| Kele Okereke |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Kelechukwu Rowland Okereke [1] |
| Born |
October 13, 1981 (1981-10-13) (age 25) |
| Origin |
Liverpool, England |
| Genre(s) |
Indie rock
Art
rock |
| Instrument(s) |
Guitar
Vocals |
| Years active |
2002–present |
| Label(s) |
Wichita
V2 |
Associated
acts |
Bloc Party |
| Notable instrument(s) |
Fender
Telecaster
Gretsch
Tennessee Rose |
Kele Okereke (birthname Kelechukwu
Rowland Okereke, born October 13, 1981 in Liverpool to Nigerian
parents), is the vocalist and guitarist
for English
art
rock band
Bloc
Party.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
days
- 2 Bloc
Party
- 3 Personal
life
- 4 Style
- 5 Musical
equipment used
- 6 References
|
Early days
Okereke (nicknamed "Rowly" as a child) was born in Liverpool
to Catholic Nigerian
parents, though he grew up in London. His mother was a midwife, and his
father a molecular biologist. He has one
sister. He went to school at Ilford County High School,
until, but switched to Trinity High School for sixth form
at age 16. Growing up, he would regularly visit Nigeria. However, he
lived in Bethnal Green, and it was there in
1998 that he became friends with his new schoolmate at Trinity: Russell
Lissack. A year later, when Okereke met Lissack at Reading
Festival, the pair formed a band called Union. In 2000, they recruited
bass player Gordon Moakes, and the band
proceeded to tour with various drummers. In 2001 (aged 20), Okereke
moved out of his parents' home. Two years later, he met Matt Tong
who became the band's permanent drummer. In 2003, the band changed its
name to Bloc Party.
Bloc Party
-
In 2005 Bloc Party released their first studio album, titled Silent
Alarm. The album reached number three in the UK charts, and propelled
the band to fame. Despite this, Okereke continued to study English
literature at university. Until the release of Silent Alarm, he had
kept his musical activities secret from his parents.
The band released their second album, called A Weekend in the
City on February 5, 2007 in the UK and February 6 in the United States.
The album debuted at #12 in the Billboard 200 with 48,000 copies
sold.[3] It became available via the UK's iTunes store a day ahead of
schedule, on February 4, and reached the #2 spot in the Official UK
Chart. The album was produced by Jacknife Lee. The first single, "The
Prayer", was released on January 29. This single has been located on
their MySpace since November 22, 2006. The next single, "I Still
Remember", is their first American single. In the build up to the
release of the album, Zane Lowe aired a live set from Maida Vale
featuring a mix of old songs and new ones on his evening radio show on
BBC Radio 1 on January 30, 2007. On February 1, 2007, A Weekend in the
City was made available to listen to for free through the band's
official MySpace page.
The band's first gig following the release of AWITC was on
February 5 at Reading Hexagon. It was broadcasted live on BBC's Music
Station 6 Music that night as well.
Bloc Party has been confirmed as one of the bands playing in
the Live Earth concerts on July 7, 2007 and the Oxegen Festival that
same weekend, as well as Glastonbury and the Reading and Leeds
Festivals 2007
Okereke began work on the band's second album. Among the
influences in the album were his feelings about his peers, who at the
time, were mostly feeling disappointment with the lack of opportunity
after finishing university. These emotions gave the album a theme of
life in East London in the 21st century. The album was released in
February of 2007, when it reached number 2 on the UK charts.
Personal life
Okereke is a shy and private person,
and is considered to be more concerned with his music than his media
image. He has expressed disdain for interviews, asking one interviewer
from Skyscraper magazine, "Why is it important to know what I had for
breakfast? Or who I went to bed with? Or what sneakers I am wearing? If
it's relevant to understanding my music, then so be it. But if it's
purely to satisfy the media's obsession with celebrity, then no thanks.
I don't want to play that game." The focus of one interview with NME in July 2005 was
largely to do with his dislike of being interviewed. In it he implied
that the media placed deliberate emphasis on conflicts between bands
and did not want to be drawn into such publicity, saying that "public
feuding between bands is completely pointless."A huge influence in
Kele's life was his cousin friend David Rowland who is the lead singer
of The Bobcats. Kele spent many summers in Dublin and always remembers
his days in Dundrum (upper middle class residential area). He concluded
that he has "no faith" in interviews since every interview of him that
he has read has "distorted and manipulated" what he says. The image of
inaccessibility cultivated by such an attitude later caused Okereke to
say, "people think that I hate being approached but that's not true" in
the NME on September 15, 2005.
