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Wikipedia

Ki (album)

Ki (/ˈk/ KEE)[1] is the eleventh studio album by Canadian musician Devin Townsend, and the first album in the Devin Townsend Project series. The album was released on May 25, 2009, on Townsend's independent record label HevyDevy Records.

Ki
The cover of Ki is a 3-D illustration by Konrad Palkiewicz.
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 25, 2009 (2009-05-25)
Recorded2008 – 2009 at Devestate, Studio D, and the Factory
Genre
Length66:50
LabelHevyDevy
ProducerDevin Townsend
Devin Townsend chronology
Ziltoid the Omniscient
(2007)
Ki
(2009)
Addicted
(2009)
Devin Townsend overall chronology
1994–2006 Chaos Years
(2008)
Ki
(2009)
Addicted
(2009)
Alternative cover
The international InsideOut release of Ki is sold in a green slipcase bearing the Devin Townsend Project logo, designed by Travis Smith.

Townsend, the founder, songwriter, and frontman of extreme metal band Strapping Young Lad and progressive metal group The Devin Townsend Band, dissolved both bands in 2006 to spend time with his family and avoid the burnout of touring and interviewing. After a period of self-discovery and a year-long break from songwriting, Townsend began work on a four-album series to clarify his identity as a musician. Ki includes themes of self-control and sobriety, and is musically subtler than much of the artist's previous work, consisting of ambient rock music interlaced with tentative bursts of heavy metal.

The album was written, produced, mixed, and co-engineered by Townsend, who also performed guitar and vocals. Townsend assembled a supporting group of Vancouver musicians including blues drummer Duris Maxwell, rock bassist Jean Savoie, keyboardist Dave Young, and guest vocalist Ché Aimee Dorval to play on the album. While some critics found the album uneven, Ki received generally positive reviews for its unexpected musical direction, along with its production, vocal dynamics, and mix of influences.

Background edit

After disbanding his extreme metal band Strapping Young Lad and his progressive metal project The Devin Townsend Band in 2006, Townsend shaved off his trademark "skullet" hairstyle[2][3] and gave up alcohol and marijuana.[3] Townsend found it "disconcerting" that he had difficulty writing music without drugs, and that he had trouble identifying his purpose as a musician. He spent a year producing albums in absence of writing, but found it unrewarding and decided to "pick up the guitar and just write."[1] This began a period of self-discovery where he learned "how to create without drugs".[4]

Over two years, Townsend wrote over 60 songs, and found that they fit into "four distinct styles".[1] In March 2009, Townsend announced his plans for a four-album series called the Devin Townsend Project,[4] with the goal of clarifying his musical identity and being "accountable" for the persona he projects to the public.[1] Ki, the first album of the Devin Townsend Project, is written to "set the stage" for the subsequent albums.[4] The word "ki" represents the Japanese concept of "life force" (氣, "ki").[4] Townsend chose the name as an homage to the 1981 Kitarō album of the same name, which he "loved as a kid".[5]

The project's concept includes a different group of musicians for each album. For Ki, Townsend chose a group of musicians with whom he had not previously worked. He discovered Duris Maxwell, a blues drummer who has played with such acts as Heart, Jefferson Airplane, and Tommy Chong,[6] in a blues club in northern Canada.[4] Townsend was impressed by his energy and recruited him for Ki.[4] Townsend also chose Jean Savoie, a music store employee who plays in a Beatles cover band, to play bass on the album. Maxwell and Savoie were ideal for the album, Townsend explained, because they had little experience playing heavy music, and had a fresh perspective that fit with Ki's subtler sound.[4] Townsend also brought back Dave Young, an ambient keyboardist who had played in The Devin Townsend Band,[4] and recruited Vancouver artist Ché Aimee Dorval as a vocalist on several tracks. The album was primarily recorded, produced, and mixed from late 2008 to early 2009 at Devestate and Studio D; the drums were recorded at Factory Studios in Vancouver.[7]

