Vous avez des bons goûts.
Connectez-vous pour suivre vos artistes favoris, sauvegarder des événements, & plus encore.
Connexion
Bandsintown
obtenir l'app
Inscription
Connexion
Inscription
Connexion

Industrie
ArtistesÉvénement Pros
AideConfidentialitéConditions
Billets, dates de tournée et concerts pour Malice K

Malice K

The Great Escape 2024

16 mai 2024

10:00 UTC+1
J'y étais
Laisser une critique
Billets, dates de tournée et concerts pour Malice K
festival
Découvrez qui d'autre passe à The Great Escape 2024

Trouver un endroit où dormir

Programmation
Sid Sriram
14,2 k Fans
S'abonner
Victoria Canal
10,6 k Fans
S'abonner
Begonia
10,2 k Fans
S'abonner
Mad Tsai
9,33 k Fans
S'abonner
Darren Kiely
7,84 k Fans
S'abonner
Jalen Ngonda
7,05 k Fans
S'abonner
Wunderhorse
6,68 k Fans
S'abonner
Corella
5,92 k Fans
S'abonner
Mackenzy MacKay
5,68 k Fans
S'abonner
Rum Jungle
5,34 k Fans
S'abonner
Sirens Of Lesbos
4,96 k Fans
S'abonner
Jambinai
4,95 k Fans
S'abonner
Frost Children
3,91 k Fans
S'abonner
Kingfishr
3,77 k Fans
S'abonner
Alfie Jukes
3,76 k Fans
S'abonner
Jalen N'Gonda
3,57 k Fans
S'abonner
TOM LARK
3,36 k Fans
S'abonner
Zach Templar
3,26 k Fans
S'abonner
Been Stellar
2,84 k Fans
S'abonner
Food House
2,74 k Fans
S'abonner
Jayo
2,65 k Fans
S'abonner
The Dare
2,61 k Fans
S'abonner
Fabiana Palladino
2,41 k Fans
S'abonner
Aysanabee
2,29 k Fans
S'abonner
Aziya
2,26 k Fans
S'abonner
Ugly
1,98 k Fans
S'abonner
Bolis Pupul
1,97 k Fans
S'abonner
Enola
1,88 k Fans
S'abonner
En Attendant Ana
1,8 k Fans
S'abonner
Mette
1,73 k Fans
S'abonner
Cardinals
1,59 k Fans
S'abonner
Friedberg
1,55 k Fans
S'abonner
Olivia Lunny
1,31 k Fans
S'abonner
Trout
1,28 k Fans
S'abonner
Big Special
1,04 k Fans
S'abonner
King Isis
946 Fans
S'abonner
Emmeline
936 Fans
S'abonner
DARTZ!
904 Fans
S'abonner
Malice K
888 Fans
S'abonner
S'abonner
Gia Ford
816 Fans
S'abonner
Miso Extra
793 Fans
S'abonner
S'abonner
Sharktank
715 Fans
S'abonner
Alessi Rose
668 Fans
S'abonner
Carsick
624 Fans
S'abonner
battlesnake
568 Fans
S'abonner
The Life
476 Fans
S'abonner
Automotion
458 Fans
S'abonner
Fcukers
409 Fans
S'abonner
Eaves Wilder
383 Fans
S'abonner
Soft Launch
380 Fans
S'abonner
YHWH Nailgun
328 Fans
S'abonner
No Windows
304 Fans
S'abonner
Erin LeCount
263 Fans
S'abonner
Fiona Lee
258 Fans
S'abonner
LVRA
244 Fans
S'abonner
Sila Lua
163 Fans
S'abonner
The New Eves
154 Fans
S'abonner
Fiona-Lee
115 Fans
S'abonner
Cosmorat
113 Fans
S'abonner
freekind
112 Fans
S'abonner
DARTZ
108 Fans
S'abonner
Mock Media
106 Fans
S'abonner
S'abonner
ENOLA
10 Fans
S'abonner
Découvrez plus d'artistes à suivre & synchronisez votre musique
Trouvez vos favoris
musicSyncBanner

Partager l’événement

Biographie de Malice K

There are ghosts all across AVANTI, the debut album from Malice K - the record wades through a disarray of chaos and loss with a sharp-toothed fervor. At points it’s howling and unhinged, a grungy layer atop a lush foundation of melodic capital-s Songwriting akin to the golden-age pop of the ‘70s, but in other moments it dissolves into a gentle, wistful haunting. Malice K’s songs are blunt, uncomplicated and unflinching as he probes the interiority of memories, of mistakes – saturated with an innate intensity that sucks you into his gnarled and visceral world, so barbed it could draw blood.

