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A. K. Paul
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Key Information
Anup Kumar Paul (born 1986) is an English singer, songwriter and producer from London. Paul came to prominence in 2011 as a contributor to his brother Jai Paul's debut single "BTSTU (Edit)".[1] The following year, he co-wrote the demo of Jai's single "Jasmine", as well as Big Boi's song "Higher Res".[2]
Paul is the recipient of two Ivor Novello Awards, which he received in 2013 for his work on Emeli Sandé's single "Next to Me".[3][4][5][6] A. K, Jai and Muz Azar then launched the Paul Institute, a record label and musical incubator; its first release was Paul's 2016 debut single, "Landcruisin'". In 2023, Paul performed live as a part of Jai's debut performances at Coachella and subsequent tour.[7][8][9][10][11]
Early life
[edit]A. K. Paul grew up in Rayners Lane, London, with his younger brother Jai Paul, also an acclaimed producer and songwriter. He is credited as a collaborator on Jai's early singles, and said that when Jai initially sent "BTSTU" to him, it "changed the way" he thought about music.[12][13]
Career
[edit]A. K. Paul was first credited as a co-writer on his brother Jai's debut and second single, which were released in 2011 and 2012. A. K. has worked with numerous artists as a musician, songwriter and producer. These include Nao, Sam Smith, Miguel, Foals, Big Boi, HIRA, Maverick Sabre, Jessie Ware, JONES, Daniel Avery, Wesley Joseph, Reinen, Ruthven and Emeli Sandé.[14] Paul is a multi-instrumentalist and has often contributed bass parts to tracks, alongside production and songwriting credits. One of A. K.'s collaborators, NAO, said of the Paul brothers: "They've been sonic pioneers and broken all the rules about how you write, arrange and mix, but not at the expense of musicality. I think most artists working within alternative funk, R&B or indie music have tried to work out how they do it, but it's not anything you can recreate."[15]
2010s
[edit]Paul is credited as providing additional vocals and sound design on Jai Paul's demo recording "BTSTU", as well as mastering the track.[16] The demo received widespread blog coverage throughout 2010, leading to significant UK national radio play. In 2011, Jai Paul's record label XL Recordings gave the demo an official release as "BTSTU (Edit)" to favourable reviews. He provided bass guitar and sound design for Jai Paul's 2012 release, "Jasmine (demo)", and also mastered the track, as with Jai Paul's debut release.[17] "Jasmine (demo)" received critical acclaim in the media, with Pitchfork featuring the song as a "Best New Track"[18] within an hour of its appearance on SoundCloud, The New York Times praising its "Prince era sensuality"[19] and The Guardian describing the production as "amazing".[20] The song appears on the soundtrack to the 2013 video game, Grand Theft Auto V.
Paul collaborated with Hackney vocalist Nao on a song called "So Good" in 2014. This was the first time Paul applied the moniker A. K. Paul.[21] That November, singer Jones collaborated with A. K. on a song called "You".[22] In 2015, A. K. provided production on Miguel's album Wildheart for the song "Flesh".[23] He also co-wrote three songs on Maverick Sabre's second studio album Innerstanding.
In March 2016, A. K., Jai Paul and Muz Azar announced the Paul Institute, a record label and musical incubator.[24] This was accompanied by the release of the single "Landcruisin'", a song by A. K. Paul, via text messages and a website.[25] "Landcruisin'" was the Paul Institute's first release. The song premiered on Zane Lowe's Beats 1 radio show before receiving digital, streaming, and 7-inch vinyl releases. Most music critics gave the song favorable reviews, comparing it to the works of Prince, D'Angelo, and Miguel. It managed to enter the Billboard Twitter Emerging Artists chart. James Vincent McMorrow reached out to A. K. Paul after listening to "Landcruisin'", calling it "a huge record".[26] James asked Anup to put his own twist on the lead single from We Move, "Rising Water". The result was something extraordinary, James wrote in a statement to Complex. "He said to me after it was done that he's never done something like this before, lifted an entire vocal from an already written and produced song and then flipped the chord structure and premise of the song."[27]
Paul collaborated with Guernsey born DJ Mura Masa with the track "Who Is It Gonna B" on Mura Masa's debut album.[28] A. K. Paul also reached out to British R&B artist HIRA - working on production on the single "Eve" alongside Craze and Hoax.[29] 2017 also saw the introduction of a new A. K. Paul demo track entitled "Be Honest" which was aired on an Apple Beats 1 broadcast of a live Mura Masa performance and DJ set.
