Mick Karn
Mick Karn (born Andonis Michaelides; 24 July 1958 – 4 January 2011) was a British musician of Greek Cypriot origin, renowned for his innovative fretless bass playing and multi-instrumental contributions to the new wave and art rock band Japan.[1][2] Born in Nicosia, Cyprus, he moved to London at age three and grew up in south-east England, where he initially trained classically on violin and bassoon, joining the London Schools Symphony Orchestra before switching to bass guitar after his bassoon was stolen.[1][2] Karn co-founded Japan in 1974 with schoolmates David Sylvian (vocals), Steve Jansen (drums), Richard Barbieri (keyboards), and later Rob Dean (guitar), evolving from glam rock influences in their debut album Adolescent Sex (1978) to sophisticated art rock on later works like Quiet Life (1979), Gentlemen Take Polaroids (1980), and Tin Drum (1981), which included the UK top-five single "Ghosts."[1][2] His distinctive, fluid bass lines—often evoking lead guitar melodies—and use of wind instruments such as saxophone, clarinet, and the Chinese suona defined the band's exotic, atmospheric sound, helping them achieve cult status before disbanding at the height of fame after the live album Oil on Canvas (1983).[1][3] Beyond Japan, Karn pursued a prolific solo career, releasing eight albums starting with Titles (1982), and formed the short-lived supergroup Dalis Car with Bauhaus singer Peter Murphy, yielding the album The Waking Hour (1984).[1] He collaborated with artists including Gary Numan, Kate Bush, Joan Armatrading, and Porcupine Tree, while the Japan lineup briefly reunited as Rain Tree Crow for a self-titled album in 1991.[1][2] A self-taught sculptor and photographer, Karn also published his autobiography Japan & Self Existence in 2009, reflecting on his personal and professional life.[1] Diagnosed with advanced cancer in 2010, he died at his home in London on 4 January 2011, survived by his wife Kyoko and son Metis.[1][2]Early life
Childhood and family
Mick Karn was born Andonis Michaelides on July 24, 1958, in Nicosia, Cyprus, to a Greek Cypriot family.[4] In late October 1961, at the age of three, he emigrated with his family of five—including his parents and two siblings—to London, England, where they settled in the south-east of the city.[4][1][5] His early years were shaped by exposure to diverse cultures, particularly Middle Eastern music through his mother's listening habits.[6]Early musical training
Karn's early musical training began in childhood with classical studies, including mastering the violin at age 11, followed by woodwind instruments, particularly the bassoon and clarinet, which provided a foundation in classical technique and breath control.[1][7] These pursuits were part of his broader exposure to music at school, where he developed an affinity for melodic expression on double-reed and single-reed instruments.[1] At the age of 14, Karn performed with the London Schools Symphony Orchestra as a bassoonist, having successfully auditioned for the ensemble despite his relatively informal preparation.[1] This experience marked a significant early performance milestone, allowing him to apply his woodwind skills in a professional youth orchestra setting.[4] In his mid-teens, following the theft of his bassoon, Karn shifted to self-taught exploration of the bass guitar and saxophone.[1] He purchased a second-hand electric bass for £5 and, seeking to replicate the continuous pitch nuances of the bassoon, removed its frets to create a fretless instrument.[1]Career
Time with Japan
Mick Karn co-founded the band Japan in 1974 in London alongside school friends David Sylvian (vocals and guitar), Steve Jansen (drums), and Richard Barbieri (keyboards), initially as an after-school project for the teenage musicians.[8] The group began rehearsing in basements and garages, drawing early inspiration from glam rock acts.[9] Karn, whose real name was Andonis Michaelides, brought his budding skills on bass guitar and woodwinds to the lineup, helping shape the band's experimental sound from the outset.[1] Over the late 1970s, Japan evolved from an abrasive glam rock style—influenced by David Bowie and Roxy Music—into a sophisticated art rock and new wave ensemble, incorporating electronic elements, funk rhythms, and global influences.[10] Karn played a pivotal role in this transformation, primarily on fretless bass guitar, which provided the band's signature fluid, melodic lines, while also contributing saxophone, oboe, and clarinet to add textural depth and exotic timbres.[1] His early training on bassoon and other woodwinds enabled this versatile approach, allowing seamless integration of bass grooves with horn-like melodies.