Klavier Gavin

"Klavier Gavin"

- Achtung, baby! Today, we play it my way!

Klavier Gavin is Apollo Justice's rival. He is the younger brother of Justice's former mentor, Kristoph Gavin. He was also the lead vocalist and guitarist of his own rock band, the Gavinners.

Law career
Klavier Gavin trained to become a prosecutor in Germany. He was touted as a genius, a "true thoroughbred of the prosecutor's office", which helped to propel him to his first trial at the age of 17, sparring with renowned defense attorney Phoenix Wright.

First trial

 * Main article: Turnabout Succession

Before the trial took place, Klavier's older brother Kristoph told him that Wright was going to present false evidence in court and gave him a witness to testify as such. Convinced that Wright was a fraud, Klavier engaged Wright rudely and taunted and cornered him until he came up with the fake evidence. Klavier sprang his trap, and Wright was exposed as a fraud. However, the defendant disappeared from the courtroom, and no verdict was given. Wright would later lose his badge in a hearing with his fellow defense attorneys.

Klavier always wondered how his brother knew about the forgery ahead of time but never questioned him.

Encounters with Justice

 * Main article: Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney

Seven years after Wright's disbarment, Justice got Kristoph Gavin convicted for murder. Intrigued, Klavier faced Justice in his next trial to test Justice's worth. Justice eventually convinced Klavier that he had the wrong suspect on trial, and Klavier turned to guide Justice through the process of implicating the real criminal, causing Justice to wonder whether he really had "won" the case.

Klavier then invited Justice and Trucy Wright to one of his concerts, during which a bodyguard was shot dead with his own pistol. The two lawyers faced off again, and a key witness named the Gavinners' second guitar, Daryan Crescend, as the killer. Refusing to believe it at first, he eventually came to grips with the truth and guided Justice again to finding the evidence.

Three months later, Klavier participated in Wright's test trial for the Jurist System, which involved the poisoning death of a painter. The case's connection to Klavier's first case came to light, and Klavier was forced to face the past. His brother Kristoph was summoned from his cell as a special witness; Klavier wanted to believe in his brother, but Kristoph tried to bluff his way out of his predicament, and Klavier finally came to accept the truth. Once again, Justice and Klavier worked together to piece together the circumstances and motives behind the crime at hand, but they could not conclusively prove Kristoph's involvement in the forgery that had ended Wright's career. Nonetheless, Klavier remembered that the jury, not the judge, had the power to decide. When Kristoph found out about the jury, he was furious at the prospect of his plan being nullified by common people. Klavier told his brother that the law no longer needed him, and the jury declared the defendant innocent of the murder charge.

Singing career

 * Main article: Gavinners

Klavier started his rock band some time before he started his law career. His band's first single went platinum overnight.

Seven years after kicking off his double career, Klavier visited Borginia. He also met Lamiroir and was entranced by her voice, calling it "divine". He invited her to sing in one of his concerts, and he also received a guitar. Lamiroir and Klavier performed a duet for the concert (the concert to which he had invited Justice), but the guitar caught fire during the song, and Lamiroir's bodyguard was also killed. Distraught by these events and the conviction of Crescend for the murder, Klavier vowed never to sing the song again.

The jury trial in which Klavier saw Kristoph implicated as the killer affected Klavier so deeply that he decided to disband the Gavinners and pursue his law career more fully.

Personality
Unlike Phoenix Wright's usual opponents, Klavier Gavin is quite honest and friendly, even when he is first introduced. He maintains his rock-star mannerisms in the courtroom, and he avoids investigative work, but he takes both of his jobs very seriously. While he strives for absolute perfection in his concerts (he is easily angered if he hears even the smallest mistake), he is more concerned about getting the right person convicted when he is in court, which is another major difference from Wright's rivals. He is cool and confident, and he likes to taunt and tease Justice when Justice falters.

Sometimes, his band's platinum hit single Guilty Love plays in the courtroom (i.e. it actually plays and people notice it), and Klavier sometimes makes gestures as if he is playing a solo on an invisible electric guitar. Klavier's speech makes gratuitous use of German words, even starting his pet names for various people with "Herr" (German for "Mr.") and "Fraulein" (German for "Ms.") (e.g. "Herr Forehead" for Justice), and beginning several sentences with "Achtung" (Attention).

Despite his perfectionist attitude toward music, Klavier considers his music career a hobby and his law career his real passion.

Name

 * "Klavier" in German means "piano", though he doesn't actually play that instrument in his band.


 * "Garyuu" may come from a combination of "self taught man" and "a dragon's fang". The first kanji in Kyouya (響) means, "to echo" or "to resound".


 * "Konrad" means "courageous advice" and "Kantilen" in German means "Cantilen", a vocal melody or instrumental passage in a smooth and lyrical style.


 * Klavier's necklace forms a "G" for "Garyuu" as well as the shape of his hair, upside down. This meant that the English name had to start with "G" to retain the double meaning of the necklace. The same symbol is found on the bottom of his shoes.

Animation
Klavier Gavin's signature "air guitar" animation (as it is often called), in which he gestures as if he is playing an invisible guitar, is one of the longest in the Ace Attorney series.

In popular culture



 * One of Klavier's catchphrases, "Achtung, baby!", is similar to the name of an album by U2.


 * Two of the phrases Klavier says on his first trial against Wright he makes references to two songs, in the phrases:"...He Would Knock, Knock, Knock on Heaven's Door...", and "...He Would Take The Stairway To Heaven...", referring to the death of Magnifi Gramarye.