Kim Jakobsen To Archives | Wonderland https://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/tag/kim-jakobsen-to/ Wonderland is an international, independently published magazine offering a unique perspective on the best new and established talent across all popular culture: fashion, film, music and art. Wed, 17 Apr 2013 19:34:40 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 MIGUEL: Dream Lover /2012/11/22/miguel-dream-lover-interview-kaleidoscope-album/ Thu, 22 Nov 2012 17:04:06 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/?p=12352 Haunting, sparse and soulful, the sounds of Californian crooner Miguel are giving contemporary R&B the kick in the backside it’s been waiting for. Read about the making of his new record Kaleidoscope Dream in our magazine feature. When Miguel opened for Usher at his recent London show, it was by no means incidental. The R&B […]

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Haunting, sparse and soulful, the sounds of Californian crooner Miguel are giving contemporary R&B the kick in the backside it’s been waiting for. Read about the making of his new record Kaleidoscope Dream in our magazine feature.

Miguel (Image: Kim Jakobsen To)

When Miguel opened for Usher at his recent London show, it was by no means incidental. The R&B legend is the young gun’s mentor, the two of them brought together by music exec – and one-time Notorious BIG manager – Mark Pitts.

“Mark was very keen that we become as close creatively as possible,” says Miguel in his LA drawl. “He wanted to put me in with Usher so he could show me the ropes and give me advice. I was a nobody kid. Usher just trusted Mark, plus he’d already heard some of my music and was a fan.”

So Miguel ended up co-writing three songs on Usher’s 2010 album Raymond Vs Raymond and supported him on the US-wide OMG tour. Miguel’s contributions to the album were far removed from the will.i.am-produced anthem that gave the tour its name: OMG might have been the danced-up, dumbed-down hit that sold the albums, but it was tracks like the spacey, sexual opener Monstar, the sparse, slo-mo Mars Vs. Venus and the Cali-funk Pro Lover that made it so good when you got it.

Miguel’s earlier solo 2010 album All I Want Is You was chock-full of the same such eargasmic R&B. Sure Thing had an old-school fuzz and feel, a haunting choral harmony ran through Girl With The Tattoo, Quickie was a cocky call for a swift shag over clashing instrumentals and Hard Way was a hip hop beat softened by the swoon of his voice. It went criminally unnoticed in the UK, but hopefully his new work, Kaleidoscope Dream, will make a bigger dent in a 2012 climate where Frank Ocean’s obscuro-R&B has thrived.

Like Frank, who first made a name for himself through a free mixtape, Miguel was keen to circumnavigate the norms of releasing this time round. Certain tracks on Kaleidoscope Dream were initially put out via Art Dealer Chic, a tripartite (and freely downloadable) EP, perhaps to appeal to the influential music blogs who love a leak or a slow drip. The tease of tracks helped draw people’s attentions to their rarity and quality and fans on critic-infested forum I Love Music were going wild; many of them claiming that lead track, Adorn, was the song of the year.

Alongside Frankie O and The Weeknd, Miguel is one of R&B’s biggest game-changers; all of them switching up the genre, harnessing their love, fear, doubt, horniness and loneliness in a clever, cool new manner, albeit with soul.

“You can hear it the moment you hear the voice. There’s a soul, there’s feeling behind it. It’s progressive, it’s not the same sound, not the same topics, not written from the same perspective. People lost sight of the individuality and R&B became so urban,” he says, suggesting that machismo meant male singers couldn’t be emotional or experimental. But he adds, “I think the great part about R&B now is that individuality is starting to be celebrated again. There are a few people who are really pushing the boundaries of what has become the stereotype. Artists in the genre are tired of the bullshit and the same regurgitated, soulless stuff. The soul of it had completely gone and it lost sight of what it was.”

Kaleidoscope Dream is Miguel’s way of “sitting down and having a drink with the listener”. But which drink and what’s the chat? “It’s Jamie, Johnnie or Jack, so Jameson, Johnnie Walker or Jack Daniels. We’d catch up on current events and talk about women as well, obviously. I want people to understand the full spectrum of my personality.”

Even though he’s from LA, he’s been living bicoastal in recent years and wanted to record the album in New York to reflect the life he’s been living there: “Being a Lower East Side kid in skuzzy bars with random people drinking, ending up at random parties, having a good time, making fucking stupid mistakes and laughing about it the next morning.”