2020s
[edit]After a period of inactivity attributed to a legal fight, Paul released the final version of "Be Honest" in July 2020.[30] He also worked on releases of Paul Institute artists Reinen and Ruthven, and appeared on two tracks from the album Friday Forever by Everything is Recorded, the musical project from XL Recordings label head, Richard Russell: "05:10 AM / Dream I Never Had", and "10:02 AM / Burnt Toast".
A.K. uploaded a single on SoundCloud called "Cheers Mate" on 12 April 2021, which included a note that said: "additional voices from Reinen, K. Ustinov and 'Ohhh... yeah!' vox was recorded circa 1990, my dad on production."[31]
He was credited as a producer (and additional producer) on four tracks from English rock band Foals' seventh album Life Is Yours, which released on 17 June 2022, via Warner/Transgressive/ADA.[32] A.K. co-produced the track "Monsoon" on British artist Wesley Joseph's album GLOW, and was also featured in its music video.[33][34] Paul Institute member Ruthven released his debut album Rough & Ready on 25 October 2025, for which Paul contributed writing and production for most songs.[35]
Paul released a single "Watchin' U" on 22 May 2025, which had previously been teased in another Mura Masa Beats 1 Radio show in 2016.[36] He co-wrote and co-produced the song "Ghostly" for another Transgressive Records artist, Miso Extra, which was released 19 February 2025.[37]
Discography
[edit]| Song | Artist | Credit | Album | Release Date | UK Singles Chart | Certification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "BTSTU" | Jai Paul | Writing/Production/Background Vocals | Leak 04-13 (Bait Ones) | April 2011 | - | - |
| "Jasmine" | Jai Paul | Writing/Production | Leak 04-13 (Bait Ones) | March 2012 | - | - |
| "Higher Res" | Big Boi | Bass/Recording | Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors | December 2012 | - | - |
| "Next To Me" | Emeli Sandé | Co-writing/Bass | Our Version of Events | February 2012 | 2 | Platinum |
| Jessie Ware | Guitars/Bass | Devotion | April 2013 | 105 | ||
| "Nirvana" | Sam Smith | Writing | Nirvana (EP) | January 2014 | - | - |
| "So Good" | Nao | Writing/Production/Vocals | So Good E.P. | December 2014 | - | - |
| "You" | JONES | Writing/Production | Indulge (EP) | June 2015 | - | - |
| "FLESH" | Miguel | Writing/Production | Wildheart | June 2015 | - | - |
| "Give It Up", "So Free" and "Mother" | Maverick Sabre | Writing | Innerstanding | October 2015 | - | - |
| "Landcruisin'" | A.K. Paul | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering | Landcruisin' | March 2016 | - | - |
| "Trophy" | Nao | Writing/Production/Vocals | For All We Know | July 2016 | - | - |
| "Rising Water (A. K. Paul Remix)" | James Vincent McMorrow | Production/Additional Vocals | We Move | 29 September 2016 | - | - |
| "Eve" | HIRA | Production | Eve/Rarri | 12 May 2017 | - | - |
| "Who Is It Gonna B" | Mura Masa | Writing/Vocals | Mura Masa | 14 July 2017 | - | - |
| "Evil" | Ruthven | Production | Evil | 16 November 2017 | - | - |
| "Mystery" | Fabiana Palladino | Production | Mystery | 16 November 2017 | - | - |
| "Hypothalamus" | Ruthven | Production | Hypothalamus | 25 July 2018 | - | - |
| "Shimmer" | Fabiana Palladino | Production | Shimmer | 25 July 2018 | - | - |
