| Chris Cutler |

Chris
Cutler with the Peter Blegvad Trio performing
at a RIO Festival in Southern
France, April 2007
(© Michael S. Eisenberg)
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Chris Cutler |
| Born |
January 4, 1947 (1947-01-04) (age 60)
Washington, D.C.,
United
States |
| Genre(s) |
Avant-progressive rock,
Experimental,
Free improvisation |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, Lyricist,
Music
theorist,
Businessperson |
| Instrument(s) |
Percussion |
| Years active |
1960s – present |
| Label(s) |
Recommended |
Associated
acts |
Louise, Henry
Cow, Art Bears,
Cassiber,
News from Babel,
The Science Group,
Fred
Frith, Lutz Glandien,
Peter
Blegvad |
| Website |
www.ccutler.com |
Chris Cutler (born January 4, 1947) is an English
percussionist, composer, lyricist and music theorist. Best known for
his work with English
avant-garde
rock
group Henry
Cow, Cutler was also a member and drummer of a number of
other bands,
including Art
Bears, News from Babel, Pere
Ubu and (briefly) Gong/Mothergong. He has collaborated
with many musicians and groups, including Fred
Frith, Lindsay Cooper, Zeena
Parkins, Peter Blegvad and The
Residents, and has appeared on over 100 recordings. Cutler's career
spans over three decades and he still performs actively throughout the
world.
Cutler created and runs the British independent record label Recommended
Records, is the editor of the music magazine unFILEd,
and has written a collection of essays on music, including a book on
the political theory of contemporary music.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Henry
Cow
- 1.2 Recommended
Records
- 1.3 Other
bands and projects
- 1.4 Other
collaborations
- 1.5 Solo
performances
- 2 Electrified
drum kit
- 3 Writings
and talks
- 3.1 Talks
- 3.2 Essays
- 3.3 Books
- 4 Discography
- 5 Bibliography
- 6 Films
- 7 Footnotes
- 8 See
also
- 9 External
links
|
Biography
Chris Cutler was born in Washington,
D.C., but was raised in England. He never studied music but tried
his hand at banjo, guitar, trumpet and flute while at school. He
finally settled for drums "because I wanted to be in a band and
drummers were scarcest."
Cutler formed his first band in 1963, playing Shadows
and Ventures
instrumental covers, then played in several R&B
and soul
bands. In 1966 he joined a band called Louise which performed on the London psychedelic
club circuit for three years before breaking up. Looking for work,
Cutler placed a series of advertisements in Melody
Maker over a period of nine months in 1970. This put him in touch with
a number of musicians which led to Cutler and Dave Stewart of Egg
forming The Ottawa Music Company, a 26 piece rock composer's orchestra,
in 1971. Soon afterwards, Henry Cow, looking to replace
the drummer who had just left them, responded to one of Cutler's
adverts and invited him to a rehearsal.
Henry Cow
-
Henry Cow had been formed in 1968 by Cambridge
University students Fred Frith (guitar) and Tim
Hodgkinson (woodwind and keyboards). By 1971 the band had
gone through a number of personnel changes and it was only when Cutler
joined them in September 1971 that the group stabilised. Frith,
Hodgkinson and Cutler became Henry Cow's permanent core until the band
split up in 1978.
Henry Cow were a groundbreaking group that launched the
careers of many of its members, including Cutler's. Their music was
uncompromising and this eventually put them at odds with the mainstream
music
business, forcing the band to do everything themselves: from recording,
manufacturing and releasing their own albums, to organising their own
tours and being their own management and agency. All this proved
invaluable experience for Cutler that would assist him greatly in his
future endeavours. The group spent most of its last three years touring
Europe and many of Cutler's future collaborations resulted from contact
made with musicians on these tours. In Henry Cow's last few months they
initiated Rock in Opposition (RIO), a
collective of like-minded bands they had encountered through Europe
that were united in their opposition to the music
industry.
