Joelistics Explained

Joelistics
Birth Name:Joel Ma
Origin:Sydney, Australia
Genre:Hip hop
Years Active:1999–present
Label:Liberation, Elefant Traks
Associated Acts:TZU
Background:solo_singer

Joelistics (born Joel Ma) is an Australian MC, producer and multi-instrumentalist, who is a member of the Melbourne-based Australian hip hop group TZU and a solo artist on the Elefant Traks music label.

Early life

Ma was raised in Sydney, to a Chinese father and an Anglo-Celtic Australian mother.[1] Ma attended Fort Street High School in the inner western Sydney suburb of Petersham, which was also attended by other Australian hip hop musicians, such as Adit Gauchan, producer for Horrorshow, and Kaho Cheung (aka Unkle Ho), producer for The Herd.[2] [3]

Ma said in October 2014 that he played in punk and hardcore bands during his adolescent years, and drums was his first instrument. His high school band "The Mechanical Bumcheeks" won the "Battle of the Bands" competition at Balmain Town Hall in Sydney.

Music

TZU

After travelling to Melbourne, Ma formed TZU with Paso Bionic of Curse Ov Dialect and members of Pan in 2002.[4] During their years of activity, they released four studio albums under Liberation Music before disbanding in 2013.

Joelistics

2011 – 2014: Voyager

Using his MC name "Joelistics", Ma signed with Sydney-based Australian hip hop label Elefant Traks for the release of his first solo album Voyager. Released in 2011, Ma collaborated with Ella Thompson (Oz Soul Collective, Axolotl), Dustin Mclean (Moon Zero studios) and Natalie Pa'apa'a (Blue King Brown) for the recording of the album.[5] Ma explained following the release of Voyager that the album is influenced by travels to locations such as Berlin, Germany; France; and Bangkok, Thailand, and he wrote sections of two songs—"All the Rebels" and "Sooner or Later"—while in Bangkok:

There is a hotel near Sukhumvit Rd called The Atlanta and it's my favourite hotel in all the world ... and in the marbled foyer they provide letter writing rooms for guests. I set up my laptop in one of these rooms and cooked up "All the Rebels" ... I stumbled across the beat [for "Sooner or Later"] in my last few days before I returned to Australia, and the verses about travelling tumbled out while I was in transit from Thailand back to Oz. They were mostly written at Suvarnabhumi airport in a sleep-deprived, half-excited, half-delirious state.

2014–2015: Blue Volume

Ma's second solo album Blue Volume was released in mid-2014, again on the Elefant Traks label, and the musician explained in a June 2014 interview that while Voyager was "a largely positive record", the follow-up is "about breaking up and being quite caught up in the frustrations of certain things, certain emotions and the loss of identity." Ma further explains that the Australian social climate had changed after he returned from travelling in Germany and Spain, and he proceeded to channel feelings of frustration and anger into the creation of Blue Volume, an album that he describes as "uncomfortable".[6] Between the two albums, Ma also experienced the end of a long-term relationship with his former partner and the death of a close friend:

... I experienced some loss that I hadn't really touched before. And people who were close to me are no long there or no longer close to me ... the things that I think are worth fighting for and believe in, I think, are still the same ... Maybe, if anything, I've got more doubts.

The launch shows for Blue Volume took place in September, October and November 2014, including shows in Hong Kong and Singapore.[7] Ma also performed with fellow Elefant Traks artist Sietta for the 2014 Darwin Festival, in Darwin, a special collaboration that was scheduled to feature "stories about growing up in Australia in the 80s and 90s, and particularly growing up mixed race."

Ma completed a video interview with the Music Feeds website prior to the start of the "Blue Volume Tour" in Sydney, and revealed that during the songwriting process for Blue Volume his laptop was stolen while he was overseas. The laptop contained all of the material he had written for the second album, but he explained that the theft might have been fortuitous, as the tone of the material was darker than the songs he wrote following the theft. Ma was also questioned about the musical diversity of Blue Volume and Ma replied with an example of his eclectic taste: "When I listen to music, I make mixtapes, and it will go from a Fugazi track, to a Public Enemy track, to an Al Green track, and I like that movement through the different styles ... you know, the themes on Blue Volume, I think, carry through from song to song."[8]

Ma performed at the "New Years Beats" event on New Year's Eve 2014, alongside fellow Australian hip hop artists, such as Briggs and The Funkoars.[9] He performed his song, "Say I'm Good" alongside You Am I for the triple j radio station's 40th anniversary event, Beat The Drum, on 16 January 2015.[10]

2018

Joelistics produced the title track for Mojo Juju's 2018 album, Native Tongue.[11]

Touring

Ma's Australian "Blue Volume Tour" occurs during October and November 2014, starting in Sydney and finishing in Brisbane.[12] DJ Soup will perform with Ma, while the support acts are Mathas and label-mates Sietta.

