Shinjuku Zulu
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Shinjuku Zulu

Toronto, Ontario, Canada | INDIE

Toronto, Ontario, Canada | INDIE
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"FOUR STAR REVIEW: Globe"

Shinjuku ZULU/shinjuku ZULU
Neuphoria Recordings
By Robert Everett-Green

Rating: **** The land of pop electronica can be a brittle place, where all angles are right and air is not an essential element of life. The beat becomes the pulse of a deadened sensitivity.

Shinjuku ZULU, the extraordinary debut disc by Toronto sound and visual artist K.I.A. (Kirby Andersen), comes from a different place. The utopian precision is there, but so are the trade winds. They bring complicating voices from Africa and the Middle East.

The groove rules, but it's a constitutional monarchy. In That Groove, Larissa Gomes's vocal is instrumentalized, but its living traces remain, warming a plunging central riff that's always gathering and shedding different rhythmic counterpoints. In Segue, a chain of syncopated gasps and a soaring African chorus changes a brooding bass line into the root of something earthy, sunny and intimate.

Brando, a cover of Neil Young's Pocahontas, brings something else into the mix, the implication that every sequential element is, in some dimension, happening simultaneously. The opening blurts of sound, the rhythmic whispers, the expertly cramped Gomes vocal and the Indian chanting -- by the closing statement it's all one, contracting to an ideal moment and expanding without limit.

Middle Eastern traces appear in Dervish, in which one note from a short vocal fragment pierces the rubbery, viscous beat machinery like the utterance of a comic demigod, and Cyclamen, in which Gomes's vocal is shattered and reconstituted over a rollicking drum line.

The most symptomatic number is Funkriot, in which a hermetic dance track suddenly empties into a jumble of street sound, which is immediately absorbed into the revivified groove. It's like someone just threw open the dance club's fire-door, and let the fresh air in. (Web distribution at http://www.nu4ya.com.) - GLOBE & MAIL


"FOUR STAR REVIEW: Gazette"

SHINJUKU ZULU GOES WORLDWIDE
PRODUCER K.I.A. BLENDS REGGAE, HOUSE, AFRICAN CHANTS
TO MAKE COMPLEX DEBUT CD
Shinjuku Zulu/Shinjuku Zulu
Neuphoria

There's something to be said for ambition. Calgary-born, Toronto-dwelling electronic-music producer K.I.A. has ambition. He also has some sweet ideas. Living in Tokyo and L.A. and seeing other exotic parts of our planet have filled out his worldview and made this debut album a bold introduction.

Heavily soaked in the dancier side of electronica, the songs pound to the beats of deep house, breaks and drum-and-bass. Add some exotic vocals (courtesy of Toronto singer Larissa Gomes), reggae bass lines, African chants, percussion and a recurring pop aesthetic and you've got an album with many levels of potential, plus enough depth to warrant repeated listens.

K.I.A. stays heavily involved in the mix. Gomes's dreamy vocals rarely emerge unaltered by the producer's tweaking. And tracks rarely drone on with loop-fueled laziness. This is a complex record that reveals surprises each time it is played. That it is not easily digestible, which at first seems a drawback, proves to be it's merit. FOUR STARS. -T ' Cha Dunlevy - Montreal Gazette


"FOUR STAR REVIEW: Globe"

Shinjuku ZULU/shinjuku ZULU
Neuphoria Recordings
By Robert Everett-Green

Rating: **** The land of pop electronica can be a brittle place, where all angles are right and air is not an essential element of life. The beat becomes the pulse of a deadened sensitivity.

Shinjuku ZULU, the extraordinary debut disc by Toronto sound and visual artist K.I.A. (Kirby Andersen), comes from a different place. The utopian precision is there, but so are the trade winds. They bring complicating voices from Africa and the Middle East.

The groove rules, but it's a constitutional monarchy. In That Groove, Larissa Gomes's vocal is instrumentalized, but its living traces remain, warming a plunging central riff that's always gathering and shedding different rhythmic counterpoints. In Segue, a chain of syncopated gasps and a soaring African chorus changes a brooding bass line into the root of something earthy, sunny and intimate.