| "Be Honest" | A.K. Paul | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering/Vocals | Paul Institute - Summer 2020 | 28 July 2020 | - | - |
| "Shadow Knight" | Reinen | Writing/Production | Paul Institute - Summer 2020 | 29 July 2020 | - | - |
| "Have You Decided?" | Ruthven | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering | Paul Institute - Summer 2020 | 30 July 2020 | - | - |
| "Cheers Mate" | A.K. Paul | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering/Vocals | SoundCloud release | 12 April 2021 | - | - |
| "Wake Me Up", "2001", "Summer Sky" and "Looking High" | Foals | Production | Life Is Yours | 17 June 2022 | - | - |
| "Monsoon" | Wesley Joseph | Production | Secretly Canadian/EEVILTWINN | 20 April 2023 | - | - |
| "Ghostly" | Miso Extra | Writing/Production | Earcandy | 19 February 2025 | - | - |
| "Watchin' U" | A.K. Paul | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering/Vocals | - | 22 May 2025 | - | - |
| "We Get What We Deserve" | A.K. Paul | Writing/Production/Mixing/Mastering/Vocals | - | 5 November 2025 | - | - |
References
[edit]- ^ "Various - XL Recordings Sampler 2011". Discogs. 9 August 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ Big Boi - Vicious Lies And Dangerous Rumors, retrieved 3 May 2023
- ^ "Ivor Novellos 2013: Winners in full". Digital Spy. 16 May 2013. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "Emeli Sandé's unstoppable rise compounded by two Ivor Novello awards". The Independent. 17 May 2013. Archived from the original on 11 July 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ "Anup Paul | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ "Archive | The Ivors | The Ivors Academy | Champions of Music Creators". The Ivors Academy. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ "12 years after his first single, Jai Paul plays his first hometown show". Crack Magazine. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
- ^ Dazed (3 August 2018). "Meet the artists of the Paul Institute". Dazed. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ © 2016 Paul Institute, SoundCloud of A.K. Paul. Retrieved on 27 July 2016.
- ^ Staff, BrooklynVegan (27 April 2023). "Jai Paul played his first headline shows ever at Knockdown Center & Brooklyn Steel (pics, setlist, video)". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "Jai Paul performs first-ever live show at Coachella 2023". DJMag.com. 17 April 2023. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ A.K., Paul. "14 years ago my brother sent me a demo that changed the way I thought about music. I was studying music at uni at the time.. But there were and still are so many lessons in BTSTU". Instagram.
- ^ "Jai Paul's Brother Is Producing For This Promising New London Singer". The FADER. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
- ^ "A.K. Paul". Discogs. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ Dazed (12 September 2017). "How Jai Paul changed the sound of pop with just two songs". Dazed. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "Jai Paul - BTSTU". YouTube. 21 April 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
- ^ Jai Paul (3 April 2012), Jai Paul - Jasmine (Demo), retrieved 6 August 2017
- ^ "Jai Paul: "Jasmine"". Pitchfork. 30 March 2012. Retrieved 20 May 2012.
