Bruce Gilbert (born Bruce Clifford Gilbert,
18 May 1946, Watford, Hertfordshire)
is an English
musician,
one of the founding members of the influential and experimental art-punk band Wire,
and a pioneer in the experimental noise scene.
Education and early career
He studied art
in a British school and found a niche in
the budding avant-garde music scene in late 1960s England.
Gilbert's experimental inclinations in his musical tastes later
influenced his guitar
playing in Wire. While in Wire he was known as the most experimental
member of the group.
Although not properly trained as a guitarist, he provided much
of the experimental bass heard in most Wire songs with distortion pedals and other effects.
Gilbert explains how he became a member of Wire; "It all came
about by accident. I was working as an AV technician in charge of a
small studio at Watford college. I was fiddling about as usual, making
strange tapes with one of the students. We were planning to do a Tangerine
Dream-ish sort of thing, but more harrowing, not as soporific. At that
time, I was unaware of the other things that were happening in Germany, the
experimental, harder stuff, but I suppose that was what I was working
towards, without knowing it. Then a chap who played guitar started
dropping by to make use of the facilities. Somehow, the studio just
became a focus for people, so some of us just started playing things
together. I was very wary of where it might lead. I'm not impressed by
'technique' and to begin with, my role in the proceedings was to make
sure that it didn't get in the way of what we were trying to do."
Gilbert and his band members had no idea that Wire was to
become one of the most influential and innovative bands of the punk
era, with their brief, three album tenure between 1976-79 with Pink Flag,
Chairs Missing
and 154
before temporarily disbanding after a show at London's Electric
Ballroom at the start of 1980. At this time, Gilbert formed Dome
with Wire's bassist,
Graham
Lewis. Dome's performances were done at art
galleries with visual displays that allowed audience interactivity.
Gilbert and Lewis performed with tubes made of paper over their heads,
thus restricting their vision. Artist Russell
Mills frequently collaborated with Dome.
Works
Gilbert's most famous solo works, Music for Fruit,
The Shivering Man, and most recently Ordier
express his self proclaimed “fascination with the possibilities of
sound.” Gilbert's works use everything from minimalist electronic
glitch to instrument manipulation.
Several of his compositions have aroused international
attention.
Late career
Gilbert's respect for musical experimentation lead him to a
career as a DJ, first under his own name, and later
as DJ Beekeeper. Gilbert has often been quoted saying that being a DJ
was just an excuse to "manipulate other people's music" - such projects
include remixing "National Grid" by the group Disinformation
(art and music project), for publication on their double CD "Antiphony".
In March 1996, he released the results of new experiments, the
Ab Ovo album and "Ovo Mix" 12-inch single.
His first solo album not to result from an external dance or film
commissions, was described by The
Wire as, "a forceful piece of work which sounds like nothing else
around."
Gilbert was also commissioned to create music for modern dance
performances, with excerpts appearing on his albums This Way,
Shivering Man (both combined on CD as This
Way to the Shivering Man) and Music for Fruit.