[11] The band's breakthrough came with their later albums on Virgin Records: Quiet Life (1979), which blended synth-pop and funk; Gentlemen Take Polaroids (1980), emphasizing atmospheric art pop; and Tin Drum (1981), their most commercially oriented release exploring Asian musical motifs.[12] Tin Drum yielded the hit single "Ghosts," which reached No. 5 on the UK charts and became Japan's biggest success, noted for its minimalist arrangement and haunting melody.[13] Karn's contributions to songwriting and arrangements were integral, particularly his intricate fretless bass lines in tracks like "Visions of China," where his playing evoked ceremonial rhythms and drove the song's dynamic shifts.[9] Despite rising popularity—Tin Drum peaked at No. 12 in the UK and the band enjoyed strong fan support in Europe and their namesake country, including sold-out tours—internal tensions, especially between Karn and Sylvian over creative directions, led to Japan's disbandment in December 1982 following their final "Sons of Pioneers" tour in Japan.[8] The split occurred at the height of their commercial momentum, with nine UK Top 40 singles and growing international acclaim, as members sought individual paths amid personal and artistic conflicts.[9]Solo career
Karn's solo career began with the release of his debut album Titles in November 1982, coinciding with the announcement of Japan's disbandment. The record fused experimental elements of jazz, rock, and world music, drawing on influences from Asian, Indian, Middle Eastern, and Mediterranean traditions alongside contemporary electronic sounds.[14][15][16] Building on the fretless bass techniques refined during his tenure with Japan, Karn's independent output highlighted his multi-instrumentalism across contrabass, soprano saxophone, and assorted winds, often incorporating electronic textures for innovative sonic landscapes.[17] Subsequent releases, such as Dreams of Reason Produce Monsters in 1987, delved into introspective themes with ritualistic rhythms and atmospheric production, featuring sparse vocals on tracks like "Buoy."[18][17] Over the following decades, Karn maintained a steady pace of releases, including Bestial Cluster (1993), The Tooth Mother (1995), Each Eye a Path (2001, reissued in 2009), More Better Different (2004), Three Part Species (2006), and The Concrete Twin (2009), alongside EPs and compilations such as Each Path a Remix (2002), Love's Glove (2005), Of & About (2006), and Selected (2007). These works consistently emphasized themes of introspection and technical experimentation, blending organic instrumentation with electronic manipulation to create evocative, mood-driven compositions. In total, Karn produced eight solo albums from 1982 to 2009, underscoring his evolution as a versatile artist beyond band constraints.[17][19][20]Collaborations and session work
Karn formed the short-lived supergroup Dali's Car with Bauhaus vocalist Peter Murphy in 1984, releasing the album The Waking Hour that year, where Karn handled bass, saxophone, keyboards, and guitar alongside Murphy's vocals.[21] In the 1980s and 1990s, Karn collaborated with former Japan bandmates Richard Barbieri and Steve Jansen under the moniker JBK (Jansen/Barbieri/Karn), producing instrumental albums that blended ambient, art rock, and electronic elements; their releases included Beginning to Melt (1993), the EP Seed (1994), and Ism (1999).[22] Karn contributed fretless bass and saxophone to Gary Numan's 1981 album Dance, influencing its experimental new wave sound, and provided uncredited fretless bass on two tracks—"We Take Mystery (Religion)" and "The 1930s Rust"—from Numan's 1982 release I, Assassin.[23][24] On Kate Bush's 1982 album The Dreaming, Karn played bass on the track "Houdini," adding his distinctive fluid style to the record's avant-garde production.[25] Karn provided bass on all tracks of Joan Armatrading's 1984 album Square the Circle.[26] Karn worked with Japanese musician Masami Tsuchiya on the 1982 album Rice Music, contributing bass to several tracks amid a lineup featuring Ryuichi Sakamoto and other guests, bridging new wave and J-rock aesthetics.[27] In 1990, Karn participated in the Rain Tree Crow project—a reunion of Japan's core members under a new name—co-writing and performing on the track "Every Colour You Are" for their self-titled album, released in 1991 after sessions spanning 1989–1990.[28] Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Karn engaged in freelance session work, including contributions to world music and experimental projects such as the 2001 compilation Japanese Cross, where he collaborated with Tsuchiya on "Experience -1999" and with D-kiku on "Synapse," exploring fusion and ambient textures.[29]Musical style