- ^ "New Releases". The New York Times. 13 April 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
- ^ "New Music: Jai Paul – Jasmine (demo)". The Guardian. 13 April 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
- ^ "Listen: Nao vs. A. K. Paul - So Good". ClashMusic.com. 24 June 2014. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- ^ "A.K. Paul & Jones x "You"". ProductOfSociety.org. 18 November 2014. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- ^ "Miguel - Flesh (Produced by AK Paul)". DetailsofmyLife.net. 13 July 2015. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
- ^ Gordon, Jeremy (21 March 2016). "Jai Paul and Brother A.K. Paul Launch New Project Paul Institute". Pitchfork.com. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ Bowe, Miles (24 March 2016). "A. K. Paul reveals first Paul Institute release: 'Landcruisin''". Fact Magazine. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "Premiere: James Vincent McMorrow Teams Up With AK Paul To Remix "Rising Water"". Complex. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- ^ "Premiere: James Vincent McMorrow Teams Up With AK Paul To Remix "Rising Water"". Complex.com. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ "Mura Masa's Album Will Be a Plethora of Delights, Including AK Paul, Bonzai and A$AP Rocky". Vice.com. 26 April 2017. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
- ^ "Eve by HIRA | HIRA | Free Listening on SoundCloud". Archived from the original on 19 December 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
- ^ "Listen to A.K. Paul's new song "Be Honest"". Thefader.com. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
- ^ Cheers Mate, retrieved 3 May 2023
- ^ "Foals detail new album Life Is Yours". Consequence. 1 March 2022. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
- ^ Wesley Joseph - MONSOON (Official Video), 17 November 2022, retrieved 16 May 2023
- ^ Wesley Joseph - Glow, 20 April 2023, retrieved 16 May 2023
- ^ Bloom, Madison (22 August 2024). "Ruthven Announces Debut Album Rough & Ready, Shares Video for New Song". Pitchfork. Conde Nast. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
- ^ ">"New A. K. Paul - Watchin' U". Crack in the Road. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
- ^ ""Ghostly" by Miso Extra". ASCAP ACE Repertory. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
A. K. Paul
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background
Anup Kumar Paul, known professionally as A. K. Paul, was born in March 1986 in Rayners Lane, a suburb of Harrow in northwest London.[9][1] Of Indian descent, Paul grew up in a family that valued creative pursuits, with his parents having immigrated to the United Kingdom from India.[10] Paul shares a particularly close relationship with his younger brother, Jai Paul (born June 30, 1988), also a musician and producer raised in the same Rayners Lane household. The brothers' bond extended to their creative lives, where they frequently collaborated in a shared home studio during their formative years, mutually influencing each other's songwriting and experimental approaches to sound.[11] This sibling partnership laid the groundwork for later joint ventures, including the co-founding of the Paul Institute in 2016. Raised in the multicultural setting of Rayners Lane, a diverse London suburb with significant South Asian and other immigrant communities, Paul was immersed in a rich tapestry of cultural influences from an early age.[12] This environment, blending British urban life with elements of his Indian heritage, contributed to his early cultural exposure.Early musical influences
A. K. Paul's early musical interests were profoundly shaped by a blend of Western R&B icons and elements of Indian music, reflecting his family's cultural heritage. Growing up in a household of Indian descent in London, he was exposed to Indian music traditions, which later influenced his incorporation of melodic and rhythmic structures reminiscent of Bollywood soundtracks in his productions. Key artistic inspirations included Prince, whose innovative fusion of funk, rock, and pop informed Paul's approach to genre-blending; Michael Jackson, whose dynamic vocal delivery and pop sensibility left a lasting impact; and D'Angelo, whose soulful, introspective neo-soul style resonated deeply with Paul's own emotive songwriting.[13][13] Paul's professional curiosity was ignited around 2007 when he began collaborating with his brother Jai on early demos, including contributing guitar and production to the track "BTSTU," which marked his initial foray into music creation. This exposure to Jai's raw, home-recorded experiments not only sparked his interest but also highlighted the potential of self-produced music within London's burgeoning underground scene. The brothers shared a supportive family environment that encouraged their creative pursuits, allowing them to explore music without formal constraints.