Akido
aKido | |
---|---|
Birth name | Kim Gaboury |
Also known as | aKido |
Born | Quebec City, Quebec, Canada |
Origin | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Genres | |
Occupation(s) | Composer |
Instruments | Guitar, Drums, Piano, Synthesizer |
Years active | 2003–present |
Labels | Nordique Music Fullspin Music |
Website | www |
Members | Kim Gaboury On Tour: Martin Gaboury (drum) |
Kim Gaboury better known by his pseudonym Akido (stylized as aKido) is a Canadian electronic rock musician and composer based in Montreal, Quebec.[1] Gaboury assembles a band for live performances,[2] but records without them in the studio.
Career[]
As a young man Gaboury played guitar for the band Zolof.[3]
In 2004, calling himself Akido, he released a seven-track instrumental album; he also released a song, "Les Humains", which was later the basis for of an animated music video created by Felix Lajeunesse and Paul Raphaël.[4] Another 2004 release, "Playtime", was played regularly on campus and community radio stations that year.[5]
In September 2007, according to The R3-30, the aKido song "Dancing in Chains" was the third-most popular indie song in Canada.
Gaboury joined Michel Cusson, Térez Montcalm and Luck Mervil to form the Cafe Elektric collective; the group performed at the 2009 Francofolies festival.[6][7]
AKido's album "Gamechanger", released on the Nordique label in August 2010,[8] was number 13 on the !earshot Top 20 Electronic chart for 2010.[9] In January 2011, Gamechanger was nominated for the Electronica Album category for The 10th Annual Independent Music Awards,[10] and in October 2011, nominated for the "Album électronique de l'année" at l'ADISQ.[11]
In 2012 Akido's recording "Undark" received regular airplay on campus and community radio in the Montreal area.[12]
In March 2014, Kim was nominated at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards in the Canadian Screen Award for Best Original Score category for the film Maïna.
AKido collaborated with electronic music producer Pascal Asselin, known as Millimetrik, to create the 2016 album Fog Dreams.[13]
Discography[]
- Playtime, 2004
- Blink, 2007
- GameChanger, 2010
- Undark, 2012
Reissues[]
- Blink Reissue, 2010
- Playtime Reissue, 2010
EP[]
- Les Humains, 2010
- Thearly Ears, 2010
Videoclips[]
- "Dancing in Chains"
- "Les Humains" [1]
References[]
- ^ (July 6, 2008). "Free shows today", The Gazette, p. A20.
- ^ "Pawa Up First + aKido". December 8, 2009 // CJLO Magazine // Concert Reviews
- ^ "TAM TAM MACADAM de septembre". Radio Canada, François Blain, 2 September 2005
- ^ Longwell, Tod. "Felix & Paul Studios: Inventing the Future of Content". Variety, March 22, 2018
- ^ [2004 - Top 20 Electronica".] !earxhot
- ^ "Corneille pops the cork<". Montreal Gazette, 2009-07-31 -
- ^ "Cusson, Mervil, Montcalm : Rencontre de trois électrons libres". La Presse, 14 November 2009
- ^ "aKido: Gamechanger". Pop Matters, Mike Schiller, 20 Oct 2010
- ^ "Top 20 Electronic of 2010". !earshot charts
- ^ "Braids, Timber Timbre and Galaxie Lead Quebec Indie Music Awards Nominations". Exclaim!. By Natasha Young, Sep 29, 2011
- ^ ADISQ Gala: Nominations - Artistes MusiqueElectro Archived 2011-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ " CISM 89.3 MHz - Montreal Top 30". !earshot chart, For the Week Ending: Tuesday, March 6, 2012
- ^ Geneviève Bouchard, "Millimetrik entre deux univers". Le Soleil, 16 August 2016
External links[]
- Living people
- Canadian electronic musicians
- Musicians from Montreal
- Musicians from Quebec City
- Canadian classical composers
- Canadian male classical composers
- Canadian film score composers
- Male film score composers