Mia Doi Todd

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Singer, guitarist

Coming from a longstanding tradition of Los Angeles-based singer-songwriters, Mia Doi Todd gained prominence in the late 1990s as one of the city's most inspired new voices. Melding influences of Los Angeles's folk scene with her East Asian heritage, Todd's subdued, uniquely toned voice has been the driving force behind her numerous albums and has earned her a remarkable underground following.

Born in 1975 to a Japanese-American judge and an Irish-American sculptor, Todd grew up in the Silverlake neighborhood of Los Angeles. Between the two strong cultures of her parents and the divergent fields in which they practiced, Todd's upbringing intricately balanced law, art, and the cultural East/West dichotomy. At a young age she began studying music and art, and took to origami and plaster sculpting, two art styles that would later complement her adult hobbies of clothes making and designing.

With her early music studies, Todd concentrated primarily on cultivating her rich vocal talents. In her late teens she frequented a number of Los Angeles clubs, attending shows by the numerous touring bands that came through town. She spent time at the all-ages venue Jabberjaw, and with the city's indie rock scene in full swing, she eventually picked up a guitar and taught herself to play. The first song she wrote was based on a book by Italo Calvino, and she later credited the song as being a prime element in her search for a distinct musical voice.

In 1993 Todd moved to New Haven, Connecticut, to complete her undergraduate degree at Yale University. After a semester studying astronomy, she switched her major to East Asian studies in order to better understand her Japanese heritage. Her senior thesis focused on a modern Japanese dance form called Ankoku Butoh, and its creator, Hijikata Tatsumi.

During her time at Yale, Todd began writing songs. The East Coast provided her with a wealth of new experiences, many of them involving nature settings, and her songs reflected these changes in her life. She studied poets like William Blake and Leonard Cohen, and as she delved into the folk-rock musical tradition, artists like Joni Mitchell and Nico began to have an influence on her growing body of work.

Todd began gigging around New Haven and New York City, playing to small crowds in cafes and clubs. She released her first record, a vinyl single entitled "Digging and Planting," late in 1996. Her first solo album of voice and guitar, 1997's The Ewe and the Eye, was released just before she graduated from Yale. Recorded with the help of Brent Rademaker and his L.A.-based band Further, at the band's Spaceshed studio, The Ewe and the Eye came out on Further's Xmas label and started Todd off on a successful recording path.

After her graduation in 1997, Todd moved to New York City and immersed herself in the city's indie rock scene. Artists like Palace Brothers and Elliott Smith had an impact on her songwriting style, and later that year she recorded Come Out of Your Mine, although it would not be released until 1999.

Todd received a fellowship in 1998 to continue her Ankoku Butoh studies, and she spent the next nine months in Tokyo. There she studied other forms of dance, theater, and modern performance art, such as noh and kabuki. "Being only half-Japanese made me want to explore what it is to be Japanese, and the art and culture of Japan," she told the website Halvsie. com. "I had only half of an identity, so I had to go searching for the other half." She found that since her Japanese language skills were rather rudimentary, her personal expression in Japan was hindered, and she began to focus intently on the way in which she crafted songs in English.

After moving back to New York City in 1999, Todd began performing alongside indie rock heroes like Smith and Sebadoh's Lou Barlow. She preferred to play before or between louder rock bands, acting as the quiet temper to over-the-top sonic madness. Occasionally she performed with her own band, Los Cincos (later Syncopation), but they never recorded any material. That year also saw the release of Come Out of Your Mine on Communion Records. LA Weekly 's Michael Simmons praised the record's stylistic merits, and noted Todd's search for existential meaning. "The 24-year-old Angeleno identifies the ugly spirit that pervades our time in 'Strange Wind'.… yet insists on emphasizing life over death," he wrote. "Accompanied solely by her own guitar, Come Out of Your Mine is a timeless work by an unapologetic aesthete who's apparently unconcerned with the attitudinal fashions of her peers."

Todd's third album, Zeroone, a self-produced disc recorded on her home computer, came in 2001. Released on her newly formed City Zen record label, Zeroone also received its fair share of attention in the underground media. Scott D. Lewis commented in Signum Press, "With nothing more than an acoustic guitar, voice, and Macintosh G4, Todd has crafted ten songs of compelling mystery and wild solitude. Her voice lies directly between that of Joni Mitchell and Cat Power, but she has a way of rounding out her words and scooping out the middle that is beautifully haunting—and all her own."