Ma's Sydney performance at the Newtown Social Club on 17 October 2014 received a 3.5-star rating (out of 5) from Sydney Morning Herald reviewer George Palathingal who described Ma as "some kind of hip-hop samurai", whose "rhyming is razor-sharp and his storytelling compelling". According to Palathingal, Ma's mother and friends attended the Sydney leg of the "Blue Volume Tour" and Ma explained to the audience that his music has always been motivated by passion, rather than money.[13]

Media appearances

Prior to the commencement of the October–November 2014 Blue Volume Australian tour, an article from Ma was published on the Tone Deaf website on 9 October 2014. Titled "The 5 Asian Pop Songs That Are Weirder Than Acid, According To Joelistics", the article lists Ma's five favorite Asian pop songs from a genre that Ma described as a "visual beast." Ma lists includes artists such as Baby Metal, G Dragon and Queen Sea Big Shark.

Discography

Albums

List of albums, with selected details! Title! Details
Voyager
  • Released: 2011
  • Format: CD
  • Label: Elefant Traks (ACE059)
Blue Volume
  • Released: 2014
  • Format: CD
  • Label: Elefant Traks (ACE101)
Film School
  • Released: March 2021
  • Format: LP
  • Label: Joelistics

Extended Plays

List of EPs! Title! Details
Ghost Town
(with Mojo Juju)
  • Released: 25 November 2019[14]
  • Label: Mojo Juju
  • Formats: digital, streaming

Awards and nominations

AIR Awards

The Australian Independent Record Awards (commonly known informally as AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.|-| 2011[15] [16] |Voyager | Best Independent Hip Hop/Urban Album| |-

Music Victoria Awards

The Music Victoria Awards are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music. They commenced in 2006.! |-| 2020| Joelistics for Mo'Ju & Joelistics Ghost Town (EP)| Best Producer| |[17] [18] |-

Filmography

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Hip-hop without the usual bling bling. Fairfax Media. 27 March 2006. 3 August 2014.
  2. Web site: GUESTS & SPECIALS HORRORSHOW. rage. ABC. 3 August 2014. 12 November 2011.
  3. News: Hip-hop without the usual bling bling. Fairfax Media. 27 March 2006. Louise Hall. 3 August 2014.
  4. Web site: TZU @ J Play . Jplay.com.au . 1 October 2013.
  5. Web site: Marcus. Joelistics 'Voyager' – Track by Track. The Vine. Digital Media. 3 August 2014. 17 June 2011.
  6. Web site: Matt Shea. Joelistics: "There's a format for Aussie hip-hop these days". The Vine. Digital Media. 3 August 2014. 30 June 2014.
  7. Web site: Sosefina Fuamoli. Joelistics announces 'Blue Volume' tour dates for October and November!. The AU Review. Heath Media & the AU review. 21 October 2014. 21 August 2014.
  8. Web site: Interview: Joelistics – "I Like An Element Of Chaos". https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211219/rWgy4LamxBQ . 2021-12-19 . live. Music Feeds on YouTube. Google Inc. 21 October 2014. Video upload. 17 October 2014.
  9. Web site: October 16. Cassettte Entertainment on Facebook. Facebook. 21 October 2014. 16 October 2014.
  10. Web site: You Am I with Joelistics and Adalita at triple j's Beat The Drum. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211219/Y6Nq6S1oPWA . 2021-12-19 . live. triple j on YouTube. Google Inc. 20 January 2015. Video upload. 16 January 2015.
  11. News: Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ABC News. Mojo Juju talks race, family and representation in her third album, Native Tongue. Beverly. Wang. Radio National: Stop Everything!. 18 August 2018. 7 November 2019.
  12. Web site: Staff, Joel Ma. The 5 Asian Pop Songs That Are Weirder Than Acid, According To Joelistics. Tone Deaf. Tone Deaf. 9 October 2014. 9 October 2014.
  13. News: George Palathingal. Joelistics review: The power and passion of a hip-hop samurai. 21 October 2014. The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 October 2014.
  14. Web site: Ghost Town DD. Apple Music Australia. 17 September 2021.
  15. Web site: Independent Music Awards Nominees Announced. tonedeaf. 13 September 2011. 19 August 2020.
  16. Web site: History Wins. Australian Independent Record Labels Association. 18 August 2020.
  17. Web site: Previous Nominess. Music Victoria. 13 August 2020. 19 September 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200919214225/https://www.musicvictoria.com.au/musicvictoriaawards/previous-nominees. dead.
  18. Web site: Previous Winners. Music Victoria. 13 August 2020.