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Monochrome

Emi Meyer

Monochrome

Price: € 19.95
Format: CD
Label: Origin Records
UPC: 0805558274220
Catnr: ORIGIN 82742
Release date: 03 November 2017
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Label
Origin Records
UPC
0805558274220
Catalogue number
ORIGIN 82742
Release date
03 November 2017
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

With an interesting blend of jazz, soul and pop, Tokyo-based singer/songwriter Emi Meyer has carved out a wide-ranging career in Japan with her songs featured in TV, movies and advertising, and her performances ranging from small jazz clubs to major stages throughout Asia. For her debut U.S. recording, Meyer combines music from a set recorded in Paris with Belgian pianist Eric Legnini's French quartet, and new originals recorded in Seattle and featuring guitarist Dan Balmer & pianist Dawn Clement. From her own compositions to classics like "I'd Rather Go Blind" from Etta James' songbook, Michael Buble's "Home," or "What A Wonderful World," Emi's intimate readings project poignancy and grace, tying them all together in an engaging package.
Mit einer interessanten Mischung aus Jazz, Soul und Pop hat die in Tokio lebende Sängerin und Songwriterin Emi Meyer eine weitreichende Karriere in Japan hinter sich, mit ihren Songs in TV, Kino und Werbung und ihre Auftritte reichen von kleinen Jazzclubs bis zu großen Bühnen in ganz Asien. Für ihr Debüt in den USA kombiniert Meyer Musik aus einem Pariser Set mit dem französischen Quartett des belgischen Pianisten Eric Legnini und neuen Originalen aus Seattle mit dem Gitarristen Dan Balmer und Dawn Clement. Von ihren eigenen Kompositionen bis hin zu Klassikern wie "I' d Rather Go Blind" aus dem Songbuch von Etta James, Michael Buble's "Home" oder "What A Wonderful World", Emi's intime Interpretationen bringen Brillanz und Anmut zum Ausdruck und fügen sie zu einem fesselnden Ganzen zusammen.

Artist(s)

Emi Meyer (vocals)

Emi Meyer's musical career followed an unhurried, steady trajectory. Born to a Japanese mother and American father in Kyoto, she moved with her family to the States as a toddler. She began studying classical piano at age 6, honing her piano chops in her school's jazz ensemble and soon after began composing pop music of her own.  In 2007, she released an album of original material with the help of a good friend in LA. 'It was just out of pocket, with no expectations,' she says. Around that time, Meyer also entered the Seattle-Kobe Jazz Vocalist Competition, a prestigious annual singing competition whose winner flies to Seattle's Japanese sister city of Kobe to compete in the Kobe Jazz Queen Contest. 'I...
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Emi Meyer's musical career followed an unhurried, steady trajectory. Born to a Japanese mother and American father in Kyoto, she moved with her family to the States as a toddler. She began studying classical piano at age 6, honing her piano chops in her school's jazz ensemble and soon after began composing pop music of her own. In 2007, she released an album of original material with the help of a good friend in LA. "It was just out of pocket, with no expectations," she says. Around that time, Meyer also entered the Seattle-Kobe Jazz Vocalist Competition, a prestigious annual singing competition whose winner flies to Seattle's Japanese sister city of Kobe to compete in the Kobe Jazz Queen Contest. "I was 18 and had just missed the student level, so I had to enter as an adult," she says. "I did it for the experience. I thought screw it, I'm not gonna win. I'd never sung standards [or] covers. Everyone else was a trained professional." To her surprise, she won. The victory led to her first performances in Japan and enabled her to study ethnomusicology there. She moved to Kyoto, networked with musicians and venues, formed a band, and gradually began gigging regularly. Word of mouth and social media - "This was the era of MySpace," she says - attracted a steady stream of reps from major Japanese record labels. "I was really excited at first, but I learned the hard way, it's not fun to be with a major label unless you are already doing a type of music that they want to market." Meyer wanted to record her own original material on her own terms. So she stuck to her guns, turning her back on major label attempts to tamper with her sound. Plankton Music, a small Japanese indie label, got behind her, releasing her original LA recording Curious Creature as-is in 2009. The record hit #1 on iTunes Jazz Charts in Japan, and Meyer wound up winning iTunes Japan's Best New Artist award for that year. Since then, she's recorded a succession of records for Plankton (one in Japanese, the rest in English), maintaining artistic control and ownership of her material in the process. She's augmented her recording royalties with gun-for-hire work and song placement in several Japanese commercials, and her songs have popped up in American TV shows like MTV's Awkward and TV Land's Younger. It's not enough to make her rich, but it's afforded her the opportunity to live in Tokyo as a musician. Now her overseas profile is bigger than ever. She worked on the soundtrack to Flying Colors, a hit Japanese indie film based on a bestseller about a student struggling to pass her college entrance exams that became a sizable hit last May. In September she released Monochrome, her first record to include standards. Stateside, she digitally released a deluxe edition of her 2012 album Galaxy's Skirt on Dec. 4 and Seattle-based jazz label Origin Records will drop a revised version of Monochrome (including several new originals) domestically in fall 2017. (City Arts)
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Composer(s)

