Takashi Matsunaga

Takashi Matsunaga (松永貴志, Matsunaga Takashi, born 1986), sometimes known professionally as Takashi, is a Japanese jazz pianist and composer.

Takashi Matsunaga
Birth nameTakashi Matsunaga (松永貴志, Matsunaga Takashi)
Born (1986-01-27) January 27, 1986
Kobe, Japan
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Musician, composer
Instrument(s)Piano
Websitetakashimatsunaga.com

Life and career

Matsunaga was born and raised in Kobe.[1] At the age of five he first played a piano and Hammond organ that his father had.[1] His father also took him to jazz clubs.[1] After winning an electric organ competition at the age of ten, Matsunaga took lessons from Tadao Kitano, who also taught Makoto Ozone.[1] Matsunaga played his first concert as a professional when he was 15, appeared on television in 2002, then signed with Toshiba-EMI and released his first album the following year.[1] As an 18-year-old, Matsunaga was promoted by Toshiba-EMI as "the youngest pro jazz pianist in Japan".[1] Storm Zone, his 2004 release and debut album for Blue Note, contained only his original compositions.[2] In 2012, he recorded for the anime Kids on the Slope, which narrates the story of two teenagers playing jazz, one piano the other drums.

Playing style

"Matsunaga has a busy, almost frenetic, bop-based playing style, with dense clusters of notes and a profusion of riffs and melodic ideas."[1]

Composing style

A reviewer for The New York Times commented that Matsunaga composes in "various stylistic idioms, including Latin-tinged numbers [...] gentle ballads [...] and swinging tours de force".[1]

Discography

An asterisk (*) after the year indicates that it is the year of release.

As leader/co-leader

Year recorded Title Label Notes
2003* Takashi Toshiba-EMI Trio
2003* Moko Moko Toshiba-EMI
2003 Storm Zone Blue Note Trio, with Daiki Yasukagawa (bass), Junji Hirose (drums)
2004* Today Somethin' Else
2006* Inorganic Orange Somethin' Else Trio
2008* Love Makes the Earth Float Somethin' Else Trio, with Hiroaki Mizutani and Daiki Yasukagawa (bass; separately), Akira Sotoyama and Junji Hirose (drums; separately)
2013* Good News Somethin' Else

Main source:[3]

References

  1. McClure, Steve (3 March 2004) "A Prodigy of Piano and Japan's Jazz Master". The New York Times.
  2. van Vleck, Philip (28 February 2004) "Takashi". Billboard 116.9. p. 49.
  3. "Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
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