THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “When Maria Maita-Keppeler was in college, she studied the ancient art of Japanese woodblock printmaking. “By the nature of the medium, you have to be bold,” she says — but, you also have to be delicate, deliberate, exacting. All those little cuts on their own add up to the whole — to a picture, a story, a life.
The Japanese-American singer-songwriter applies that same approach to her eponymous band Maita; she only writes songs she intends to finish. She only makes cuts in service of the whole. And once the debris has been blown away, the melodies remain — vibrant, sharp, and often heartbreaking. The band’s latest LP, Want, is all of the above. A razor’s edge look at a relationship in turmoil, the record serves to strip away everything undesired in Maita-Keppeler’s life, leaving behind only that titular word: Want. “The album allowed me this opportunity to be a little more courageous about my feelings,” Maita-Keppeler says. “I grew up feeling very much like the peacekeeper. Now, I have to be really assertive about what I want for myself.” See? Bold.
A Eugene, Oregon native, Maita-Keppeler grew up straddling American and Japanese culture; her father was the former, her mother the latter. Still, both parents contributed to her musical exploration — mom and dad played guitar, while Maita-Keppeler’s mother wrote songs in the language of her homeland. Skilled in violin and guitar, Maita-Keppeler really keyed into music when she started listening to early aughts indie songwriters like Bright Eyes, Elliott Smith and Regina Spektor. She then set out getting over her stage fright via open-mic stints, and started writing songs in lieu of a fateful book report.
After college, Maita-Keppeler moved to Portland, where she met guitarist and producer Matthew Zeltzer. Christening their band after her mother’s maiden name, the two toured as a duo, finding their home somewhere between Portland’s Americana-folk and indie-rock scene, and self-releasing their debut EP Waterbearer in 2017. More of a singer-songwriter affair than their current sound, the record nevertheless hinted at what Maita would become: A gorgeous mix of visceral songwriting and indie rock.
That same year, the band rounded out the crew with multi-instrumentalists Nevada Sowle and Cooper Trail, a bass and drums duo from Moscow, Idaho. The pair came on board when Maita were recording their first LP Best Wishes at the Ok Theatre in the tiny town of Enterprise, Oregon. “A lot of the songs were just about me trying to parse through memories and relationships and hold myself accountable for my own feelings,” Maita-Keppeler recalls. “I was so young when I wrote that record. It was about college days transitioning into early adulthood.”
A coup for Maita, the record was released in 2020 — but it was bittersweet, according to Maita-Keppeler. The album came out peak-pandemic and they were unable to tour. And since COVID threw a wrench in the works, the band felt a bit like they had to reintroduce themselves with 2022’s I Just Want To Be Wild For You, which they recorded back in 2020. “This record was about how people can lose connection — whether with yourself, a partner or the world around you,” Maita-Keppeler says. “There’s this disillusionment that can happen in our modern world. But there’s this wealth of passion that lies underneath those moments — a desperation that’s not being fulfilled.”
As restrictions loosened, Maita began to see the benefit of rave reviews. They toured the U.S. and Europe and played shows opening for the likes of Mirah, Blind Pilot, Horse Feathers and Typhoon, and garnered featured slots at SXSW and Treefort. Meanwhile, the band were working on polishing up their third LP, want, which Maita-Keppeler penned during pandemic isolation. A fiercely private songwriter who draws mostly on her own experience for song fodder, Maita-Keppeler dug deeper than ever into her heart. “This album feels like the most cohesive of any batch of songs that I’d written, because the slate was pretty blank in terms of what was going on around me,” she recalls, adding that she spent much of the pandemic learning how a long-term relationship can be tested by too much time and space. “I had the chance to feel all these feelings without a lot of distractions from the outside world.”
Recorded at Echo Echo in Portland in the winter of 2022, the record serves as the most crystallized of Maita’s works thus far; like Maita-Keppeler’s screen prints, which she does for each song she writes, it’s a stark, arresting image of a place in lost time. “We felt like the songwriting had a kind of visceral quality to it,” she says. “I love high highs and low lows.” Through it all, though, runs the theme of wanting. “These songs all explore desire within the framework of a long-term relationship where you’re just trying to push and dig deeper,” she says. “I feel like not a lot of songs really get to the core of those struggles and how nuanced they actually are.”