Yayoi Ikawa
Yayoi Ikawa is a Japanese-born jazz pianist, composer, and educator based in New York City.
Early life and education
Ikawa was born in Tokyo and raised in Chiba, Japan, and began playing her grandfather's piano at age three. She had formal classical piano lessons throughout her childhood. At age fifteen, her American host family, who were musicians, introduced her to jazz music upon her first visit to the United States as an exchange student.She returned to Japan and attended the International Christian University in Tokyo, where she was a member of the jazz band and earned a Bachelor’s Degree in International Studies. Ikawa moved to New York City in 1999 and began attending jam sessions regularly, leading to an audition and acceptance into the New School of Jazz, where Ikawa studied with her primary musical mentor, Reggie Workman, and private studies with Geri Allen.
After receiving the Henry and Gill Block Scholarship and completing her studies at the New School, Ikawa performed at jazz festivals in Italy and Slovenia under the guidance of Reggie Workman.
Ikawa attended New York University and while working toward a Master's degree in music, she composed an orchestral work for an animated short film by Yusuke Murakami entitled If I were an Atomic Bomb, which was premiered at the Lincoln Center in 2007.
Career
Ikawa's debut recording as a leader, entitled Angel Eyes, was a trio date produced by jazz drummer Carl Allen for the Nippon Crown record label and released in 2004. Ikawa's second recording as a leader, Color of Dreams, also a trio recording, was released in 2005.Ikawa founded the Bridge Project in 2008, an international musician collective. Its primary goal has been to unite musicians, providing an opportunity to share a musical dialogue in a creative and exploratory musical environment. Since its inception, Yayoi's Bridge Project has performed at Jazz Festivals and Concerts throughout the United States, Europe, Asia, the Caribbean, South Africa, and Central and South America.
As a band leader, Ikawa has led a piano trio and larger ensembles at concerts in Los Angeles, North Carolina, The Blues Alley in Washington, DC, as well as New York City venues including Klavierhaus, The Kitano, Cell Theatre, Caffè Lena, Zinc Bar, and Soapbox Gallery
Ikawa has served as music director at the First Baptist Church in Piscataway, New Jersey, and was an adjunct piano instructor and lecturer at City College of New York and Brooklyn College.
Collaborations
Although primarily a jazz artist, Ikawa has worked in a variety of musical genres and has performed or recorded with Reggie Workman, Emeline Michel, Howard Johnson, Lonnie Plaxico, Teo Macero, Craig Harris, Michael Carvin, Frank Lacy, Imani Uzuri, Tyshawn Sorey, Carla Cook, and Richard Bona.Discography
| Release year | Artist | Title | Label |
| 2004 | Ulrich Krieger | The Marvellous Aphorisms of Gavin Bryars | Mode |
| 2004 | Igor Bezget | Statements | Sensor |
| 2004 | Jeremy Powell | Leaving | Mayhem |
| 2007 | Dexter Porter | Crazy She Calls Me | Verdict |
| 2007 | Beaty Brothers | Band B3 | Beaty Music |
| 2007 | Teo Macero | Study In Contrast | Teo Productions |
| 2008 | Billy Fox | Kaidan Suite | Gozen Reiji |
| 2009 | Jon Crowley | Connections | Jcrowl |
| 2010 | Jonathan Powell | Transcend | CD Baby |
| 2012 | Daniel Bernard Roumain/Laurelyn Dossett | The Collide | DBR |
| 2015 | Michael Carvin | Flash Forward | Motema |
| 2018 | Salim Washington/Brian Willson | You Dig ?!? | Double Music |
| 2021 | Mark Isham/Craig Harris | Judas And The Black Messiah | Watertower Music |
| 2022 | Craig Harris | Managing The Mask | Aquastra Music |
| 2023 | Matt Kane | Song Poems | Bounce Step Records |
| 2024 | Lonnie Plaxico | Radiance | Plaxmusic |
| 2024 | Matt Steckler | Old Friends Beckoned, New Sounds Reckoned | Skydeck Music |