Malice K is a New York-based project helmed by visual artist and songwriter Alex Konschuh, but he was born and raised in Olympia, Washington. Following a stint living in Los Angeles, where he delved further into his music making and became a member of the artist collective Death Proof Inc., a trip to New York funded by a prospective label resulted in him simply never leaving the city. A period of chaos ensued, Malice K exhausted and unmoored and ultimately, unwell: “I was just... I was trying to be like a full-time performer constantly in my day to day life,” he says. “I was at every party, and doing everything, and I just wasn’t me.”

That partying and instability caught up to him, and through necessity he found ways to let go of what wouldn’t allow him to continue making his art, or even to survive. He wades through that turmoil on AVANTI, which acts as a diary of the last two years of his life. The album title offers a double meaning, named for both the formative alternative performing arts high school Malice K attended and the Italian adverb, which, translated to English, means “to go forward.”

He started writing the songs here across the last several years, one song at a time. Perfection is never the point. As reflective as his songwriting is, Malice K isn’t interested in belaboring the work, or even his own story. Leaving room for catharsis, for connection, for a community, is what’s most important. He prefers to distill the feeling and sound of the room, of the immediate present, the way he feels when he performs it, to tape.

“A microphone just recording the room, what’s around you - there’s something that comes through there and I like to preserve that as much as possible,” he says. “Even though you can’t define exactly what someone was feeling when they made a song, you can tell when somebody felt something when you hear it. It’s like how a camera can save a photo – I want to do that, but with sound.”

And the resulting AVANTI undulates with a singular acuity, strangely romantic but tragic, tense and startling, even in its quieter, ballad-skewing moments.

The record is unpredictable across its 11 songs. The album opens with a jarring scream on “Halloween,” Malice K’s breathless vocals buried beneath a grungy, roving Nineties riff. The track emanates a manic energy, enveloping. It’s a fitting entrypoint for the record, and for the vividness of Malice K. The snarling and obsessive “You’re My Girl” has a swaggering paranoia: “I got so high I thought my hand touching my hand was your hand.” But AVANTI exists in a lot of quieter moments – “Radio,” with its fluttering morose cello (Malice K’s first time composing for the instrument), which moves at an almost glacial pace comparatively, or the aching wistfulness on both the “The Old House” and “Blue Monday.” “The Old House” is an album stand-out, anchored in an acoustic guitar, an uneasy lullaby that never quite settles into itself: “I think to myself I got the things that I wanted, but I can’t help think there’s something else that I forgot to do.”

There’s an underlying theatricality throughout - but it works because it’s built on what’s simple and true. Like on the penultimate track, “Raining,” with its propulsive, percussive heartbeat, where he wonders: “You set me on fire and put me out / for what is trust / but making up for how you fucked up to begin with?” It’s the closest the album comes to a thesis – a flawed, lovesick devotion – but the idea of a guiding story is something Malice K squarely rejects.

“I don’t like albums formed solely around themes, or where you have to be told what it is,” Malice K says. “I don’t like being told what to think or feel about something – I stray away from projects where it needs to be explained to be heard properly, or where there’s only one way to hear something.”

A recent press interview called Malice K a shapeshifter, but he’s not amorphous in that way. He’s decisive and intense, more concerned with carving his own path, and building his own world, rather than finding ways to fit into what already exists. Every part of Malice K is distinctly himself – felt even in the visual components, like the “Radio” single tape-and-scissors artwork, the illustrations for the inside of the album packaging, the AVANTI album cover featuring a sculpture he made in collaboration with Cheeky Ma. From his sweaty high-octane shows to the high-flash high-contrast photos; from his gnarled and unsettling illustrations to the studio recordings that vacillates between grief and tenderness at the drop of the hat, there’s an exceptional ferocity across everything Malice K touches. AVANTI feels lived in, like peering into an abandoned house through a window smeared with grimy fingerprints, relics of a life well-lived scattered inside - despite being a debut, there’s the sense that Malice K arrived fully-realized, imperfections and all.
Plus d'info
Indie
Suivre cet artiste