Franklin J. Bruno echoed that sentiment in the LA Weekly, writing that "the basic elements of Todd's intimately scaled art remain unchanged: cautious but sturdy acoustic picking, ambiguously confessional lyrics and, most of all, her rich, impossibly mannered voice." That year Todd also contributed a remixed track, "Digital, Version 2.1," to Dublab Presents: Freeways, and it became one of her best-known songs.

After years of jumping indie labels, Todd signed to Sony/Columbia Records in 2002. Her major-label breakout album, The Golden State, was a collection of older songs taken from past albums that was re-recorded with the help of producers Mitchell Froom and Yves Beauvais. Explaining his attraction to Todd's work, Froom wrote on her official website, "When I first heard Mia's music, I didn't get it. But it stuck with me. It hooked into me. You have to pay attention to her work. In that way, her music is more aggressive than anything else you could do today. It's as big of a punk statement as you can make. Mia demands more." The record had a special meaning to Todd, outlining further her involvement with Zen meditation. Tracks like "88 Ways" and "Digital" examined nature's ability to unite as well as divide, and "Hijikata Tatsumi" was written as a tribute to the Butoh founder, whom she studied exhaustively.

The record was a critical success and brought Todd many new fans, as well as to all corners of the world on its requisite tour, but Sony/Columbia decided not to renew her contract. Todd retreated to her home studio, where she went back to writing songs for herself. With Rademaker on board as a consultant and producer, the two went through all of her demo tracks and assembled Manzanita at a studio in Lake Hollywood, with members of Dead Meadow and Beachwood Sparks assisting on the record. After the 2005 release of Manzanita, Todd continued to record music, enjoy fashion design, and participate in numerous Japanese dance performances.

Selected discography
"Digging and Planting," Self-released, 1996.
The Ewe and the Eye, Xmas, 1997.
Come Out of Your Mine, Communion, 1999.
Zeroone, City Zen, 2001.
The Golden State, Sony/Columbia, 2002.
Manzanita, Plug Research, 2005.

Sources

Periodicals
LA Weekly, July 22, 1999; March 1, 2001.

Online
Halvsie.com, http://www.halvsie.com/musicians/mia_doi_todd.html (October 28, 2004).
Mia Doi Todd Official Website, http://www.miadoitodd.com (October 28, 2004).
Signum Press, http://www.signumpress.com/Issue9/detritus/music-review/mia-doi-todd.html (October 28, 2004).
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

A singer and songwriter whose music embraces a rich variety of cultural and creative influences, Mia Doi Todd was born June 30 1975 in Los Angeles, California. Mia Doi Todd grew up in a creative household; her father, Michael Todd, is a sculptor of note, and her mother, Kathryn Doi Todd, is an Associate Justice in the California Court of Appeals as well as a patron of the arts who has helped bring traditional Japanese dance and theater troupes to Los Angeles. As a child, Mia became involved in theater and choral performance, and she studied classical vocal technique. As a teenager, she began writing songs, influenced by the work of the Beatles, Leonard Cohen, and particularly Joni Mitchell, and her work developed a keener focus when she moved east to attend Yale University and became interested in indie rock.

In 1997, members of the Los Angeles-based group Further invited Todd to use their studio to record her songs; the result was her debut album, The Ewe and the Eye, a spare set of performances featuring only her vocals and acoustic guitar, which was released on Further's Xmas Records label around the same time Todd was completing her studies. She then moved to New York City, where she recorded her second album, Come Out of Your Mine, for Communion Records. After a sojourn in Japan where Todd studied Ankoku Butoh dance, she returned to America and recorded a third album, 2001's Zeroone, a collection of longer and more intricate songs that she issued through her own City Zen Records imprint. Todd's music soon caught the attention of Sony's Columbia Jazz division, who signed her to a recording contract. Her fourth album, The Golden State, found her re-recording many of the songs from her first three albums with more expansive arrangements and production from Mitchell Froom and Yves Beauvais.

