Johann Kloos - Songs and compositions, vocals, guitar, keyboards and clarinet.
PAST COLLABORATORS (not exhaustive):
Paul Bamlett - Bass, vocals and drums.
Duncan Laine - Electric Violin, Keyboards and Drums.
Graham Duthie - Bass.
Nick Patrick - Drums.
Richard Twinn - Guitar and Singing.
Nick Davis - Guitar.
Will Bowden- Bass.
Sunil - Bass.
Clive Richards - percussion.
Bill Fairhall - casio keyboard, glissando guitar.
Brian Field - synth, bass.
Toby Baron - Drums.
Jamie Odell - Keyboards.
Phil Rasmussen - Guitar and Vocals,
Dave Clarke - Bass
Mark Kelly - Guitar.
Paul Klabou - Bass.
Gina Charalambous - piano.
Rico - Saxophone.
Bruce Hunnisett - Saxophone.
Influences
Sparks,
Roxy Music,
Eno,
Erik Satie,
Syd Barrett,
Momus,
Doctors of Madness,
Velvet Underground,
Faust,
Radiophonic Workshop,
Raymond Scott,
Lenny Dee.
Sounds Like
THREE REVIEWS OF "MAGIC FROM THE ATTIC 1984-1991"
The Lofty garret room into which Johann Kloos retreats to is a place of the highest magic. Sumptuous and stark, uplifting and oppressive, the music this man creates is a web of contradictions in mood, genre, construction and influence. One moment he's crossing swords with Richard Thompson, the next he's exchanging dark, raw anecdotes with Tom Waits, and then staggering through insane corridors with an equally stoned Syd Barrett. In "Magic From The Attic", Johann straps the listener to the psychiatrist's couch while his musical personality breaks down into bewildering, diverse elements - schizophrenia on a grand scale. Compiled over a nine year period, it would be the most skilful cartographer who could plot Johann's convoluted rout through these masterpieces, the baffling logic robbing me of any steady ground to which I could pin the dreaded label. To do so would be like trying to edit the Beatles "White Album" down to a 60 second snatch of sound. The psychotic otherworldliness of "Get Yourself Together" would have raised a smile on Barrett's twisted face in recognition of a fellow traveller. An acoustic meander with "Sundays" lazily draws an eternity of sunshine with gentle ability shared with the likes of Gordon Giltrap. We scream air guitars in "Goth City", sip tea and tap our feet to "Masque Ball", blink the sleazy nightclub smoke from our eyes during the Twin Peaksesque "Lost In The Afternoon" - the variety is endless. "Never Change" is a delicately beautiful example of Johann's talent for the simple song, following the path that "Storm Petal Suzie" blazed for Erick. Then "Sometimes You Have To Let Go" seals Johann's fate. This gorgeous, effortless waltz of atmospheric pop, as uplifting and easy going classic I can listen to again and again. "Magic From The Attic" is an incredible testament to an incredible talent.
Putting your finger on where Johann Kloos is coming from is rather difficult to say at least, It doesn't help that the album is a 15 song collection covering a period of almost 10 years. Just as you are settled into some colourful, progressive new age sounds things go and switch to Psychedelic Syd Barrett. Some of the finest, mellow new age sounds we've had the pleasure of listening to sit next to songs that sound a little like George Fornby on Acid, next to a quirky Metal with tasty drum times, sleezy Nick Cave like nightclub blues with sinister keyboards humming in the background. Bits of mellow, adventurous prog rock all over the place.
Many moments will remind you of those liberally inclined 60's films that invariably have titles like Bill And Sue And Bob Too and feature long bike riding scenes. Historically blippy synths, that they simply don't make anymore give this a dated yet compulsive air. Johann Kloos sure has some odd things in his attic.
When I was a few years old I heard Manfred Mann's song Ha Ha Said the Clown and misheard the title! The strange instrumentation evoked a world of talking cars.
Even the Beatles in their early days sounded strange to my ears. I caught on to their surrealism very early.
Then, each new record would surprise you with a new sound that you never heard before. My quest has been to continue that search for new sounds. I am pushed by the aim to make records I heard in my dreams, waking up to find they did not exist. My job has been to attempt to make them.
