Control K profile picture

Control K

About Me

Control K Q & A

Q: Where does the name come from?

Ctrl + K is the Windows keyboard shortcut for 'Insert Hyperlink', which is where the name originally comes from. The Internet connects so much together and I wanted to represent this in my artist name. Control K Insert Hyperlink Connect to the rest of the world.

Q: How would you describe your music?

With difficulty! My own tastes are so diverse, and I genre hop so consistently nowadays that I don't really have one style. I hope that this is reflected in what I create. It's all produced electronically, so it'll probably fall somewhere within the electronica camp but I'll leave it up to someone else to put a label on it.

Q: What are your musical influences?

Pretty much most of what I hear around me, and a whole lot more besides. I think that music can come from the least likely of sources and that there's not such a gap between sound and music.

Of course, I'm also very much influenced by more conventional music too. I was obsessive about The Beatles as a teenager and am sure that they remain the root of most modern popular music. I dug their pioneering spirit and sought it out in others - Miles in jazz, Scratch in dub, Dylan in words, for example.

Q: Is there a Control K philosophy?

Musically, I suppose the principle of 'anything goes', really. I aim to make music that reflects my broad tastes. Also, I support the spirit of experimentalism trying new sounds, putting things together that don't typically go with each other, that kind of thing.

Beyond that, Control K is internationalist, humanist and pacifist at heart.

Q: How long have you been making music?

I've been involved with bands and making music on and off since about 16, so almost 20 years now. Still, paying your dues means producing a lot of crap too!

I began making electronic music around 2001.

Q: Do you play live?

As Control K, no. Not yet anyway. Having spent many years singing in bands - something I still occasionally do - I've had a fair bit of live experience, but it's quite different with electronic music. One man and his laptop doesn't make for much of a spectacle and I prefer to give an audience something to watch.

Control K live is certainly something I'd like to do in the future, but it'll take a while, as it did with rock n roll. Perhaps the odd DJ set would be a good toe in the water.

Q: If you could collaborate with anybody, whom would you choose?

I'd be keen to work with anybody whose music I like that wants to work with me, really. There are plenty of artists that I've discovered through Myspace that I'd love to do something with - collaborations, remixes, samples, etc.

A fantasy wish-list would probably have people like Tom Waits, Herbie Hancock or Alex Paterson on it. Perhaps remix a Bowie track or maybe something with Michael Franti.

Q: What does the Internet mean for music to you?

It's been such a revolution, much more than pirate radio, the cassette tape or punks D.I.Y. ethic, because it has enabled musicians to reach a literally global audience instantly. The thing is though, with so much content available over the Internet, even just with the case of music, how does a new or upcoming artist tap into that vast audience or even make themselves known to even small parts of it? Record companies still play a crucial role, but nowadays more for marketing, raising awareness or the means to exploit intellectual property.

Q: What are the best and worst aspects of living in Tokyo?

Tokyo is both a playground and a machine, each of which can be good and bad.

It is one of the most achingly fashionable spots in the Asian wing of the Global North, constantly reinventing itself, hyper modern and full of lights, buttons and gadgets that actually work. On top of all this, and remarkably so for a place of such immense size, it still feels incredibly safe.

On the other hand, the constant struggle to keep up with such a vast clockwork organism can be utterly exhausting. This is the rat race in extremis. But being an outsider in what is essentially still a pretty closed culture sometimes saves me from the wheel.

Q: Where do you see Control K in five years time and what are your plans for the future?

Right now, I'm just trying to put the name out, get people to hear the music and hopefully shift a few CDs off the back of it. There's a long backlog of ideas waiting their turn to come out, which is exciting and frustrating at the same time.

I'd like to try my hand at some new methods and tools, give working with other people a shot, and perhaps figure out how to take Control K into the live space. Movie soundtracks are an interesting idea too, maybe on the smaller independent flick side of things.

A record deal to do my marketing and distribution for me within the next five years or less would be very helpful.

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This is an edited extract. The full interview will appear on the Control K website when that is revamped during the summer.

