Biography

Since 1999, when he released his debut album as Joakim Lone Octet on Future Talk, Joakim has been a tough musician to pinpoint.

An ex piano student at the Conservatory, the man has taken great pains (and pride?) to avoid being pigeonholed and has grown on the outskirts of the French Touch and international Club scenes, becoming one of their major players but refusing to associate with any crew, style or genre.

Year after year, Joakim has gathered experiences that confirm his global vision of music and explored many facets of the musical spectrum: a musician with five albums under his belt; an outstanding DJ with a huge musical spectrum; a label founder and manager (Tigersushi and the recent vinyl-only Crowdspacer imprint); a self-taught graphic designer (he designs his record covers and most of the label’s artworks); a producer (for (!!! Chk Chk Chk,  Juveniles, Zombie Zombie, Poni Hoax…); a high-profile remixer (Antena, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Todd Terje etc…); a fashion enthusiast (he launched Tigersushi Furs with his cousin); a sound designer for catwalks (Chanel, Margiela, Balenciaga); and a step into contemporary art, working on Camille Henrot’s installations and videos (who won the Silver Lion at the 2013 Venice Biennale with the video Grosse Fatigue) or making his own sound installations (Gwangju Biennale in 2014 curated by Jessica Morgan).

US TOUR DATES

4/13 @ Barter Wynwood – Miami, FL

Joakim’s album ” THE STUDIO VENEZIA SESSIONS”

unnamedAs the title suggests, Joakim recorded this new album last year at Studio Venezia, the installation/sculptural ensemble/recording studio created by Xavier Veilhan for the prestigious 2017 Venice Art Biennale. Built inside the French Pavilion & inspired by the grotto-like Merzbau by Kurt Schwitters, Studio Venezia had dozens of artists create and record there over the 6 months of the Biennale (from Chassol to Brian Eno, from Joakim to Sebastien Tellier), invited by Xavier Veilhan himself with the help of co-curator Christian Marclay.

With an impressive collection of rare instruments from medieval horns to rare modular synths (Baschet crystals and percussions, a Buchla, a clavinet…), Studio Venezia was an amazing creative playground for the adventurous musician. Those instruments were captured by a team of sound engineers in the best possible way thanks to Nigel Godrich’s (Beck, Radiohead…) mobile studio loaded with state of the art vintage recording gear.

Before going there in May 2017, Joakim examined the instrument list and the specific context of a studio open to the public within an international contemporary art exhibition to anticipate his creative process. Instead of drafting compositions and demos ahead of the recording session, he decided to have an “in-situ” approach by creating a system involving the visitors of the Studio in the composition phase. Joakim asked random visitors of the pavilion to pick a word, a letter (between A and G), tap a tempo and sometimes choose the instruments that he would play for each piece. The word was translated into a chord using a transcription table Joakim invented. Hence the song titles made of the given word plus the name and origin of the contributor. The music was then mostly improvised, based on those chords, scales and tempi. The recordings were then taken back to New York where Joakim made some light editing and mixed the pieces.

In terms of influences, Joakim tried to channel the spirit of proto-ambient German heroes Cluster, 60s and 70s modal jazz, Japanese evocative minimalism and drone composers’ hypnotic transcendence.

One can hear the studio through these recordings, which was the point, to use the studio as an instrument, like the kraut rock pioneers did. You may hear the floor cracking, people talking or coughing, and the peculiar quality of music recorded in a large space with its acoustic properties, a rare occurrence when everyone is now working from small home studios and major large studios are closing down. This album also marks a return for Joakim to his musical education as a classically trained pianist as you can hear him improvise on the piano (“Arms”, “Air”, “Dream”), Fender Rhodes (“Trust”) or harpsichord (“Absense”).

Following the release of The Studio Venezia Sessions, Joakim will create a live performance based on his experience in Venice. The premiere of this new solo performance is commissioned by the Villa Medicis in Rome for their Villa Aperta festival early June. More shows will follow.

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