Senri Kawaguchi

Senri Kawaguchi is a Japanese jazz and fusion drummer. In Japan, she is sometimes known as tekazuhime (手数姫), (“Princess of Many Strokes”). She has the image of a gecko on the front of her 20-inch bass drum, and on her Zildjian drumsticks. She has won many awards for her drumming. Kawaguchi was introduced to drumming at the age of five when her father, a practicing doctor whom she described in an interview as a mecha-otaku, brought home an electronic drum kit so that he could explore its inner workings. Eventually, he gave it to her to play with, and at the age of six, she began taking drum lessons locally. When she was eight years old her teacher recommended that, having shown sufficient interest and talent, she started taking lessons from the renowned Japanese drummer and drum instructor Kozo Suganuma. In 2010, at the age of 13, she became one of the youngest drummers, and, at that time, only the second Japanese drummer after Akira Jimbo to be added to the Drummerworld list of top 500 drummers.

In 2011, as well as continuing session work, she made her first overseas trip as a drummer when Yamaha Drums invited her to showcase some of their new drum kits at the 2011 Winter NAMM Show in Anaheim, California. Later in the year, she travelled with Yamaha to China, to participate in the 2011 Tianjin Jiutai International Drum Festival. In 2012, she made her first national television appearance when, along with the members of Senri’s Super Session, she accompanied guitarist Kyoji Yamamoto at that year’s Tokyo Crossover Night International Jazz Festival, which was broadcast by Fuji Television on their satellite channel. On her 16th birthday in January 2013, she released her first solo album A la Mode. There she was accompanied by a number of Japanese musicians, including some that she had performed with in her BeeHive Sessions.

At the beginning of 2014, she went to Los Angeles to record her second solo album, Buena Vista. There, she met French smooth jazz and new-age music multi-instrumentalist Philippe Saisse, with whom she continues to work. She was also invited to be one of the international judges for the 2014 Hit Like a Girl drum competition, and has been a regular judge since then. Later in the year, she became involved in idol group E-Girls’ tour of Japan, joining their support group as the drummer, giving her her first experience of performing at larger venues, including Tokyo’s Budokan. Finally, in September, she made her first appearance at the Tokyo Jazz Festival.

In April 2015, after graduating from senior high school, she moved to Tokyo to study social science at Waseda University. While studying at university she continued her session and studio work. In August, she travelled to the 2015 Rock au château festival held in the grounds of the château de Villersexel in France In September, she performed at the Super Mario 30th Anniversary Concert in Tokyo. She also became more in demand to work with other artists, either in concert, or as a session artist on albums, notably being invited to perform with Guthrie Govan on the Japanese leg of his Erotic Cakes tour at the end of 2015. She would work again with Govan, a year later, at the end of 2016. In 2016, she released 3 albums: KKK Core, a collaboration between Kawaguchi, Kozo Suganuma and Kaori Hirohara that they had worked on since the previous year; Trick or Treat, her third album as part of Kiyo*Sen, and Cider Hard and Sweet, a collaboration with Philippe Saisse and the bassist Armand Sabal-Lecco.

Throughout 2017, she participated in events to promote Yamaha Drum’s 50th anniversary—culminating in a concert on stage with Dave Weckl, Steve Gadd, and Akira Jimbo on 2 September. Artists that she worked with in 2017 included Bootsy Collins on his album World Wide Funk, which was released in October 2017 and Jan Erling Holberg, with whom she worked on the single Aim to Please. In September 2017 she performed with Saisse and Sabal-Lecco for a televised performance at the 2017 Tokyo Jazz Festival at NHK Hall, after which they performed at various venues, including Motion Blue in Tokyo, which was recorded and released as a DVD and Blu-ray, and for which they won the Nissan Jazz Japan Award 2017 for Best Live Performance. In September, she began performing with one of Japan’s leading jazz orchestras, Eric Miyashiro’s Blue Note Tokyo All-Star Jazz Orchestra. In October 2017, she travelled to Bengaluru where she participated in the 2017 October Octaves with Indian fusion violinist Abhijith PS Nair.

In 2019, she graduated from Waseda University. Also in 2019, she was invited by Jun Abe to join a band which he was setting up combining traditional Japanese instruments with modern ones. In 2021, it was announced that the band would be named ZAON (坐音). In 2021, she led a performance on the rooftop of the Andaz Tokyo Toranomon Hills with seven other young Japanese performers for the closing ceremony of One Young World Munich 2021. A film “Senri’s Seven”, directed by Lilou Augier was made about preparations for this performance; it included some music from the actual performance. They also performed as “The Jazz Avengers” at Billboard Live YOKOHAMA and Billboard Live OSAKA. In 2023, the Jazz Avengers announced their first album and release tour on their YouTube channel.

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