Kevin Johansen is a songwriter who mixes several rhythms and languages in his musical work.
Life
Kevin Johansen was born on June 21, 1964 in Fairbanks, Alaska, to Marta Gloria Calvet and Kent Johansen. Marta Calvet was an Argentine feminist and poliglot; she met Kent Johansen while studying at Denver, they moved to Alaska and lived there until Kevin was 5 years old. In 1969, they moved to Phoenix where his sister Karina was born. His parents got divorced soon after, and the mother and children moved to San Francisco. His mother remarried a Mexican painter, but with time the relationship became abusive and she decided to leave her husband and the US in 1976. Johansen spent his teenage years between Buenos Aires and Montevideo. In 1990 he married an Argentine ballerina in Buenos Aires, and the young couple moved to New York so she could continue her dance studies. Johansen worked as waiter, tourist guide and translator for a while, until he got a chance to start performing regularly at CBGB’s and got his musical career on track. He divorced his first wife and he remarried in 2006 to María Laura Franco. He currently lives in Buenos Aires with Maria and his four children: Miranda, Kim, Tom and Roy.
Musical career
He started to play guitar and write lyrics at 14, and by the end of high school he decided to become a musician. Johansen made a brief appearance in the local rock scene with the bandInstrucción Cívica with Julian Benjamin in the 80s they released two albums: Obediencia Debida in 1985 and Instrucción Cívica in 1986. In 1990 he moves with his girlfriend of that time to New York. He had several jobs unrelated to music, until Hilly Kristal heard him sing and invited him to perform at his club CBGB´s. He played in the CBGB's club for several years, until he created the group The Nada, and in 2000 recorded the album with the same name, a mix of different Latin sounds with modern pop, funk and rock. In 2010 he returned to Argentina, where he currently lives. The album, released by Los Años Luz, was relatively successful and Johansen and the group went on tour as far as Spain. By the end of 2002 Johansen recorded Sur o no Sur, also released by Los Años Luz in Argentina and by Sony Music in the rest of the world. During 2003, Johansen became successful in Argentina, playing in June at the Gran Rex Theatre, the largest Buenos Aires hall. Again in Spain, he promoted his new album with concerts in Madrid and Barcelona, this time with bigger audiences. He also performed during the MTV Latino awards, from where he continued a concerts tour to Miami, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco prior to the release of the album in United States. He has performed in Mexico, Chile, Belgium and again Spain, Colombia, among other countries with positive response from fans and the media. At the Latino Grammy Awards, Sur o no Sur was nominated for "Album of the year", "Song of the year" and "Best Music Video". For about 15 years, most the visual arts of his music was done by the Cartoonist Ricardo Siri Liniers. They went on tours together, where Liniers would draw along to Johansen music while his drawings where projected in the back of the stage. They also published a book together.
Critics reviews
Newspapers from different countries have highlighted his musical and language mixtures. He naturally switches from English to Spanish or from Cumbia to Rock. He is seen as an artists who is not afraid to experiment, since he has not settled with one specific genre he is usually calls his work as “de genre-ate”.
Discography
The Nada
Sur o no Sur
City Zen
Logo
Kevin Johansen + The Nada + Liniers = Vivo en Buenos Aires