Ripples" DOWNLOAD & STREAMING http://smarturl.it/riefuripples
Ripples-Written by Rie fu
From the album "Places" to be released 2019
Produced, recorded & mixed by Dan Cox @ Urchin Studios London
Mastered by Matt Colton (Alchemy Mastering London)
Vocals, piano: Rie fu
Electric Guitar: Kenji "Jammer" Suzuki
Bass: Nick Pini
Drums: Matt Ingram
Cello: Jo Quail
music video by Surge Films
Blissful pop by London-based Japanese singer/songwriter, inspired by the dexterity of KateBush and the voice of Karen Carpenter. https://riefu.com/
Written and performed by Rié
Produced by Squizzle
Video shot by Hutch Films (Will Hutchinson)
Hair by Naomi Yanagawa (Cleve Hair London)
Edited and animated by Rié
The “creatures” in this song are both yourself and the problems you face in life; depression, addiction, bad relationships, or any issues you encounter every day. After all, they all start out as individually “benevolent”, but the problem starts when you try to push away and fight each other. That’s why I want to suggest to “take it by the hand, don’t look away”. Talk to those creatures, shake hands with them. This may not be the absolute solution to all problems, but at least a decent place to start.
Benevolent Creature - Lyric
Written by Rié
Oh you’re a benevolent creature
I know it eats you up and lets you down and takes you all around
Oh you’re a benevolent creature
I know it kicks you back and drags you on and drives you out of bounds
Let it go, moving on together
Rolling on, louder, louder
I know it eats you up and lets you down and takes you all around
I know it kicks you back and drags you on and drives you out of bounds
Take it by the hand, don’t look away
Oh you’re a benevolent creature
You don’t need to play it down and keep it up enslaved by the crowd
Oh you’re a benevolent creature
You don’t need to hold it back, pretend it’s fine when you want to scream out loud
Rié (pronounced ree-ay) Funakoshi - known simply as Rié - is a Japanese London-art school graduate who made her debut in the UK in the summer 2017 with the four-track EP Business Trips. A singer-songwriter of rare melodic grace whose music resonates with the lush splendour of Karen Carpenter and the acoustic intimacy of Suzanne Vega, news of the release comes in line with ‘St.Martin’ (Theme Park Mix) – the first track to be lifted from the EP - which seamlessly cuts between London and Tokyo, representing both her background and her journey to the UK.
Having studied Fine Art at London’s Central St Martins, she began to immerse herself in music shortly after graduating, which along with painting, became her defining characteristic. Following a deluge of songwriting the young woman who sports striking pink-streaked hair earned a deal with Sony Japan at the age of 19 under the recording name Rie Fu, earning herself widespread recognition with the release of her debut album at home. Subsequent albums followed, along with a stint performing on a series of Asian tours before Rié returned to the UK the next stage of her music career.
Rié possesses the ability to write about anything within her music, speaking about the influence behind this, she says: “There’s nothing I wouldn’t write about,” she says. “I’d welcome the challenge of writing about the most unexpected thing. Kate Bush writes about mundane things but makes them sound like magical fairly tales.”
Rié frequently combines her love for both fine art and music and her paintings can be seen in the artwork and visual video concepts with this EP. She frequently turns to Japanese poetry as a source of influence, something she says will often describe the ‘beautiful’ without ever being explicit. “Japanese poetry and writing are all about saying something through something else, implying obliquely,” she muses. “In a Japanese poem, if something is beautiful, you never use the word ‘beautiful’; you refer to it without spelling it out.”
"Save You" written and performed by Rié
Produced by Theme Park Video
Directed/produced by Mitsuru Fukuda, Takeki Kitajima (Keyaki Works)
"Levels"EP containing this track is released 3rd Nov, 2017
Rié (pronounced ree-ay) Funakoshi - known simply as Rié - is a Japanese London-art school graduate who made her debut in the UK in the summer 2017 with the four-track EP Business Trips. A singer-songwriter of rare melodic grace whose music resonates with the lush splendour of Karen Carpenter and the acoustic intimacy of Suzanne Vega, news of the release comes in line with ‘St.Martin’ (Theme Park Mix) – the first track to be lifted from the EP - which seamlessly cuts between London and Tokyo, representing both her background and her journey to the UK.
Having studied Fine Art at London’s Central St Martins, she began to immerse herself in music shortly after graduating, which along with painting, became her defining characteristic. Following a deluge of songwriting the young woman who sports striking pink-streaked hair earned a deal with Sony Japan at the age of 19 under the recording name Rie Fu, earning herself widespread recognition with the release of her debut album at home. Subsequent albums followed, along with a stint performing on a series of Asian tours before Rié returned to the UK the next stage of her music career.
Rié possesses the ability to write about anything within her music, speaking about the influence behind this, she says: “There’s nothing I wouldn’t write about,” she says. “I’d welcome the challenge of writing about the most unexpected thing. Kate Bush writes about mundane things but makes them sound like magical fairly tales.”
Rié frequently combines her love for both fine art and music and her paintings can be seen in the artwork and visual video concepts with this EP. She frequently turns to Japanese poetry as a source of influence, something she says will often describe the ‘beautiful’ without ever being explicit. “Japanese poetry and writing are all about saying something through something else, implying obliquely,” she muses. “In a Japanese poem, if something is beautiful, you never use the word ‘beautiful’; you refer to it without spelling it out.”
London-based Japanese singer/songwriter/painter Rié, inspired by the uniqueness of Kate Bush, the chords of Joni Mitchell and the voice of Karen Carpenter
Rié (pronounced ree-ay) Funakoshi - known simply as Rié - is a Japanese London-art school graduate who made her debut in the UK in the summer 2017 with the four-track EP Business Trips. A singer-songwriter of rare melodic grace whose music resonates with the lush splendour of Karen Carpenter and the acoustic intimacy of Suzanne Vega, news of the release comes in line with ‘St.Martin’ (Theme Park Mix) – the first track to be lifted from the EP - which seamlessly cuts between London and Tokyo, representing both her background and her journey to the UK.
Having studied Fine Art at London’s Central St Martins, she began to immerse herself in music shortly after graduating, which along with painting, became her defining characteristic. Following a deluge of songwriting the young woman who sports striking pink-streaked hair earned a deal with Sony Japan at the age of 19 under the recording name Rie Fu, earning herself widespread recognition with the release of her debut album at home. Subsequent albums followed, along with a stint performing on a series of Asian tours before Rié returned to the UK the next stage of her music career.
Rié possesses the ability to write about anything within her music, speaking about the influence behind this, she says: “There’s nothing I wouldn’t write about,” she says. “I’d welcome the challenge of writing about the most unexpected thing. Kate Bush writes about mundane things but makes them sound like magical fairly tales.”
Rié frequently combines her love for both fine art and music and her paintings can be seen in the artwork and visual video concepts with this EP. She frequently turns to Japanese poetry as a source of influence, something she says will often describe the ‘beautiful’ without ever being explicit. “Japanese poetry and writing are all about saying something through something else, implying obliquely,” she muses. “In a Japanese poem, if something is beautiful, you never use the word ‘beautiful’; you refer to it without spelling it out.”