Artist Spotlight: Belle Chen

Belle Chen is a pianist and composer that skillfully blends piano melodies with synths, creating a seamless fusion of acoustic and electronic music.

Belle released the single 'Three Birds', as a preview of her upcoming album, "Ravel In The Forest," set to be released on February 16, 2024, through Platoon. The album, inspired by nature and created as an imaginative world through music, invites listeners on a journey filled with richly cinematic, ethereal compositions.

The album's production involves a collaboration with the Budapest Art Orchestra in tracks like 'Closer' and 'Moonrise,' showcasing Belle's diverse and intriguing approach to music creation. 'Ravel In The Forest' defies categorization, providing a refreshing experience that reconnects audiences with nature, music, and introspection.

Your new album, 'Ravel In The Forest,' takes listeners on a journey through nature and imagination. Can you share more about the inspiration behind it?

My new album Ravel In The Forest was inspired by the feeling of losing oneself in your imagination while being in nature. So in this album, you’ll hear textures and colors and sounds that were inspired by the movements and the colous of the flora and fauna found in forests.

Could you provide some insights into your classical training and its influence on your work, particularly when blending contemporary and electronic music? How did your classical background play a role in shaping the sound of this album?

My classical training is like the foundation that I build my own music language upon. And for me, it's like a big dictionary that I can draw words from to tell my own musical story. In this particular album (Ravel in the Forest), I draw inspirations from the approaches of Impressionist composers such as Maurice Ravel, and how they evoke certain feelings through the use of colors, light and shade and combining that approach with the technology that we have today, through the use of synths and production technique to create this whimsical, imaginative world that's this new album.

Making music for me is a very intuitive process. I'm always guided by the end feeling of what I want to create for the listeners. And in this journey to get there I would explore the different options and textures and colors that's available, and are the most appropriate to create this end feeling. Sometimes I find it through classical approach and sometimes I find it through more electronica kind of approach. Sometimes it's a hybrid, so it's never really the same.

The concept of 'Ravel In The Forest' seems deeply connected to nature and introspection. How do you believe music can serve as a medium for self-reflection and connection to the world around us?

For me, music is a really important medium for self reflection and introspection, because I think it creates this pocket of time and space to be really with yourself, and be really honest with how you're feeling and seeing the world. And in a way, music can also be a shared experience.

When a musician shares a piece of music with a world, we're actually sharing a part of how we see the world and our perspective as well.

And when two people share what they're listening to is similar; they're sharing how they see the world. It is a moment and a medium for connection, as well as self reflection.

As an artist who has performed globally, can you share a memorable moment from your performances at venues like the Royal Albert Hall’s Steinway Series and the National Theatre of Korea?

My most memorable moments when I'm performing happens when I feel like I'm in sync with the audience. You can feel the energy coming back in and I feel like we're on a journey together. And I feel like I'm getting to know them on a very deep and personal level. And so those are the most fun and memorable moments for me.

Your journey includes being recognized as an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music in London and being a Yamaha artist. How have these affiliations influenced your growth as a musician?

I'm hugely grateful for the affiliations. I think both the academy and Yamaha has played such important roles in my musical DNA and in my journey so far, and to be able to partner with Yamaha on special projects especially has made a big difference.

What does your morning routine look like?

My morning routines are usually done in silence and solitude. That's where I think most clearly and my best and usually that involves meditation, reading, journaling, and then plotting up my day with a good cup of coffee before getting started.

Your tips for finding your creativity on a tough day

So when I'm having a tough day, I usually time box an hour or so to create as freely as possible. And usually that involves sitting in front of the piano and improvising and recording that on the voice memo. I think it is done without any intention, without any pressure. And then I'll step away go for a walk around the block clear my mind. And usually on these days I try to be gentle with myself and kind with myself, because some things just take time and sometimes it takes longer, and that's okay to take longer.