Recommended Records
-
Main article: Recommended
Records
After Henry Cow disbanded in 1978, Cutler created Recommended
Records in London,
an independent label and distribution network for RIO artists. The
record label quickly filled the gap left by commercial labels and soon
began to also release non-RIO bands and musicians. Recommended Records
always placed the musicians first and profits second, and as a result
experienced financial difficulties from time to time – but it has kept
going for over 25 years, and has been one of Cutler's great success
stories. There is a number of musicians whose work would never have
seen the light of day had it not been for Cutler's label.
Other bands and projects
Cutler's first post-Henry Cow project was Art
Bears (1978-1981), a group formed by Cutler, Fred Frith
(guitar and keyboards) and Dagmar Krause (vocals, from Henry Cow)
six months before Henry Cow split up (see Henry
Cow for details). Art Bears were a song-oriented group that
recorded three studio albums. Cutler's main contributions were the
songs texts and (with Frith) the album productions. Art Bears (in the
wake of Henry Cow) were well received by critics and further boosted
Cutler's reputation in "progressive" circles.
In 1982, Cutler co-founded the Anglo-German group Cassiber (1982-1992) with German musicians Heiner
Goebbels, Alfred Harth and Christoph Anders. Over the next ten
years Cassiber produced five albums and toured Europe, Asia, South and
North America. Their music was very experimental and often involved
spontaneously improvising pre-existing structured and arranged
material.
In 1983, Cutler formed News
from Babel (1983-1986), another song-orientated group with
core members Cutler, Lindsay Cooper (from Henry
Cow), Zeena
Parkins (a United States harpist) and Dagmar Krause. With guest
musicians (including Robert Wyatt and Sally
Potter) they made two critically acclaimed studio albums, but did not
perform live.
Cutler was a member of the United States experimental rock
band Pere Ubu between 1987 and 1989. He
had first encountered them in Washington DC in 1978 while exploring the
possibility of Henry Cow touring America (which never materialised as
Henry Cow disbanded soon after). Cutler kept in touch with Pere Ubu
until they split in the early 1980s and their singer, David Thomas began a solo
career. Cutler and Lindsay Cooper joined Thomas in 1982 to form David Thomas and the
Pedestrians, and for the next three years they toured Europe and North
America and made two albums. Over the next few years, some of the
ex-Pere Ubu members began joining the Pedestrians. Cooper left in 1985
and by 1987 the group (now called David Thomas and the Wooden
Birds) was effectively Pere Ubu again. As Pere Ubu, the band (with
Cutler) made two albums. Cutler left in 1989.
In 1991, Cutler and German composer Lutz Glandien recorded the critically
acclaimed song project Domestic Stories. Cutler
wrote the song texts and played drums, while Glandien composed and
performed the music with samplers and computers. The supporting
musicians were Dagmar Krause (vocals), Fred Frith (bass and guitar) and
Alfred Harth (saxophone and clarinet). Cutler collaborated with
Glandien again in 1994 to record Scenes from no Marriage
and to participate in P53, a commission for the 25th Frankfurt
Jazz Festival with Zygmunt Krauze, Marie Goyette, Otomo
Yoshihide.
The (ec) Nudes
were a band Cutler, Wädi Gysi (guitar) and Amy Denio
(vocals, bass, saxophone, accordion) formed in 1993. The trio recorded Vanishing
Point, a CD of songs with texts by Cutler and music by Gysi
and Denio, and toured extensively. Bob
Drake later joined the group on bass and as a quartet they toured all
over Europe, Canada
and Brazil,
but did not record. Cutler left the group in 1994.
Cutler and Yugoslav keyboardist and composer Stevan Tickmayer
formed The Science Group in 1997 to
record A Mere Coincidence (1999), an album of songs
on science topics, including quantum mechanics. Cutler wrote
the texts, Tickmayer composed the music, and the rest of the group
comprised Bob Drake (bass guitar, vocals) and Claudio Puntin (bass clarinet), with
guests Amy Denio (vocals) and Fred Frith (guitar). In 2003 Cutler and
Tickmayer reconstituted The Science Group as a quartet with Bob Drake
(bass guitar) and Mike Johnson (guitars), and
released an instrumental album, Spoors.
