'SAY GOODBYE TO LOVE' BEHIND THE SCENES KENNA 'SAY GOODBYE TO LOVE' ELLEN SHOW Post this video on your site (using the code below) PSP COMMERCIAL FREETIME HELL BENT LOOSE WIRES LIVE @ THE ROXY MySpace Presents: The Fit featuring Kenna
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.. There are people who need to define themselves because it gives them identity and then there are people, like Kenna, who allow themselves to be undefinable and lead others onto a journey that we could never have reached ourselves. Being that unclassifiable, in Kenna's case, can end up nabbing you stage time with Justin Tmberlake and Nelly Furtado, a gig opening Live Earth at Giants Stadium and probably a spot on more album-of-the-year lists than you’d ever imagined. The long and winding road from the release of his 2003 debut album New Sacred Cow to the late-2007 release of Make Sure They See My Face showed the Ethiopian-born, Virginia -raised artist the dark side of record industry politics after he was passed around from label to label before finally landing on the Neptunes’ Star Trak imprint (high school friend Chad Hugo co-produced both of Kenna’s albums). The critically acclaimed New Sacred Cow saw some mainstream love: “Freetime” nabbed a MTV VMA Breakthrough Video nomination, and Timberlake, Furtado, Mark Ronson, N.E.R.D and Depeche Mode's Dave Gahan added Kenna, who’d previously opened for No Doubt to their tours. Even pop-author, Malcolm Gladwell, famously devoted an entire chapter to the genre-defying artist in his 2005 best-seller BLINK, summarizing “Kenna’s Dilemma” and the irony behind why Kenna couldn’t maintain a major-label deal at the time: the guy’s basically too inspired to pin down and too multi-talented to tie up in a neat, happy little marketing package. The self-described chameleon elaborated on his inability to be easily pigeonholed when he recently told VIBE, “I was never a clique kid, I never fit into one crew in elementary (or) high school, I was never that way in college, I pretty much rolled with whoever I felt comfortable with in my life. I’m a foreign kid, an inner city kid, a suburban kid — I’ve done and been in all those worlds, so now who am I to you? Who am I to the world when I represent so many aspects of it?” But the multifaceted 30 year old, who climbed Mount Kilimanjaro (slacker!), used his enigmatic appeal to claim his place as the king of esoteric dance-pop with his next album, Make Sure They See My Face. His hard-hitting sophomore album is a funked-out musical stew that highlights his categorically encyclopedic knowledge of contemporary music and ability to create meaningful synth-funk tracks which, tinged with that interplanetary Neptunes touch, seem to come from another universe. Whether or not Make Sure They See My Face makes Kenna a household name, the man will still remain a genre-busting musical genius. Experience his Prince-meets-Talking Heads-meets-New Order-meets-LCD SoundSystem style in his “Say Goodbye to Love” video, and check out www.kennakenna.com or www.myspace.com/kenna MORE: The first rule of understanding Kenna is to really believe him when he says his name means "to get what you want." A couple years after completing his debut record--the interim hallmarked by his own fittingly monumental climb to Mount Kilimanjaro to "find "himself"--Kenna is here again to take back his name. Kenna Zemedkun (ZUH-MED-KIN), was born in Addis Ababa. His family migrated to Virginia Beach, Virginia, where he first fell deep in love with American music, specifically U2's Joshua Tree, an album that would forever shape his sonic aesthetic. For many years he struggled to find himself, working odd jobs and attending college. Until in his late teens he returned to his first love: music. With high school classmate "Chase" Chad Hugo--one half of production powerhouse The Neptunes--engineering and co writing the material, the demo got to Flawless Records where he was signed without so much as a face-to-face meeting. New Sacred Cow came out humbly in 2003 on Columbia Records to substantial critical acclaim, a loyal underground fan base, and millions of online downloads and file sharing. Two videos (of singles "Freetime" and "Hell Bent") enjoyed heavy rotation on MTV2, leading to two MTV video noms for Breakthrough Video. After an opening slot on Depeche Mode frontman Dave Gahan's solo tour, and several tour dates with No Doubt, Kenna found his identity caught somewhere nebulous, halfway between the weird-science underground and the gloss-and-finish mainstream. A few years ago, the entertainment industry, much less commercial radio, may well not have been ready for Kenna to bust out with an essentially New Wave record, particularly one that was embedded with influences so eclectic it spanned everything from synth pop to punk rock to hip hop to electronica. A point that was made most convincingly by author and marketing guru, Malcolm Gladwell, in his 2005 best-selling book Blink, where he devoted an entire chapter to this subject entitled "Kenna's Dilemma". Ask production impresario Pharrell Williams what his old friend and colleague Kenna evokes for him and you'll get "the world will be singing songs of honesty along with audiences in cellphone-lit stadiumsÉ" Indeed Make Sure They See My Face (FACE) is the long-awaited follow-up experiment, co produced by Hugo and this time featuring select tracks from the other Neptune, Williams. When East Village Radio VJ Mark Ronson played the first single "Out of Control" on his "Authentic Shit" show, the internet underground was set a-buzz; when it served as the soundtrack to the recent Sony PSP commercials his growing mainstream cred enjoyed a serious catapulting. Then there's the album itself--fresher than ever, cultivating a stream of truly future sonics with ample homage to past ripples in rock and soul, the Kenna sound feels grown into, comfortable, true. Less dark than the debut, Hugo explains the sound they came up with this time around as "artful, dynamic, otherworldly and catchy. Something that is needed right now. It's progressive music." FACE veers more on the up-tempo, with several dance tracks that showcase The Neptunes's street sleight-of-hand theatrics alongside Kenna's lothario-dark-rock wailing melodics. The dizzying "Daylight" is jump-started with an almost 70s prog rock pulse and the hypnotic "Phantom Always" even flirts with arena rock atmospherics, while "Better Wise Up" lays bare an intricate art rock heart. Best of all, the ballad "Baptized in Blacklight" is a pining lamentation that breaks down the entire album in its magic hour. Everything is faced, no questions are left unanswered, and nothing is holding him back this time around. The sophomore effort is Kenna's most celebratory confessional, irony-free, homage-less, simply the testament of a man who can't help but possess the essence of a new era and the sound of an irreplaceable place, all with lyrics that convey an almost proverbial timelessness. Ample doses of mystery keep the cult in a paradoxically satisfying crave-state; as Kenna himself only gives away so much when he says, "[FACE] is a story from start to finish. A search for identity. A willingness to go to extremes to find the truth and balance. Stretching. Attempting. Failing. Attempting again. Getting back up and hoping for the best. All the while, finding yourself growing and becoming more aware and comfortable with imperfection. That's [FACE], from 'Daylight' to 'Wide Awake.'" ..
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