Brando, a cover of Neil Young's Pocahontas, brings something else into the mix, the implication that every sequential element is, in some dimension, happening simultaneously. The opening blurts of sound, the rhythmic whispers, the expertly cramped Gomes vocal and the Indian chanting -- by the closing statement it's all one, contracting to an ideal moment and expanding without limit.

Middle Eastern traces appear in Dervish, in which one note from a short vocal fragment pierces the rubbery, viscous beat machinery like the utterance of a comic demigod, and Cyclamen, in which Gomes's vocal is shattered and reconstituted over a rollicking drum line.

The most symptomatic number is Funkriot, in which a hermetic dance track suddenly empties into a jumble of street sound, which is immediately absorbed into the revivified groove. It's like someone just threw open the dance club's fire-door, and let the fresh air in. (Web distribution at http://www.nu4ya.com.) - GLOBE & MAIL


"FOUR STAR REVIEW: Gazette"

SHINJUKU ZULU GOES WORLDWIDE
PRODUCER K.I.A. BLENDS REGGAE, HOUSE, AFRICAN CHANTS
TO MAKE COMPLEX DEBUT CD
Shinjuku Zulu/Shinjuku Zulu
Neuphoria

There's something to be said for ambition. Calgary-born, Toronto-dwelling electronic-music producer K.I.A. has ambition. He also has some sweet ideas. Living in Tokyo and L.A. and seeing other exotic parts of our planet have filled out his worldview and made this debut album a bold introduction.

Heavily soaked in the dancier side of electronica, the songs pound to the beats of deep house, breaks and drum-and-bass. Add some exotic vocals (courtesy of Toronto singer Larissa Gomes), reggae bass lines, African chants, percussion and a recurring pop aesthetic and you've got an album with many levels of potential, plus enough depth to warrant repeated listens.

K.I.A. stays heavily involved in the mix. Gomes's dreamy vocals rarely emerge unaltered by the producer's tweaking. And tracks rarely drone on with loop-fueled laziness. This is a complex record that reveals surprises each time it is played. That it is not easily digestible, which at first seems a drawback, proves to be it's merit. FOUR STARS. -T ' Cha Dunlevy - Montreal Gazette


"UNIQUE MUSIC OF K.I.A."

CALGARY HERALD

SOUND AS TEXTILE
WEAVING, LAYERING CREATE UNIQUE MUSIC OF K.I.A.
-Nick Lewis

As music critics we are inundated on a weekly basis with towering piles of albums that eventually reveal, after hours of filtering, maybe one disc we'll want to come back to on our own time. Of course it's rare when it's from a Canadian and even more so when it's from a Calgarian. But Shinjuku Zulu, a.k.a. K.I.A, a.k.a. Kirby Andersen is slowly beating the living daylights out of anything else that's come our way this young year. His eponymous debut, released on his label Neuphoria, is an eclectic exploration in electronica, if that word isn't passe yet. To describe it would be to say it sounds like Kevin Yost spinning Everything But The Girl records with Mad Professor remixes, although its worldbeat flavour has led some reviewers to simply call it eclectronica.

"I certainly like the references," the 33-year-old Andersen laughs from his office in Toronto. "I think it's somewhere between Philip Glass and Grandmaster Flash, because there's a hip-hop influence, a minimalist composer influence, a reggae dub influence, a dance influence and a worldbeat influence."

Although independently released, the disc has already started making some waves. The Globe and Mail listed it as one of its top ten records of 2000, and other publications that didn't filter it out have given it four star ratings. All that endorsement is incredible considering Andersen has no formal music training. Having graduated from the University of Calgary with a degree in English literature in 1988, he felt the overwhelming need to travel. In Tokyo, he was fascinated by the juxtaposition of 22nd century structures alongside 400-year-old temples, and he wanted to replicate the flood of neon and steel onto canvas. Again, with no formal training, he became a visual artist, cutting and pasting strips of paper in multi-layered collages, parlaying that into jobs in Los Angles and then Toronto.