[14][13] In the late 2000s, Paul delved into home recording alongside Jai, learning the basics of production using accessible equipment to layer synths, guitars, and vocals in their West London setup. This hands-on experimentation fostered his foundational skills in sound design and arrangement, drawing from the DIY ethos of the era's online music communities. The "BTSTU" demo, recorded in 2007, was initially shared on platforms like MySpace, with wider circulation and buzz among tastemakers and bloggers emerging in 2010, amplifying their early presence in London's underground electronic and R&B scenes.[14][13]Career
Early collaborations (2007–2015)
A. K. Paul, whose real name is Anup Kumar Paul, began his professional music career in the late 2000s through close collaboration with his brother, Jai Paul, contributing to early demos that would define their shared sound in alternative R&B. Their partnership gained initial traction with the 2007 demo of "BTSTU," which Paul co-produced and helped shape, blending soulful vocals with experimental electronic elements. Uploaded online in 2010, the track went viral after being shared on music blogs, amassing millions of streams and drawing attention from major labels like XL Recordings, which signed Jai Paul in 2011 and released an edited version of "BTSTU" that year.[14] Building on this momentum, Paul expanded his songwriting and production credits beyond the family circle. In 2012, he co-wrote "Higher Res," a bonus track on Big Boi's album Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors, featuring Jai Paul's vocals alongside Little Dragon; the song's intricate layering of hip-hop beats and psychedelic synths highlighted Paul's emerging versatility in fusing genres. The following year, 2013, marked a commercial breakthrough when Paul co-wrote Emeli Sandé's "Next to Me" for her debut album Our Version of Events, a gospel-infused ballad that became a UK top-10 hit and earned Paul two Ivor Novello Awards: Best Song Musically and Lyrically, and PRS for Music Most Performed Work.[15][16][17] By the mid-2010s, Paul's reputation as a sought-after producer in the UK alternative R&B and indie scenes solidified through further partnerships. He collaborated with emerging artist NAO on the 2014 single "So Good," released as part of her So Good EP, where Paul's production emphasized lush, atmospheric textures supporting NAO's soaring vocals, helping establish the track as a standout in the burgeoning alt-R&B wave. These early works, often developed in home studios with Jai Paul's influence on demo experimentation, positioned Paul as a key figure in bridging underground innovation with mainstream appeal, though some projects faced delays due to legal disputes over sample clearances.[18]Paul Institute and solo debut (2016–2019)
In 2016, A. K. Paul co-founded the Paul Institute alongside his brother Jai Paul and collaborator Muz Azar, establishing it as a creative collective and record label dedicated to nurturing experimental R&B and electronic music talents.[19] The initiative emerged from the brothers' shared vision to foster innovative soundscapes beyond traditional industry constraints, serving as both an incubator for new artists and a platform for their own work.[20] Marking his solo debut under the Paul Institute banner, A. K. Paul released the single "Landcruisin'" on March 24, 2016, a self-written, produced, mixed, and mastered track characterized by its funky basslines, shimmering synths, and a sense of "orderly disorder" that evoked futuristic pop influences.[21] BBC Radio 1's Zane Lowe premiered the song, hailing it as "Bladerunner pop" for its cinematic, propulsive energy blending retro funk with modern electronic elements.[21] The release was issued as a limited-edition 7-inch vinyl, underscoring the label's emphasis on tactile, collector-oriented formats amid a digital landscape.[22] By 2017, the Paul Institute expanded its scope through infrastructural investments, including the acquisition of a former BBC nightclub in West London to serve as a dedicated space for music creation and collaboration, reflecting a commitment to building a physical hub for the collective's activities.[23] This move aligned with efforts to recruit support staff, such as a design intern, to professionalize operations and support emerging projects.[24] In 2018, the Paul Institute broadened its roster by releasing tracks from up-and-coming artists, including "Masquerade" by Reinen and "So NY" by HIRA, both co-produced by A. K. and Jai Paul, which highlighted the label's role in mentoring and amplifying diverse voices in alternative R&B.[25] These outputs demonstrated the institute's evolution into a mentorship-oriented entity, prioritizing experimental production techniques and collaborative growth for new talents during this foundational period.[26]Recent projects and reunions (2020–present)
