Waterloo Region Record

Meet a King of take-charge types

- Mikael Wood

No one rules the members of King.

Based in Los Angeles, this crafty R&B trio writes, performs and produces its own music, a rare instance of artistic autonomy in a world defined by behindthe-scenes direction.

What’s more, twin sisters Paris and Amber Strother and their friend Anita Bias handle the business side of their band as well. When King was ready to release its debut album —this year’s tender and spacey “We Are King,” recorded at the group’s own pace at Paris Strother’s home studio —it didn’t turn to an establishe­d label or even a tech giant like Apple, as singer Frank Ocean did recently with his long-awaited “Blond.” Instead, the women put the record out themselves, through their company King Creative.

“We’re just doing what comes naturally,” said Paris Strother, who plays instrument­s and produces while her sister and Bias sing. “I mean, who knows what we want better than us?”

Asked what these endorsemen­ts mean for a group determined to make its own way, Paris Strother said, “It means you’re on the right track.” Then she got a bit metaphysic­al, as befits King’s trippy electronic soul.

“It’s wavelength­s, you know? If your favorite artists are on a wavelength and they start reaching out to you, then you’re like, ‘Wow, we’ve arrived at this particular frequency.’” That arrival wasn’t rushed. King started taking shape around 2008, when Paris Strother moved to L.A. following her graduation from the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Strother’s goal at the time was composing music for television and commercial­s. But a run-in with Bias, a fellow Berklee alum who’d returned home to Compton, planted the seed for a different idea, one nourished when Amber Strother came to visit her sister.

“Paris dragged me onstage at this open mike in Hollywood,” remembered Amber, at the time a cosmetolog­y student in Chicago. “That night I sang with Anita, and it was like magic.”

Soon the three were playing regularly around town, including one gig at which they impressed the cult-fave R&B singer Van Hunt.

“He emailed me and said, ‘You guys need to take this seriously and record something,’” Paris Strother recalled. “I was, like, ‘Huh, that’d be cool.’”

Yet the musicians took their time crafting songs. “The concept of wanting to create a musical land or experience —that’s something that united us right away,” said Strother. “We want people when they’re listening to be able to fall into the music, to be completely enclosed by it.”

In 2011, King released an impressive EP with dreamy words about love and destiny set over hypnotic grooves that cleverly meshed played and programmed elements. The reaction was swift and overwhelmi­ngly positive; Prince even invited the trio to open one of the concerts he gave that year at the Forum in Inglewood.

“That was crazy,” Amber Strother said, shaking her head at the memory.

Paris Strother acknowledg­ed she could feel the demand building almost immediatel­y for a full-length album. But as the women worked away in Strother’s studio —often in the wee hours, depending on when inspiratio­n happened to strike —they again were careful not to hurry their process.

“You can say you want it by next week, but if the song isn’t ready, it isn’t ready,” Strother said. “We learned to tell people, ‘We’ll call you when it’s done.’”

On “We Are King,” which came out in February to rave reviews, that commitment to detail is easy to hear in tunes like “The Right One,” a slow-mo ballad with complex harmonies, and “In the Meantime,” whose soft but sturdy beat echoes music by two of the musicians’ heroes, Babyface and Luther Vandross. There’s also “Supernatur­al,” with a sumptuous orchestral arrangemen­t seemingly inspired by old-school Disney musicals.

“It’s a sound, a texture, a galaxy that we’re creating here,” Strother said.

The depth of the music —and the youth of its makers —has led some listeners to inaccurate conclusion­s, the women said.

“People will say, ‘Who produced your album? I know you didn’t,’” said Strother.

“I think it was important to make this a statement: ‘We did this.’”

They’re still doing it too. King will spend October and November touring the U.S. and Europe. And the group has already started creating new music —and on a slightly more convention­al schedule.

“I try to wait till, like, 8 a.m. to call them now,” Paris Strother said, turning to her bandmates. “Have you guys noticed?”

 ?? ALEX KING/BIG HASSLE, ?? From left, Amber Strother, Paris Strother and Anita Bias ofKing.
ALEX KING/BIG HASSLE, From left, Amber Strother, Paris Strother and Anita Bias ofKing.

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