‘Writing novels is about rhythms’

This news has been read 5910 times!

Murakami delights fan with radio show debut

TOKYO, Aug 5, (Agencies): Best-selling Japanese author Haruki Murakami, hosting a special radio show featuring some of his favorite songs he jogs to, says writing novels is about rhythm, as in music and running.

“Murakami Radio,” a pre-recorded show broadcast Sunday night, featured as its themes two crucial elements of his life as a novelist: running and music. During the 55-minute show, Murakami played nine numbers he enjoys running to — rock and jazz — selected from thousands of titles stored on several iPods, while sharing stories behind the songs and talking about running and writing. A perennial contender for the Nobel literature prize, Murakami said he initially had no intention of becoming a writer. After finishing university, he was running a jazz bar in Tokyo and music was his thing, and that’s where his style comes from, he said.

“Rather than learning storytelling technique from someone, I’ve taken a musical approach, while being very conscious about rhythms, harmony and improvisation,” the 69-year-old Murakami said on the radio. “It’s like writing as I dance, even though I don’t actually dance. For me, writing tends to be a very physical process, and that’s my style.”

A native of Kyoto, Murakami has precise memories of when he decided to become a writer: at around 1:30 pm on April 1, 1978, while attending a baseball game at Tokyo’s Jingu Stadium — home to the underdog Japanese baseball team the Yakult Swallows, his favorite — where he saw an American named Dave Hilton hit a double, he wrote in his 2007 memoir, “What I Talk About When I Talk About Running.”

Murakami’s first novel, “Hear the Wind Sing,” came out in 1979. His 1987 romantic novel “Norwegian Wood” was his first best-seller, establishing him as a young literary star. Recent best-sellers include “1Q84,” ‘’Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage” and his latest novel, “Killing Commandatore.” Music serves as important motifs in his stories, and he has also written books on the topic. Murakami started running soon after becoming a novelist, initially to lose weight he had gained from long hours of sitting and writing. He has since become a serious runner, completing more than 30 marathons.

He said he runs to keep up his physical strength. “When you write, your physical ability is extremely important,” he said. “You sit all day and keep writing, so it takes a lot of energy, even though many people don’t seem to believe me.”

Choice

Rock music is his usual choice for running to keep a steady pace, he said, recommending “songs that you can sing along to, ideally those that give you courage.”

Protagonists in Murakami’s stories are often troubled young men seeking their self-identity in grim, dark or fantastical settings. But Murakami was upbeat and humorous during Sunday’s program as in his short stories and essays, including his 2001 essay collection titled “Murakami Radio.”

Ahead of Sunday’s show, Murakami said in a message released through Tokyo FM that he’s collected so many records and CDs, he felt it would be more fun to share some of them than to keep the pleasure to himself. He has seven iPods storing 1,000 to 2,000 titles each, from which he chose the songs for Sunday’s show. On a radio show last week, anxious Murakami fans, including artists, discussed his novels and guessed his picks for Sunday. Murakami opened the show with Donald Fagen’s “Madison Times,” originally composed by jazz pianist Ray Bryant. He then played “Heigh-Ho/Whistle While You Work/Yo Ho (A Pirate’s Life for Me)” by Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, one of Murakami’s favorite groups and one mentioned in his debut novel.

Other songs played: “DB Blues” by King Pleasure, “Sky Pilot” by Eric Burdon and the Animals, “What a Wonderful World” by Joey Ramone, “Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea” by George Harrison, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door” by Ben Sidran, “Love Train” by Hall & Oates and “Light My Fire” by the Doors.

Murakami took a few questions he selected from more than 2,000 submitted in advance, including some from abroad, though Sunday’s program was for domestic listeners only. Asked what music he would request for his own funeral, Murakami said none: “I would rather go quietly.” Asked to choose between life without a cat or music, he didn’t answer, saying he would regret it either way.

While seeking privacy, Murakami has spoken out on various issues, including nuclear energy, global peace and, most recently, the executions of 13 Japanese cultists for a Tokyo subway gassing and other crimes.

Best-selling author Haruki Murakami, who rarely appears in public, delighted fans on Sunday as he made his radio debut with a one-off music show.

Many fans expressed excitement on social media as they heard the show by the 69-year-old Japanese novelist, perennially touted as a contender for the Nobel literature prize. “It’s the first time I listened to his voice. I’m surprised that his way of talking and his voice are young!!” said one Twitter user.

“Appreciate I can listen to his voice!! So excited I have tears!!,” tweeted another.

The reclusive writer, an avid music fan, introduced songs by US and British musicians.

Murakami became a global sensation with the publication of “Norwegian Wood” in 1987 and has written several other bestsellers including “1Q84” and “Kafka on the Shore”.

In 2007, he published a non-fiction work, “What I Talk About When I Talk About Running”. He has said he uses several iPods to listen to music while running.

Music, he told the radio show, had helped him to write.

“I didn’t learn writing techniques from someone’s literature. I learnt about rhythms, harmony and improvisations from music,” he said.

Even so, he said, he “prefers to die quietly” — when the co-host of the show relayed a listener’s question about what music he wants at his funeral.

The writer, who spends much of his time in the United States, has a cult following for his sometimes surreal works peppered with references to pop culture, which have been translated into some 40 languages.

 

This news has been read 5910 times!

Back to top button

Advt Blocker Detected

Kindly disable the Ad blocker

Verified by MonsterInsights