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Kishi Bashi

Kishi Bashi, Bayonne

Kishi Bashi, Bayonne

Kishi Bashi

Beachland Ballroom
April 8, 2026
Doors:
7:00 pm
/
Show:
8:00 pm

Kishi Bashi

Kishi Bashi is the pseudonym of Emmy-nominated singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Kaoru Ishibashi. Born in Seattle, Washington, and raised in Norfolk, Virginia, Ishibashi is a virtuoso violinist and a Berklee College of Music alumnus. He is renowned for his groundbreaking collaborations with symphonies across the U.S., such as the National Symphony Orchestra (Kennedy Center), Chicago Philharmonic, Seattle Symphony, and Oregon Symphony. His orchestral work has expanded his reach, blending classical and pop influences in performances that continue to captivate audiences worldwide.



As a violinist, Kishi Bashi has recorded and toured internationally with artists like Regina Spektor, Sondre Lerche, and indie band of Montreal, and has made appearances on major late-night TV shows including SNL, David Letterman, Conan, and Jimmy Fallon. His original music has been featured in commercials for major brands like Microsoft, Samsung, American Express, Target, and Apple. His debut album 151a (2012) received high praise from NPR’s Bob Boilen, who called it “a radiant, uplifting soundscape.” This launched Kishi Bashi onto major festival stages such as SXSW and Austin City Limits and began his journey as a critically acclaimed solo artist.



In addition to his solo career, Kishi Bashi was the founding member of the electronic rock outfit Jupiter One. In 2011, he began recording and performing solo, opening for artists like the Sondre Lerche and Alexi Murdoch, before embarking on his own U.S. tours. He gained further recognition in 2014 for his coffee line Royal Daark Blend, which included exclusive song downloads with each purchase. His 2016 album Sonderlust was released live on NPR's All Songs Considered, adding to his ever-growing legacy.



His 2019 album Omoiyari (a Japanese word meaning compassion for others) and its accompanying documentary explored themes of minority identity and the WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans. The film, after four years of work and over $100,000 in funding from global backers, premiered at SXSW 2022. Kishi Bashi also scored the soundtrack for the Apple TV+ series Stillwater (2020), a collection of uplifting orchestral tracks he co-composed with Toby Chu.



In 2021, Kishi Bashi released Emigrant EP, a companion piece to Omoiyari, further exploring the themes of his documentary. In 2022, he re-issued his debut album 151a in celebration of its 10th anniversary, with a double LP featuring demo versions of the original tracks. His documentary A Song Film By Kishi Bashi: Omoiyari was acquired by MTV Documentaries and will be available on Paramount+ in the fall of 2023. The soundtrack, Music from the Song Film: Omoiyari, is also available.



2024 saw the release of his fifth studio album Kantos (August 23), a kaleidoscopic journey inspired by sci-fi, philosophy, and ancient ruins. The album blends everything from Brazilian jazz and ‘70s funk to orchestral rock and city pop, influenced by the cult-classic sci-fi novel series Hyperion Cantos, the writings of 18th-century Enlightenment philosopher Immanuel Kant, and Kishi Bashi’s revelatory trip to ancient ruins on the island of Crete.



With an ever-evolving sound and a passion for cinematic storytelling, Kishi Bashi continues to break new ground as a storyteller and performer, captivating audiences with his unique blend of classical and popular music.



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Since his 2016 debut album Primitives, Bayonne has channeled his vast imagination into an elegant yet wildly experimental form of electronic pop, equal parts meditative and mesmerizing. In the making of his latest body of work, the Austin-based artist/producer/multi-instrumentalist otherwise known as Roger Sellers found himself in even greater need of an outlet for his kinetic creative impulses, thanks to an intense convergence of events in his personal life: his father’s diagnosis with and eventual death from cancer, the end of a significant relationship, and an overwhelming struggle with depression and anxiety. Deeply informed by a deliberate transformation of his musical process, Bayonne’s third full-length Temporary Time ultimately makes for his most expansive work to date—an album of both painfully raw introspection and otherworldly beauty.


