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Artist:

Tonio K.

Tonio K.

Representative Songs:

"The Funky Western Civilization," "16 Tons of Monkeys," "What Women Want"

Representative Albums:

Life in the Foodchain, Amerika, La Bomba

Is Also Known As:

Steve Krikorian

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

John Keller

Worked With:

Followers:

  • Birth Name: Steve Krikorian
  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '70s - 2000s
  • Instrument: Guitar

Biography

New wave ironist Tonio K. was born Steve Krikorian in Palm Desert, CA, on April 15, 1949; the son of Armenian immigrants, he was raised in nearby Fresno, and while in high school formed his first band, the Raik's Progress. In 1973, he appeared on his first album, Remnants, as a member of the former Buddy Holly backing band the Crickets; after going solo, he assumed the stage name Tonio K., apparently in honor of the Thomas Mann novella Tonio Kröger. His debut LP, Life in the Foodchain, was a critical smash upon its 1978 release, winning acclaim for its scathing wit and smartly crafted songs; Amerika followed two years later, and although it fared poorly commercially it helped establish the singer as a major favorite on the L.A. club scene.

A follow-up, Too Cool to Be a Christian, was recorded but never released; despite Tonio K.'s famously sarcastic attitude, the project's title was far from a joke, however, and his growing spirituality remained the focus of his work in the years to follow. After 1982's La Bomba EP, he was silent until the release of 1986's Romeo Unchained, which heralded a newly mellow sound; 1988's Notes from the Lost Civilization was his final proper LP, although a planned follow-up, Olé, was recorded but not issued. (It was finally released in 1997). During the 1990s, Tonio K. was most active as a songwriter; in 1998 he issued Rodent Weekend '76-'96 (Approximately), a collection of unreleased material. Yugoslavia followed a year later. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: Tonio K

Steve Krikorian (July 4, 1950 - ) aka Tonio K was born in California's San Joaquin Valley. He is of Armenian descent[1].

Krikorian is a singer/songwriter, whose songs have been recorded by Charlie Sexton, Bette Midler, Peter Case, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Vanessa Williams, Bonnie Raitt, Alias and others.

Krikorian and Alan Shapazian (rhythm guitar) formed a band called The Raik's Progress which recorded one single for Liberty Records, released in 1967. (A full-length album by the band was issued on Sundazed Records in 2003.) In the early 1970s, he appeared on two albums by Buddy Holly's former backing band the Crickets: "Remnants" (1973) and "Long Way from Lubbock" (1974). (In 2004 he reunited with the Crickets for one track on their Crickets and Their Buddies album, appearing as lead vocalist on the Holly classic "Not Fade Away.")

In 1978, Krikorian went solo with Life in the Foodchain, adopting the name of Tonio K., a reference to the Thomas Mann novel Tonio Kröger. The album garnered critical acclaim, most famously from Steve Simels of Stereo Review, who proclaimed it "the greatest album ever recorded."

He is often regarded as a Christian artist. He released two albums on What? Records, an imprint of Word Records. However, he has never identified himself as a Christian artist and has said that Word Records released his albums because they were "looking for something that wasn’t really contemporary Christian or gospel, by definition...they were looking for something that was outside the scope of the typical vanilla, contemporary Christian band."[2]

Tonio continued as a performing singer/songwriter into the 1990s, but gradually withdrew from live concerts and focused more on crafting songs for other artists. In 2005, Krikorian co-wrote eight of the nine vocal tracks with Burt Bacharach on Bacharach's album At This Time. The album went on to win a Grammy as an instrumental recording. Tonio K's comment: "I'm having a great career".

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tonio K" Read more

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