In 2020, A. K. Paul released the single "Be Honest" on July 27, marking the relaunch of the Paul Institute label he co-founded with his brother Jai Paul.[27][28] The track, a slow-burning R&B piece, served as the inaugural release in a new series of music from the label.[29] Paul followed with "Cheers Mate" in April 2021, an upbeat electronic track shared via SoundCloud that showcased his continued experimentation with funk and soul influences.[30] In 2022, he contributed additional production to Foals' album Life Is Yours, specifically on tracks "2am" and "Looking High," blending his signature grooves with the band's indie rock sound.[31][32] A notable reunion occurred in April 2023 when Paul joined Jai Paul onstage at Coachella for his brother's debut live performance, providing guitar support alongside band members including Fabiana Palladino.[7][33] The set featured selections from Jai's catalog and a new track, "So Long," highlighting their collaborative dynamic.[34] Paul's output continued into 2024 and 2025 through the Paul Institute, where he co-produced and co-wrote multiple tracks on Ruthven's debut album Rough & Ready, released October 25, 2024, via the label and XL Recordings.[35][36] This included contributions to songs like "Cautious" and "Indulge," emphasizing intimate R&B songwriting.[37] In May 2025, Paul issued the single "Watchin’ U" on his Organic Systems imprint, a concise R&B cut exploring observational themes.[38] In November 2025, he released the single "We Get What We Deserve".[39] The Paul Institute has sustained activities through such artist developments and occasional live appearances, including the 2023 Coachella event, fostering a roster of alternative R&B talent up to 2025.[29]Musical style
Production techniques
A.K. Paul's production style emphasizes the integration of analog equipment to achieve a distinctive warm, retro-futuristic sonic palette, often employing synthesizers and tape machines to infuse tracks like "Landcruisin'" with textured depth and ambient richness.[14] This approach prioritizes dramatic, grainy atmospheres over pristine clarity, drawing from a lo-fi artisanal ethos that imbues unconventional sounds with organic warmth.[14] Such techniques evolved from his early collaborative influences, allowing Paul to craft immersive, nostalgic layers that blend vintage hardware with contemporary electronic elements.[11] In his collaborations, particularly with NAO, Paul layers live instrumentation—such as electric guitar and bass—with digital effects to define the "wonky funk" aesthetic, creating syncopated grooves that fuse soulful organicism with glitchy, off-kilter electronics.[40] This method, evident in productions like "So Good," balances raw performance energy with processed modulation for a playful, unpredictable rhythmic drive.[13] The resulting hybrid textures highlight Paul's skill in harmonizing acoustic immediacy and synthetic manipulation, yielding a sound that feels both intimate and expansive.[11] His mixing and mastering processes are typically self-directed in compact, home-based setups, enabling precise, hands-on refinement that maintains the music's intimate character and analog warmth.[11] This DIY control allows Paul to iteratively balance frequencies and dynamics, ensuring the final output retains a cohesive, unpolished vibe reflective of his independent ethos.[13]Influences and evolution
A. K. Paul's artistic inspirations are rooted in the sensual grooves of 1980s and 1990s R&B, particularly the innovative funk of Prince and the beat-making precision of J Dilla, which infuse his productions with emotional warmth and rhythmic complexity.[14] UK garage's bouncy basslines and electronic textures further shape his sound, evolving it into a signature alternative R&B style that prioritizes eclectic fusion over conventional structures.[14] In the early 2010s, Paul's work emphasized collaborative pop production, contributing to albums by artists such as Emeli Sandé, Sam Smith, and Miguel, where his crisp, synth-driven arrangements added a layer of futuristic polish to mainstream R&B.[21] This phase transitioned around 2016 with the launch of the Paul Institute alongside his brother Jai Paul, marking a shift toward experimental solo funk in releases like "Landcruisin'," which critics described as "Blade Runner pop" for its atmospheric, retro-futuristic vibe.