Jamiroquai
Jamiroquai |
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Jamiroquai is a Grammy Award-winning English acid jazz/funk/soul band. Jamiroquai was initially the most prominent component in the early-1990s London-based acid jazz movement, alongside groups such as Incognito, the Brand New Heavies, Galliano, and Corduroy. Subsequent albums have explored other musical directions such as, but not limited to, pop, rock and electronica. Jamiroquai has sold well over one million records in the United States alone.[citation needed]
History
Formation
The band name is a blend of Jam session and "iroquai", based on the Iroquois, a Native American tribe.[1] The lineup of the band has changed several times, and the longest serving and now core members of the band are lead singer and songwriter Jason "Jay" Kay and drummer Derrick McKenzie (1994). Despite his self-professed attempts to treat Jamiroquai as a band, Kay has always been at the forefront of how the group is marketed, and has therefore always had the lion's share of media attention, to the point where he is viewed as almost a solo artist. He was the impetus behind the formation of Jamiroquai, deciding to form the band after an unsuccessful audition to become the singer of the Brand New Heavies.
Sony BMG
Jamiroquai's first single, "When You Gonna Learn", was released in 1992 on the Acid Jazz label. Following its success, Kay signed an eight-album record deal with Sony BMG Music Entertainment. The first Sony album, Emergency on Planet Earth was released in 1993. It was followed in 1994 by The Return of the Space Cowboy. The single "Space Cowboy" gained notice on the charts and in club rotation.
While Jamiroquai was growing in popularity in the UK and Western Europe, they remained relatively unknown to U.S and other international audiences. The band's international breakthrough came with the third album, Travelling Without Moving in 1996, which yielded two big hits, "Virtual Insanity" and "Cosmic Girl". The success of "Virtual Insanity" was due in part to its innovative video, which featured Kay's dance moves and some gravity-defying images. At the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards, the creative videoclip for "Virtual Insanity" won four awards, including Best Video, Best Special Effects, Best Cinematography, and Breakthrough Video.
In 2003 Jamiroquai compiled and mixed a DJ mix album for the Late Night Tales series for Azuli Records. The track selection shows some of the band's funk, soul and disco influences, including tracks from The Pointer Sisters, The Commodores, Johnny "Hammond" Smith and Marvin Gaye.
The acid jazz flavours and ethnic influences of the first three albums continued with the release of Synkronized in 1999. Jay Kay's interest in funk and disco music were shifting the band's directions towards such. By their fifth album, A Funk Odyssey (2001), they had evolved so drastically, that some critics and listeners would remark they lost the 'Jamiroquai sound'. With the departure of more and more original band members, including Wallis Buchanan and his didgeridoo, Jamiroquai had become a very different band than that of 1992. In spite of the changes, the fifth album's first single, "Little L", reached #1 in many charts worldwide.
Their sixth album, titled Dynamite was released on June 20, 2005. It reached #3 on the UK charts. The first single, "Feels Just Like It Should" was released early in June, the second, "Seven Days in Sunny June" released on August 15th, 2005, followed by the third, "(Don't) Give Hate A Chance" on November 7, 2005.
Jamiroquai released a greatest hits collection, High Times: Singles 1992-2006 in November 2006. The release of this album marked the end of Kay’s eight-album contract with Sony. The album reached the number 1 spot in the UK album chart after its first week of release. The album featured two new tracks, "Runaway" and "Radio". On September 18, 2006, "Runaway" was given its first play by UK radio stations. It was released as a single on October 30, 2006. Kay remarked that compilation was released purely out of contractual obligation: "2006, they're out of the fucking picture." [2]
Post-Sony
In October 2006, Jamiroquai recorded a live session for Live from Abbey Road at Abbey Road Studios. Their performance was shown alongside those of Damien Rice and the Goo Goo Dolls on the UK's Channel 4 in January 2007. In May 2006 Jamiroquai performed during the Laureus Sports Awards in Barcelona;[3] the event was later televised by NBC in June.
In March 2006, Jamiroquai announced their switch to Columbia Records. Future releases will appear under the Columbia imprint.[4]
In March 2007, the Daily Mail stated that Jay Kay planned to retire so that he could raise a family. In an interview, the 37-year-old Kay said that the only thing that mattered now was "having kids and finding a good woman." [5] In response to the Daily Mirror article Jay Kay wrote a statement on the official Jamiroquai site:
As usual they got it wrong for a cheap headline! All I said was that we’re taking a bit of time out to get the studio refurbished and we’ll be back making music in a few months time. There’s no way I’m quitting the music business - now I am out of my long contract with SonyBMG we have so many options open to us we’re just going to take our time and get it right - it's just getting interesting!
