Lone Wild
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Lone Wild | |
---|---|
Origin | Nashville, Tennessee, United States & Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 2011–present |
Labels | |
Associated acts | |
Website | lonewild |
Members |
Lone Wild is an American indie rock band that was formed by Ashkan Karimi in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 2012 that later moved to making Nashville, Tennessee it’s home in 2020. With Ashkan Karimi (lead vocals, guitars, producer) as the main songwriter and member, the band’s lineup has changed a number of times over the years it has been together.
Formerly known as Aftermidnight and The Fairweather.[1], Lone Wild began as a culmination of Karimi finding his own musical identity and direction often influenced bands like U2, Mutemath, and Jeff Buckley. Karimi has often described their sound as "alternative rock" with "pop tendencies".
In 2018, leaning into 80's inspiration[2], Lone Wild released the debut singles “Danger Cat”[3] and “Stranger Ways” [4]along with a number of other singles. This ultimately lead to the self-titled debut album release, “Lone Wild” in March 2019.[5]
Following the release of the debut album, Karimi’s first generation Persian-American heritage led the band to partner with Preemptive Love Coalition - a non-profit that helps refugees in Middle-Eastern countries. They did so by spotlighting their work while touring to promote the album at concerts, on social media, and by donating 10% of their concert, merch, and streaming profits.[6][7]
Gaining momentum, they had music featured on various independent playlists, indie music blogs, national commercials & television. In 2020, “Danger Cat” & “Sequin Dress” landed on national ads for Carvana and the tech giant, Amazon, while “Spitfire” was placed on Season 1 Episode 4 of the HBOMax Original Series “Made for Love” that garnered millions of viewers.
As touring slowed in 2020, Lone Wild started to write and record the second album. In 2020/21 amidst the covid-19 pandemic, an election in the U.S. and surmounting racial injustices[8], the band answered back with the release of their 4 new singles, “Locktup”[9], “The Dirties”[10], “Tryna Make Sense of It”[11] and “#ikyk”[12]
Background[edit]
2010-2014: Early Years | Aftermidnight EP & The Luminous[edit]
The origins of Lone Wild can be found in the music scene of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Karimi met friend and guitarist, Austin Donoho, and one day decided to get together in a garage with Donoho’s friend Ben Blount (drums). As time progressed, Karimi brought songs to Donoho to record guitars for a recording project that Karimi was doing himself. The solo project morphed into the band, Aftermidnight when friend Pablo Achivare-Vallejos (bass) joined.[13]
Playing their first show on New Years Eve 2011/2012, they began to make their way through venues in the local Oklahoma scene and neighboring states, spanning Missouri, Kansas, Texas, and Arkansas. They went on to release 2 EP’s recorded at Tulsa’s The Closet Studios with Kendal Osborne as the engineer. The “Aftermidnight EP” which featured their crowd favorites “Currents” and “Veneer”[14] earned local radio airplay on 104.5 The Edge. Their follow up EP “The Luminous” which featured their singles “Scales”, “Moonlight”, “Luminous” and “The Rope” also did equally as well, with “Scales” and “Moonlight”[15] earning airplay on college radio across the U.S.
In 2013 Aftermidnight played a number of shows getting to open for acts like Civil Twilight and Mike Mains & The Branches, and in 2013/14 they played Center of the Universe Festival featuring acts like MUTEMATH, OneRepublic, Young the Giant, Cold War Kids, Twenty One Pilots and Neon Trees. [16][17]
2014-2016: The Fairweather[edit]
After the release of Aftermidnight’s 2nd EP, Blount needed to step away from the project. During this time, things were in limbo, with Karimi and Donoho occasionally getting together to work on the various music ideas they had.
After a cold rehearsal in a garage with friends from the local music scene, they enlisted Bobby Ross (bass) and Kristopher Elliott (drums). The Fairweather emerged, and went on to release a self-recorded EP featuring the songs “Untie My Tongue” & “Drifting Home”[18]— both earning extensive airplay on college radio. Playing upwards of 70 shows from 2014-2016 across the mid-west, they took an indefinite hiatus as Donoho needed to step out.[19]
2016-2019: Lone Wild[edit]
With a number of songs left over from The Fairweather days, Karimi began to finish writing what was left bringing on Bobby Ross and his friend Aaron Seale (drums) to co-produce and record the project. In early 2017, Karimi brought in long time friend Jordan McLeod as the projects executive producer, and in Spring of 2017 they went on to record once again with Kendal Osborne (The Closet Studios).
