iamamiwhoami

iamamiwhoami (/ˌæm.æm.ˈhæm/ eye-am-am-eye-HOO-am-eye) is the electronic music and audiovisual project of Swedish singer-songwriter Jonna Lee in collaboration with her longtime record producer Claes Björklund. The project has since 2009 released audiovisual series on their YouTube channel followed by a large international audience. Visual collaborators of the project include Swedish director Robin Kempe-Bergman, until 2013, and visual collective Wave, consisting of Lee and cinematographer John Strandh, and formerly Agustín Moreaux.

iamamiwhoami
Lee photographed by John Strandh.
Background information
OriginStockholm, Sweden
Genres
Years active2009–2017
LabelsTo whom it may concern.
Associated acts
Websiteyoutube.com/iamamiwhoami
Members

Their videos in particular have spread virally, and the project is notable not only for its artistic multimedia output, but also the creators' leveraging of YouTube and viral videos to disseminate their music and the accompanying videos, garnering a cult following. In 2010, Lee founded a record label for iamamiwhoami, To whom it may concern., which she runs. One of their videos called "y" is listed at the first place of Google search under the search results for the letter "y", which generated more than 50 million views already, since it is the first link Google would get you to if the web browser doesn't autocomplete "youtube" properly. This slowly became the viral internet meme.

Since December 2009, iamamiwhoami's music videos have been released in several series on the project's YouTube channel, while their music is available through digital music retailers. By May 2013, a total of 24 videos had been released on iamamiwhoami's YouTube channel. Running from an initial set of prelude videos to a series of full-length songs, the videos and songs form a continuous story featuring Lee as a protagonist. iamamiwhoami released their debut physical album, the audiovisual album Kin, in June 2012, while the initial full-length series, Bounty (2010–2011), was released physically in June 2013. A third album, Blue, was released in November 2014.

The project has also remixed songs for Moby and The Irrepressibles, as well as performing live in concert tours revolving around the releases of Kin, Bounty and Blue. An online performance art "concert" in support of the Bounty series was streamed online in 2010, taking place in a forest. On 29 April 2015, a second online performance art "concert" in support of the Blue series was streamed online; this "concert" was released physically and digitally in September 2015 as Concert in Blue, and includes the first new iamamiwhoami song ("The Deadlock") since 2014.

In March 2017, Lee embarked on solo career as ionnalee, stating that it is continuation of iamamiwhoami, though "the two projects will not exist simultaneously".

Background

Lee, seen performing here in 2008, developed iamamiwhoami with Björklund after the release of her second album in 2009

Musically, iamamiwhoami is the brainchild of Swedish singer-songwriter Jonna Lee and her longtime record producer Claes Björklund.[1] Lee, giving an interview to Playgroundmag.net, stated that iamamiwhoami was born from "experiencing convention in its purest form", a reference to her previous releases as a solo artist.[1] Indeed, iamamiwhoami's musical and visual style is a departure from the guitar-led alternative pop that Lee had previously created, although she acknowledges that "the change is probably more apparent from an external point of view."[2] Lee began developing iamamiwhoami in 2009 and started creating the music together with Björklund in real time with their releases in 2009–2010. Lee has explained they wanted it to "grow freely and [tear] the formerly [sic] by its roots and start over",[1] envisioning the ability to "physically visualize" their songs. Lee began collaborating with visual directors Robin Kempe-Bergman, Agustín Moreaux, still photographer John Strandh, and most recently, fashion and costume designer Mathieu Mirano, who are credited as part of the visual team of iamamiwhoami,[1][3] and Lee has defined the collective as being herself in a "collaboration with amazing people" that she loves, also stating "iamamiwhoami is not something [she] can shake off."[4] The process of forming iamamiwhoami began with "a need of change" and the fact that there were songs already in development.[2] Lee has acknowledged they are working with limited means independently through her label To whom it may concern. to maintain their creative freedom.