The follow-up to 2019’s Drastic Measures, Temporary Time intimately documents a period of psychic inertia experienced by Sellers in recent years. “The title of the record refers to that feeling of stagnancy that happens at certain moments in your life, where you’re not sure what the next move is and feel sort of stuck in limbo,” he explains. “I wrote these songs during a long stretch of self-development, mentally and emotionally and creatively, and in a way they’re like a diary of everything I was going through.” Although Sellers began working on Temporary Time in idyllic seclusion during a solo trip to West Texas, he soon immersed himself in close collaboration with a number of musicians and co-producers, including Danny Reisch (HAIM, Local Natives), Jon Joseph (BØRNS, Gothic Tropic), and longtime Bayonne drummer Matt Toman. Along with adding new depth and texture to Bayonne’s signature sound—an immaculately layered and looping-heavy collision of lush guitar tones, frenetic synth lines, organic percussion, and more—that shift in approach led to significant growth in his strengths as a songwriter and lyricist. “Because of everything I was dealing with, especially with my dad’s declining health, I ended up being much more thoughtful with the lyrical content than in previous records,” Sellers points out.



Mixed by Sellers and Reisch, Temporary Time opens on the moody splendor of “Must Be True,” a piano-driven and quietly piercing breakup song that instantly sets the tone for the album’s dreamy contemplation. From there, Bayonne veers into the propulsive dark-pop of “Right Thing,” one of several tracks featuring ghostlike samples of audio lifted from his family home movies. “One of the last good times I had with my father was playing him that song and showing him where his voice comes in,” says Sellers, who describes “Right Thing” as a gloomy but upbeat reflection on uncertainty. “He was so excited to hear himself on the record, and that was a really meaningful moment for me.” Next, on “Is It Time,” Temporary Time drifts into a mood of lovely surrender—an effect achieved through the track’s hypnotic arrangement of soaring vocals, gorgeously sprawling textures, and Toman’s powerful full-kit drumming (an element Sellers lovingly refers to as “the best drums ever recorded”). “There’s a point in the middle of the song where it feels flying, which to me represents the idea of freeing yourself from anxiety,” he says. “It’s about allowing yourself to take a dive, and to stop worrying about what’s going to happen next.” And on “Perfect,” Bayonne delivers a radiant piece of alt-pop lit up in luminous beats, lilting background vocals from The Deer’s Grace Rowland, and a sublime flute solo from Sellers’s friend Walter Nichols (who also lends his spellbinding saxophone work to the track). “It’s the most positive moment on the record, but a little satirical since it’s hard for me to write positively sometimes,” says Sellers. “In a way I’m almost making fun of myself for being so optimistic, even though it’s still a feel-good song.”



All throughout Temporary Time, Sellers embeds his songs with the kind of gloriously strange sonic details that have always defined Bayonne’s music (e.g., the unearthly pedal-steel riffs of “FK,” courtesy of Minnesota-based musician Aaron Fabbrini; the sweetly off-kilter Omnichord tones of the album-closing “Tabitha”). Originally from the Houston suburb of Spring, he took up piano and drums as a child and started writing his own material in high school, as well as self-recording with the help of his family’s karaoke machine. By his early 20s he’d discovered minimalist composers like Steve Reich and Terry Reilly, which inspired him to infuse a certain atmospheric quality into his work. After putting out a handful of avant-folk-leaning projects under his own name, he adopted the Bayonne moniker in the mid-2010s and released Primitives to acclaim from major outlets like MOJO, who noted that the album merges “the celestial overlaid vocals of AnCo, Toro Y Moi’s soaring gauzy electronic pop, the live, looping sample techniques of tUnE-yArDs and D.D. Dumbo, and even Steve Reich’s shuddering, percussive experiments in repetition—with charming results.”



While Bayonne mostly made his first two albums in solitude, the highly collaborative experience of creating Temporary Time ended up producing an unexpected but undeniably welcome effect: a return to the unbridled freedom of his earliest output. “I’d always been a little anxious about handing off my music to other people, but with this record it felt so amazing to get other people involved—it completely opened me up,” says Sellers. “There were moments when it was difficult to write about what I was going through, but the whole process made me fall back in love with music again. I put everything I was feeling into it, and I hope it brings people some kind of comfort.”


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