As a teenager, Oliver Johnson learned piano and saxophone, and started using production software prior to getting involved with synthesizers. While studying multimedia art at Salzburg University of Applied Sciences, Johnson issued the first Dorian Concept recordings digitally and uploaded a popular video of himself improvising with a microKORG. Through friend Paul Movahedi (aka the Clonious), unreleased material reached Benji B, who spread the word via airwaves, clubs, and fellow BBC DJs Gilles Peterson and Mary Anne Hobbs, who also became early supporters. By the end of 2009, Johnson had put his studies on hold and already had a considerable discography, including a handful of brief statements on vinyl and the full-length When Planets Explode, released on Kindred Spirits subsidiary Nod Navigators. He had also appeared on a slew of compilations, most significantly the Rush Hour label's Beat Dimensions, Vol. 2, on which his company included contemporaries such as Samiyam, Mono/Poly, and Devonwho. Flying Lotus, another admirer, added him to his live band.
More doors opened for Johnson in 2010, during which he was heard on Flying Lotus' "Satelllliiiiiiiteee" (off Cosmogramma), contributed "Her Tears Taste Like Pears" to the Ninja Tune XX compilation, and performed with the Cinematic Orchestra at Ninja Tune's 20th anniversary event at the Royal Albert Hall. "Her Tears Taste Like Pears" became the basis of a like-titled Ninja Tune EP in 2011. Three years later, after additional recordings and performances with Flying Lotus, Thundercat, and the Cinematic Orchestra, Johnson completed his second full-length, Joined Ends. Released on Ninja Tune in 2014, the album deviated from the debut, with sounds from a battery of different analog synthesizers and an electric Wurlitzer piano.
Once touring commitments wound down, Johnson withdrew for a few years and recorded a third album with a comparatively traditional approach to making contemporary electronic music. The Nature of Imitation, featuring the sound of Johnson's heavily processed vocals and bearing the logo of Flying Lotus' Brainfeeder label, broke a four-year silence in 2018. An absence of similar length preceded the 2022 release What We Do for Others, on which Johnson fought his perfectionist tendency and crafted some of his gentlest, loosest material. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi