From the Cocoa Event-Handling Guide - The Responder Chain:
The responder chain is a linked series of responder objects to which an event or action message is applied. When a given responder object doesn’t handle a particular message, the object passes the message to its successor in the chain (that is, its next responder).
When you press a key the window receives the keyDown event. Then it dispatches the event to the first responder, that usually is the control with a blue bezel around its border (try to click on the address field in Safari or Firefox, when it's blue-bezeled then it has first-responder status).
If the first responder does not eat the keypress (the Safari address field does eat it when it displays a character) then it passes it down the responder chain to the next responder in the view hierarchy, then to the window and to the window controller as you can see in the Guide. (Take care that the action responder is another story.)
So you have to implement the keyDown: on a view of your window or in the window itself, if it has no views that eat events. The simplest way to test is to override the keyDown: method of an empty window
To put your hands into the inner workings you can even try overriding the sendEvent: method of a window. sendEvent: dispatches the events to the views of the window, and from there you can for example log all the events managed by the window.