Other collaborations
Fred
Frith and Chris Cutler, partners in time for over three
decades.
The ex-Henry Cow members have always maintained close contact
with each other and Cutler still collaborates with many of them. Cutler
and Fred Frith have been touring Europe, Asia and the Americas since
1978 and have given over 100 duo performances. Four albums from some of
these concerts have been released. In December 2006, Cutler, Frith and
Tim Hodgkinson performed together at The Stone in New York City, only their
second concert performance since Henry Cow's demise in 1978.
On 4 November 2006 Cutler, Jon Rose (violin) and Zeena Parkins (harp)
performed with the BBC Scottish
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ilan Volkov, at the Glasgow
City Hall in Glasgow,
Scotland.
The concert was recorded and later broadcast by BBC
Radio 3 on 24 March 2007.
Other musicians and bands Cutler has performed regularly, and
recorded, with over the years include Tim Hodgkinson, Lindsay Cooper,
Peter Blegvad, John Greaves, René
Lussier, Jean
Derome, Tom
Cora, Aksak
Maboul, The Residents, The
Work, Duck and Cover, Les
Quatre Guitaristes De L'Apocalypso Bar, Kalahari
Surfers, Hail
and Biota.
Solo performances
Since the late 1990s, Cutler began giving solo electrified
percussion performances to audiences across the world. His first was in
Tokyo in
June 1998, which was recorded in a documentary
film, At the Edge of Chaos, by award winning film
director Shinji Aoyama. The first part of the film is equipment set-up
and sound-checks, plus interviews with Cutler, while the second part is
the improvised concert itself.
In 2001 Cutler released Solo: A Descent Into the
Maelstrom, an album of solos on his electrified drum kit
taken from live performances in Europe and the United States between
August 2000 and May 2001. In 2005 he released Twice Around
the World, an album of real-time recordings made from all
over the world between 23.30 and midnight GMT. The material was taken
from a daily half-hour radio programme Cutler ran for Resonance
FM: Out Of The Blue Radio between July 2001 and July 2002. A companion
album, There and Back Again, comprising 44
environmental recordings, was released by Cutler in 2006.
Electrified drum kit
Chris Cutler never studied music and taught himself drumming
on make-shift drum kits assembled with whatever was on hand. He slowly
developed a technique using a "top-down" approach as opposed to the
traditional "bottom-up" approach used by schooled drummers. Drummers
are first taught basic patterns which are later combined into more
complex patterns. Cutler learned the opposite way, hearing or imagining
a sound and then disciplining his hands and feet to reproduce it. This
"top-down" approach resulted in a unique style of drumming that
pervades all of Cutler's performances and recordings.
By the time Cutler was drumming for Henry Cow in 1971, his had
become a perfectly competent, albeit unconventional, drummer. The
nature of Henry Cow was to experiment and explore and it was here that
Cutler developed and refined his drumming techniques. It was also here
that he started to electrify his drum kit. He began by attaching old
telephone mouthpieces to drums and cymbals, and connecting them to an amplifier
and a reverb
unit. He later added a small mixer for four independent inputs.
The effect was very basic: a few low-grade inputs with only
equalisation and reverberation to manipulate.
Chris Cutler's electrified drum kit.
By 1982, Cutler had added another small mixer, a pitch
shifter and a delay unit. He had also begun using
cheap guitar transducers and a table full of
additional wired objects (pans, metal trays, small tambours and
egg-slicers).