Since the upload of their first video to YouTube, the project's videos and music have been continuous and operate in "real time", and each song is completed just before being made available for viewing.[2] The first upload, "Prelude 699130082.451322" surfaced on YouTube in December 2009 and was the beginning of a since abstract storyline. Lee has said of this process "every time a production starts, it's being released very soon after to keep the conversation with the audience in the present. It's a chronological storyline of an evolution, from the very beginning up to now. I think the Internet is the place where you can do that."[5] Lee states that essentially, "the core of iamamiwhoami is our music, where the lyrics are the script for the story happening and being shared in real time. Then from that, it is expanded with imagery that reflects our development and current state as part of our chronological storyline."[6] Lee has expressed desire to break "the wall" between viewers and listeners.

iamamiwhoami is widely known for its secrecy.[6][2][4][7][8] As such, Lee's participation was not confirmed until August 2011, when she began giving her first interviews regarding the project. Lee has stated the project's name (pronounced I am, am I, who am I) was inspired by the fact that she "didn't really know what she wanted iamamiwhoami to be."[8] Lee finds that her "identity was not hidden but neither articulated by me because what is relevant is the work we have done and the audience reflection of my identity. "[9] Although Lee acknowledges that secrecy is essential,[8] she feels there is "a lot of communication from me [to the audience] all the time even though it's not literal."[5] Although "people realised pretty quickly that [she] was involved", she "chose not to comment on it, because [she] just wanted people to focus on what [they] were doing",[5] and to speak about who she is "as an individual, doesn't feel relevant".[10]

History

2009–2011: First uploads and Bounty

iamamiwhoami's first concert before a live audience at Way Out West portrayed their unconventional performance style and featured Lee singing to the audience on a bed made of toilet rolls. The audience being filmed and projected, watching themselves during the concert. The appearance continues the events in the videos of "; john" and "clump" that were released simultaneously to the Way out west performance.

The first two iamamiwhoami videos were uploaded to YouTube on 4 December 2009, and were forwarded from an anonymous email account to a number of music journalists and blogs.[11] These videos continued and featured an unknown blonde woman whose face had been distorted, and displayed themes such as birthing and growth. Imagery associated with the folklore of the mandragora (the flowering humanoid, berries, dogs used to pull out the mandrake, and semen of a hanged man) recurs throughout iamamiwhoami's videos. Each of the first six clips end with a drawing of a different animal (a goat, owl, whale, bee, llama, and monkey). Having blogged about the videos, MTV journalist James Montgomery received a package by a messenger, which included a lock of blond hair, a piece of bark, and a pictogram of the six animals with the question "Says what?"[12] Furthering the mystery; the sixth video ("23.5.12.3.15.13.5–8.15.13.5.3383") ends with the woman whispering "Why" or "Y."[13] Each video displayed a numerical code as part of its title. When indexed into the alphabet, these spell out words such as "educational", "I am", "its me", "mandragora", "officinarum", and "welcome home". Mandragora officinarum refers to the mandrake root, which when fresh or dry may cause hallucination and grows from a hanged man's sperm .[13] In 2012, Lee revealed their aim is to "let the work be in focus and push the boundaries of convention in different forms."[6] This initial stage of the project received positive, if skeptical reviews and many websites found themselves asking readers to guess the identity of the blonde woman within the clips. iamamiwhoami was speculated to be a project of many artists, including Lady Gaga, Goldfrapp, Björk, The Knife, Trent Reznor and Christina Aguilera.[14][15] The number series which were highly stylized teaser videos setting the tone of the project, established several mysteries, and served to foreshadow the projects' complete songs. For instance, "23.5.12.3.15.13.5–8.15.13.5.3383" contained vocally distorted lyrics that later appeared in the later song "o". On 25 November 2017, a full version of "13.1.14.4.18.1.7.15.18.1.1110" was released under the side project ionnalee, featuring the distorted full verse as the main chorus of the song "GONE"