Music and lyrical themes edit

Townsend channelled his new-found self-control and sobriety into Ki,[8] a "restrained, melodic, and tranquil" album that is "a sharp contrast" to the heavy metal he is known for,[9] while maintaining his "signature sound".[3] The album features undistorted guitar tones, live takes, no drum triggering, and relatively quiet mastering,[4] with a musical style combining ambient, progressive rock, jazz rock, and psychedelic blues.[8] The album's recurring musical theme is "tension and release", a gradual build in intensity which suddenly stops and gives way to "something relaxing".[4] The album's musical style has been compared to Porcupine Tree, Chroma Key, and Pink Floyd, with Townsend's vocals drawing comparisons to Steven Wilson and Steve Hackett.[10]

Ki was mixed by Townsend, and features very little compression, in contrast with his usual wall-of-sound production style.[3] Townsend explained that he originally "tried doing the wall-of-sound with it and it just kind of ruined it...it turned it into a not-so-good Strapping record."[3] The album deliberately eschews the loudness wars, the recent music industry practice of competitively mastering audio to seem as loud as possible. "I officially pull my hat out of the loudness wars", Townsend told his mastering engineer.[3] The album's songs were primarily written in open C tuning, except for "A Monday", "Trainfire", and "Disruptr" in open B, "Heaven's End" and "Winter" in open B, and "Quiet Riot" in standard tuning.[11] Townsend has cited Second Nature by The Young Gods, Paul Horn, Chants of India by Ravi Shankar, and Ween as influences on the album.[12]

Townsend described Ki as both the introduction and the moral to the "larger concept" of the Devin Townsend Project. The album's lyrical themes explore Townsend's inner demons, past addictions, self-acceptance, and his "newfound ability to say no."[4] The album opens with a brief instrumental that leads into "Coast", a quiet, bass-driven track that sets the stage for the album as a "metaphor for Devin's newfound restraint."[13] Townsend described it as "the intro to the story, quiet, dark, haunted and unsure".[4] The track builds in intensity toward the end with layers of vocals, but rather than exploding into Strapping Young Lad–style metal, fades into "loose, bluesy guitar work".[13] "Disruptr" has been described as "a coffee-house metal track", contrasting light instrumentation with heavy metal–style songwriting and vocals[13] in a way that one critic compared to Talking Heads.[14] "Gato" proceeds in a similar vein,[14] but is set apart with backing vocals by Dorval.[13] "Disruptr" and "Gato" continue the musical theme; each song builds in intensity toward the end but "stops and takes a deep breath" before proceeding.[4] The album then fades into "Terminal", an atmospheric track[14] with quiet vocals[13] that was co-written by keyboardist Dave Young.[4]

Townsend's restraint reaches a breaking point on "Heaven's End",[4] which Jon Wiederhorn of Revolver described as "a groovy pop song that morphs into a violent, acid-drenched nightmare."[8] It is followed by "Ain't Never Gonna Win", a live studio jam by the album's four musicians[4] which was described by David E. Gehlke of the online magazine Blistering as "trippy".[14] "Trainfire", a classic country–style song[14] inspired by Elvis Presley's cover of "Mystery Train",[3] addresses Townsend's former addiction to pornography, which he described as "this crazy, crack cocaine on the internet that nobody wants to talk about."[15] The song continues the album's theme of honesty and self-acceptance, both about pornography and musical tastes. Townsend explained the song's musical style, saying "yes, I like heavy music and am good at making it, but that is not all that I listen to, and that is not all that I want to play."[15]

The album's climax is found in the title track, described by the artist as "a personal breakthrough"[4] and is initially born out of a Grey Skies demo, "Soft," previously released on Ass-Sordid Demos II. "Ki" builds into a cyclical progression of arpeggios[2] which Martin Popoff of Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles described as the album's "proggiest" moment.[10] It leads into "Quiet Riot", an acoustic version of "Cum On Feel the Noize"[6] with new lyrics. "Quiet Riot", Townsend explained, "basically sums up the idea that, although I am 'damaged,' I'm fine, and have chosen to make my life better."[4]

Release and artwork edit

Ki was released on Townsend's independent record label HevyDevy Records on May 25, 2009, in Canada. It was released May 22, 2009, in Germany,[16] May 25, 2009, in the rest of Europe, and June 16, 2009, in the United States by distributor InsideOut Music.[17] A Japanese release on Marquee/Avalon was released on August 26, 2009.[18] When all four albums in the series were completed, Townsend released an eight-disc special edition box set, including a DVD and various bonus material.[4] This box set, named Contain Us, was released on December 9, 2011.