Kay expressed dissatisfaction with his former record label Sony Music. In a November 2006 interview with the Sydney Morning Herald, he commented that "These days it's 18% music and it's bloody 82% marketing bullshit [...] Next time I do an album, I'm gonna put it up on the internet for five fucking dollars."
These comments, and other recent comments in an interview with The Sun ("There are other things I want to do with my life [...] I want peace and quiet and to meet a nice girl and have some little pitter-patterers and chill out."[7]) fueled rumours that the Dynamite tour of 2005/2006 would be cancelled.
After leaving Sony, the band began work on their seventh project, and several collaborations and side-projects. In a very short mid-2007 interview with Jamirotalk, drummer Derrick McKenzie expressed his satisfaction with leaving Sony as the beginning of a period in which the band will have more creative control over their own work, together with plenty of room for experimentation and lack of pressure from a record company.[8]
On October 16, 2007, the band Nude Continuum announced a collaboration with McKenzie. The collaboration has, according to the article, spawned a remix and several guest appearances of McKenzie on several Nude Continuum songs and vice versa.[9]
On 19 November 2007, the band's percussionist, Solá Akingbolá released an album called "Routes to Roots". The album is focused strongly on the Yoruba people's music. In an interview with David Rowe, owner of [Funkin.com], Akingbolá said[10]:
This album came out of the question - "Where are the Yoruba Drummers in the global fraternity of Drummers?" The cultural influence of the Yorubas in the diaspora runs very deep. The sound, the groove, the swing in my playing is rooted in the style of traditional Yoruba drummers I grew up listening to as a boy. My dream has always been to play alongside these amazing players. This album is a dream come true and an honour. The ground work led me to places in my cultural tradition that were full of surprises and inspired more questions than answers. Philosophical, Historical, Religious and Musical. I hope this album will seduce young drummers in Yorubaland and the diaspora to delve deeper into their pre-Islamic/Christian musical history. The music of the Yorubas is in the language, the language is inseparable from the drums. No other groove can reach my heart, hands and feet like this one. If I can transfer a fraction of that to the listeners, I'll be a happy man.
On January 11, 2008, Jason himself posted a news item in which he thanked everyone who wished him the best for his birthday, and announced that the writing process for the new album has just begun.[11] Only a day earlier, drummer Derrick McKenzie posted an article on his MySpace weblog that the recording process for the same record has also begun.[12]
On January 15, 2008, the band confirmed that the recording process has begun. According to the news item, eleven tracks have already been written for the new album, with more to come. As of now, none of the tracks' names are known. [13]
On February 13, 2008, the band announced from their website that it will perform at the World Stage of the Rock in Rio - Madrid festival, being held in Arganda del Rey, Madrid with others artists who have yet to be announced.[14]
On February 28, 2008, Jamiroquai performed at the Khodynka Arena in Moscow, Russia at the launch of the new Audi A4 car.
In pop culture
- Jamiroquai's hit single "Deeper Underground" - the band's only UK #1 single to date - appeared on the soundtrack of the 1998 movie Godzilla.
- The soundtrack for the 1998 film "Sliding Doors" features "Use the Force".
- "Canned Heat" (released 1999 in the U.S.) was featured in the films Center Stage (2000) and Napoleon Dynamite (2004), the latter for its famous dance scene. It was used as well in the Nintendo DS rhythm game Elite Beat Agents and Sony PlayStation 2 camera game EyeToy: Groove.
- "Cosmic Girl" and Canned Heat both appeared in the European release of Nintendo Gamecube game Donkey Konga.
- "Feels Just Like It Should" is included in the soundtrack for the game FIFA 06 and a Timo Maas Remix was featured in Need For Speed: Most Wanted.
- The song "Virtual Insanity" was featured in Konami's rhythm games Dance Dance Revolution Ultramix 3 for the Xbox and beatmania (North America) for the Playstation 2 as well as party game Karaoke Revolution 2 for the Playstation 2, also by Konami.
- Jamiroquai is mentioned in an Achewood comic strip on January 2nd, 2008.
- The song "Cosmic Girl" appears in the 1997 film, Love Jones.