The second "series"[1] of the iamamiwhoami project began with the upload of a full song and music video titled "b", one month following the final prelude video. Garnering positive reviews for its dramatic change in style and heavy use of a piano as well as vocal distortion techniques, the song was the first to be uploaded to the iTunes Store, being offered as a paid digital download on 15 March 2010.[16] Although a "reveal" of the artist behind the moniker was anticipated, the videos showed a clearer view of Jonna Lee's face. Swedish media recognized Lee. However, Lee's previous North American management team Philadelphonic commented "If Jonna is involved in this, we have no knowledge of such."[17] Despite this, her involvement in the project was eventually thought to be confirmed with the release of the video for "t", in which her face was fully revealed without any makeup or distortion to conceal her identity. According to rraurl.com and MTV Brasil, "o" was directed by Viktor Kumlin, who is also the director of Lee's music video for "Something So Quiet". This proved to be false.[18][19] As the seven videos with letter titles were slowly released, fans gathered that the videos were likely to spell the word "Bounty". Each of the seven videos begins with the corresponding sound of the animal, however, the animal sounds are not present in the released tracks. The conclusion of the live performance art event IN CONCERT of 2010 reveals that the onomatopoeia used to represent the animals' calls can be made to approximate the pronunciation of the English word "Bounty". On 7 February 2011, several registered songs on ISWC were discovered to be closely related to iamamiwhoami. For example, songs titled, "Up!/Higher", "The Sound of Letting Go/Love", and "Little Hope/Sing a Song of Fire" all pertain to lyrics in iamamiwhoami's songs, "b", "o", and "y", respectively. The works were registered by Lee and Claes Björklund. These songs were registered around the same time as several songs from Lee's This Is Jonna Lee 2009 album.[20]

In October 2010, iamamiwhoami requested a volunteer from the audience to be presented to them with their full name through a message video; no instructions followed. Fans of the project set up voting polls and presented a volunteer from the YouTube community with the YouTube username of ShootUpTheStation. One month later, on 16 November 2010, a live online concert was streamed on To whom it may concern.'s website where ShootUpTheStation was led through the forests of iamamiwhoami by Lee and brought to be buried and burned inside a paperbox. In Concert featured performances of both the preludes, Bounty and a new song titled "." and ran at one hour and four minutes.[1]

In August 2011, iamamiwhoami played their first live show at the annual Way Out West Festival in Gothenburg, Sweden. After a long absence, they released the songs "; John" and "Clump" which was revealed to be an epilogue to Bounty.[1][21] As a conclusion to Bounty, Bullett Media posted an interview article with iamamiwhoami for their Winter 2011 'Secrets' Issue. Questions were answered strictly with sampled lyrics from the current repertoire of songs, with some additional and unknown phrases purported to be lyrics for future musical releases. The article also included promotional images of iamamiwhoami, nude in the forest and posed among similar elements from "; John" and "T".[22] The article is referenced to be written and photographed by iamamiwhoami. Following their performance at Way Out West, iamamiwhoami began recording and preparing their debut studio album.[1]

Bounty was critically well received, with Kathy Iandoli of MTV describing Bounty as having "portrayed a flaxen, ethereal goddess twisting her way throughout nature, while other [videos] included distorted imagery that housed industrial, synthy soundscapes set on fire. The combination was mysterious, yet alluring, representing a combination of horror film imagery with new age sensibilities. The titles to the songs were equally vague, ... numbers and clusters of words .... The videos never fell short of several hundred thousand views – and even much greater ... people obviously took notice."[6] At the Swedish Grammis held on January 2011, iamamiwhoami won their first award in the category of "Innovator of the Year" (Swedish: Årets innovatör), which had been newly inaugurated. An anonymous woman, later confirmed to be Nina Fors,[23] the mother of Emil Fors, a Swedish musician who worked as production manager for the videos, received the award on their behalf and handed to the speaker an envelope with the words "To whom it may concern." taped in front. The content is revealed to be an empty piece of white paper. Before leaving, the woman acknowledged by saying, "Thank you. That's all I can say". iamamiwhoami won an MTV O Music award in 2012 in the "Digital Genius" category.