I was born in Bishop's Stortford on the 6th November 1960. My interest in music began as soon as I heard it...at the age of TWO I hummed back a twenty minute classical piece after hearing it only ONCE, according to my mother Irmeli. When FIVE years old I wanted to play the school piano, and felt sure I could read notation in a child's songbook. I was not allowed to play..
At NINE YEARS OLD I made a tape loop to create a soundscape for a school dinosaur project!
I began making music from the age of 15 when I got my first cassette recorder as a birthday present. I had made a simple voltage controlled oscillator and started making electronic soundscapes, overlaying sounds by covering the cassette's erase head. I also took up guitar and clarinet. I took my tin whistle down to the M11 underpass to record the reverberations, and made a tape of me accompanied by the sound of cars. I became interested in the magical effects of random musical "accidents"..derived from my overdub experiments, not hearing the previously recorded sounds.
In 1976 I lugged my homemade synthesiser to school - it was very heavy. Together with friends Paul Bamlett and Hugh Howard I started a kind of "avant-garde" group. Paul played the piano and Hugh played woodwind. More people became involved, and it turned into a kind of cathartic, auto-destructive lunchtime event. I lost control over this and was eventually ousted from the "group" by some usurper for not being "collectivist" enough.
After dropping out of the Graphic Design course I attended at Stevenage College in 1980 I was reunited with Paul Bamlett and we recorded three songs I had composed whilst studying. Paul brought in his friend Duncan Laine who played electric violin. By then I was well into my Syd Barrett era, having heard the Piper at the Gates of Dawn album and his two solo records by this point. I called the band Mathilda Mother after the Pink Floyd song. The songs were a bit dark, even the jaunty reggae styling of "Tawdry Secrets" was betrayed by an unhappy domestic lyrical theme. "Crows" was a song about a nightmare, and it sounds rather Gothic, with Siouxsie and the Banshees' tom tom drumming from Paul. The last song "Dont Leave Me in Here" is a picture of loneliness too painful to listen to now. It was all quite miserable, but then I was too. We performed together on a few occasions at the Railway Hotel and the Triad Leisure Centre in Bishops Stortford. There were another two years of angular angst, doing things like performing Lady Lazarus by Sylvia Plath, until the word "pretentious" came up and the whole thing fizzled out.
I joined a couple of local Stortford bands, "THE DECIBELS" and "SOME PEOPLE ARE ASLEEP" as a bass player.
I wrote some new songs and recorded a demo tape at Cheops Studio in Cambridge, with Graham Duthie and Nick Patrick from the Decibels. Amongst these were "Mr Fowler" and "Storm Petal Susie." The former featured in SOUNDS psychedelic chart in the October 27 1984 issue, at number 2! It had interest from 4AD Records, Dan Treacy's Dreamworld Records and Bam Caruso. It was due to appear on a compilation by Dan Treacy, but this fell through. I released the song in 1991 under my own name on my cassette album "MAGIC FROM THE ATTIC." (Fragment Records) "Storm Petal Susie" was later performed by my next group ERICK (1986-1992), and appears on their album "Fuzzyfelt" released in 1990.
I formed a band called HA HA SAID THE CAR to perform these songs in 1985. We played three or four gigs with two different lineups featuring friends and local musos. Despite some interest, the band ended rather abruptly as the musicians departed, without much explanation, leaving me staring at an empty rehearsal room.
I joined Erick in 1987. I was one of the founding members of this group that formed to play a party, and went on to record three albums and nearly achieve major label success, only to break up in 1994 in frustration.
In 1991 I formed the Willy Brandt Cooperative, whilst I was studying Popular Music at Harlow College. This was a satisfying side project whilst being a member of Erick, allowing me to develop and perform my own music in a rather more relaxed environment, and in the company of some great musicians, these being keyboardist Jamie Odell, (Jimpster) drummer Toby Baron who now performs with Ray Davies, Toby's brother Shaun on bass and Ben Evans on guitar.
Since the breakup of Erick in 1993 I left Bishops Stortford to study Popular Music at the University of Salford. I formed a band called DOLLYROCKER (after the Syd Barrett song) with Mark Kelly, Gina Charalambous and Paul Klabou. Our final college gig at the Night and Day Cafe in Manchester was introduced by the then-unknown student comedian Peter Kay.
