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Kodomo

 
Wikipedia: Kodomo
For the manga/anime genre, see kodomo anime and manga.
Kodomo

Background information
Birth name Chris Child
Genres Electronic music, IDM
Years active 2001–present
Labels 5point Records
Website www.kodomomusic.com

Kodomo is the moniker for electronic musician Chris Child, a three-time Emmy nominee[1] and full-time composer who lives and works in New York City. As Kodomo, he is best known for his work on the Harmonix video games Amplitude, and Frequency [2] as well as the iPod game Phase, which features Kodomo's "Spira Mirabilis."[3] "Kodomo" (子供?) is the Japanese word for "child"—both a reference to his surname and the fact that he grew up in Japan.

Kodomo's first full-length album Still Life is a highly conceptual piece in which the music was all inspired by a set of photographs taken during Kodomo's travels in the US and abroad. The tracks are all titled using the photographic images rather than words. For example, Concept 13 started with a photograph that reflects the Fibonacci proportions that are repeatedly found in nature. These proportions were used to govern the musical composition in the melodic theme, the sonic texture, and even the pace of development of the piece. In this case, .618 is the governing number, and themes are introduced at these intervals, which give the whole composition a balanced and natural-feeling proportion.[4]

Contents

Discography

Albums
  • Still Life (2008)
Singles
  • "Spira Mirabilis" (2007)
  • "Concept 11" (2008)
Remixes
Compilations
  • OM Yoga Mix 2 (2008)

Influences

Kodomo's work falls within the genres of Ambient Techno, IDM, Electronic Music and Experimental Music. He was influenced by artists such as Erik Satie, Brian Eno, Kraftwerk, DJ Shadow, Cabaret Voltaire and J.S. Bach.

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kodomo" Read more