2012–2013: Kin

On 1 February 2012, iamamiwhoami's YouTube channel once again became active with the posting of the video "kin 20120611", which was sent to music blogs much in the same manner as the original release.[24] This continued with each successive release in the Kin series.[25] It was speculated that the title of the video pertained to the date 11 June 2012, using the Gregorian big-endian dating system most common in Sweden. The video was followed by the original music video in the Kin series, titled "Sever", later the opening track on iamamiwhoami's debut studio album. The series consists of nine songs and videos, which culminates in "Goods" and is a continuation of the story arc founded by the original uploads, online concert and Bounty series.[2] Together, the videos form a collective film also titled Kin which was released in CD/DVD and has been screened at several European film festivals.[26] A digital download of each song was released to retailers one day following the YouTube upload.[27] In terms of imagery, much of Kin contains large hairy creatures which interact with Lee throughout the narrative, which she explained as "represent[ing] a part of me and most others. Life with it is very much a delight. I have experienced the consequences of living without it."[1] The release resulted in the first interviews conducted by Lee in promotion of the album, for the first time describing the process of creating the iamamiwhoami visuals and music. She referred to the making of Kin in an interview with The Guardian as having been "nine months of hard labour".[8] Lee has also explained Kin "came to life after a close encounter with the audience at the first live concert in 2011" and called herself a "proud mother".

In preparation for the release, iamamiwhoami were signed to Cooperative Music, a British group of independent labels founded by V2 Records. The Italian branch of the label was the first to announce the release of the series as an album, which would be audiovisual and distributed both physically and via digital download on 11 June 2012.[28] and originating from the project's own label, "To whom it may concern.", a recurring phrase within both their videos and single artwork. This coincided with the launch of the label's first official website, which had previously been used to air the original online concert.[28] It was also discovered that iamamiwhoami is managed by the London-based D.E.F. Artist Management, whose roster includes other Swedish artists.[29] Kin was released on 11 June 2012 in CD/DVD and LP/DVD formats through the label's website,[28] with the official release following on 3 September 2012.[30]

Upon release, the album generated very positive review from critics, who praised the album's ambition as a collective as well as its style, incorporating several styles of electronic music and Lee's vocals.[31][32] iamamiwhoami was nominated for "The Best Tease of the Past 12 Months" category by BBC Radio's 6 Music Blog Awards, with fellow contenders being Lana Del Rey, Elliphant, Battlekat, Savoir Adore and The Sound of Arrows.[33] On 2 March 2012, iamamiwhoami was declared the winner on BBC Radio by Tom Robinson, and the project received their first large airplay debut with "O" after the announcement.[34] This was followed by the release of iamamiwhoami's first airplay promotional single, "Play", on 30 July 2012.[35] iamamiwhoami won the MTV O Music Awards Digital Genius Award, fellow contenders being Amanda Palmer, Gorillaz, OK Go, Radiohead and The Flaming Lips.[36] The project embarked on a European tour for kin in 2012, playing festivals and venues across Europe.[26]

Originally produced and released in a series of singles throughout 2010 and 2011, Bounty was released as an album on 3 June 2013 on iamamiwhoami's label To whom it may concern, distributed by Cooperative Music, a group of independent labels. The first music video from Bounty, titled "B", was released on 14 March 2010 on iamamiwhoami's YouTube channel, after which followed "O", "U-1", "U-2", "N", "T" and "Y". Digital singles were released shortly after each music video was uploaded to YouTube. The titles collectively formed the word "Bounty". While it was assumed that these songs solely consisted of Bounty's track listing, in 2011 two more singles and music videos, "; John" and "Clump" were released and were not confirmed as belonging to Bounty until June 2012 when iamamiwhoami's YouTube channel grouped them into a playlist named "Bounty" along with the previous tracks mentioned.

On 4 December 2012, iamamiwhoami's label website To whom it may concern. was updated with a note on the front page which stated "20130603 – iamamiwhoami; Bounty", forecasting a physical release of the Bounty series. This was confirmed on the very next day when the Release section of the website displayed Bounty's album cover art, along with its track listing.[37]

iamamiwhoami embarked on a worldwide tour in support of Kin and Bounty in 2012 and 2013, including their first dates in North America.