2003 Released "Down There From Up Here," a collection of tunes spanning 2000-2003 bookended by two tunes from 1990.
One of my compositions "SHIPS PASSING" was featured in a short experimental video "Perfect Spot," by JENNET THOMAS (2003)
Sziasztok, December 29-én, kedden este 21 órától élő, egyenes adásból Fonyó előszilveszteri koncertet hallhattok a Cragg! Rádió műsorán. Érdemes sietni, és időben kapcsolódni, mert a koncerthallgatás lehetőségét (vagyis a stream-et) 100 főre korlátozzuk majd! Pontos információkat aznap fogtok megtudni itt a szpészen: www.myspace.com/fonyo és a http://blog.myspace.com/fonyo oldalon ki lesz írva mindenféle link, és hogy mit, hogyan kell... Ezenkívül érdemes twitteren is követni, hiszen linkek és információk itt is kitudódnak! TWITTER elérhetőség: http://twitter.com/fonyo A koncerten új dalok is el fognak hangzani, melyek biztosan be fogják lopni magukat a szívetekbe! :)
Szóval, ne feledjétek! December 29-én, este, 21:00, Fonyó-ONLINE koncert a Cragg! Rádióban...! Számítsatok rá, hogy nagyon jó lesz, könnyed lesz, ütős lesz és miegymás...! :) Tehát infó később, tessék leskelődni! :)
Szép Karácsonyt Mindenkinek! ...:::szeFó cRew:::...
Also look at our calender for forthcoming gigs - we've got some pretty tasty ones coming up including
* The Futureheads * Gideon Conn * Manchester special featuring members of Primal Scream (technically not Manc in location but manc in mind), Audioweb, New Order and Northside
As you may or may not be aware SoundARC hold a charity gig every year at Club 85 in Hitchin in aid of the Garden House Hospice in Letchworth, and this year we are going to try something a little different from previous years.
This year we are going to take over the club and host 37 acts in one weekend putting full bands upstairs and acoustic acts downstairs in an event that we are calling ARCfest!
It all starts on Friday 4th December at 7pm and then continues on through Saturday 5th and Sunday 6th from 12pm-11pm
As well as raising money for the Garden House Hospice in Letchworth, ARCfest will showcase all the different genres of bands that we at SoundARC have come across over the last 4 and a half years. Over this weekend a lot of the acts that you will see don’t get a chance to play a great local venue like Club 85, So as well as hearing new music you will see all manors of genres and styles from acoustic - Metal - Indie - Rock - Punk - Electro - Ska - Funk - Hip Hop/Rap - Alternative - Rhythm & Blues - Reggae - Grunge and loads more that I cant remember!
As you may or may not be aware SoundARC hold a charity gig every year at Club 85 in Hitchin in aid of the Garden House Hospice in Letchworth, and this year we are going to try something a little different from previous years.
This year we are going to take over the club and host 37 acts in one weekend putting full bands upstairs and acoustic acts downstairs in an event that we are calling ARCfest!
It all starts on Friday 4th December at 7pm and then continues on through Saturday 5th and Sunday 6th from 12pm-11pm
As well as raising money for the Garden House Hospice in Letchworth, ARCfest will showcase all the different genres of bands that we at SoundARC have come across over the last 4 and a half years. Over this weekend a lot of the acts that you will see don’t get a chance to play a great local venue like Club 85, So as well as hearing new music you will see all manors of genres and styles from acoustic - Metal - Indie - Rock - Punk - Electro - Ska - Funk - Hip Hop/Rap - Alternative - Rhythm & Blues - Reggae - Grunge and loads more that I cant remember!
Hey Guys, Thanks so much for the comments and reviews, Seriously going to take it on board thanks so much means alot, Glad you like my music, Really like your stuff too.
Thankyou so much though for the comments, means alot! Thanks :D x
Hey, Thanks for accepting, Hope you're okay and having a mint day.
Check out my music and let me know what you think, Brand new song "Say My Name" up now, A very limited edition "Drummer's Heart" EP is also set to be released in the next few days and will be available to buy online for £4.
Please drop me a comment and let me know what you think of my music, Have a mintidoodle day.
Just stopping by to say hello and give you some news. The new album 'Coolgilly and the Freakshow' from Centascope is now available worldwide from CD Baby and directly from the merchandise page of the official website. You can also get the album from Apple iTunes, MSN Music, Rhapsody, Napster, Amazon and many more.