Kishi Bashi: Tiny Desk Concert K Ishibashi is a master of building his music from the ground up, from live violin loops to layered singing to beatboxing, in order to create pocket symphonies steeped in classical music and 21st-century pop. He brings that ingenuity and songcraft to the Tiny Desk at the NPR Music offices.

Kishi Bashi: Tiny Desk Concert

Kishi Bashi: Tiny Desk Concert

  • Download
  • <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/152285927/152370730" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">

My favorite Tiny Desk Concert moments come when the NPR staff gathers around the desk for an artist they've never heard and walk away wanting more. I wasn't surprised to see that happen with Kishi Bashi — he is, after all, the one musician out of the 1,300 songs or so we previewed for All Songs Considered that we all agreed was a must-see at SXSW. He didn't disappoint.

Kishi Bashi is not only a musician in the band Of Montreal, but also a master of building songs from the ground up — from live violin loops to layered singing to beatboxing. His songs are complicated pocket symphonies steeped in classical playing and 21st-century pop.

K Ishibashi (his given name) was born in Seattle, grew up on the East Coast and these days is settled in Norfolk, Va. His superb new album, 151a, is a favorite here in the NPR offices and among anyone who'll listen. It may be steeped in pop songs, but it isn't simple music: Sometimes the songs are in English and sometimes Japanese, sometimes they're tightly composed, sometimes they're wild improvisations. But they're always interesting and full of promise — much like Kishi Bashi's record, his live performances and this Tiny Desk Concert, from which you're sure to walk away wanting more.

Set List:

  • "Improvisation / Atticus, In The Desert"
  • "Bright Whites"
  • "I Am The Antichrist To You"

Credits:

Producer and Editor: Bob Boilen; Videographer: Michael Katzif; Audio Engineer: Kevin Wait; photo by Emily Bogle/NPR