The album art was created by artist Konrad Palkiewicz, who created the art for Townsend's ambient album The Hummer (2006) and directed the video for Strapping Young Lad's "Almost Again". The album art was designed to be viewed with a pair of 3-D glasses.[4] The album cover is an image of "two faces in one".[4] Though "not authentic", it is based on Native American and Chinese art.[4] Palkiewicz directed a music video for the song "Coast", which was released on Townsend's website on July 28, 2009.[19] The InsideOut releases come with an extra lyrics sheet and feature a green slipcase bearing the Devin Townsend Project logo,[20] designed by Travis Smith.[21]

Sales and critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic     [9]
Blabbermouth.net7.5/10[22]
Blistering7.5/10[14]
BraveWords8/10[10]
Chronicles of Chaos9.5/10[2]
Decibel          [6]
Metal Hammer8/10[23]
Rock Sound7/10[24]
Revolver3/5[8]
Sputnikmusic3.5/5[13]

Ki reached number 26 on the Finnish Top 40[25] and number 179 on the French Top 200,[26] and appeared on the UK Indie[27] and UK Rock[28] charts. It sold 800 copies in its first week of release in the United States, and debuted at number 69 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart.[29] Critical reception of the album was generally positive. Jon Wiederhorn of Revolver said the album is "well worth a listen" and praised the heavier tracks such as "Disruptr" and "Heaven Send", saying, "Townsend mostly contains his rage, but he's at his best when he loses it."[8] Martin Popoff of Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles found the album to have an "odd identity", with "all sorts of things going on just under the surface" that rewarded multiple listens.[10] David E. Gehlke of Blistering was less impressed, and found the album inconsistent. Gehlke described "Winter" as "lush and gorgeous", but felt that the album "fails to hit the mark" at other points, such as "Ain't Never Gonna Win" and "Trainfire".[14] Tyler Munro of Sputnikmusic said Ki showed Townsend "at his loosest and most dynamic", and praised Townsend's and Dorval's vocals, but felt the album was held back by musical repetition and its extended guitar jams.[13] Greg Prato of Allmusic gave the album a moderate review, admiring Townsend's unpredictability but feeling the album was not "the most gripping or groundbreaking album" in Townsend's collection.[9] Daniel Cairns of Chronicles of Chaos praised Ki as "a difficult, unusual collection of music" that "also might just be Townsend's best yet."[2]

Track listing edit

All tracks are written by Devin Townsend except where noted

No.TitleLength
1."A Monday"1:43
2."Coast"4:36
3."Disruptr"5:49
4."Gato"5:23
5."Terminal" (Townsend, Young)6:58
6."Heaven's End[30]"8:54
7."Ain't Never Gonna Win[31]" (Townsend, Maxwell, Savoie, Young)3:17
8."Winter"4:48
9."Trainfire"5:59
10."Lady Helen"6:05
11."Ki"7:21
12."Quiet Riot"3:02
13."Demon League"2:55
Total length:66:50

Personnel edit

Musicians edit

Additional musicians edit

  • Ché Aimee Dorval – additional vocals
  • Ryan Dahle – additional vocals ("Gato")
  • Bjorn Strid, Peter, Christopher, Grant, Corey, Jeremy, Ryan – additional vocals

Production edit

  • Adrian Mottrim – recording assistance
  • Mike St. Jean – preproduction assistance
  • Brennan Chambers – mixing assistance
  • Sheldon Zaharko – recording
  • Ryan Dahle – production, mixing ("Quiet Riot")
  • T-Roy – mastering

