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Nikolaos Asimopoulos Νικόλας Άσιμος | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | Nikos |
| Born | Nikolas Asimopoulos (1949-08-20)20 August 1949 Thessaloniki, Greece |
| Died | 17 March 1988(1988-03-17) (aged 38) Exarcheia, Athens, Greece |
| Genres | Rock |
| Occupation(s) | Singer, guitarist, songwriter, performance artist, political activist |
Nikolas Asimos (Greek:Νικόλας Άσιμος; 20 August 1949 – 17 March 1988[1]) was a Greek composer, singer and performance artist.[2] His real surname wasAsimopoulos (Ασημόπουλος).[2] Asimos was a very special case of acounter-culture artist, mostly because of his lifestyle.[2] His behavior and songs were often received as provocative by the general public.[2] He was a person with strongpolitical opinions. Ideologically, he could be categorized as ananarchist but he never accepted being put in a specific political ideology.
Nikolas Asimos was born inThessaloniki[2] and grew up, inKozani, where his parents were from. In 1967, he enrolled in the Philosophical School of theAristotle University of Thessaloniki. During his college years, he was often involved with theater and the performing arts whilst writing songs and singing in various boîtes of Thessaloniki.
He often had problems with the police, particularly during the period of military rule —junta — in Greece and the consequent restriction on civil liberties, i.e.,freedom of expression.[3]
In 1973, he moved toAthens from Thessaloniki; there he continued to be involved in theatre studies and graduated from a private theatre school.[2] He wrote songs that were not recorded officially, but rather privately and on tapes that he would then sell on the streets ofAthens.[2] He performed in boîtes aroundPlaka along withYannis Zouganelis andSakis Boulas, among others. His first official recording effort was in 1974 with the singleRomios – Michanismos (Ρωμιός – Μηχανισμός). In 1976, he had a daughter with Lillian Charitaki with whom he was not married.
In 1977, he was temporarily imprisoned along with five other editors and writers. They were all released after an initiative byDionysis Savvopoulos. In 1978, he was drafted into the Greek army but did not serve as he was relieved of duty for psychological reasons. He wrote a book titledAnazitontas Krokantropous (Αναζητώντας Κροκανθρώπους "Looking for Yolkthat) which was never officially published but was circulated by him inphotocopies.[2] In his later years and after his death, the book was also made available by a publishing house. In 1982, he released hislong-play record titledO Ksanapes (Ο Ξαναπές), "The Say-It-Again Man".
In 1987, he was accused of raping an ex-girlfriend and was forcibly placed in a mental institution. Shortly after he was sent toKorydallos Prison forpre-trial detention, during which his ex-girlfriend withdrew her accusations and tried to drop the charges against him. The prosecutor, however, denied dropping the charges and Asimos stayed in Korydallos until he was bailed out at the end of June.[4] After being released, he never managed to overcome his bitterness over this charge. The outstanding trial along with other personal problems affected his psychological state profoundly. After two failed attempts, he committed suicide by hanging on 17 March 1988 in his house which he used to call the "preparation area". It is rumored[citation needed] that he kept a diary during the last 15 days of his life in which he describes his efforts to find something worth living for in his life. He marked the pages with an "X" which meant that he had not found anything worth living for. The 15th day was also marked with an "X" which is the day he hanged himself.
HisParanomes Kassetes (illegal tapes), as Asimos liked to call his early work due to its lyrical content, were recorded in friends' houses and other more or less inappropriate (concerning a recording session) locations, with several musicians accompanying him. The tapes had an underground distribution by Asimos himself or his friends because he wanted to avoid his work being exploited by Record Labels. Apart from the tapes, he produced during his lifetime a 45rpm single with two songs and a full-lengthLP, as well as five compositions for aVasilis Papakonstantinou record. The rest of his work was released after he died.