Cutler experimented briefly with drum pads triggered to play sampled or synthesized
sounds, but quickly dismissed this option because he found them
unresponsive and inflexible. They reduced a drum to nothing more than a
switch: hit it and a pre-programmed sound is emitted, irrespective of
how hard or in what manner the drum is struck. Cutler preferred real-time processing:
amplifying and modifying actual sounds produced by the drum, making it
a kind of an electroacoustic instrument, immediate and responsive, and
retaining all the qualities of an acoustic drum kit.
Cutler went on to wire his entire drum kit, using a 16 channel
mixer with multi-effect processors, a "Space pedal", a "Whammy pedal",
a PDS 8000 and an old Boss pitch shifter/delay unit. In addition to
transducers, he also attached miniature microphones to some of the
drums and sticks. Cutler introduced feedback into the mix by placing a
monitor speaker near the kit.
The electrified drum kit continues to evolve and to Cutler it
is "satisfyingly unpredictable", responsive to all his old techniques
while continuing to generate new ones. It has a unique "voice" that
Cutler still has not plumbed the depths of. This is what prompted him
to start giving solo performances because it tested his skill at
playing an instrument he had to treat as an equal and evolve with.
Writings and talks
Talks
In the early 1980s,
Chris Cutler became active in the International Association for the
Study of Popular Music (IASPM) and started giving talks and
participating in symposia throughout the world. Some of the talks he
has given are:
- "Composing with Other People's Music - Creativity or
Theft?", British Council, Belgrade.
- "Electrification and Experimentation, the Development of
New Musical Resources in the Popular Field", Union of Composers, Moscow.
- "Improvisation: Motives and Methods", IASPM, University
of Leeds.
- "Rock In Opposition, a case study". Academy of Science,
Berlin.
- "Studio Composition and Visualisation" - a case study
IASPM, University, Montreal
- "Sonic and Structural Convergence at the fringes of Musical
Genres". The Royal College of Art, London.
- "On The Impact of Recording Technology on Popular music."
Pomeriggi Musicali do Milano.
- "Punderphonics and Postmodernism", Dissonanten, Rotterdam.
- "Sampling and Plunderphonics", Museum School, Boston.
- "The Recording Studio as a Compositional Instrument", The
Royal College of Art, London.
Essays
Cutler has written and published a number of essays on music,
including:
- 1990
"Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms: Concerning Musical and
Technical Means and Political Needs" – an essay on the evolution of
recorded music, published in The Cassette Mythos.
- 1994
"Plunderphonia" – an essay on plunderphonics, published in MusicWorks
60.
- 1997
"Scale" – an essay on the scale of sounds in music, published in The
Gramophone Special Edition "Perspectives on Contemporary Music".
- 2005
"Thoughts on Music and the Avant Garde" – an essay commissioned for a
book dedicated to Professor Gunther Mayer, published in Perfect
Sound Forever.
- 2006
"Locality" ; Resonance Magazine.
Books
Cutler has also published two books:
- 1981
The Henry Cow Book (co-authored with Tim
Hodgkinson) – a collection of documents and information about
the band.
- 1985
File Under Popular – a collection of theoretical
and critical writings on music, also published in Polish,
German and Japanese.