Release edit

  • Konrad J. Palkiewicz – visual consulting, layout, artwork
  • Erich Saide – photography
  • Omer Cordell – photography
  • Jeff Cohen – legal, management
  • Mike Mowery – legal, management

Charts edit

Chart Provider Peak
position
Finnish Albums Chart[25] YLE 26
French Albums Chart[26] SNEP 179
UK Indie Chart[27] OCC 22
UK Rock Chart[28] OCC 31
U.S. Top Heatseekers Chart[29] Billboard 69

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Genghis & Ragman (May 10, 2009). "Podcast #80 – Idol". The Right to Rock. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d Cairns, Daniel (May 29, 2009). "The Devin Townsend Project – Ki". Chronicles of Chaos. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Munro, Tyler (May 21, 2009). . Sputnikmusic. Archived from the original on 2010-01-07. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Devin Townsend to return this summer with 'Ki'". Blabbermouth.net. March 20, 2009. Retrieved September 13, 2013.
  5. ^ Townsend, Devin (June 15, 2011). . HevyDevy Forums. Archived from the original on October 25, 2016. Retrieved June 26, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c Treppel, Jeff (August 2009). "Review: Devin Townsend – Ki". Decibel (58): 88.
  7. ^ Townsend, Devin (2009). Ki (booklet). Devin Townsend Project. Vancouver: HevyDevy Records. p. 12.
  8. ^ a b c d e Wiederhorn, Jon (August 2009). "Review: Devin Townsend Project – Ki". Revolver.
  9. ^ a b c Prato, Greg (May 2009). "Ki – Review". Allmusic. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c d Popoff, Martin (April 29, 2009). "DEVIN TOWNSEND PROJECT - Ki". BraveWords. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  11. ^ Townsend, Devin (April 18, 2009). . HevyDevy Forums. Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  12. ^ Rausch, Jan (April 7, 2009). . Toazted. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Munro, Tyler (May 28, 2009). "Devin Townsend Project – Ki Review". Sputnikmusic. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Gehlke, David E. (May 2009). "Review: Devin Townsend Project – Ki". Blistering. Archived from the original on May 26, 2011. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  15. ^ a b Cowan, Darren (June 2009). . Blistering. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved June 15, 2009.
  16. ^ "Devin Townsend – Ki" (in German). InsideOut Music (Germany). Retrieved April 28, 2009.[dead link]
  17. ^ (in German). InsideOut Music. Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  18. ^ KI~氣~/デヴィン・タウンゼント・プロジェクト (in Japanese). Oricon. Retrieved July 28, 2009.
  19. ^ "Devin Townsend Project: 'Coast' video released". Blabbermouth.net. July 28, 2009. Retrieved September 3, 2013.
  20. ^ (in German). InsideOut Music (Shop). Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  21. ^ Townsend, Devin (January 30, 2009). . HevyDevy Forums. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  22. ^ Ogle, Ryan (2009-07-13). "Ki Devin Townsend Project". Retrieved September 3, 2013.
  23. ^ Lawson, Dom (July 2009). "Review: Devin Townsend – Ki". Metal Hammer (193): 93.
  24. ^ Alderslade, Merlin (June 2009). "Devin Townsend Project – Ki". Rock Sound (123): 83.
  25. ^ a b "Devin Townsend – Suomen virallinen lista". Finnish Charts. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  26. ^ a b "Les charts français". Hung Medien. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  27. ^ a b . BBC Radio 1. May 31, 2009. Archived from the original on April 22, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2009.
  28. ^ a b . BBC Radio 1. May 31, 2009. Archived from the original on April 22, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2009.
  29. ^ a b "Devin Townsend Project: Ki First-Week Sales Revealed". Blabbermouth.net. June 24, 2009. Retrieved June 24, 2009.
  30. ^ "Is it Heaven's end or Heaven send? I've heard this is a dispute about this and the booklet was miss-printed". Townsend has spelled this title "Heavens End" on message board posts. The album booklet, official MySpace page, official eBay page, and InsideOut Music press release spell it "Heaven Send". Townsend confirmed the official title is "Heaven's End".
  31. ^ The InsideOut Music press release spells this title "Ain't Never Gonna Win..." (with an ellipsis). The album booklet, official MySpace page, and official eBay page spell it without an ellipsis.