2014–2017: Blue and Concert in Blue

On 17 January 2014, To whom it may concern. and official networks were all updated with artwork that featured Lee in front of a waterfall beneath the title "Fountain".[38] It was confirmed as a new single and released digitally on 22 January 2014.[39] To whom it may concern.'s was also updated with a "Generate" feature, a donation service in which funds were promised to "be used for creative purpose only".[40] After the user donated, they were redirected to a page containing a gif image of a fish being released into a pond. Following "Fountain" were three singles "Hunting for Pearls", "Vista" and "Tap Your Glass", which were sporadically released on 25 February, 28 April, and 4 August, respectively.[41][42][43]

On 8 July, the third audiovisual album was officially announced, titled Blue, released on 10 November in exclusive physical and digital editions.[44]

On 30 April 2015, the second live album/project (CD/DVD/book) was officially announced, titled Concert in Blue, released on 2 September 2015 in exclusive physical and digital editions. As with their previous releases, Concert in Blue was released with a picture book. Concert in Blue included songs from Blue as well as Bounty and Kin. Concert in Blue would also see the release of the first new iamamiwhoami song since 2014 ("The Deadlock"), which was released as a single as well.[45]

On 24 February 2017, Lee announced the release of her new solo single under the alias ionnalee. "Samaritan" was released on 10 March alongside its accompanying music video. Lee also opened several new social media accounts to promote her solo endeavours. When asked about the future of iamamiwhoami, she said that the new project is a continuation of the collective, albeit "the two projects will not exist simultaneously".[46]

Musical style

iamamiwhoami is considered to be an electronic music act.[47] Their music is mostly characterised by Jonna Lee's "spiritual" and "ghostly" vocals as well as Claes Björklund's "lush and nuanced" production.[48][49][50] It has been described as electropop,[51] synth-pop,[52] art pop[53] and avant-garde.[54]

The duo has been compared to artists like Portishead,[55] The Knife,[56] Björk and Fever Ray.[57] Ben Hogwood of musicOMH compared Lee's voice to those of Elizabeth Fraser and Siouxsie Sioux.[49]

Influences

Jonna Lee stated that she is influenced by Kraftwerk, Cocteau Twins, Depeche Mode, Christopher Nolan, Air and Vangelis. She also added that she enjoys listening to Blood Orange, Arca, Denis Villeneuve, Chromatics, Four Tet, Björk, Todd Terje, Disasterpeace and Mozart.[58]

Members

Music
Visuals
  • Jonna Lee – direction, art direction
  • John Strandh – direction, cinematography, photography
Former
  • Robin Kempe-Bergman – direction
  • Agustín Moreaux – art direction, costume design, direction
Timeline

Videography

Title Release date Related releases
Video streaming[A] Digital download Release Digital download
"Prelude 699130082.451322-5.4.21.3.1.20.9.15.14.1.12" 4 December 2009 (2009-12-04)

31 January 2010 (2010-01-31)[B]

"9.1.13.669321018" 7 January 2010 (2010-01-07)

1 February 2010 (2010-02-01)[B]

"9.20.19.13.5.723378" 25 January 2010 (2010-01-25)