Okereke has been notoriously coy about his sexuality.
Despite this, he has given an interview to gay
lifestyle magizine Attitude,
and in January 2007 he compared himself to famous bisexuals Brian
Molko and David Bowie, as well as Morrissey,
who has also remained tight-lipped about his sexual orientation
throughout his career. In an interview with the The
Observer newspaper he attacked homophobia
and quoted the famous lesbian novel The Well of Loneliness
by Radclyffe
Hall.
Okereke has expressed a desire to leave Britain in the future.
On RTE
science television show Scope, he nominated the iPod as his favourite
invention.
Style
Kele performing in January, 2007 at Southampton Guildhall, UK
As a songwriter, Okereke's approach is somewhat
unconventional. His lyrics on Bloc Party's debut album Silent
Alarm are more in line with another very
private, mysterious frontman, Michael Stipe of R.E.M..
Both songwriters avoid direct expression of their feelings and
opinions, preferring to speak through a veil of allusion and cryptic
imagery. "Helicopter", for instance is a song some believe is addressed
to George
W. Bush and the war in Iraq.
It has the lyrics: "North to south, empty, running on bravado... He's
gonna save the world, Just like his Dad... (the same mistakes), Some
things will never be different... Are you hoping for a miracle? (It's
not enough)" In response to this issue, Okereke said in an interview,
"'Helicopter' isn't about Bush; it's a song about waking up and
realising certain things. I hope what people got from that song wasn't
a critique of American life. I got really worried when I started
reading our message boards; there was an American who had read the
lyrics of 'Helicopter' and had come to the conclusion that we were
advocating that the European way is the ideal. But that wasn't it at
all. Europeans have their own set of problems. I've personally been
quite retarded by growing up in Europe; I have issues with things being
messy and saying what I really feel."
Nonetheless, for the second album A
Weekend in the City, he chose more personal and
political subjects for songs. A family friend, Christopher Alaneme, had been
murdered in a racist
attack, while David Morley, a London bartender,
was beaten to death in a possibly homophobic "happy
slapping". Okereke has claimed that these events, combined with the 7 July London bombings
"galvanised [his] mindset", prompting him to make the lyrics "dark,
bigger and quite abrasive".
Furthermore, Okereke criticised Green Day in
the NME for "riding on this public sentiment of anti-Americanism among
teens across the world." He further said that, "it just seems to be the
emptiest of soundbites, and that's something we're always conscious of
trying to avoid." In reference to these Green Day fans he said that
"being confronted by how stupid and blinkered western teenagers are,"
made him angry. To change this, he said "he was trying to provide an
alternative, by trying to provide an oasis for kids who are
disenfranchised, by doing something different as a band."
In 2004 he collaborated with The Chemical Brothers,
singing on the track "Believe" from their album Push
the Button.
Musical equipment used
The following is a list of equipment used by Okereke.
Guitars:
- Fender Telecaster – Sunburst
- Gretsch
Tennessee Rose – Cherry Red
- Fender Stratocaster – Black
Amplifiers:
References
-
"Bloc
Party: Ultra-violence and hedonism have fuelled this album", NME, 2006-08-17.
| v • d • e Bloc Party |
| Russell Lissack
| Gordon Moakes | Kele Okereke | Matt Tong |
| David Searston | Mat Coleman | James Chorley |
| Discography |
| Studio albums: Silent
Alarm | A Weekend in the City |
| EPs: Bloc Party EP | Little Thoughts EP |
Two More Years EP |
| Remix albums: Silent
Alarm Remixed |
| Singles: "She's
Hearing Voices" | "Little Thoughts" | "Helicopter"
| "Tulips"
| "So Here We Are" | "Banquet"
| "The Pioneers" | "Two
More Years" | "The Prayer" | "I Still Remember" | "Hunting
for Witches" |
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Okereke, Kelechukwu Rowland |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
Okereke, Kele |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
Singer and guitarist |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
13 October 1981 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Liverpool, England |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|