External links edit

  • Devin Townsend (MySpace)
  • Ki (InsideOut)

album, eleventh, studio, album, canadian, musician, devin, townsend, first, album, devin, townsend, project, series, album, released, 2009, townsend, independent, record, label, hevydevy, records, kithe, cover, illustration, konrad, palkiewicz, studio, album, . Ki ˈ k iː KEE 1 is the eleventh studio album by Canadian musician Devin Townsend and the first album in the Devin Townsend Project series The album was released on May 25 2009 on Townsend s independent record label HevyDevy Records KiThe cover of Ki is a 3 D illustration by Konrad Palkiewicz Studio album by Devin Townsend ProjectReleasedMay 25 2009 2009 05 25 Recorded2008 2009 at Devestate Studio D and the FactoryGenreProgressive rock jazz rock psychedelic bluesLength66 50LabelHevyDevyProducerDevin TownsendDevin Townsend chronologyZiltoid the Omniscient 2007 Ki 2009 Addicted 2009 Devin Townsend overall chronology1994 2006 Chaos Years 2008 Ki 2009 Addicted 2009 Alternative coverThe international InsideOut release of Ki is sold in a green slipcase bearing the Devin Townsend Project logo designed by Travis Smith Townsend the founder songwriter and frontman of extreme metal band Strapping Young Lad and progressive metal group The Devin Townsend Band dissolved both bands in 2006 to spend time with his family and avoid the burnout of touring and interviewing After a period of self discovery and a year long break from songwriting Townsend began work on a four album series to clarify his identity as a musician Ki includes themes of self control and sobriety and is musically subtler than much of the artist s previous work consisting of ambient rock music interlaced with tentative bursts of heavy metal The album was written produced mixed and co engineered by Townsend who also performed guitar and vocals Townsend assembled a supporting group of Vancouver musicians including blues drummer Duris Maxwell rock bassist Jean Savoie keyboardist Dave Young and guest vocalist Che Aimee Dorval to play on the album While some critics found the album uneven Ki received generally positive reviews for its unexpected musical direction along with its production vocal dynamics and mix of influences Contents 1 Background 2 Music and lyrical themes 3 Release and artwork 4 Sales and critical reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 6 1 Musicians 6 2 Additional musicians 6 3 Production 6 4 Release 7 Charts 8 References 9 External linksBackground editAfter disbanding his extreme metal band Strapping Young Lad and his progressive metal project The Devin Townsend Band in 2006 Townsend shaved off his trademark skullet hairstyle 2 3 and gave up alcohol and marijuana 3 Townsend found it disconcerting that he had difficulty writing music without drugs and that he had trouble identifying his purpose as a musician He spent a year producing albums in absence of writing but found it unrewarding and decided to pick up the guitar and just write 1 This began a period of self discovery where he learned how to create without drugs 4 Over two years Townsend wrote over 60 songs and found that they fit into four distinct styles 1 In March 2009 Townsend announced his plans for a four album series called the Devin Townsend Project 4 with the goal of clarifying his musical identity and being accountable for the persona he projects to the public 1 Ki the first album of the Devin Townsend Project is written to set the stage for the subsequent albums 4 The word ki represents the Japanese concept of life force 氣 ki 4 Townsend chose the name as an homage to the 1981 Kitarō album of the same name which he loved as a kid 5 The project s concept includes a different group of musicians for each album For Ki Townsend chose a group of musicians with whom he had not previously worked He discovered Duris Maxwell a blues drummer who has played with such acts as Heart Jefferson Airplane and Tommy Chong 6 in a blues club in northern Canada 4 Townsend was impressed by his energy and recruited him for Ki 4 Townsend also chose Jean Savoie a music store employee who plays in a Beatles cover band to play bass on the album Maxwell and Savoie were ideal for the album Townsend explained because they had little experience playing heavy music and had a fresh perspective that fit with Ki s subtler