"Because I'm a visual artist I've always felt that everything I do should be visual and aural as well, so when I create visual pieces, there's always a musical theme," he says. "The paintings are designed so they can be remixed and rearranged, the same way a song can. So I always knew I wanted to make music, but because of the way my brain works, in that cut-and-paste compositional sense, I couldn't do it quite the way I wanted until a few years ago because of the technology. The computer is now my violin."

His cut-and-paste method of layering sounds and samples atop one another has led to some fairly interesting creations. The self-titled opening track could be called drum 'n' bass, but there are no drums or bass to speak of. Instead it's an aural collage of 20 different sampled voices along the lines of a Rahzel wordplay, laid down to a backing beat of more voice snippets that resemble a rollicking bass line of low beats and high cymbals.

"Yeah, people ask me to classify that track and the best description I can give them is a capella jungle," Andersen says. "All those instruments are just percussive voices, even the ones you think are instruments." Some of the tracks, like the Moroccan roll Cyclamen evolved purely by him messing around on his computer.

"My vocalist, Larissa Gomes, was just doing some voice stretching exercises before singing," he says. "I took a sample of that, stretched it, flipped it, edited it to itself, stretched it some more, and then chopped it up into many portions. It was a throwaway bit that I eventually made into a Middle Eastern chant."

While that may sound easy enough to create on your personal i-Mac, it took Andersen close to three years to fully produce this album. "Everyone thinks a computer does all the work, and all I do is push a button," he says. "Electronic music is both the easiest and hardest music to make, because it's easy to make it, but hard to make it sound good. These days anyone can throw a bunch of beats together, make a booty music video with a lot of chicks in thongs, and sell millions."

Andersen believes he will make it in todays manufactured musical climate despite a lack of marketing dollars. After all, he reminds me, I was the one that called him. So what's he going to do when people catch on to his sound and the money starts rolling in? "What do you think?" he laughs. "I'll make a booty video." - The HERALD


"UNIQUE MUSIC OF K.I.A."

CALGARY HERALD

SOUND AS TEXTILE
WEAVING, LAYERING CREATE UNIQUE MUSIC OF K.I.A.
-Nick Lewis

As music critics we are inundated on a weekly basis with towering piles of albums that eventually reveal, after hours of filtering, maybe one disc we'll want to come back to on our own time. Of course it's rare when it's from a Canadian and even more so when it's from a Calgarian. But Shinjuku Zulu, a.k.a. K.I.A, a.k.a. Kirby Andersen is slowly beating the living daylights out of anything else that's come our way this young year. His eponymous debut, released on his label Neuphoria, is an eclectic exploration in electronica, if that word isn't passe yet. To describe it would be to say it sounds like Kevin Yost spinning Everything But The Girl records with Mad Professor remixes, although its worldbeat flavour has led some reviewers to simply call it eclectronica.

"I certainly like the references," the 33-year-old Andersen laughs from his office in Toronto. "I think it's somewhere between Philip Glass and Grandmaster Flash, because there's a hip-hop influence, a minimalist composer influence, a reggae dub influence, a dance influence and a worldbeat influence."

Although independently released, the disc has already started making some waves. The Globe and Mail listed it as one of its top ten records of 2000, and other publications that didn't filter it out have given it four star ratings. All that endorsement is incredible considering Andersen has no formal music training. Having graduated from the University of Calgary with a degree in English literature in 1988, he felt the overwhelming need to travel. In Tokyo, he was fascinated by the juxtaposition of 22nd century structures alongside 400-year-old temples, and he wanted to replicate the flood of neon and steel onto canvas. Again, with no formal training, he became a visual artist, cutting and pasting strips of paper in multi-layered collages, parlaying that into jobs in Los Angles and then Toronto.