When I tell him that I adore Adorn, he sings a short refrain, reminding me what an odd feeling it must be to have music pouring out of you. “It’s real cool watching a song from its inception and then seeing it become other people’s song. I remember the night I had the Adorn chords in my head, then getting home and playing the chords and drum pattern. It wrote itself in two hours.

“Then I went and listened to it in my car. That’s how I know if I love a song or not: if I get in my car and I’m like ‘Oooooooh’ [pulls pained, satisfied frown], then I know. I remember playing it at about 3am, sitting there jamming and being like, “This shit feels crazy. I don’t know if anyone else is gonna like this shit, but I love it.”’

His music’s for himself in another way too – as a way of staying sane. “I think all artists are a bit emotional. I try and reserve my emotion for my music and in everyday life, keep it as even as possible. If I wasn’t making money, I would do this regardless. It’s like health – mental fucking health.”

Words: Stuart Brumfitt
Photographer: Kim Jakobsen To
Fashion Editor: Francesca Turner

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EMERGING: Kim Jakobsen To /2012/10/04/emerging-kim-jakobsen-to/ Thu, 04 Oct 2012 10:28:39 +0000 http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/?p=11603 Norwegian-turned-Londoner Kim Jakobsen To has shot for everyone from Acne to Canon (and Wonderland, of course), but it's his unpretentious, intimate and entirely lovely portraits that really caught our eye. We talk to him about Birdland, his exhibition at Rove Gallery. How would you describe your aesthetic? I would say simple, clean and honest. So […]

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Norwegian-turned-Londoner Kim Jakobsen To has shot for everyone from Acne to Canon (and Wonderland, of course), but it's his unpretentious, intimate and entirely lovely portraits that really caught our eye. We talk to him about Birdland, his exhibition at Rove Gallery.

How would you describe your aesthetic?

I would say simple, clean and honest.

So what's Birdland all about?

Birdland is about what I find beautiful in my life. The title is from a Patti Smith song and it's an exhibition of three works inspired by the dreamy and free poetry of it. '220 Kingsland Road' is a honest and simple series of nudes of friends from London in my living room. 'Faces and worlds no one else knew' are pictures of two androgynous boys, Jakob and Jostein, and my boyfriend, Valentin. I wanted those images to be very utopian, airy and colourful, just as when the images were shot. The third work is selected images from commissioned works where I've collaborated with stylists in making a portrait, but with a high dose of fantasy and dreams injected into them.

You were born in Norway – what was your childhood like? Why did you move to London?

I grew up in a small town and usually played alone with Lego in my room, or roaming around the forests imagining elves and trolls around me. I guess my childhood was very peaceful, loving and completely free from the big world out there.

Do you have any unusual inspirations?

I get inspired from everything in life. It's important for the creative mind to open up for chance and a constant flow of energy from people and places. Comfort and routine is the creative minds worst enemy, so it's good being a little like a nomad.

Do you remember the first photograph you took?

I was about 10 and took my mothers camera and shot about one roll of the neighbour's cat in our garden. It felt great and I loved being able to play with the angles and the cat itself while I was shooting. I still have those images.

What do you enjoy most about photography?

Meeting people, traveling and being able to be part of keeping people's history and energy for the future.

You seem to photograph a lot of men – is that deliberate? Is it different to shoot a man or a woman?

In fashion I prefer to photograph men as it is relevant to my own interest in clothes and lifestyle. But doing womenswear with a great female model that completely gets the camera is the best thing ever! For this show however all the portraits are of boys, other than in my nudes where I also have women. I believe photography should be personal, so it naturally has boys in it as most of my friends are boys and it's also the gender I'm most attracted to.

How do you get people to relax in front of the camera?

Communication is very important, and I only photograph people I want to connect with.

What other young photographers do you really rate?

My soul brother Brett Lloyd is great, and I really enjoy many of my friends works such as Agnieszka Maksmik, Katja Mayer, Amira Fritz and Daniel Sannwald.

You've shot people like Yoko Ono and Beth Ditto – is there a celebrity you liked shooting in particular and why?

Both Beth and Yoko were fantastic to photograph. They are passionate women with a great confident personality who have given themselves to creativity, and have had such a positive effect on me as a teenager. I love strong women. They are the mother of the tribe. Saying that, my biggest dream would be to take a portrait of the godmother of rock and roll, Patti Smith.

Birdland is on till 14 October at the Rove Gallery, Lincoln House, 33-34 Hoxton Square, London. www.kimjakobsento.com

Words: Zing Tsjeng

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