Time 'n' Place is the second studio album by Kero Kero Bonito. It was preceded by the singles "Only Acting", "Time Today", and "Make Believe" and was released on 1 October 2018.
Writing[]
The sophomore full-length from Kero Kero Bonito, Time ānā Place is an album ineffably shaped by the subconscious. Lead singer and chief lyricist Sarah Bonito (who was raised in the suburbs on the Japanese island Hokkaido) found herself rattled in recent years by recurring images
in her dreams: a water park from when she was little, a hallway in her primary school. After those dreams started, she also received an unexpected photo from her brother: a picture of a plot of bare land that once held her childhood home, the house now demolished.(āI felt like Iād lost something, even though I didnāt know I needed it,ā she says.)

Sarah's childhood home (demolished), Otaru, Japan, 2017
And in another heartbreak for Sarah, 2017 saw the death of her beloved childhood pet, a boy budgie named Nana whom she received soon after moving to the UK at age 13.
At the same time, Sarahās fellow KKB members experienced some life-changing upheaval, including the loss of several close family members. So when the London trio began writing again, they felt compelled to diverge from the carefree sensibilities of their early work (a form of kitsch electro-pop that jumbled up lo-fi dance music with bilingual lyrics, British TV references, and stories about animals). Resuming a very teenage and visceral approach to making music, KKB effectively morphed into a band, with Sarah on vocals, Jamie on bass, Gus on drums, and their friend James Rowland on guitar. Their debut for Polyvinyl, Time ānā Place is a document of that band finding its voice, a coming-of-age story told in warped guitar solos, shining melodies, unnervingly tender lyrics about yogurt and seafoam and feral parakeets.
For KKB the urgency of Time ānā Place was imperativeāthey needed to process their pain and confusion in frantic, kinetic movements, and bashing away on drums and guitars felt more fitting than assembling songs on a laptop. Itās also much more true to their upbringing as musicians, back when Gus and Jamie were growing up in the South London suburbs and played in garage bands together all during their school days. With the added vision and otherworldly voice of Sarahāwho spent her adolescence in the UK town of Kenilworth, and met Gus and Jamie on a web forum five years agoāthe classically dissident music of their indie-rock forebears takes on weirder and more wonderful textures and colors, giving way to something dreamy and transcendent but not without its nightmare moments.
Songs and Meanings[]
While loss of innocence is an overriding theme on Time ānā Place, the album is weighted with existential reflections of all kinds. āMake Believeā is partly about lucid dreaming, but itās also about self-inflicted anxiety, and the danger in slipping into fantasy as a way to escape fear. āTime Todayā is about waking up early and feeling determined to make the most of the day, and the sad/sweet naĆÆvetĆ© of that optimism in the face of self-sabotage. āOnly Actingā follows a social-media-age identity crisis, the song itself coming unhinged as its narrator spins out of control. And on āDear Future Self,ā KKB examine their worries about the state of the world, bending time by including a line about global warming in a song styled toward Brill Building pop.
Elsewhere on Time ānā Place, KKB look into multiverse theory (on āIf Iād Known,ā a Randy Newman-inspired song featuring a verse rapped by Jamie) and the shift in perspective that comes with getting older (on āSwimming,ā a bittersweet tribute to singer-songwriter Yumi Matsutoya). Recorded with a gang of their dearest friends, all singing together in a ragtag chorus, āSometimesā is a tear-jerkingly hopeful song about pushing through depression. An album concerned with the sanctity of physical space in an increasingly virtual world, Time ānā Place also speaks to the thrill of going outside (on āOutsideā), the tranquility of the town dump (on āDumpā), and the surreal stillness of a deserted rest stop (on āRest Stop,ā a track that finishes the album in a beautifully glitched-out non-ending).
Within the cartography of Time ānā Place, the most important space is the suburbs, an aspect of their shared past that KKB find infinitely formative. As kids, each member quickly learned the need to invent their own wildness and excitement, embracing misfit status in a place where any form of self-expression could be seen as aberrant. That iconoclastic spirit has carried over to KKBās current role in the musical landscape, with Time ānā Place partly conceived as a reaction against the sterility of playlist culture. Itās a sublimely untidy album, anarchic but balletic in grace, music born from willful imagination and a sense of purpose best captured in the bandās own words: āMore than ever music needs to be set free, because it can be anything, so we just decided to do whatever the fuck we wanted.ā[1]
Production[]
Though much of Time ānā Place was self-produced in Gusās bedroom in the London suburb of Bromley, it was also partly recorded by Jimmy Robertson (Arctic Monkeys, Fuck Buttons) and Stereolab drummer Andy Ramsay (King Krule, Wire) at Ramsayās Press Play Studio in South London. Along with Rowland, the album features contributions from noise/electronic musician Jennifer Walton, a string arrangement by composer Calum Bowen (aka bo en), and a three-part choir made up of Cecile Believe, Oscar Scheller, and Cryingās z (aka Elaiza Santos). Built on the same volatile energy thatās made KKBās live shows famously mosh-heavy, Time ānā Place collages those elements together in a sound thatās both chaotic as punk and symphonic as ā60s pop.
The band setup led them to explore noisy territory, which was new to the group. For most of Time 'n' Place, they recorded guitar, bass and drums in a studio and added everything else at home; Jamie, Gus and James learnt the songs over numerous 10-hour rehearsals. Every sound on Time 'n' Place is from hardware, though they were transformed by digital and analogue processes, reflecting the effect of combining various junk media (like inkjet printing an iPhone 5 photo).
Track listing[]
- Outside
- Time Today
- Only Acting
- Flyway
- Dump
- Make Believe
- Dear Future Self
- Visiting Hours
- If I'd Known
- Sometimes
- Swimming
- Rest Stop
Credits[]
Sarah Midori Perry - vocals
Gus Lobban - drums, keyboards, production
Jamie Bulled - bass, vocals on "If I'd Known"
James Rowland - guitar, noise
The Parakeets (Cecile Believe, z & Oscar) - backing vocals
Jennifer Walton - noise on "Outside" and "Rest Stop"
The Sometimes Singers (George, Yasmin, bo en, Aggie & Oscar) - extra vocals on "Sometimes"
bo en - string arrangement on "Dear Future Self"
Cindy Foster & Greta Mutlu - violins on "Dear Future Self"
Alex Plant-Smith - cello on "Dear Future Self"
Jimmy Robertson - band recording
Andy Ramsay - engineering, additional recording
Anthony Lim at Premier Mastering - mixing, mastering
Recorded 2017-2018 @ Press Play, Bermondsey & Gus' room, Bromley
Trivia[]
- Oscar previously worked with KKB on the TOTEP. He also worked with Sarah on his song "1UP".
- bo en previously worked with Gus on his song "money won't pay".
- Yasmin previously worked with KKB on the song "Laser Quest". She additionally had featured on Jamie's band Kabogaeries' song "Nowhere To Be Seen".
- The Parakeets previously worked with KKB on TOTEP.
- The group recorded the band parts for both Time 'n' Place and TOTEP in a five-day session at Press Play Studios, run by Andy Ramsay.
- Time 'n' Place's band parts were recorded by the amazing Jimmy Robertson; we picked him because he engineered Late of the Pier's "Fantasy Black Channel", whose phat-sounding collagic mentalism greatly inspired T'n'P.