sound 4 Townsend also brought back Dave Young an ambient keyboardist who had played in The Devin Townsend Band 4 and recruited Vancouver artist Che Aimee Dorval as a vocalist on several tracks The album was primarily recorded produced and mixed from late 2008 to early 2009 at Devestate and Studio D the drums were recorded at Factory Studios in Vancouver 7 Music and lyrical themes editTownsend channelled his new found self control and sobriety into Ki 8 a restrained melodic and tranquil album that is a sharp contrast to the heavy metal he is known for 9 while maintaining his signature sound 3 The album features undistorted guitar tones live takes no drum triggering and relatively quiet mastering 4 with a musical style combining ambient progressive rock jazz rock and psychedelic blues 8 The album s recurring musical theme is tension and release a gradual build in intensity which suddenly stops and gives way to something relaxing 4 The album s musical style has been compared to Porcupine Tree Chroma Key and Pink Floyd with Townsend s vocals drawing comparisons to Steven Wilson and Steve Hackett 10 Ki was mixed by Townsend and features very little compression in contrast with his usual wall of sound production style 3 Townsend explained that he originally tried doing the wall of sound with it and it just kind of ruined it it turned it into a not so good Strapping record 3 The album deliberately eschews the loudness wars the recent music industry practice of competitively mastering audio to seem as loud as possible I officially pull my hat out of the loudness wars Townsend told his mastering engineer 3 The album s songs were primarily written in open C tuning except for A Monday Trainfire and Disruptr in open B Heaven s End and Winter in open B and Quiet Riot in standard tuning 11 Townsend has cited Second Nature by The Young Gods Paul Horn Chants of India by Ravi Shankar and Ween as influences on the album 12 nbsp Lady Helen source source On tracks such as Lady Helen Ki features subtle music and quiet mastering compared to many of Townsend s previous releases Problems playing this file See media help Townsend described Ki as both the introduction and the moral to the larger concept of the Devin Townsend Project The album s lyrical themes explore Townsend s inner demons past addictions self acceptance and his newfound ability to say no 4 The album opens with a brief instrumental that leads into Coast a quiet bass driven track that sets the stage for the album as a metaphor for Devin s newfound restraint 13 Townsend described it as the intro to the story quiet dark haunted and unsure 4 The track builds in intensity toward the end with layers of vocals but rather than exploding into Strapping Young Lad style metal fades into loose bluesy guitar work 13 Disruptr has been described as a coffee house metal track contrasting light instrumentation with heavy metal style songwriting and vocals 13 in a way that one critic compared to Talking Heads 14 Gato proceeds in a similar vein 14 but is set apart with backing vocals by Dorval 13 Disruptr and Gato continue the musical theme each song builds in intensity toward the end but stops and takes a deep breath before proceeding 4 The album then fades into Terminal an atmospheric track 14 with quiet vocals 13 that was co written by keyboardist Dave Young 4 Townsend s restraint reaches a breaking point on Heaven s End 4 which Jon Wiederhorn of Revolver described as a groovy pop song that morphs into a violent acid drenched nightmare 8 It is followed by Ain t Never Gonna Win a live studio jam by the album s four musicians 4 which was described by David E Gehlke of the online magazine Blistering as trippy 14 Trainfire a classic country style song 14 inspired by Elvis Presley s cover of Mystery Train 3 addresses Townsend s former addiction to pornography which he described as this crazy crack cocaine on the internet that nobody wants to talk about 15 The song continues the album s theme of honesty and self acceptance both about pornography and musical tastes Townsend explained the song s musical style saying yes I like heavy music and am good at making it but that is not all that I listen to and that is not all that I want to play 15 The album s climax is found in the title track described by the artist as a personal breakthrough 