"Because I'm a visual artist I've always felt that everything I do should be visual and aural as well, so when I create visual pieces, there's always a musical theme," he says. "The paintings are designed so they can be remixed and rearranged, the same way a song can. So I always knew I wanted to make music, but because of the way my brain works, in that cut-and-paste compositional sense, I couldn't do it quite the way I wanted until a few years ago because of the technology. The computer is now my violin."

His cut-and-paste method of layering sounds and samples atop one another has led to some fairly interesting creations. The self-titled opening track could be called drum 'n' bass, but there are no drums or bass to speak of. Instead it's an aural collage of 20 different sampled voices along the lines of a Rahzel wordplay, laid down to a backing beat of more voice snippets that resemble a rollicking bass line of low beats and high cymbals.

"Yeah, people ask me to classify that track and the best description I can give them is a capella jungle," Andersen says. "All those instruments are just percussive voices, even the ones you think are instruments." Some of the tracks, like the Moroccan roll Cyclamen evolved purely by him messing around on his computer.

"My vocalist, Larissa Gomes, was just doing some voice stretching exercises before singing," he says. "I took a sample of that, stretched it, flipped it, edited it to itself, stretched it some more, and then chopped it up into many portions. It was a throwaway bit that I eventually made into a Middle Eastern chant."

While that may sound easy enough to create on your personal i-Mac, it took Andersen close to three years to fully produce this album. "Everyone thinks a computer does all the work, and all I do is push a button," he says. "Electronic music is both the easiest and hardest music to make, because it's easy to make it, but hard to make it sound good. These days anyone can throw a bunch of beats together, make a booty music video with a lot of chicks in thongs, and sell millions."

Andersen believes he will make it in todays manufactured musical climate despite a lack of marketing dollars. After all, he reminds me, I was the one that called him. So what's he going to do when people catch on to his sound and the money starts rolling in? "What do you think?" he laughs. "I'll make a booty video." - The HERALD


"Remix Music, Why Not Art?"

K.I.A. is about art-making, music-making and idea-spinning, and those points where the all three inclinations intersect.

Next Wednesday, for instance, K.I.A. plans to re-mix/re-assemble six different re-mixable paintings at Gallery 401 into one single large work. Each of his paintings is made up of a series of identically sized small lightweight and interchangeable aluminium rectangles. In the re-mix, bits from one work can fit another.

Complication is built into K.I.A.'s multi-task art life. Wednesday's will serve to launch "...adieu shinjuku zulu..." a CD that K.I.A. wrote, arranged and produced, bringing in a posse of friends to meet special musical needs, such as singing.

Not one to leave any loose ends anywhere, the new CD refers back to K.I.A's debut CD, Shinjuku Zulu - Shinjuku is a section of Tokyo - released in 2000 to a number of rave reviews.

In fact, a recent quick visit to his lower Bathurst St. headquarters, which doubles as living quarters for the artist/musician and designer wife Zanesha Gowrali, gave me a better idea of the burgeoning K.I.A. idea-factory.

Images, symbols and glyphs of one sort or another were everywhere. Music symbols are the core design element for PolyVictorian , another re-mixable painting. K.I.A. is big on words and word games, like calling one group of his singers, "The Arctic Zulu Ensemble." When he was still just plain Kirby, he finished three years of English studies at the University of Calgary before heading to Tokyo in 1987 where he taught English to support his growing self-taught art habit.

Lacking any formal art or musical training seems to have been an advantage. "In the pre-computer days of '87, '88, I was already thinking in this cut-and-paste way," he told me. "I had so many ideas I just had to get them out there somehow."

"I just had to wait for the means to come along so I could do it," he said. - TORONTO STAR


"Top Ten of the Year"

Here, in almost no particular order, are a few of the albums and events that enlarged my life in 2000: Radiohead, Kid A...Genghis Blues, Paul Pena...Shinjuku ZULU, Shinjuku ZULU. (Neuphoria): The groove rules on this debut album, but it's a constitutional monarchy conceived on a global scale. These smart light-filled tracks absorb voices from Africa and the Middle East, as well as from K.I.A.'s Toronto, into one of the year's wittiest, most organic dance albums...Marshall Mathers, Eminem... - Globe


"Remix Music, Why Not Art?"

