MOKB Present & WTTS Indy Underground Present
Tue
Sep
25
Michael Kiwanuka
Bahamas, Yuna
Deluxe at Old National Centre
502 N. New Jersey St.
Indianapolis, IN, 46204
Doors 7:00PM / Show 8:00PM
This event is all ages
With Michael Kiwanuka, it's all about the voice. A voice that he describes as "hitting straight through to the core" with direct, emotional songs about love, yearning, comfort and belonging. It's a voice that built him a following via MySpace and small London gigs, and led Paul Butler from The Bees to invite him to the band's Isle of Wight studio to lay down these introductory tracks from what promises to be a major new British singer/songwriter. Which makes it all the more strange, really, that what Michael originally set out to be was a session guitarist who maybe wrote the odd song for other people.
Growing up in North London, he struggled at times to see where he fitted in. An avid England and Spurs fan, he found it hard to imagine a day when a name like Kiwanuka could sit comfortably on the back of a football shirt here. Nonetheless, when his parents took him and his brother back to Uganda to visit family, he and his brother were immediately recognised as British tourists. Like most of his schoolmates, he liked bands like Nirvana, Radiohead, Offspring and Blur, but it was only when he discovered that Jimi Hendrix was black that he understood he had a place playing rock guitar.
In his teens, two other icons helped him find his voice. A friend gave him a Bob Dylan box set,
and Michael was bowled over by the power of a well-crafted song, delivered with just urgent
vocals and an acoustic guitar. Later, he was playing the free CD that came with a music
magazine and heard an out-take of •Sitting on the Dock of the Bay• in which Otis Redding was
talking to the studio engineer. It made the soul icon seem more human, more accessible, and
though there were later to be other influences from Bill Withers and Terry Callier to John
Martyn and Laura Marling, it was Dylan and Redding who laid the foundations for Michael•s
own rootsy, folk-inflected modern soul.
He played in rock bands at school, and when he was 16 went east to Hackney in search of
other musicians to work with. He began hanging out with Tiny Tempah collaborator Labrinth
at his studio, played contemporary R&B, soul and jazz-funk at small jam sessions, and did
some session guitar for the likes of Tottenham rapper Chipmunk. "It was fun and I learned
loads, but I still felt like I didn•t quite fit in. I couldn•t express the side of me that had played in
rock bands, or listened to Dylan or Nirvana."
He began writing his own songs quietly at home, just for fun. They weren•t meant for other
people to hear – at least not at first. "No one would give me a gig playing the kind of music I
loved, so I had to write my own. It was more to keep my passion in music alive, just
something to do to keep my soul warm, you know. It didn•t fit into what was in the charts at
the time!"
Eventually, he recorded demos of a few songs, hoping to give them to others to perform. But
he was surprised to find that people loved his voice, and began encouraging him to play small
shows. And finally, he found his place in the world. "I love singing live, the feeling when you
really connect with an audience, when suddenly there•s a hush and you can feel it in the air. It
doesn•t happen all the time, but when it does, it•s really special."
The debut EP and its follow up, •I•m Getting Ready•
was produced by Paul Butler of The Bees,
in the band•s Isle of Wight studio. "I•d just been playing my songs with an acoustic guitar, and
that will always be the core, the thing I come back to. But Paul also encouraged me to mix in
the kind of music I was playing when I was hanging out in Hackney, so I got to play a bit more
electric, and a bit of bass, and it turned out to be quite a soulful record. It•s got folk things
there but also influences like Shuggie Otis and Curtis Mayfield. I really enjoyed making it."
Bahamas is Afie Jurvanen, and for the last many years he's been playing other people's music-- PasoMino, Great Lake Swimmers, The Stills, Howie Beck, Amy Millan, Jason Collett, Hayden and zeus. He's spent the last few years playing piano and guitar with Feist. He walks with a strange and haunted gait, due to a horrible knee injury suffered while on tour, and it's rumored that this might be what led to the appalling "shorts on stage" incident. No photo's of the crime have surfaced and the indie rock police are asking anyone with information to come forward.
A Bahamas live show is likely to be a solo affair, though lately, a host of Toronto time keepers have been sitting behind the drum kit to accompany the Finnish-Canadian through a set of his so called "love songs."
"Pink Strat," the title of Afie's debut record, and is most likely an homage to the very old, and very wimpy sounding Fender Stratocaster (www.fender.com) that he's been known to play.
Hi my names Yuna Zarai, Malaysian singer-songwriter. I was born in Kedah, and I grew up in Subang Jaya, Kangar, Kedah, Penang, Perak. I love my family and my friends. I am a girl who loves everything and anything about life. History. Art. Music. Fashion. Kinda shy. I'm not a big talker. I like to make stuff. A lot of people have mixed feelings about me and what I do but it's okay. I just focus on spreading positive energy and bringing joy to people's lives. If you are about that too, we should be friends.
$15.00-$18.00
All tickets via LiveNation.com, Ticketmaster Outlets, Old National Centre Box Office
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Deluxe at Old National Centre
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Michael Kiwanuka with Bahamas, Yuna
Tuesday, September 25 · Doors 7:00PM / Show 8:00PM at Deluxe at Old National Centre
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