Not long after the album was released, Sony shuttered Columbia Jazz, but Todd, undaunted, continued exploring new musical perspectives on her next project, 2005's Manzanita. The album, released by Plug Research, featured performances by members of indie pop favorites Beachwood Sparks, noisy psych visionaries Dead Meadow, and dub enthusiasts Future Pigeon; a number of tracks from Manzanita were reworked on 2006's remix album La Ninja: Amor and Other Dreams of Manzanita, which also included four new songs. In 2008, Todd reactivated her City Zen label for her eighth album, GEA, in which she worked with a small acoustic ensemble and experimented with longer, more ambitious musical structures. In 2011, Todd returned with Cosmic Ocean Ship, a song cycle inspired by her spiritual and geographic journeys of the previous two years. When not busy with her work in music, Todd is a performer and choreographer with Body Weather Laboratory, a Los Angeles-based Butoh dance troupe. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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Mia Doi Todd (born June 30 1975) is a musician from Los Angeles, California, United States.[1]

Mia has collaborated with rock, electronica, and hip-hop musicians, contributing her voice to works by Dntel, Beachwood Sparks, Nobody, Adventure Time, Frausdots, Folk Implosion, The Mission, Saul Williams, Prefuse 73, Flying Lotus, vosotros, Winter Flowers, and others.[citation needed]

Contents

Biography

Doi Todd's divorced parents are sculptor Michael Todd and California Second District Court of Appeal Associate Justice Kathryn Doi Todd, who holds the distinction of being the first female Asian American judge in the United States.[2] [3]

Todd moved to New Haven, Connecticut in 1993 to attend Yale University, where she majored in East Asian Studies. Her first album, The Ewe and the Eye, was recorded at the Spaceshed, the recording studio/garage belonging to the LA band Further. It came out on its label, Xmas Records, in the spring of 1997, as she was graduating from college. She moved to New York City and started playing in clubs. That fall, she recorded her second album, Come Out of Your Mine, which was released on the Communion Label in 1999.

She lived in Japan for most of 1998, studying Ankoku Butoh first with Kazuo and Yoshito Ohno and at Asubeustosu-kan, and then with Min Tanaka at Body Weather Farm. She speaks rudimentary Japanese. Returning home to Los Angeles, she recorded most of her next album, Zeroone, on a Power Mac G4 and started City Zen Records to release it in 2001.

Her first three albums were solo acoustic recordings. She then started to play with a band, which was called Los Cincos which later renamed itself Syncopation. Todd and the group did not record much together. She signed a contract with Columbia/SME Records and recorded The Golden State, culling songs from her previous albums. Mitchell Froom and Yves Beauvais helped her produce it. She recorded at the Sunset Sound Factory, and the album came out in the fall of 2002. For a year, she toured the US and Europe, on her own and then with Alaska! and Lou Barlow's Folk Implosion. Columbia chose at this time not to renew her contract.

Her fifth album, Manzanita, which was released in 2005, is also the Spanish name of a round-leaved bush with smooth, red bark and tiny, bell-shaped blossoms that grows throughout California and the Pacific Coast. She recorded in Lake Hollywood with Rob Campanella. Many of the songs were still just voice and guitar or piano. Neal Casal played guitar, Brent Rademaker played bass as well as some guitar and piano. On drums and percussion were Hunter Crowley, Ric Menck, and Nelson Bragg. Members of Dead Meadow and Beachwood Sparks made cameo appearances, and the entire band—Future Pigeon—backed her on the song "Casa Nova." Rob engineered the album and played electric guitar, piano, dulcimer, and mandolin.

An album of remixes, La Ninja: Amor and other dreams of Manzanita, appeared in April 2006 and also had three new tracks, including a cover of the Beatles' song "Norwegian Wood."

Mia Doi Todd has worked with Dntel on two songs, Anywhere Anyone, and Rock My Boat.

Mia Doi Todd's seventh album Gea was named as LA Weekly's Top-10 Recordings of 2008. Carlos Niño produced with Miguel Atwood Ferguson's orchestrations. Mia toured the US and Canada as guest artist for Jose Gonzalez.

In 2009 she released her first instrumental album, Morning Music, in collaboration with percussionist Andres Renteria.

In 2011, she collaborated with José González on the track "Um Girassol Da Cor Do Seu Cabelo," and also contributed a version of the track "Canto de Iemanjá" for the Red Hot Organization's most recent charitable album "Red Hot+Rio 2." The album is a follow-up to the 1996 "Red Hot + Rio." Proceeds from the sales will be donated to raise awareness and money to fight AIDS/HIV and related health and social issues.

Discography

Albums

EPs

  • Pink Sun EP (2006)
  • Dublab Remixes (2003) [4]

References

External links


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Mentioned in

Alaska! (Rock Band, 2000s)
Frausdots (Rock Band, 2000s)
Savath & Savalas (Electronica Band, '90s, 2000s)
Come Out of Your Mine (1999 Album by Mia Doi Todd)
GEA (2008 Album by Mia Doi Todd)