Discography
Here is a selection of albums Chris Cutler has performed on,
showing the year they were first released:
- With Henry Cow
- 1973
Leg
End aka Legend (LP Virgin
Records, UK)
- 1974
Unrest
(LP Virgin
Records, UK)
- 1976
Henry Cow Concerts
(2xLP Caroline Records, UK)
- 1979
Western Culture
(LP Broadcast, UK)
- With Henry Cow/Slapp
Happy
- 1975
Desperate Straights
(LP Virgin
Records, UK)
- 1975
In Praise of Learning
(LP Virgin
Records, UK)
- With Art Bears
- 1978
Hopes and Fears
(LP Recommended Records, UK)
- 1979
Winter Songs
(LP Recommended Records, UK)
- 1981
The World as It Is Today
(LP Recommended Records, UK)
- With Aksak Maboul
- 1979
Un Peu de L'Ame des Bandits (LP Crammed
Discs, Belgium)
- With Cassiber
- 1982
Man or Monkey? (2xLP Riskant,
Germany)
- 1984
Beauty and the Beast (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1986
Perfect Worlds (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1990
A Face We All Know (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1998
Live in Tokyo (2xCD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With The Work
- 1982
Live in Japan (LP Recommended
Records, Japan)
- With Fred Frith
- 1983
Live in Prague and Washington, (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1994
Live in Trondheim, Berlin, Limoges (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- 2000
2 Gentlemen in Verona (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- 2007
Live at The Stone (CD Tzadik
Records, USA)
- With News from Babel
- 1983
Work Resumed on the Tower (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1986
Letters Home (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- With David Thomas and the
Pedestrians
- 1983
Winter Comes Home
(LP Recommended Records, UK)
- 1985
More Places Forever
(LP Rough Trade Records, UK)
- With Peter Blegvad
- 1988
Downtime (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1995
Just Woke Up (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1998
Hangman's Hill (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- With Pere Ubu
- 1988
The Tenement Year
(LP Fontana Records)
- 1989
Cloudland
(LP Fontana Records)
- With Hail
- 1992
Kirk (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With Lutz Glandien
- 1993
Domestic Stories (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- 1994
Scenes from no Marriage (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With The (ec) Nudes
- 1994
Vanishing Point (LP Recommended
Records, UK)
- With P53
- 1995
P53 (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With Biota
- 1995
Object Holder (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With Zeena Parkins
- 1996
Shark! (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With René Lussier and Jean
Derome
- 1996
Three Suite Piece
(CD Recommended Records, UK)
- With The Science Group
- 1999
A Mere Coincidence (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- 2003
Spoors (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- With Vril
- 2003
Effigies in Cork (CD Recommended
Records, UK)
- Solo
- 2001
Solo: A Descent Into the Maelstrom (CD Recommended
Records)
- 2005
Twice Around the World (CD Recommended
Records)
- 2006
There and Back Again (CD Recommended
Records)
Bibliography
- Cutler,
Chris and Hodgkinson, Tim (1981). The Henry Cow Book.
Third Step Printworks. ISBN
0-9508870-0-5.
- Cutler,
Chris (1993). File Under Popular. Autonomedia. ISBN 0-936756-34-9.
Films
- 2000
At the Edge of Chaos – 65 minute documentary by
Shinji Aoyama on a Chris Cutler solo percussion concert in Tokyo, June 1998.
Footnotes
-
Eisenberg, Michael S. Chris Cutler/Peter Blegvad Trio. BetterPhoto.com.
Retrieved on 2007-07-31.
-
Cutler, Chris. Long biography. Chris
Cutler's homepage. Retrieved on 2006-11-22.
-
Cutler, Chris. Cassiber. Chris Cutler's
homepage. Retrieved on 2006-11-22.
-
The
Stone calendar. The Stone, New York City.
Retrieved on 2006-12-18.
-
Fred
Frith - Tim Hodgkinson - Chris Cutler, The Stone NYC, Dec 16 2006.
Punkcast. Retrieved on 2007-04-10.
-
Hear and Now: BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra.
BBC Radio 3. Retrieved on 2007-03-30.
-
Cutler, Chris. The electrified kit. Chris
Cutler's homepage. Retrieved on 2006-11-22.
-
Cutler, Chris. "Necessity and Choice in Musical Forms:
Concerning Musical and Technical Means and Political Needs". The
Cassette Mythos. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
-
Cutler, Chris. "Plunderphonia". Chris
Cutler's homepage. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
-
Cutler, Chris. "Scale". Chris Cutler's
homepage. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
-
Cutler, Chris. "Thoughts on Music and the Avant Garde".
Perfect Sound Forever. Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
See also
External links
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Cutler, Chris |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
|
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
English
percussionist, composer, lyricist and music theorist |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
January 4, 1947 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Washington, D.C. |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|