NikitaDelMar Posted November 4, 2015 Posted November 4, 2015 (edited) Motivational description about MIKA I found on www.codaagency.com: about Mika (from the www.codaagency.com) Mika wants to set the bar for fantastical, 3 dimensional pop at his own height. Which is over 6' and statuesquely sculptured, since you ask. Welcome to his world: where some louche dilettante is throwing the greatest party in the universe and everyone is invited under his very own cherry moon. Mika is a songwriter, performer, producer and orchestrator and he's ready to unleash his debut album to the world. Both astonishingly musical and profoundly thoughtful, his tunes combine a heady euphoric rush with darker unexpected elements: daytime melodramas and night-time tales of love, loss, abandonment, hope and happiness. They all jostle together for attention, each one a pure pop golden nugget. Mika is a true young internationalist. Born in Beirut in the middle of the 80s, Mika's family soon found themselves having to move to Paris at the height of the war. When his father was subsequently taken hostage and held at the American embassy in Kuwait the family eventually settled in London. An inevitably turbulent experience for our young hero, he found himself bereft, lost in the chasm of a displaced upbringing. "It was the combination of moving as well as a horrible time I had at school in the first few years of living in London that lead me to forget how to read and write, and stop talking for a little while. I was pulled out of school for over six months; in order to sort my self out and find a new school. This is when music really became important. It got me back on my feet." He says now that by the age of 9 he knew that songwriting was his destiny. The electric performances that would win over some of the most hardened musical ears on the planet would come later. "After I started singing as a boy I started to get jobs everywhere. With the help of a terrifyingly tough Russian singing teacher, I got to be really good at professional gigs. I did everything from recordings with the Royal Opera House to the Orbit Chewing gum jingle. I'll never forget calling up British Airways to get a ticket, only to be placed in a line, listening to my own voice. That was a painful 8 minutes. I think the other main reason for getting so much work was that I was insanely cheap! My mother and I had no idea what I was supposed to get paid, and no one was in a hurry to educate us. Looking back on it, I think 45 quid for the Orbit chewing gum jingle, could have been a little too cheap." A self-taught piano virtuoso, gymnastic vocalist and born entertainer, Mika has music in his bones and at a prodigiously young age he was ready to show out and let go. Mika wasn't hunched over a radio under his bedclothes or seduced by the glitz of "Top of the Pop's" on the TV screen when he had his first performance awakenings. Instead, he was catapulted onto the stage of a Richard Strauss opera at 11. David Hockney was pottering around at rehearsals in the background, with models, designing the set (Mika still has the poster for the opera on his living room wall now, signed by Hockney). After near complete social exclusion at school - "I wish I could say I was a self-imposed loner but it was imposed on me" - this was a life he fell in love with, instantly: "It was a magical world that you could live in. A parallel universe for people that is illusory and enchanting and amazing." For the last 12 years of his life he has followed his maxim of a parallel universe to its natural conclusion and is now about to present his dynamic, idiosyncratic and unashamedly personal debut album. Brimming with brightly-hued melody, engaging hooks and a distinct lyrical style that speaks exactly and distinctly of its moment, he has finally been given an outlet for his unique vision. "I grew up listening to every thing from Joan Baez and Dylan, to Serge Gainsbourg and Flamenco. My musical tastes have become more eclectic as I've got older, but I'm always going back to great artist songwriters, people who make great records to their own vision. Prince, Harry Nillson, Elton John, even Michael Jackson. These people make amazing pop records that couldn't be performed by anybody else and that's what I always wanted to do." However, this musical vision might never have been realised. At 19 he left home to study for an academic degree at The London School of Economics. He quit on the afternoon on the first day and enrolled at The Royal College of Music two weeks later. An obsessive songwriter as a student, he would gate-crash parties and take to pianos to deliver 5 song sets, unannounced. One such occasion led to an early development deal, which he now sees as essential to his progress as an artist, but at the time saw as little short of spirit-crushing: "The bosses would try and twist me into a direction that went totally against my nature. Basically, they wanted me to follow whatever was popular at the time. And at the time what was popular was Craig David, so my depression was pretty deep." In the midsts of desperation, he wrote what will soon become his signature song, Grace Kelly, a spoof 4/4 opera set to a technicolour pop backdrop. "It was a ####-off song to people that I was working with at the time," he explains now. "It is where the line 'shall I bend over, shall I look older, just to be put on your shelf' comes from. I was so angry. That company had every resource except a soul." The infectious pomp and deliriously catchy chorus of Grace Kelly became a benchmark for where he wanted to go. "You can't be afraid to stand out. If no one was going to take a punt on it, then so be it. I would do it myself." Mika's is a voice that needs to be heard. Straddling belting refrains with his four-octave range, the boy found himself in Miami, demoing with anyone he could hook up with, in any studio time he could get, for free. He ended up befriending the Bee Gees engineer who was promptly sacked for moonlighting on company time. This is the Mika magic touch. Unafraid to stand alone - because this is what he is used to - his intimate first person and third person storytelling will connect with outsiders while subverting the mainstream from within. Whether eulogising the delights of the larger framed woman on the funk-rock strop of Big Girl (You Are Beautiful), condensing modern sexual peccadilloes on the burlesque Billy Brown, or celebrating the joys of being alive on Love Today, his is a place that pop music is not used to traveling to. "I wrote Love Today when i was happy, really happy. When you're on a buzz, you get cocky and you assume that everyone in the world at that time feels the way you do. I often feel like that. So I put it in a song. " Attention to detail. Personal care and attention. Making sure everything is sitting in the right place. These are the watchwords at Mika's heart. His artwork, developed with his older sister Yasmine, is the first key that unlocks his work - And the music will do all the talking. "I can't wait to get playing live. It's where it all comes together for me. You change things, because you have to, it's a different dynamic. I'm looking forward to that. I often get stressed when recording, as it's so full of decision making. You're constantly editing and deciding what should/can stay on the song for ever. I'm looking forward to undoing that in my live sets, and going places where i wouldn't necessarily go on the record!" READ IT WHEN "I" THINK YOU DID ENOUGH. Edited November 4, 2015 by NikitaDelMar 6
Kumazzz Posted November 4, 2015 Posted November 4, 2015 It's the original article URL. http://www.codaagency.com/artist/657-mika_754
Sabine64 Posted November 5, 2015 Posted November 5, 2015 (edited) this is part of his new bio on mikasounds.com Edited November 5, 2015 by Sabine64
mamiam Posted November 5, 2015 Posted November 5, 2015 Thanks for sharing NikitaDelMar, and more info about this art. Sabine Love,love me
Marilyn Mastin Posted November 5, 2015 Posted November 5, 2015 When I first started reading it, I got excited, thinking it was something new. But it's OLD! When people open threads for old articles, I think they should add the year, in this case 2007, so that people don't get excited, thinking it's new.
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