K.I.A. is about art-making, music-making and idea-spinning, and those points where the all three inclinations intersect.

Next Wednesday, for instance, K.I.A. plans to re-mix/re-assemble six different re-mixable paintings at Gallery 401 into one single large work. Each of his paintings is made up of a series of identically sized small lightweight and interchangeable aluminium rectangles. In the re-mix, bits from one work can fit another.

Complication is built into K.I.A.'s multi-task art life. Wednesday's will serve to launch "...adieu shinjuku zulu..." a CD that K.I.A. wrote, arranged and produced, bringing in a posse of friends to meet special musical needs, such as singing.

Not one to leave any loose ends anywhere, the new CD refers back to K.I.A's debut CD, Shinjuku Zulu - Shinjuku is a section of Tokyo - released in 2000 to a number of rave reviews.

In fact, a recent quick visit to his lower Bathurst St. headquarters, which doubles as living quarters for the artist/musician and designer wife Zanesha Gowrali, gave me a better idea of the burgeoning K.I.A. idea-factory.

Images, symbols and glyphs of one sort or another were everywhere. Music symbols are the core design element for PolyVictorian , another re-mixable painting. K.I.A. is big on words and word games, like calling one group of his singers, "The Arctic Zulu Ensemble." When he was still just plain Kirby, he finished three years of English studies at the University of Calgary before heading to Tokyo in 1987 where he taught English to support his growing self-taught art habit.

Lacking any formal art or musical training seems to have been an advantage. "In the pre-computer days of '87, '88, I was already thinking in this cut-and-paste way," he told me. "I had so many ideas I just had to get them out there somehow."

"I just had to wait for the means to come along so I could do it," he said. - TORONTO STAR


Discography

GET: All Shinjuku Zulu & K.I.A. cds/mp3s on the web (copy/paste links below into your browser):

iTunes, Shinjuku Zulu: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewArtist?id=7897624
iTunes, K.I.A.: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewArtist?id=5126711

iTunes K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu:
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?i=279563989&id=279563892&s=143441

Any-player mp3: http://cdbaby.com/all/neuphoria

RELEASES:
K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu:
"F-1 Papillons -Best Of K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu" (15 songs) feat. "Make Me Shake","Baby U Got"
"DXLR8 - Downtempo 'Best Of' K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu" (2008- 13 tracks) feat. "Allelujah", Mrs. Major Tom"

as Shinjuku Zulu:
"Kiss the Honey, Honey" (2007-7 tracks) feat. SXYLV
"Various Chimeras" (2006-19 tracks) feat. "Shanghai Masai", "Da Riddim Griffin"
"Various Chimeras Instrumentals" (2006-12 tracks) feat. "Be My Woman, Be My Man" Extended Inst. Edit
"Shinjuku Zulu" (2001-14 tracks) feat. "That Groove"
as K.I.A.:
"Sonorous Susurrus" (CDx2- 22 tracks) (2004) feat. "Nevermine"
"Adieu, Shinjuku Zulu" (2003-15 tracks) feat. "Mrs. Major Tom"

(feat. these additional vocalists: Courtney Farquhar, Eugene Spanier, artist Janet Cardiff, Richard Williams, Sarah Daye, the Arctic Zulu ensemble)

Photos

Bio


ALL K.I.A. / SHINJUKU CDs ON iTUNES &THE WEB->

iTUNES: search "shinjuku zulu" and/or "K.I.A."
MP3s -any player: AMAZON.COM (search MP3 Downloads: Shinjuku Zulu)
---------------------------------------------
NEW RELEASES:
-"F-1 Papillons - Best of K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu" -15 songs

Shinjuku Zulu and K.I.A.s releases have been described as Sheer brilliance (Globe & Mail), Four Stars (the Gazette) High-tech boom cut with voodoo (The Star) Urban dance at its best (Exclaim!).