- The soundtrack for the 2000 film "Center Stage" features "Canned Heat" and "Cosmic Girl".
- The soundtrack for the 2000 film "Titan A.E." features "Everybody's Going to the Moon".
- The game Tony Hawk's Underground referenced Jamiroquai three times and Eric Sparrow, the player's rival mentions Jay Kay as "Jay."
- The song "Travelling without Moving" appears in the Playstation game, Speed Freaks, during the intro.
- The song "Seven Days in Sunny June" was featured in the film "The Devil Wears Prada" (2006).
Discography
Year | Album | U.K. Pop Albums | U.S. Pop Albums | U.S. Electronic |
---|---|---|---|---|
1993 | Emergency on Planet Earth | 1 | - | - |
1994 | The Return of the Space Cowboy | 2 | - | - |
1996 | Travelling Without Moving | 2 | 24 | - |
1999 | Synkronized | 1 | 28 | - |
2001 | A Funk Odyssey | 1 | 44 | 1 |
2005 | Dynamite | 3 | 145 | 2 |
Members
Current Members
- Jason Kay - Vocals (1992 - present)
- Derrick McKenzie - Drums (1993 - present)
- Sola Akingbola - Percussion (1996 - present)
- Rob Harris - Guitar (2001 - present)
- Matt Johnson - Keyboards (2002 - present)
- Paul Turner - Bass (2004 - present)
- Lorraine McIntosh - Backing Vocals
- Hazel Fernandez - Backing Vocals
- Sam Smith - Backing Vocals
Former members
- Toby Smith - Keyboards (1992-2002)
- Wallis Buchanan - Didgeridoo (1992-2001)
- Gavin Dodds - Guitar (1993-1994)
- Simon Katz - Guitar (1995-2000)
- Stuart Zender - Bass (1993-1998)
- Nick Fyffe - Bass (1998-2003)
- Nick Van Gelder - Drums (1993)
- Darren Galea aka DJ D-Zire - Turntables (1993-2001)
- Adrian Revell - Flute, Saxophone
- Howard Anderson - Saxophone, Flutes, Shakuhachi, Didgeridoo
- Winston Rollins - Trombone
- John Thirkell - Trumpet (1993-1998)
- Simon Carter - Keyboards (1999-2002)
- Maurizio Ravalico - Percussion (1993)
- Dee Lewis - Backing Vocals
Guest appearances
- Andrew Levy - Bass (1992)
- Simon Bartholomew - Guitar (1992)
- Kofi Kari Kari - Percussion (1992)
- Vanessa Simon - Backing Vocals
- Martin Shaw - Trumpet
- Beverley Knight - Vocals (2001)
- Beverlei Brown - Backing Vocals (2006)
Samples
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See also
- List of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List of artists who reached number one on the U.S. Dance chart
- Buffalo Man, the name of the character featured on all but one of Jamiroquai's album covers.
References
- ^ Greg Prato. "Jamiroquai Biography on Yahoo! Music". Yahoo! Inc. Retrieved 2007-10-04.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "Mad hatter". The Sydney Morning Herald. 2005-11-25. Retrieved 2005-11-29.
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(help) - ^ Jamiroquai | News | Laureus Sports Awards performance photos - 22 May 2006, 23:28 (BST)
- ^ "Jamiroquai Switch to Columbia Records". Official Jamiroquai website. 2006-03-17. Retrieved 2006-08-31.
- ^ "Jamiroquai's Jay Kay calling it quits". MP3.com. 2006-03-17. Retrieved 2006-08-31.
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(help) - ^ "Jay Kay calls it a day - Oh no he doesn't!". Jamiroquai - The Funkin Site. 2007-02-28. Retrieved 2007-03-13.
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(help) - ^ "Jay Kay to hang up hat?". Jamiroquai - The Funkin Site. 2005-11-25. Retrieved 2005-11-29.
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(help) - ^ http://jamirotalk.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7129
- ^ http://www.nudecontinuum.com
- ^ http://www.funkin.com/news/?id=3688
- ^ http://www.jamiroquai.com/?content=1&articleid=141
- ^ http://www.funkin.com/news/?id=3704
- ^ http://www.jamiroquai.com/?content=1&articleid=143&comments=1#
- ^ http://www.jamiroquai.com/site/news/145/jamiroquai-to-play-rock-in-rio-madrid-in-july