The sound of Janah, hailed
as 'Jubilant and compelling' by the Chicago Sun Times, is working and
so are they. The five-piece Atlanta-based band that Creative Loafing
critics and readers both voted Best Local International/World Music
Band in 2002, has been gaining popularity with a diverse, enthusiastic
fan base across the country.
Born of founder Keith Johnston's
world travels and personal vision for a better breed of American music,
the band independently released World That Surrounds You in 2000 combining
sensuality and spirituality, power and suggestion, electric and acoustic
instruments, distortion and clarity, into an ear-catching collection
of distinctive yet emotionally accessible songs.
That album, acquired and
released by Rattlesby Records in 2002, resulted in extensive national
touring, many festival appearances, an internet message board filled
with delighted, inquisitive fans, college and AAA radio airplay, and
an increasingly confident, determined band, hungry for their growing
audience.
Opening for notable acts from Sister Hazel and Alanis Morisette, to
veterans such as Johnny Winter and The Samples, Janah continues to impress
the accidental listener and the seasoned aficionado alike. Modern Drummer
gave World That Surrounds You an impressive 9 out of 10 rating, describing
the album as "a musical melting pot, extremely well-orchestrated,
drawing upon folk music from all corners of the earth." Commercial
airplay in Cincinnati, Chicago, Memphis and Nashville only confirmed
what grass-roots listeners had been saying all along. We like this music.
Despite the band member's
individual dedication and experience, Janah's sound is, in essence,
the musical memoirs of Keith Johnston, a song writing visionary, composer,
and lyricist who's desire to find a new voice took him from the predictable
streets of Atlanta, to the shores of Israel and beyond, ultimately giving
his songs an authentic world quality no amount of cunning, second-hand,
desk-top ingenuity could achieve. His eclectic compositions combine
experience, appreciation for cultural distinctions, melodic sensibility,
and a lust for adventure, discovery and epiphany.
Janah's new album, "Swan
In The Monsoon" released in April 2004, is brimming with the
same bold spirit of imagination, damning the status quo, while fostering
unusual mass appeal. It has contagious melodies, lush, powerful orchestration,
meaningful lyrics, and a feast of rock-solid percussion burnished in
by hundreds of live shows. Instead of struggling to live up to their
studio work, as many bands do, Janah continually comes alive on stage
with wild energy and great detail, leaving a reoccurring theme in the
letters of multiplying fans: "When are you coming back?"