Featured songs on "F-1 Papillons": Make Me Shake (We Pull and We Push Push) (as heard on Degrassi), Hey La (Paris Hiltons BFF), That Groove (Americas Next Top Model), Large Slow River (feat. a sound-installation by Venice Biennale award-winning artist Janet Cardiff).

KIRBY IAN ANDERSEN performs as Shinjuku Zulu as well as K.I.A. He writes and produces all the songs, bringing in different singers and rappers when required. He has lived in Tokyo, L.A., and Toronto. Tracks of his have been used in Crash with Dennis Hopper, "Resurrecting the Champ" with Samuel Jackson, "Dirt" with Courteney Cox, etc. SHANKHINI (Rapper on "Make Me Shake", and singer/rapper on "Baby U Got"), has been featured on Nelly Furtado's "Powerless"and was a winner of Much Music Networks internationally broadcast rap contest. LARISSA GOMES sings on Make Me Shake, Feel It, and other tracks. She is also an actress, having performed on CSI, in SAW VI, etc. CARYN GREEN sings on Kiss the Honey, and Be My DJ, and has appeared in various Hollywood productions, including the Emmy-nominated series Revelations

"F-1 Papillons -Best Of K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu" available worldwide at iTunes, Amazon, etc.
==Track listing==
01 "Make Me Shake (Gimme Some Crush Crush) feat. Larissa Gomes, Shankhini
02 "Baby U Got" feat. Shankhini, by Shinjuku Zulu & Shankhini
03 "Feel It" feat. Larissa Gomes
04 "Kiss the Honey, Honey" feat. Caryn Green
05 "Dirty Liar" feat. MC General
06 "Almighty Beat" feat. Shawn Skeir
07 "We Do Supersonic" feat. Prince I
08 "SXYLV" feat. Ms. Mac
09 "Rashomon" feat. Bit Playaz
10 "That Groove" feat. Larissa Gomes
11 "Be My DJ" feat. Caryn Green
12 "Hey La" feat. Larissa Gomes
13 "Large Slow River" feat. Janet Cardiff
14 "Nevermine (Mrs Major Tom Remix" feat. Larissa Gomes
15 "Sensation" feat. Courtney Farquhar
-"DXLR8 - Downtempo 'Best Of' K.I.A. & Shinjuku Zulu" feat. "Broken" (dubstep & soul)...
13-track digital chillout compilation...
TRACKLISTING:
01 "Scarborough Fair - A True Dub of Mine" (21st century dubbed up version of the song)
02 "Mrs. Major Tom" (continuing the story of Major Tom, now from the wife's p.o.v.)
03 "Allelujah" (17th century dancehall-reggae stylee; also used in the Courteney Cox t.v. series 'Dirt', in, ahem, a celebrity limo-sex scene)
04 "Rainbowbeau" (ambient pop w/haunting vox)
05 "Yedayed" (chillout/world)
06 "Broken" (new track; dubstep & soul)
07 "Scatter" (jazz scatting & breaks & fx)
08 "One Come We" (electonicameraderie)
09 "Dubmarine" (chillout, featuring two reggae haikus)
10 "Sweetness Likes the Reverb" (acapellatronica)
11 "Rise Up" (like Sigur Ros gone dub, feat a St. Michael's choirboy on vocals)
12 "Coal Coal Black" (1920s blues and dub)
13 "Uneunoia" (instrumental/ambient)

Tracks taken from the CDs "Various Chimeras" (SZ), "Shinjuku Zulu" (SZ), "Sonorous Susurrus" (K.I.A.), "Adieu Shinjuku Zulu" (K.I.A.)

---------------------------------------------
BIO:
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K.I.A., who currently resides in Toronto (having lived also in L.A. and Tokyo,) is the producer/writer of all the songs and lyrics. "DXLR8" is his sixth release (see discography and press quotes below.) He is also a well-reviewed visual artist, and makes large remixable paintings, sculptures, and installations (seen in the background of the publicity shots.) His artwork resides in corporate and private collections worldwide. (see more on the art here: http://www.nu4ya.com )


Band Members