Best known as the lead singer/songwriter of
the Strokes,
Julian Casablancas was born on August 23, 1978 to Elite Model Agency Group founder John Casablancas and model and former Miss Denmark Jeanette Christiansen. Christiansen's second husband, painter Sam Adoquei, helped shape
Casablancas' early musical taste, giving him a
Doors album that was a marked difference from the
Phil Collins and other pop that he listened to at the time.
Casablancas spent part of his teens in the Swiss boarding school Instituit Le Rosey, where he met future
Strokes guitarist
Albert Hammond, Jr., and in New York's Lycee Français high school, where he met
Fabrizio Moretti and
Nick Valensi.
Casablancas began playing with
Moretti,
Valensi,
Hammond, and bassist
Nikolai Fraiture in 1998, and dubbed the band
the Strokes the following year. The band's 2001 debut album,
Is This It, was a critical and commercial success, and helped put back-to-basics, garagey rock back on the map alongside bands like
the White Stripes and
Yeah Yeah Yeahs. The new wave-tinged
Room on Fire and ambitious
First Impressions of Earth followed in 2003 and 2006, respectively, and
the Strokes went on an extended hiatus after touring in support of the latter. Most of
Casablancas' bandmates released albums with other projects or on their own:
Albert Hammond, Jr. issued two solo albums, 2006's
Yours to Keep and 2008's
¿Como Te Llama?;
Moretti's band
Little Joy released their self-titled debut late in 2008; and Time of the Assassins, the debut album from
Fraiture's project
Nickel Eye, appeared in early 2009. During this time,
Casablancas collaborated with other artists, playing Casio guitar on "Sick, Sick, Sick" from
Queens of the Stone Age's 2007 album Era Vulgaris and collaborating with
Santigold and
Pharrell on the song "My Drive Thru" for a 2008 Converse Shoes ad campaign. He also recorded with
the Lonely Island,
Danger Mouse, and
Sparklehorse.
Casablancas began recording his solo debut album in 2008 with producer
Jason Lader and
Bright Eyes'
Mike Mogis;
Phrazes for the Young, which featured denser, more free-flowing songs than
the Strokes' albums, arrived in fall 2009. After returning to
the Strokes for 2011's
Angles and 2013's
Comedown Machine, he formed another band,
Julian Casablancas + the Voidz, to help flesh out the songs he had accumulated. The results were 2014's
Tyranny, a dense, sprawling work inspired by
Casablancas' love of '80s punk like
Black Flag and his political outrage. Three years later, they moved to RCA and renamed themselves
the Voidz. The group's second album,
Virtue, featured production by
Shawn Everett and arrived in March 2018. ~ Heather Phares