Born July 24, 1958,
Mick Karn first studied wood and wind instruments such as bassoon and clarinet. However, it is his highly distinctive fretless bass voice for which he is most renowned, an accolade placing him next to
Jaco Pastorius. According to
Karn, bass went unnoticed and his mission was to get it noticed. Even on early
Japan recordings, his wiggly bass can be heard. By their swan song, 1981's
Tin Drum, he was dubbed one of the best bass players in the world. He'd already supplied bass and sax work to
Gary Numan's
Dance album and was the first
Japan member with a solo record:
Titles. In 1983,
Japan's live album
Oil on Canvas brought his playing to new ears: jazz legend
Jan Garbarek. The following year brought an unlikely collaboration with
Peter Murphy of
Bauhaus.
The Waking Hour became
Dali's Car's only album and soon
Karn was again a solo agent teaming up with close friend
Steve Jansen to produce
Dreams of Reason Produce Monsters. Session work with
Kate Bush and
Joan Armatrading bridged
Karn's solo efforts, which were few and far between, often odd in title and texture (Beard in the Letter Box, Plaster the Magic Tongue). The early '90s saw a more prolific
Karn, who formed the Medium label with
Jansen and
Richard Barbieri. All three joined guitarist
David Torn to produce
Karn's best efforts:
Bestial Cluster in 1993 and
The Tooth Mother in 1995. Between these came an experimental project, Polytown, with
Torn and drummer
Terry Bozzio. Its muscular and at times funky prog rock is not for the fainthearted.
Karn found time to spend on his sculptures, and a San Francisco sabbatical eventually bore the album
Each Eye a Path.
The Concrete Twin was released in 2010. Diagnosed with cancer the same year,
Karn died on January 4, 2011, at the age of 52. In an attempt to further his legacy, K-Scope began an aggressive program of reissues in 2016. ~ Kelvin Hayes