1 February 2010 (2010-02-01)[B]

"Like Hell"
"13.1.14.4.18.1.7.15.18.1.1110" 10 February 2010 (2010-02-10) "Gone"
"15.6.6.9.3.9.14.1.18.21.13.56155" 22 February 2010 (2010-02-22)
"23.5.12.3.15.13.5–8.15.13.5.3383" 1 March 2010 (2010-03-01) "O" 11 April 2010 (2010-04-11)
"B" 14 March 2010 (2010-03-14) 15 March 2010 (2010-03-15) Tara Busch remix 19 April 2010 (2010-04-19)
"O" 12 April 2010 (2010-04-12) 11 April 2010 (2010-04-11) Adrian Lux remix 29 April 2010 (2010-04-29)
"U-1" 3 May 2010 (2010-05-03) 3 May 2010 (2010-05-03)
  • 9 July 2010 (2010-07-09)
  • 16 July 2010 (2010-07-16)
"U-2" 7 May 2010 (2010-05-07) 7 May 2010 (2010-05-07)
"N" 2 June 2010 (2010-06-02) 3 June 2010 (2010-06-03) Eineinmeier remix 25 June 2010 (2010-06-25)
"T" 30 June 2010 (2010-06-30) 30 June 2010 (2010-06-30) Tele Tele remix 24 September 2010 (2010-09-24)
"Y" 4 August 2010 (2010-08-04) 5 August 2010 (2010-08-05) Zoo Brazil remix 3 November 2010 (2010-11-03)
"20101001" 1 October 2010 (2010-10-01)[C]
"20101104" 4 November 2010 (2010-11-04) In Concert; "." 4 December 2010 (2010-12-04)
In Concert 16 November 2010 (2010-11-16)[D] 4 December 2010 (2010-12-04)
  • In Concert; "U-1"
  • In Concert; "B"
  • In Concert; "T"
  • In Concert; "N"
  • In Concert; "O"
  • In Concert; "U-2"
  • In Concert; "Y"
  • In Concert; "."
4 December 2010 (2010-12-04)
"; John" 15 May 2011 (2011-05-15) 16 May 2011 (2011-05-16) "+46 702 888 037"[E]
"Clump" 31 July 2011 (2011-07-31) 1 August 2011 (2011-08-01)
"Kin 20120611" 1 February 2012 (2012-02-01)
"Sever" 14 February 2012 (2012-02-14) 15 February 2012 (2012-02-15)
"Drops" 28 February 2012 (2012-02-28) 29 February 2012 (2012-02-29)
"Good Worker" 13 March 2012 (2012-03-13) 14 March 2012 (2012-03-14)
"Play" 27 March 2012 (2012-03-27) 28 March 2012 (2012-03-28)
"In Due Order" 10 April 2012 (2012-04-10) 11 April 2012 (2012-04-11)
"Idle Talk" 24 April 2012 (2012-04-24) 25 April 2012 (2012-04-25)
"Rascal" 8 May 2012 (2012-05-08) 9 May 2012 (2012-05-09)
"Kill" 22 May 2012 (2012-05-22) 23 May 2012 (2012-05-23)
"Goods" 5 June 2012 (2012-06-05) 6 June 2012 (2012-06-06)
Kin Kin DVD exclusive 11 June 2012 (2012-06-11)
Bounty Bounty DVD exclusive 3 June 2013 (2013-06-03)
"Fountain" 21 January 2014 (2014-01-21) 22 January 2014 (2014-01-22)
"Hunting for Pearls" 26 February 2014 (2014-02-26) 25 February 2014 (2014-02-25)
"Vista" 28 April 2014 (2014-04-28) 28 April 2014 (2014-04-28)
"Tap Your Glass" 4 August 2014 (2014-08-04) 4 August 2014 (2014-08-04)
"Blue Blue" 5 September 2014 (2014-09-05) 5 September 2014 (2014-09-05)
"Thin" 2 October 2014 (2014-10-02) 1 October 2014 (2014-10-01)
"Chasing Kites"
"Ripple" 18 November 2014 (2014-11-18) 10 November 2014 (2014-11-10)
"The Last Dancer" 4 December 2014 (2014-12-04)
"Shadowshow" 22 December 2014 (2014-12-22)
Blue Blue DVD exclusive 15 February 2015 (2015-02-15)
"Dive"
Concert in Blue 2 September 2015 (2015-09-02) 2 September 2015 (2015-09-02)

A. ^ All YouTube videos, except where noted.
B. ^ 1 2 3 Re-upload date. The original upload of these videos was removed.
C. ^ This video was deleted on 16 November 2010.
D. ^ Streamed on To whom it may concern.'s website.
E. ^ Phone call stream.