4 and is initially born out of a Grey Skies demo Soft previously released on Ass Sordid Demos II Ki builds into a cyclical progression of arpeggios 2 which Martin Popoff of Brave Words amp Bloody Knuckles described as the album s proggiest moment 10 It leads into Quiet Riot an acoustic version of Cum On Feel the Noize 6 with new lyrics Quiet Riot Townsend explained basically sums up the idea that although I am damaged I m fine and have chosen to make my life better 4 Release and artwork editKi was released on Townsend s independent record label HevyDevy Records on May 25 2009 in Canada It was released May 22 2009 in Germany 16 May 25 2009 in the rest of Europe and June 16 2009 in the United States by distributor InsideOut Music 17 A Japanese release on Marquee Avalon was released on August 26 2009 18 When all four albums in the series were completed Townsend released an eight disc special edition box set including a DVD and various bonus material 4 This box set named Contain Us was released on December 9 2011 The album art was created by artist Konrad Palkiewicz who created the art for Townsend s ambient album The Hummer 2006 and directed the video for Strapping Young Lad s Almost Again The album art was designed to be viewed with a pair of 3 D glasses 4 The album cover is an image of two faces in one 4 Though not authentic it is based on Native American and Chinese art 4 Palkiewicz directed a music video for the song Coast which was released on Townsend s website on July 28 2009 19 The InsideOut releases come with an extra lyrics sheet and feature a green slipcase bearing the Devin Townsend Project logo 20 designed by Travis Smith 21 Sales and critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 Blabbermouth net7 5 10 22 Blistering7 5 10 14 BraveWords8 10 10 Chronicles of Chaos9 5 10 2 Decibel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 6 Metal Hammer8 10 23 Rock Sound7 10 24 Revolver3 5 8 Sputnikmusic3 5 5 13 Ki reached number 26 on the Finnish Top 40 25 and number 179 on the French Top 200 26 and appeared on the UK Indie 27 and UK Rock 28 charts It sold 800 copies in its first week of release in the United States and debuted at number 69 on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart 29 Critical reception of the album was generally positive Jon Wiederhorn of Revolver said the album is well worth a listen and praised the heavier tracks such as Disruptr and Heaven Send saying Townsend mostly contains his rage but he s at his best when he loses it 8 Martin Popoff of Brave Words amp Bloody Knuckles found the album to have an odd identity with all sorts of things going on just under the surface that rewarded multiple listens 10 David E Gehlke of Blistering was less impressed and found the album inconsistent Gehlke described Winter as lush and gorgeous but felt that the album fails to hit the mark at other points such as Ain t Never Gonna Win and Trainfire 14 Tyler Munro of Sputnikmusic said Ki showed Townsend at his loosest and most dynamic and praised Townsend s and Dorval s vocals but felt the album was held back by musical repetition and its extended guitar jams 13 Greg Prato of Allmusic gave the album a moderate review admiring Townsend s unpredictability but feeling the album was not the most gripping or groundbreaking album in Townsend s collection 9 Daniel Cairns of Chronicles of Chaos praised Ki as a difficult unusual collection of music that also might just be Townsend s best yet 2 Track listing editAll tracks are written by Devin Townsend except where notedNo TitleLength1 A Monday 1 432 Coast 4 363 Disruptr 5 494 Gato 5 235 Terminal Townsend Young 6 586 Heaven s End 30 8 547 Ain t Never Gonna Win 31 Townsend Maxwell Savoie Young 3 178 Winter 4 489 Trainfire 5 5910 Lady Helen 6 0511 Ki 7 2112 Quiet Riot 3 0213 Demon League 2 55Total length 66 50Personnel editMusicians edit Devin Townsend vocals guitar fretless bass guitar ambience programming production mixing engineering Duris Maxwell drums Jean Savoie bass guitar Dave Young keys piano ambienceAdditional musicians edit Che Aimee Dorval additional vocals Ryan Dahle additional vocals Gato Bjorn Strid Peter Christopher Grant Corey Jeremy Ryan additional vocalsProduction edit Adrian Mottrim recording assistance Mike St Jean preproduction assistance Brennan Chambers mixing