During the production and recording of what would eventually become the debut record for Lone Wild, they leaned heavily into the influences of 80’s pop, rock, synth wave, and chill wave. What started as writing and recording for a 5 song EP stretched into an 11 song album, which was recorded in two parts. The first 5 tracked during their sessions in 2017 and the remaining 6 were tracked in Spring of 2018.
In 2018, Lone Wild finally emerged with the release of their debut singles “Danger Cat” & “Stranger Ways”. Karimi followed with a handful of single releases from the 2017/18 sessions, which culminated with the release of the debut self-titled record, “Lone Wild” on April 5th of 2019.[20]
Kicking off the album release with a show at their often frequented local venue, The Vanguard, Karimi enlisted friends Donoho, Blount, and Aaron Seale to play the initial show and a string of shows in the midwest throughout 2019 to further promote the album.[21]
2019-Present: Tryna Make Sense of It[edit]
In 2020, Karimi made Nashville, TN his home -- in the midst of a pandemic, an election year, surmounting racial injustices, and an overall pessimistive climate, he began to listen what was going on around him and escape it all to write music for Lone Wild’s sophomore effort.
In 2021, Lone Wild answered back with the release of 4 new singles, “Locktup” (July), “The Dirties” (September), “Tryna Make Sense of It” (October), and “#ikyk” (December)[22]
Members[edit]
- Ashkan Karimi – all vocals, guitars, synthesizer/keyboards, production (2011–present)
Past members (studio & live)[edit]
- Austin Donoho – guitar (2011-2016)(2019-2021)
- Ben Blount – drums (2011-2014) bass (2019-2021)
- Kristopher Elliott – drums (2014-2016)
- Bobby Ross – bass (2014-2017)
- Aaron Seale – drums (2017-2021)
Discography[edit]
Aftermidnight[edit]
The Fairweather[edit]
- The Fairweather EP (2016)
Lone Wild[edit]
- Lone Wild (2019)
- #ikyk (2021)
References[edit]
- ↑ "Lone Wild". Oklahoma Music Archives Wiki. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild kick off the new year with their infectious 80s pop". IndieCentralMusic. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild release new single 'Danger Cat'". Music Injection. 2018-08-18. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ ObscureSound (2018-10-23). "Listen: Lone Wild - "Stranger Ways"". www.obscuresound.com. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ Robb, Caity (2019-04-11). "Lone Wild Releases Debut Self-Titled Album". Star Catcher Magazine. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ BUZZMUSIC (2019-11-27). "Lone Wild Is Changing the World, One Song at a Time". BuzzMusic. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "LONE WILD – ARTIST SHOWCASE AND INTERVIEW — AMP". 2021-09-23. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "LONE WILD TURNS LEMONS INTO LEMONADE IN NEW SINGLE "LOCKTUP"". Get Some Magazine. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ BUZZMUSIC (2021-09-15). "Lone Wild Gives Us "The Dirties" with Their Intoxicating New Release". BuzzMusic. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Listen: "Tryna Make Sense of It" by Lone Wild". Wolf In A Suit. October 26, 2021. Archived from the original on
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ignored (help) - ↑ "Login • Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild". The Vanguard | Tulsa, OK. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "EP, by Aftermidnight". Aftermidnight. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "The Luminous, by Aftermidnight". Aftermidnight. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild". The Vanguard | Tulsa, OK. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ Tulsa Little Jam - Season 2, Episode 13 - Lone Wild, retrieved 2021-12-07
- ↑ Writer, JERRY WOFFORD World Scene. "The Fairweather sets record release Friday at Vanguard". Tulsa World. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "About The Fairweather". Spotify. Archived from the original on
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ignored (help) - ↑ reports, From staff. "Local band Lone Wild releasing new material". Tulsa World. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ "Lone Wild Album Release Show". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
- ↑ Tulsa Little Jam - Season 2, Episode 13 - Lone Wild, retrieved 2021-12-07
External links[edit]
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