Louis Cole | |
Landscape: | yes |
Birth Name: | Louis Maxwell Cole |
Birth Place: | Los Angeles, California, US |
Years Active: | 2008–present |
Label: | Brainfeeder, Ninja Tune |
Current Member Of: | Knower, Clown Core (speculated)[1] |
Louis Maxwell Cole is an American musician, singer-songwriter, video producer, and music video director. He is best known as the co-founder of the independent electronic jazz-funk duo Knower, along with Genevieve Artadi. He is also speculated to be a member of the avant-garde musical duo Clown Core. As a solo artist, he has released five studio albums; his fourth album, Quality Over Opinion (2022), was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Jazz Album.
Louis Cole was born in Los Angeles to a family with musical roots.[2] [3] His father plays jazz piano, while his mother played bass. Cole started drumming when he was 8.[3] [4] He graduated in jazz studies at the USC Thornton School of Music in 2009.[2] [5]
After graduating from USC in 2009, Cole was encouraged by his friend Jack Conte to put music videos on YouTube, including one called "Bank Account", which showcased a split-screen of him playing keyboards, drums, and singing.[6] [2] This video catapulted him into the public awareness, as it was posted on social media by various celebrities and musicians such as John Mayer, Charlie Day, and Björk.[3] [4]
After doing several other short songs and uploading them to YouTube, Cole wanted to focus more on writing longer material.[3] He co-founded Knower with another jazz studies graduate, Genevieve Artadi.[7] In 2010, he released both his self-titled solo album and the debut album for Knower.[2] [5] After releasing his second solo album, he focused more on Knower, producing three other albums. In the meantime, Cole co-wrote "Padded Cell" for Seal's 2015 album 7, and together with Artadi, got featured on Snarky Puppy's Family Dinner – Volume 2. In 2017, he co-wrote two songs for Thundercat's album Drunk.[2] This led to signing a contract with Flying Lotus' label Brainfeeder and releasing his third solo album through the label in 2018.[6] [2] [3] The album featured appearances by Artadi, Thundercat, Dennis Hamm and Brad Mehldau.[2] Cole also appeared on Thundercat's 2020 Grammy Award winning album It Is What It Is, performing on a song called "I Love Louis Cole", which was dedicated to him.[8]
In 2020, Cole wrote an exclusive song for Grand Theft Auto Online called "Planet X", which was added to the FlyLo FM radio station through The Cayo Perico Heist update.[9] [10] Knower's song "Fuck the Makeup, Skip the Shower" was previously featured on the same radio station.[11] "Planet X" was later included in Cole's fourth studio album Quality Over Opinion, which was released on October 14, 2022 via Brainfeeder.[12] Another single from the album, "Let it Happen", was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals in 2023, and the album as a whole was nominated for Best Alternative Jazz Album the following year.[13]
It is speculated that Cole and saxophonist Sam Gendel are behind Clown Core, a surrealist musical duo of two anonymous clowns who blend grindcore, jazz, and electronic music.[14]
Cole is a classically-trained jazz musician and multi-instrumentalist who plays drums, keyboards, guitar and bass, sings, and produces his material.[15] [3] [16] His work contains elements from a diverse range of music genres such as jazz, funk, pop, avant-garde, electronic, lo-fi (early) and grindcore (with Clown Core).[3] [5] [1] Cole is a "bedroom" musician who does not like working in a professional recording studio. He practices drums for four hours a day, and writes music for seven hours a day. Cole feels his mission is to write his own favorite music, and he "never [tries] to make [his] music accessible to anyone."[3] He is known for using strange and counterintuitive chord progressions.[6] His lyrics often include humor and vulgarity, and his music features home-made videos. Cole is more creative during the early hours of the day, and documents this phenomenon on his song, "The Weird Part of the Night".[3]
Cole's influences include his father, Stevie Wonder, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, The Beach Boys, Boards of Canada, Nate Wood, The Beatles, and Skrillex, among others.[3] [15] Cole is also influenced by science fiction and video game sounds and visuals, and notes that the music of classic Nintendo games and Tron shaped Knower's aesthetic:
Cole is best friends with Thundercat, who has called him "one of Los Angeles's greatest musicians".[17] [18] Flying Lotus has also expressed admiration for Cole on Twitter, calling him "super inspirational" during the writing of his album Flamagra.[19]
Bob Mintzer has described Cole as "the paradigm for today's musician". Will Schube of Passion of the Weiss has compared Cole's "auteur approach" to that of another Los Angeles musician, Ariel Pink.[20] Emma Roller of The Brick House Cooperative has described Cole as "a dopey yet cerebral jazz composer and percussionist who whaps out brain-meltingly complex beats with Terminator-like precision".
Title | Album details | |
---|---|---|
Louis Cole |
| |
Album 2 |
| |
Time |
| |
Quality Over Opinion |
| |
Some Unused Songs |
| |
Nothing |
|
Title | Album details | |
---|---|---|
Louis Cole and Genevieve Artadi |
| |
Think Thoughts |
| |
Let Go |
| |
Life |
| |
Knower Forever |
|
Title | Album details | |
---|---|---|
Clown Core |
| |
Toilet |
| |
Van |
| |
1234 |
|
Title | Year | Album |
---|---|---|
"Weird Part of the Night" | 2016 | Time |
"Bank Account" | 2017 | rowspan=3 |
"Thinking" | ||
"Blimp" | ||
"Things" | 2018 | Time |
"Doing the Things" | 2019 | |
"Let It Happen" | 2022 | Quality Over Opinion |
"I'm Tight" | ||
"Not Needed Anymore" | ||
"Dead Inside Shuffle" |
These are writing and production credits for music outside of Knower, Clown Core, or his own solo work.
Title | Year | Artist | Album | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Padded Cell" | 2015 | Seal | 7 | Co-writer | |
2020 | Jacob Mann | 106 | Mastered |
Title | Year | Credited artist(s) | Album |
---|---|---|---|
"Bus in These Streets" | 2016 | Thundercat | Drunk |
"Jameel's Space Ride" | |||
2018 | Jacob Mann Big Band | Greatest Hits, Vol 2 | |
"Tonight" | 2018 | Sam Wilkes | Wilkes |
"Descending" | |||
"It Gets Funkier IV" | Vulfpeck | Hill Climber | |
"Edge of the Cliff" | 2020 | Genevieve Artadi | Dizzy Strange Summer |
"Hope Song" | |||
"Hits | " | Henry Solomon and Logan Kane | |
2023 | Genevieve Artadi | Forever Forever | |
"Mad Hope" | Gen Hoshino | Lighthouse | |
style=text-align:center" colspan="12" style="font-size: 8pt" | "—" denotes he wasn't on one song, but an entire album. |