Music

VK Blanka on His New Album ‘Knightclub’ & How Overseas Touring Has Affected His Musical Sensibility

On Sept. 4, VK Blanka released his new album, Knightclub. In early 2024, he launched his first North American tour in nine cities throughout the United States and Canada. In July, he performed at the largest anime convention in South America, Anime Friends 2024, in São Paulo, Brazil, followed by his first Latin American tour, VK Blanka Latin America Tour 2024, in Santiago and Mexico City. This new album is his first in three years, released in the middle of this heavy overseas touring schedule. These overseas performances have had a tremendous impact on him, which comes through in his music.

How was your first Latin American solo tour?

It was so fun. It’s the other side of the world, so there was a whole different type of excitement. What really stuck out was everyone shouting out their love for my music. In Japan, for our shows, we try to create something of a journey, but the audiences in Latin America were amped up the whole way through, regardless of the show’s flow. That made me feel great.

So you can feel differences in countries’ national characters through the audience reactions?

Right. In Japan, there’s this feeling of humanity and spirituality. In Latin America, whether it’s Brazil or Mexico, everyone’s always so cheery. With North American audiences, sometimes they’re going crazy but sometimes they’re cool and collected. All that comes through in the shows. For the Middle East, in Saudi Arabia everyone’s shouting “Yeah!” So, in that way, it feels the same as North America, Latin America, and Europe…except that no matter how energetic the show is, the audience is all sitting back watching it from these cushy seats. Then, when the show ends and you say “Thank you so much, Saudi Arabia!” they give you a standing ovation. In their culture, the way you watch a music show is the same as the way you’d watch a play. I think those differences are really interesting. In that sense, playing in places other than Japan is very stimulating.

In countries like Saudi Arabia, clothing can’t be very revealing, so I’m guessing these cultural changes could also affect wardrobes.

Yeah, they did advise me about that. You can’t wear shorts, so I wore full-length pants, despite the heat. But in town, you’d see Europeans wearing shorts and jogging like it was no big deal (laughs). So there were people from countries who didn’t care about things like that, but since we’re Japanese, we took care to dress the “proper” way. You’d see that gap, as well, in lots of places, which was interesting.

Have these experiences overseas brought about any changes in your own lifestyle?

Yeah, they’ve changed the way I think. Of course, I’ve become more interested in different countries, and my experience has brought things like social situations, politics, economics, and culture closer to home. For example, now if I see that there’s a demonstration happening in France, I know where it’s happening, and I think about the friends I have there, that are my own age. I wonder what they think about the situation. Performing overseas, you establish a lot more connections like that. I feel like, without even being conscious of it, I’ve become more “borderless.”

What’s the meaning behind the title of your new album, Knightclub?

I like giving my albums cool names, like “wizard” or “Devil” (laughs). So, in line with that, I was originally thinking of naming it “Knight.” But then I decided to give it a more musical title, so I took “night club,” which has a cool feel, and then I put a “k” in front to make “Knightclub,” which would also have the double meaning of a legion of knights.

The first song, “Yomigaeri (with Noriyuki Makihara & ayaka),” has a spiritual feel to it. What’s it about?

That wasn’t the kind of song I set out to write from the start, but it ultimately ended out with this theme of life and death. Ever since I was an elementary school kid, I’ve thought about what it means to live, and what it means to die. I feel like my outlook on life and death has come through with the different experiences I’ve had.

“Daddy (Dying in NY)” is an English language song on the album that starts out with a chaotic soundscape. What’s the story behind it?

When I was doing a show in Europe, one of the fans shouted out “Daddy!” I didn’t know what it meant at the time, but when I looked it up later, I found out it was a sexual come-on for a hot guy. I talked about that on the North American tour, too, and then one day I played this show in New York. The show was incredible, and it was the last of the tour, so at the end I felt totally spent. That’s why I gave the song that name, like “a hottie dies in New York.”

“High Love” is a standout song, sung entirely in falsetto. You did the whole thing, including the chorus, yourself, right?

Right. I recorded the whole thing in my home studio. When I debuted, what set me apart was how much falsetto I used and how high I sang. The music I wrote after my debut was more flexible, but one day I realized that I’d never really gone full-steam since my debut song, “Slave of Love.” I wanted to use that same approach again, so I wrote “High Love.”

“Never Run” has an 80’s feel to it. What can you tell us about this song?

Los Angeles musician Josh Cumbee, who mixed the song with me, said “There used to be groups whose music all used this beat, so if we use it, it’s going to sound retro.” I found that pretty surprising. It wasn’t my intent to revive an old sound, I simply thought that it was a great rhythm, the kind of rhythm that could always get people moving. The lyrics to this song are also all in English, and the audience really got into it during our Latin America tour. It’s hard for foreign audiences to sing along to Japanese songs, but this song was surprisingly easy even for audiences in Chile and Mexico. The song showed a lot more global potential than even I’d expected, which I think is fascinating.

“Fortress” is a beautiful, soaring ballad. What were you trying to express through it?

The theme is “defense,” which, in a way, is a passive act or mentality. In the song, I tried to embody this concept not of defending or bearing something out of weakness, but instead because if you go all the way in your defense, then you’ll be unrivalled.

So playing piano and singing are where your true musical roots lie?

Even now, the piano is always my main instrument. That will probably never change. But the direction I use when I perform is changing. Actually playing live shows, it’s really constricting being trapped behind the piano the whole time. I want to move around more and be more active, so there are parts of my approach that are changing little by little. One thing that is true for both my first album and this album is that I handled all the arrangements myself. Recently, I’d been asking lots of different people to work on arranging the songs, but with this album, I’ve come full circle and did all the arrangements myself again. That’s one connection between the new album and my first album.

“Matane” is a simple song with very intimate vocals. I feel like it gives a glimpse of the true you.

I took a straightforward, genuine approach with “Matane.” When I wrote it, I thought it would be a good song to end the album with, and I hoped that it would linger with the listener, even after it ended. My concept for it was to create the same feelings that I hoped the audience at one of my shows would have as they headed back home.

What do you see in your future?

I want to create great music, for everyone to listen to that music, and to put on shows in every city. Other countries are no longer a mystery to me. The world is now my home, so I think it would feel wonderful to put on a complete world tour, playing in cities in Japan, Latin America, North America, the Middle East, Europe, and Australia.

This interview by Takayuki Okamoto first appeared on Billboard Japan

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