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Control K's first album, 'The Front Line (Redux)', is available now from www.cafepress.com/controlk for $12.99

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 11/11/2005
Band Website: www.controlk.co.uk
Influences:
'Change' (Sounds Phenomenal Recordings, 2008)

808 State Aphex Twin Basement Jaxx Boards Of Canada LTJ Bukem The Chemical Brothers Daft Punk Death In Vegas Brian Eno Future Sound Of London David Holmes The KLF Kraftwerk Leftfield New Order The Orb Orbital Ryukyu Underground Roni Size Squarepusher Thievery Corporation Underworld Warp Records Beastie Boys Coldcut DJ Krush DJ Shadow Michael Franti & Spearhead Gang Starr Grandmaster Flash Jungle Brothers Jurassic 5 Kelis KRS One Massive Attack N*E*R*D Ninja Tunes The Pharcyde Portishead Public Enemy Gil Scott Heron The Streets Roots Manuva Timbaland A Tribe Called Quest Wu-Tang Clan Alpha & Omega Horace Andy Black Uhuru Blood & Fire Burning Spear Jimmy Cliff Dillinger Dr. Dick's Dub Shack King Tubby Linton Kwesi Johnson Mad Professor Bob Marley (& The Wailers) Junior Murvin Misty In Roots On-U Sound Augustus Pablo Lee 'Scratch' Perry Scientist Jah Shaka Toots & The Maytals Peter Tosh Trojan Records U-Roy Albert Ayler Louis Armstrong Ron Carter Don Cherry Ornette Coleman John Coltrane Miles Davis Duke Ellington Gil Evans Ella Fitzgerald Dizzy Gillespie Herbie Hancock Billie Holliday Wynton Marsalis Charles Mingus Thelonious Monk Charlie Parker Maceo Parker Sun Ra Max Roach Sonny Rollins Horace Silver Nina Simone...and more (coming soon)
Sounds Like:

Other sites associated with Control K:

Control K online store

Buy Control K CDs and merchandise (1 item currently available)
Unpredictable Porridge

Control K page at John Peel site

Shelf Life

My Japanese rock 'n' roll band

Peace Not War Japan

Japan-based music initiative for raising awareness about peace through the arts.

Sounds Phenomenal

Projects Events Musicians Support (includes Brighton Music Directory)

Postings From An Edge

My general blog

Dom Pates: Collected Writings

Articles, Short Stories, Interviews, Travel Writing, Reviews, Song Lyrics, Poetry...

Globalism Pictures

Global Image Gallery

Globalism Films

YouTube page



Control K features on TheDownloadGeneration's online channel.


Record Label: Sounds Phenomenal Recordings

My Blog

Control K featured on new online music video channel

Not long after I've finished and posted the first video for a Control K track, I'm delighted to report that the film has been chosen for inclusion on a new online music video channel.TheDownloadGenera...
Posted by on Thu, 04 Dec 2008 16:46:00 GMT

First Control K video now online (Change)

'Change' is the first video produced by Control K.'Change' is an overview of the key moments of the 2008 US election, culminating in Obama's victory address at Grant Park in Chicago. With bo...
Posted by on Sun, 30 Nov 2008 14:44:00 GMT

New song for 2008 - ’Change’

The only new Control K song for this year, 'Change', has just gone up on this profile.At the end of a momentous week on the world stage with the election of Barack Obama as US President, I've just put...
Posted by on Sun, 09 Nov 2008 16:24:00 GMT

’Eloise Twisk’ on Best Of MySpace podcast

I'm somewhat thrilled to announce that one of my tracks - 'Eloise Twisk' - has just been featured in the latest episode of the 'Best Of MySpace' podcast by Gill Mills.Apparently, Control K was nomina...
Posted by on Sun, 27 Jul 2008 15:34:00 GMT

Control K live at Shelf Life show

Two and a half years after the release of 'The Front Line (Redux)' album, I will finally be making my live electronic debut. The show is in support of Shelf Life , the band that I also front here in T...
Posted by on Wed, 16 Jan 2008 20:47:00 GMT

First Control K remix now released

The first new recording by Control K in two years is finally released, a remix of a Ryuichi Sakamoto song. Constructed over a six month period, 'Rokkasella (New Clear Mix)' is Control K's first ventur...
Posted by on Fri, 05 Oct 2007 11:01:00 GMT

Calling Tokyo-based gigging bands...

I've started writing a small column in the magazine Asia Player on Tokyo-based bands with MySpace pages. It doesn't matter whether the band is all Japanese, all gaijin or mixed but they should be gigg...
Posted by on Mon, 22 Jan 2007 05:28:00 GMT

Control K makes live debut with Tokyo DJ set...

I've pondered long and hard over how it was going to happen and what shape it was going to take, but it seems the decision has finally been made for me. I make my live debut as Control K with a D...
Posted by on Wed, 06 Sep 2006 09:28:00 GMT