assistance Sheldon Zaharko recording Ryan Dahle production mixing Quiet Riot T Roy masteringRelease edit Konrad J Palkiewicz visual consulting layout artwork Erich Saide photography Omer Cordell photography Jeff Cohen legal management Mike Mowery legal managementCharts editChart Provider PeakpositionFinnish Albums Chart 25 YLE 26French Albums Chart 26 SNEP 179UK Indie Chart 27 OCC 22UK Rock Chart 28 OCC 31U S Top Heatseekers Chart 29 Billboard 69References edit a b c d Genghis amp Ragman May 10 2009 Podcast 80 Idol The Right to Rock Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d Cairns Daniel May 29 2009 The Devin Townsend Project Ki Chronicles of Chaos Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d e f g Munro Tyler May 21 2009 Interview with Devin Townsend Sputnikmusic Archived from the original on 2010 01 07 Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Devin Townsend to return this summer with Ki Blabbermouth net March 20 2009 Retrieved September 13 2013 Townsend Devin June 15 2011 Question About Deconstruction HevyDevy Forums Archived from the original on October 25 2016 Retrieved June 26 2011 a b c Treppel Jeff August 2009 Review Devin Townsend Ki Decibel 58 88 Townsend Devin 2009 Ki booklet Devin Townsend Project Vancouver HevyDevy Records p 12 a b c d e Wiederhorn Jon August 2009 Review Devin Townsend Project Ki Revolver a b c Prato Greg May 2009 Ki Review Allmusic Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d Popoff Martin April 29 2009 DEVIN TOWNSEND PROJECT Ki BraveWords Retrieved September 12 2022 Townsend Devin April 18 2009 Ki Official Thread HevyDevy Forums Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved June 2 2009 Rausch Jan April 7 2009 Video interview with Devin Townsend Toazted Archived from the original on January 30 2012 Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d e f g Munro Tyler May 28 2009 Devin Townsend Project Ki Review Sputnikmusic Retrieved June 2 2009 a b c d e f g Gehlke David E May 2009 Review Devin Townsend Project Ki Blistering Archived from the original on May 26 2011 Retrieved June 2 2009 a b Cowan Darren June 2009 Devin Townsend Project Feature Interview Blistering Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved June 15 2009 Devin Townsend Ki in German InsideOut Music Germany Retrieved April 28 2009 dead link Devin Townsend Ki in German InsideOut Music Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved April 12 2009 KI 氣 デヴィン タウンゼント プロジェクト in Japanese Oricon Retrieved July 28 2009 Devin Townsend Project Coast video released Blabbermouth net July 28 2009 Retrieved September 3 2013 Devin Townsend Project Ki in German InsideOut Music Shop Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved June 2 2009 Townsend Devin January 30 2009 Ki HevyDevy Forums Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 2 2009 Ogle Ryan 2009 07 13 Ki Devin Townsend Project Retrieved September 3 2013 Lawson Dom July 2009 Review Devin Townsend Ki Metal Hammer 193 93 Alderslade Merlin June 2009 Devin Townsend Project Ki Rock Sound 123 83 a b Devin Townsend Suomen virallinen lista Finnish Charts Retrieved September 12 2022 a b Les charts francais Hung Medien Retrieved September 12 2022 a b Top 30 Independent Label Albums BBC Radio 1 May 31 2009 Archived from the original on April 22 2009 Retrieved June 6 2009 a b Top 40 Rock Albums BBC Radio 1 May 31 2009 Archived from the original on April 22 2009 Retrieved June 6 2009 a b Devin Townsend Project Ki First Week Sales Revealed Blabbermouth net June 24 2009 Retrieved June 24 2009 Is it Heaven s end or Heaven send I ve heard this is a dispute about this and the booklet was miss printed Townsend has spelled this title Heavens End on message board posts The album booklet official MySpace page official eBay page and InsideOut Music press release spell it Heaven Send Townsend confirmed the official title is Heaven s End The InsideOut Music press release spells this title Ain t Never Gonna Win with an ellipsis The album booklet official MySpace page and official eBay page spell it without an ellipsis External links editDevin Townsend MySpace Ki InsideOut Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ki album amp oldid 1190797875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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