Watkin Tudor Jones
Watkin Tudor Jones | |
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Jones, December 2012 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Watkin Tudor Jones |
Also known as |
Ninja Max Normal The Man Who Never Came Back MC Totally Rad Yang Weapon Destructo Waddy WAD:e[1] Ninjie[2] |
Born |
Johannesburg, South Africa | 26 September 1974
Genres | Alternative hip hop, rave |
Years active | 1995–present |
Labels | Interscope, Cherrytree,[3] Polydor, Rhythm Records |
Associated acts |
The Original Evergreen MaxNormal.TV The Constructus Corporation Fucknrad Die Antwoord |
Watkin Tudor Jones (born 26 September 1974),[4] known as Ninja, is a South African rapper, record producer, and actor.
Jones comes from Johannesburg where he attended Parktown Boys' High School. Jones left school in 1992, one year before graduating.
Jones was a part of South African hip-hop scene for many years. He has had many different stage personas, including with the Sibot-produced The Fantastic Kill and Markus Wormstorm-produced promo-only EP "Emmanuel Rothchild - My Favourite Songs" and "Markus Wormstorm Is Not Gay", and fronting such acts as The Original Evergreen, MaxNormal.TV and The Constructus Corporation.[5] He is best known as Ninja from Die Antwoord.
Other aspects of Jones' creativity have been graphic art and even stuffed animal making.
Jones has a daughter named Sixteen with Yolandi Visser,[6] who has been a frequent collaborator, including membership in Die Antwoord. He now lives in Cape Town.
Max Normal
Jones was the lead vocalist of Max Normal, a live hip hop act, which released their debut album entitled Songs From The Mall in 2001. The band performed at various festivals around South Africa, including Up the Creek, Splashy Fen, and Oppikoppi. They also played in London and three shows at the Pukkelpop Festival in Belgium.[7] A second version of this band evolved into the 'corporate' hip-hop group MaxNormal.tv in which they released an album, Good Morning South Africa, in 2008 with a sound not unlike the later-formed and more well-known group "Die Antwoord." They were a South African hip-hop crew that performed live wearing three-piece suits while frontman MaxNormal delivered his motivational speaking style raps to the audience. He also illustrated his lyrics to help the audience follow which were projected onto a big screen above the live performers and are triggered live to the beat by Max's personal assistant, Yolandi Visser, in a PowerPoint presentation style.
In early 2002, Jones disbanded Max Normal, just as the band was reaching South African stardom, headlining festivals like Oppikoppi and charting on 5FM (citing being creatively stifled as reason). He relocated to Cape Town and began collaborating with DJ Dope of Krushed & Sorted and Felix Laband on the music for a multi-media project he had conceptualised involving a graphic novel with soundtrack and live show. These sessions spawned the Man Who Never Came Back track on African Dope's Cape Of Good Dope compilation in 2002, but gradually mutated into The Constructus Corporation outfit. Yolandi Visser, listed as Anica The Snuffling on the credits, was also involved.
The Constructus Corporation
When Jones disbanded Max Normal in early 2002, he and long-time DJ partner Sibot invited Markus Wormstorm and Felix Laband to collaborate on his ambitious The Constructus Corporation project, which resulted in the concept album / graphic novel The Ziggurat (ADOPECD009 African Dope Records 2002).[8]
After a production process including mix and master by Krushed & Sorted, in December 2002 "The Ziggurat" was released. This is an 88-page pink hard-covered book containing a hand-written hiphop fantasy story by Jones, which follows the adventures of two kids on a giant futuristic floating world / shopping mall called The Ziggurat, with detailed etched digital illustrations by artist Nikhil Singh, a soundtrack CD on which Jones plays several different characters, and a bonus blank CD at the back of the book with instructions on where to download an entire second album of music and narrations for free, with which to fill the CD. The Constructus Corporation disbanded in early 2003.
Die Antwoord
Die Antwoord is a rap-rave group formed in 2008 and composed of Ninja, Yolandi Visser and DJ Hi-Tek.[9] The band self-identifies as a melange of several diverse cultures all mixed into one.[9] Die Antwoord toured Europe in April 2010 and the USA later that same year.[9] Their debut album $O$ was made available as a free download on their official website.[10] In late 2009 South African cinematographer Rob Malpage co-directed (with Jones), co-produced (with Left Films and Die Antwoord) and lensed the video for their single "Enter the Ninja."[11] The promo became a viral video on the internet nine months later, delivering millions of hits to the official Die Antwoord website, eventually crashing the website's server.[9] The video also features South African progeria sufferer Leon Botha, a prominent Cape Town artist.[12] Die Antwoord performs "Zef" music, zef being a South African slang term that describes a unique South African style which is modern while including out-of-date, discarded cultural and style elements.[9] Their lyrics are humorous and explicit, and performed in both Afrikaans and English.[9][10][13] Members of the band consider themselves as hip hop artists, but specifically refer to their music as zef rap-rave.[14]
Acting career
Jones has appeared in nonspeaking roles in various South African Nando's Commercials with South African comedian Marc Lottering.[15]
In 1995's direct-to-video film sequel Kickboxer 5,[16][17] Jones had a supporting role as a prison inmate.