Karn was renowned for his innovative and dexterous playing on the fretless bass guitar, creating fluid, melodic lines that often evoked lead guitar melodies with a subtle sense of space and intelligence. His technique drew influences from jazz-funk, particularly Jaco Pastorius.[1][2] A multi-instrumentalist, Karn was proficient on various wind instruments, including saxophone, clarinet, and the Chinese suona, which he used to contribute to Japan's exotic and atmospheric sound. He originally trained classically on violin and bassoon before switching to bass guitar.[1][2] Karn's style with Japan evolved from glam rock influences in their early work to a minimalist art rock approach on later albums. In his solo career, he explored eclectic hybrids blending expansive rock with Middle Eastern elements from his Cypriot heritage.[1]Other artistic pursuits
Sculpture
Mick Karn began his sculpting career as a self-taught artist in the 1970s, developing his skills in clay and other media concurrently with his musical pursuits.[30] Initially working with self-hardening clay, he transitioned to more conventional clay in the mid-1980s, allowing for larger and more malleable pieces that expanded his exploration of form.[30] This parallel artistic practice highlighted Karn's multifaceted creativity, as he balanced the temporal demands of music and sculpture without formal training in the visual arts.[30] A significant milestone in Karn's sculptural work was his major exhibition at the Hamilton Gallery in London in 1982, where he showcased a collection of his pieces to critical acclaim.[31] Notable works from this exhibition included Satchmo, Mask of Confidence, and Does Grey Matter?, which demonstrated his evolving technical proficiency and imaginative approach.[30] The event, documented in a dedicated brochure, marked a public recognition of his visual artistry beyond music.[31] Karn's sculptures often explored themes of the human form, emotion, and abstraction, reflecting deep personal introspection and a contemplative engagement with the body's expressive potential.[30] He viewed sculpture and music as complementary opposites, both occupying his time in ways that fostered creative equilibrium.[30] Only a few pieces from his oeuvre survive today, with many sold, destroyed, or lost, underscoring the ephemeral nature of his sculptural legacy.[30]Photography
Karn was also a self-taught photographer, though details of his photographic work are limited in public records. Some accounts describe his engagement in photography as part of his broader artistic interests, complementing his sculptural pursuits.[4]Acting and film appearances
Mick Karn ventured into acting with minor roles that often overlapped with his musical background, reflecting his broader performative and visual artistic interests. In 1982, he appeared as a musician in Michelangelo Antonioni's film Identification of a Woman, a subtle cameo that capitalized on his rising profile in Europe amid Japan's growing international success following tours across the continent.[32] Karn's other notable film involvement came in the 1990 90-minute television film Women in Tropical Places, where he took on a supporting role as a musician (bassist), tied to his performative persona, though details of the character remain limited in available records.[33] These sparse acting credits underscore Karn's reluctance to pursue a full-fledged career in film or theater, instead channeling his creative energies primarily into music and sculpture, with no documented major stage or screen commitments beyond these instances.[1]Written works
Mick Karn's primary literary contribution is his autobiography Japan and Self Existence, self-published through Lulu on September 10, 2009.[34] The 388-page volume offers a personal exploration of his life as a musician and artist, spanning more than 30 years of experiences and reflections.[35] Available in English and Japanese editions, it was distributed via platforms including Lulu.com, the iTunes store, and Amazon Japan.[35] The book's non-chronological structure features self-contained chapters that weave together a progressive narrative, blending elements of humor, sadness, and introspective depth.[36][34] It details the formation and dissolution of the band Japan, the brief reformation as Rain Tree Crow, and the ensuing public disputes, while also addressing challenges in his solo career, childhood recollections, and pivotal personal relationships that influenced his creative path.[35] Karn uses the autobiography to reveal candid insights into his personal struggles, romantic entanglements, and artistic motivations, highlighting the psychological underpinnings of his drive to create music and sculpture amid adversity.[35] These themes of self-examination and resilience parallel the introspective qualities evident in his visual artworks.[35] Beyond this major work, Karn's other writings were limited, with no extensive record of formal contributions to music magazines or periodicals.[20]Personal life