Other videos

These videos are not musical releases and were deleted on 16 November 2010.

Discography

Studio albums
Live albums
Compilation albums
  • Kronologi (2020)
Airplay and promotional singles
  • "Play" (2012)[35]
  • "Goods" (2012)
  • "Y" (2013)
  • "Chasing Kites" (2014)
  • "Fountain" (2015)
Remixes
  • "After" (iamamiwhoami remix) by Moby (2011)
  • "New World" (iamamiwhoami remix) by The Irrepressibles (2013)
  • "Gone" (iamamiwhoami remix) by ionnalee (2017)

Awards and nominations

Year Nominated work Award Category Result
2011 iamamiwhoami Grammis Årets innovatör (Innovator of the Year) Won[59]
iamamiwhoami MTV O Music Awards Innovative Artist Nominated[60]
iamamiwhoami MTV O Music Awards Best Web-Born Artist Nominated[61]
2012 iamamiwhoami BBC Radio 6 Music Best Tease of the Past 12 Months Won[34]
iamamiwhoami MTV O Music Awards Digital Genius Won[36]
2013 Robin Kempe-Bergman: "drops" Grammis Årets musikvideo (Music Video of the Year) Nominated[62]

References

  1. del Amo, Sergio (7 September 2012). "Trying To Lift The Veil Of Mystery Off iamamiwhoami". Playgroundmag.net. Archived from the original on 16 September 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  2. Gasior, Zuzanna (3 September 2012). "iamamiwhoami Interview". This is paper. Archived from the original on 8 September 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  3. "Press release: Album release: iamamiwhoami; kin". Bang On. 7 June 2012. Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  4. Davidson-Vidavski, Doron (18 September 2012). "What can you do with nothing?". Notion Magazine.
  5. "Exclusive Q&A: iamamiwhoami". Dazed. 20 August 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  6. Andrieux, Amy (6 September 2012). "The Elusive Genius of iamamiwhoami". MTV Iggy. Archived from the original on 9 September 2012. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  7. Amato, Alina (21 September 2012). "iamamiwhoami Ist Nicht Von Dieser Welt". Noisey (in German). Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  8. Cragg, Michael (11 August 2012). "The ethereal world of Jonna Lee". The Guardian.
  9. Heath, Theresa (31 August 2012). "kin: iamamiwhoami "It's often difficult telling dream from reality..."". Clash. Clash Music. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  10. Funke, Michael (18 September 2012). "Das Phanomen iamamiwhoami". detektor.fm. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  11. Cragg, Michael (15 March 2012). "New music: iamamiwhoami – good worker". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  12. Montgomery, James (5 March 2010). "Iamamiwhoami Makes Contact, Sends MTV News A Package". MTV. Archived from the original on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  13. Lundin, Leigh (14 March 2010). "Musical Mystery". Criminalbrief.com.
  14. Seitz, Carine (25 September 2010). "Who am I? Why I am..." Leither Magazine.
  15. Robinson, Peter (26 March 2010). "Pop goes the viral". The Guardian.
  16. Robinson, Peter (25 March 2011). "That iamamiwhoami song is on iTunes, by the way". Popjustice. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  17. Montgomery, James (15 March 2010). "'Iamamiwhoami': Is Swedish Singer Jonna Lee Behind Viral Campaign?". MTV.
  18. "Clipes exibidos no MTV Lab/teco apple #26". MTV Brasil. 30 August 2010. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  19. "vídeos: iamamiwhoami – o [2010]". rraurl.com. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  20. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 February 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. Ehrlich, Brenna (1 February 2012). "New iamamiwhoami Video Teases Happening on 6/11/12". MTV Hive; MTV. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  22. "An Inscrutable Interview with (and Exclusive Photo Series from) iamamiwhoami". Bullett Magazine. 11 November 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  23. "Nina Fors's Facebook" (in Swedish). Facebook.
  24. "iamamiwhoami; kin 20120611 video". NME. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
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