[14] The label's focus allowed greater creative autonomy, enabling Paul to explore lo-fi soul and downtempo electronics with a more introspective edge. By the 2020s, Paul's style had matured into a more personal alternative R&B, incorporating themes of identity and familial bonds in tracks like "Be Honest," which navigates vulnerability through layered vocals and subtle percussion.[27] This evolution is highlighted in his 2025 single "Watchin’ U," a neo-soul outing that blends buoyant rhythms with introspective lyrics, earning praise for its eclectic maturity and seamless integration of his foundational influences.[41] In 2025, Paul contributed writing and production to several tracks on Paul Institute artist Ruthven's debut album Rough & Ready, furthering his exploration of lush, neo-soul arrangements within collaborative settings.[42] Critics have noted this progression as emblematic of Paul's "eclectic" blend, influencing a new generation of producers while maintaining an enigmatic, genre-defying approach.[14]Discography
Solo singles and EPs
A. K. Paul's solo output consists primarily of singles released through the Paul Institute, the independent label he co-founded with his brother Jai Paul in 2016.[5] His debut solo single, "Landcruisin'," was released in 2016 as the inaugural track from the Paul Institute. The song showcases Paul's signature blend of alternative R&B and electronic elements, establishing his independent voice beyond earlier collaborations. "Be Honest," a single released in 2020, appeared as the opening track on the Paul Institute's collaborative EP of the same name. The song delves into themes of vulnerability in relationships, delivered through hazy synths and Paul's emotive delivery.[6] In May 2020, Paul released "Hungry Beat" exclusively on SoundCloud. Created during lockdown, the track features all instruments, vocals, production, mixing, and mastering by Paul, blending introspective R&B with electronic beats.[43] The following year, "Cheers Mate" emerged as a brief, instrumental-leaning single in April 2021, available exclusively on SoundCloud. Clocking in at just over a minute, it highlights Paul's experimental approach to rhythm and texture.[30][44] Paul's most recent solo single, "Watchin’ U," arrived in May 2025, marking his first original output in four years. The track examines themes of observation and unspoken attraction, wrapped in a dreamy, mid-tempo groove; it garnered moderate streaming attention but did not achieve significant chart placement.[45] In November 2025, Paul released "We Get What We Deserve" as a single. The track, available on platforms including SoundCloud and Bandcamp, continues his exploration of soulful, electronic-infused R&B.[46]Production and writing credits
A. K. Paul has made significant contributions as a songwriter, producer, and engineer to various artists across genres, often blending alternative R&B, soul, and electronic elements in his collaborative work. His early credits include co-writing and providing production support for his brother Jai Paul's breakthrough single "BTSTU" in 2011, where he handled additional vocals and sound design.[47] In 2012, Paul contributed bass and recording engineering to Big Boi's track "Higher Res" from the album Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors, collaborating alongside Jai Paul on production elements.[48] The following year, he co-wrote Emeli Sandé's "Next to Me" from her debut album Our Version of Events, earning an Ivor Novello Award for Best Song Musically and Lyrically in 2013 as part of the songwriting team with Sandé, Hugo Chegwin, and Harry Craze.[49] Paul's production role expanded with NAO's 2014 single "So Good" from the So Good EP, where he served as writer, producer, and mixer, featuring his own vocals and marking one of his first major external releases under the A. K. Paul moniker.[50] More recently, he provided additional production on "Wake Me Up" and "Looking High" for Foals' 2022 album Life Is Yours, also contributing bass throughout the album.[31] In 2024, Paul lent instrumentation, including bass guitar, electric guitar, and additional programming, to Ruthven's debut album Rough & Ready, enhancing its R&B-infused sound through close collaboration.[51]| Artist | Track/Album | Year | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jai Paul | "BTSTU" | 2011 | Co-writer, additional production, vocals, sound design[47] |
| Big Boi | "Higher Res" (Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors) | 2012 | Bass, recording engineer[48] |
| Emeli Sandé | "Next to Me" (Our Version of Events) | 2013 | Co-writer (Ivor Novello Award winner)[49] |
| NAO | "So Good" (So Good EP) | 2014 | Writer, producer, mixer, vocals[50] |
| Foals | Life Is Yours (tracks: "Wake Me Up," "Looking High") | 2022 | Additional production, bass[31] |
| Ruthven | Rough & Ready | 2024 | Bass guitar, electric guitar, additional programming[51] |