Karn was married to Kyoko and had one son, Metis.[1] In 2004, he left London to live in Cyprus with his family.[4]Illness and death
In June 2010, Karn announced that he had been diagnosed with advanced-stage cancer, though the specific type was not disclosed.[1][2] Having relocated to Cyprus in 2004, he returned to London for treatment and launched a public appeal for financial assistance to cover medical costs, which received support from fellow musicians.[1] Karn died peacefully at 4:30 pm on 4 January 2011 at his home in Chelsea, London, aged 52, surrounded by family and friends. He was survived by his wife, Kyoko, and their son, Metis.[1][2]Legacy
Karn's pioneering use of the fretless bass guitar, characterized by fluid slides, bends, and melodic lines akin to lead guitar, revolutionized the instrument's role in rock and new wave music. Self-taught after adapting techniques from his classical training on violin and bassoon, he elevated the bass from a rhythmic foundation to a prominent melodic voice, influencing a generation of bassists including Pino Palladino and Derek Forbes.[37][38] His contributions to Japan's sound helped pioneer the New Romantic aesthetic, impacting bands such as Duran Duran and shaping post-punk's evolution toward sophisticated art rock. Collaborations with artists like Gary Numan and Kate Bush further extended his reach into electronic and pop genres.[39][38] Following his death, Karn's work has received ongoing posthumous recognition. In 2024, music publications and online communities analyzed his bass lines in tracks like "Visions of China" from Tin Drum (1981), hailing him as an underrated genius of fretless playing. Annual tributes on his birthday (24 July) and death anniversary (4 January) continue as of 2025, with fans and musicians such as Steven Wilson commemorating his legacy on platforms like Reddit and Facebook.[40][41][42]Discography
Solo albums
Mick Karn's solo discography spans from 1982 to 2009, encompassing studio albums, EPs, and compilations primarily released through major labels in his early career and his own MK Music imprint later on. These works highlight his multi-instrumental prowess, particularly on fretless bass, and his shift toward more experimental, abstract art rock and electronic influences building on his Japan-era style. Most were self-produced, with occasional guest contributions from collaborators like David Torn and former bandmates.| Album | Year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Titles | 1982 | Virgin Records | Debut solo album; self-produced by Karn, who played bass, saxophone, keyboards, percussion, mellotron, and African flute; guests include Steve Jansen (congas, cymbals), Richard Barbieri (keyboards), and Masami Tsuchiya (guitar).[43] |
| Dreams of Reason Produce Monsters | 1987 | Virgin Records | Second studio album; co-produced by Karn and Steve Nye; features guest vocals by David Sylvian on "Buoy," guitar by David Torn, and trumpet by Mark Isham; explores darker, ritualistic themes.[44] |
| Bestial Cluster | 1993 | CMP Records | Self-produced; guest contributions from David Torn on guitar and treatments; emphasizes jazz fusion and abstract soundscapes with eight tracks. |
| The Tooth Mother | 1995 | CMP Records | Self-produced; includes guests David Torn (guitar) and Terry Bozzio (drums); comprises eight experimental tracks blending rock and electronic elements. |
| Each Eye a Path | 2001 | Medium Productions | Self-produced; ten tracks featuring Karn's compositions with diverse influences; no major guest musicians noted.[19] |
| Each Path a Remix | 2002 | Medium Productions | Remix album of Each Eye a Path material; self-produced; includes eight tracks remixed by artists like David Torn.[19] |
| More Better Different | 2004 | Invisible Hands | Self-produced; nine tracks showcasing eclectic styles; no prominent guests listed.[19] |
| Love's Glove (EP) | 2005 | MK Music | Self-produced EP; four tracks including "Mustard Grapes"; focuses on intimate, minimalist arrangements.[19] |
| Of & About (EP) | 2006 | MK Music | Self-produced EP; three tracks exploring abstract themes; released alongside other MK Music output.[19] |
| Three Part Species | 2006 | MK Music | Studio album with ten original tracks; self-produced and mixed by Karn; blends electronic and rock elements.[45] |
| Selected | 2007 | MK Music | Compilation of twelve tracks spanning Karn's solo career; self-curated; includes rarities like "Lunette."[19] |
| The Concrete Twin | 2009 | MK Music | Final studio album; self-produced; ten tracks reflecting mature experimentalism; released shortly before his death.[19] |