Sanatçının Albümleri
The Flames pt. 2
2023 · albüm
Someone To Make Me Laugh
2023 · single
True Love Knows No Death
2023 · single
Vandal
2022 · single
W.A.I.S.T.D. (Genix Remix)
2022 · single
The Waves pt.1 (Live)
2021 · albüm
W.A.I.S.T.D.
2021 · single
The Waves Pt. 1
2021 · albüm
From a Place of Love
2021 · single
Nineveh
2021 · single
Smalltown Boy
2021 · single
The Heart of the Wave
2021 · single
Won't Give Up (feat. Kele)
2020 · single
Melanin
2020 · single
2042
2019 · albüm
Guava Rubicon
2019 · single
Between Me and My Maker
2019 · single
Jungle Bunny
2019 · single
Leave to Remain
2019 · albüm
Not the Drugs Talking
2018 · single
Fatherland
2017 · albüm
Do U Right
2017 · single
Grounds for Resentment (feat. Olly Alexander)
2017 · single
Streets Been Talkin'
2017 · single
Yemaya
2017 · single
Benzer Sanatçılar
Everything Everything
Sanatçı
The WAEVE
Sanatçı
Philip Selway
Sanatçı
Django Django
Sanatçı
Nakhane
Sanatçı
Klaxons
Sanatçı
We Are Scientists
Sanatçı
Maps
Sanatçı
Bloc Party
Sanatçı
Frankie Rose
Sanatçı
Does It Offend You, Yeah?
Sanatçı
Petite Noir
Sanatçı
Delphic
Sanatçı
Algiers
Sanatçı
Braids
Sanatçı
Dave Rowntree
Sanatçı
Patrick Wolf
Sanatçı
The Go! Team
Sanatçı
Dutch Uncles
Sanatçı
Tanlines
Sanatçı
Biyografi
First known as Bloc Party's singer/songwriter/guitarist, Kele Okereke also pursued a solo career that spanned styles as diverse as electronic music and folk-inspired singer/songwriter pop. He first branched off from Bloc Party for his 2010 debut The Boxer. From there, he delved deeper into polished dance with 2014's Trick. Veering into an emotive, pastoral direction for 2017's Fatherland, he reinvented himself yet again. By the close of the decade, he combined his various sides and injected some soul for the intensely political 2042. Born in Liverpool, England to Nigerian parents, Okereke's family moved to London while he was in high school. It was there that he met future Bloc Party guitarist Russell Lissack. Later, during college, they formed the band the Angel Range, adding bassist Gordon Moakes and drummer Matt Tong to the fold soon after. In 2003, they settled on the name Bloc Party and found success with a string of post-punk-inspired releases beginning with the singles "Banquet" and "She's Hearing Voices" and albums including 2005's Silent Alarm, 2007's A Weekend in the City, and 2008's Intimacy. Late in 2008, Okereke moved to Berlin and began working on his own songs, which adopted more of an electronic influence than his band's already angular music. He also appeared on Tiësto's "It's Not the Things You Say" in 2009, the same year that Bloc Party went on hiatus. The following year, he released his first single as a solo artist, "Tenderoni," and his XXXChange-produced debut album, The Boxer, a set of songs inspired by the focus and endurance of prizefighters. It was followed by the like-minded Hunter EP in 2011. Later that year, Okereke reunited with Bloc Party, who released their hard-rocking fourth album, Four, in 2012. Okereke spent the rest of the 2010s juggling his Bloc Party duties with his solo career. After collaborating with British DJ Sub Focus on the track "Turn It Around" in 2013, he issued the house- and dub-influenced Heartbreaker EP. Another EP, Candy Flip, preceded his sleek second solo album, Trick, which melded electronic influences with more pop-oriented songwriting and arrived on Okereke's own Lilac Records imprint. Bloc Party's fifth album, Hymns, which incorporated gospel and R&B with ethereal electronica, appeared in 2016. Okereke's eclectic third solo album, Fatherland, was inspired by his becoming a father, his African roots, and artists like Nick Drake, Elliott Smith, Joni Mitchell, and Al Green. Recorded in Portland, Oregon and featuring performances from Corinne Bailey Rae and Years & Years' Olly Alexander, the album arrived in October 2017. After taking a brief break from his solo work for a 2019 Silent Alarm anniversary tour with Bloc Party, he resumed his solo endeavors once again for his fourth album 2042. Tackling social issues with more energy than Fatherland, Okereke took aim at racism and politics on singles like the Afrobeat groover "Jungle Bunny." That year, he also debuted his musical Leave to Remain in London, which tied into the themes highlighted on 2042. ~ Heather Phares & Neil Z. Yeung, Rovi