In 2011, Jones along with Yolandi Visser starred in the short film "Umshini Wam" which is a popular Zulu struggle song meaning "bring me my machine gun" and was directed by Harmony Korine.
In 2015, Jones, along with Yolandi Visser, costarred in Neill Blomkamp's science-fiction film Chappie.[18] The film features the songs "Baby's On Fire", "Ugly Boy", "Cookie Thumper" and "Enter the Ninja" from his band Die Antwoord.[19]
Personal life
Jones was born in Johannesburg in 1974. He has a daughter named Sixteen with Visser.[6] Sixteen occasionally appears in Die Antwoord videos, including "I Fink U Freeky". Jones has stated that he and Visser are not in a relationship.[20]
Jones frequently contradicts himself about his personal history: he has stated that he and Yolandi have known each other since childhood,[21] but has also said they met as adults.[22] He has stated that his father has been shot and his brother took his own life.[22]
Discography
- With The Original Evergreen
- Puff The Magik (1995)
- As a solo artist
- Memoirs of a Clone (2001 Chameleon records)
- The Fantastic Kill (2005)
- With Max Normal
- Songs From The Mall (2001 Chameleon records)
- With The Constructus Corporation
- The Ziggurat (2003)
- As The Man Who Never Came Back
- Cryptycism on Cape Town Beats (2007)
- With Fucknrad
- MC Totally Rad And DJ Fuck Are Fucknrad (2007)
- As MaxNormal.TV
- Rap Made Easy (2007)
- Good Morning South Africa (2008)
- With Die Antwoord
- $O$ (2009)
- 5 EP (2010)
- $O$ Re-release (2010)
- EKSTRA EP (2010)
- TEN$ION (2012)
- Donker Mag (2014)
- Chappie (2015)
References
- ↑ "Anything But Normal (archived)". Levi's Original Music Magazine. 9 September 2008. Archived from the original on 2010-03-24. Retrieved 27 July 2014.
- ↑ Donker Mag (album), Raging Zef Boner (track 5), line 1 and repeated throughout track (lyrics)
- ↑ "Die Antwoord to sign with Interscope, Neill Blomkamp to direct next video". Boing Boing. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Max Normal - Music, Movies, Merchandise". Web.archive.org. 2007-03-05. Archived from the original on 8 December 2007. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ Barker, Jean. "24 Facts: Die Antwoord". Channel24. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- 1 2 Coetzer, Diane (31 January 2012). "Die Antwoord: The Rolling Stone Interview". Rolling Stone Magazine (South African Edition) (Rolling Stone). p. 1. Retrieved 2012-02-07.
- ↑
- ↑ "Ziggurat - African Dope Records". Africandope.co.za. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "S.African Afrikaans rappers takes Internet by storm | Oddly Enough | Reuters". Af.reuters.com. 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- 1 2 "Die Antwoord | 15 Minutes with a NINJA". Mahala. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Die Antwoord - Enter the Ninja Music Video". Dontparty.co.za. 2015-09-02. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ Jardin, Xeni (2010-02-03). "Die Antwoord, S. African zef-rap, and Progeria survivor Leon Botha - Boing Boing". M.boingboing.net. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Wat Pomp Lyrics | Die Antwoord English Song Translation". Latinrapper.com. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑
- ↑ "– Work is a sideline, live the holiday. Cape Town Lifestyle. – Watkin Tudor Jones Nando’s Commercial – Before He Became Ninja From Die Antwoord". 2oceansvibe.com. 2011-03-29. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Ninja prison fight in Kickboxer 5". YouTube. 2012-10-17. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "The Redemption: Kickboxer 5 (1995)". IMDb.com. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Meet 'Chappie', the Real Gangster In This New Clip". Bloody-disgusting.com. 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Die Antwoord Featured In Latest 'Chappie' Featurette". Bloody-disgusting.com. 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Die Antwoord ~ Straight From The Horse'S Piel". YouTube. 2011-03-11. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- ↑ "Die Antwoord - Zef Side (Official)". YouTube. 2010-01-14. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
- 1 2 "Die Antwoord Music Video Commentary - Meltdown Event". YouTube. 2015-01-31. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
External links
- Watkin Tudor Jones at the Internet Movie Database
- Watkin Tudor Jones Discography at discogs.com
- The Constructus Corporation Discography at discogs.com
- The Constructus Corporation Ziggaurat Album page on African Dope
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