Ki Theory

The correct title of this article is Ki:Theory. The substitution or omission of the colon is because of technical restrictions.
Ki:Theory
Birth name Joel Burleson
Also known as Ki:Theory
Origin Richmond, Virginia, United States of America
Genres Indie
Alternative
Electronic
Years active 1999–present
Website Ki:Theory's Official Website

Joel Burleson, better known as Ki:Theory (pronounced “Key Theory”) is an American recording artist and producer who specializes in alternative rock with electronic elements.

Career

Burleson has toured widely in Canada, Japan, Korea, and the US, including a performance at Bonnaroo Music Festival.[1][2] He has done remixes for Daft Punk/Tron: Legacy, Kings of Leon, Queens of the Stone Age, Ladytron, Odesza, Cypress Hill, Rob Zombie, Sasha, UNKLE, Rodrigo y Gabriela with Hans Zimmer, and Brazilian Girls, amongst others.[2][3]

Ki:Theory's remix for Daft Punk's "The Son Of Flynn" for Tron: Legacy was featured on the official remix album, Tron: Legacy Reconfigured. [4][5][6] His remix for Rodrigo Y Gabriela's "Angelica" was included on the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack for Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.[7][8]

His original music has been featured on various television programs, including The Following, Top Gear, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, First Ascent for the National Geographic International Channel, National Geographic Wild's 2011 TV series Killer Shots, and MTV's Teen Mom 2.

His songs have appeared in commercials for Converse, Billabong, Gap and Audi, the video game trailer Electronic Arts game FIFA 14,[9] the trailer for the film Abduction[10] starring Taylor Lautner and Sigourney Weaver directed by John Singleton (Boyz n the Hood), as well as in numerous films and videos games including EA's Need for Speed: Shift and WINtA.

Ki:Theory DJed for fashion designer Betsey Johnson during Fall 2010 and Spring 2011 New York Fashion Week.

In 2009 Ki:Theory released Arms For Legs, a digital work-in-progress LP; new songs were self-released as singles and added to the collection as they were completed.

In April 2011 Ki:Theory released the EP Messages: Syntax / Error, a collection of previously unreleased songs written as part of film scores, TV commercials, and creative expressions.

On November 30, 2011 Ki:Theory released the single I Wanna Run featuring Maura Davis of the band Denali.

Ki:Theory's first full-length album KITTY HAWK was released worldwide on October 29, 2013. The album title track is featured in the trailer for the video game FIFA 14,[9] as well as in The Crew (video game).

On February 3, 2014, Ki:Theory's cover of Ben E. King's "Stand by Me" off the KITTY HAWK album was used in FOX's The Following in episode 3 of season 2 as well as the 2014 Super Bowl TV spot also for The Following. The song has since been used in a trailer for the film Brick Mansions, The CW network TV series Star-crossed, as well as TV spots for Bates Motel, Dallas (2012 TV series), and most recently the Netflix original show Marco Polo (TV series).

A deluxe edition of the album "KITTY HAWK" was released in April 2014. It features previously unreleased songs as well as remixes from artists such as Odesza, Fink, and UNKLE.

In January 2015, Ki:Theory released his latest single, "The Way It Was".

In June 2015, Ki:Theory released another single, "If You Don't Care / Fake It" alongside a remix by electronic producer GANZ, featuring speed up vocals from the original song.[11]

Discography

Albums/EPs

Singles

Remixes

Use of music in video-games

The song "KITTY HAWK" was featured in the official trailer for EA's FIFA 14 and was also used in the Ubisoft game The Crew. "KITTY HAWK" was also used in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive as a pay-to-use music kit, "MOLOTOV." The song was also later uploaded to the video game osu! by the user "George" and was later ranked by "ByBy13." Ki:Theory composed the song "Frozen" that was featured in EA's The Sims 4.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, November 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.