Emi Meyer (vocals)

Emi Meyer's musical career followed an unhurried, steady trajectory. Born to a Japanese mother and American father in Kyoto, she moved with her family to the States as a toddler. She began studying classical piano at age 6, honing her piano chops in her school's jazz ensemble and soon after began composing pop music of her own.  In 2007, she released an album of original material with the help of a good friend in LA. 'It was just out of pocket, with no expectations,' she says. Around that time, Meyer also entered the Seattle-Kobe Jazz Vocalist Competition, a prestigious annual singing competition whose winner flies to Seattle's Japanese sister city of Kobe to compete in the Kobe Jazz Queen Contest. 'I...
more
Emi Meyer's musical career followed an unhurried, steady trajectory. Born to a Japanese mother and American father in Kyoto, she moved with her family to the States as a toddler. She began studying classical piano at age 6, honing her piano chops in her school's jazz ensemble and soon after began composing pop music of her own. In 2007, she released an album of original material with the help of a good friend in LA. "It was just out of pocket, with no expectations," she says. Around that time, Meyer also entered the Seattle-Kobe Jazz Vocalist Competition, a prestigious annual singing competition whose winner flies to Seattle's Japanese sister city of Kobe to compete in the Kobe Jazz Queen Contest. "I was 18 and had just missed the student level, so I had to enter as an adult," she says. "I did it for the experience. I thought screw it, I'm not gonna win. I'd never sung standards [or] covers. Everyone else was a trained professional." To her surprise, she won. The victory led to her first performances in Japan and enabled her to study ethnomusicology there. She moved to Kyoto, networked with musicians and venues, formed a band, and gradually began gigging regularly. Word of mouth and social media - "This was the era of MySpace," she says - attracted a steady stream of reps from major Japanese record labels. "I was really excited at first, but I learned the hard way, it's not fun to be with a major label unless you are already doing a type of music that they want to market." Meyer wanted to record her own original material on her own terms. So she stuck to her guns, turning her back on major label attempts to tamper with her sound. Plankton Music, a small Japanese indie label, got behind her, releasing her original LA recording Curious Creature as-is in 2009. The record hit #1 on iTunes Jazz Charts in Japan, and Meyer wound up winning iTunes Japan's Best New Artist award for that year. Since then, she's recorded a succession of records for Plankton (one in Japanese, the rest in English), maintaining artistic control and ownership of her material in the process. She's augmented her recording royalties with gun-for-hire work and song placement in several Japanese commercials, and her songs have popped up in American TV shows like MTV's Awkward and TV Land's Younger. It's not enough to make her rich, but it's afforded her the opportunity to live in Tokyo as a musician. Now her overseas profile is bigger than ever. She worked on the soundtrack to Flying Colors, a hit Japanese indie film based on a bestseller about a student struggling to pass her college entrance exams that became a sizable hit last May. In September she released Monochrome, her first record to include standards. Stateside, she digitally released a deluxe edition of her 2012 album Galaxy's Skirt on Dec. 4 and Seattle-based jazz label Origin Records will drop a revised version of Monochrome (including several new originals) domestically in fall 2017. (City Arts)
less

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