| Ivor Cutler |

|
| Background information |
| Born |
15 January 1923 |
| Origin |
Glasgow, Scotland |
| Died |
3 March 2006 |
| Genre(s) |
Spoken word, Trad jazz, Comedy
rock |
| Occupation(s) |
Poet, Songwriter, Humorist |
| Instrument(s) |
Harmonium |
| Years active |
1959 - 2004 |
| Label(s) |
Virgin, Rough
Trade, Creation |
Ivor Cutler (15 January
1923 – 3 March 2006) was a Scottish poet, songwriter
and humorist.
He became known for his regular performances on BBC radio, and in
particular his numerous sessions recorded for John Peel's
influential radio programme, and later for Andy
Kershaw's programme. He appeared in the
Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour
film in 1967 and on Neil Innes' television
programmes. Cutler also wrote books for children and adults and was a
teacher at A. S. Neill's Summerhill
School and for 30 years in inner-city schools in London.
In live performances Cutler would often accompany himself on a
harmonium.
Phyllis
King appears on several of his records, and for a number of years was a
part of his concerts. She usually read small phrases but also read a
few short stories. The two starred in a BBC radio series, King
Cutler, in which they performed their material jointly and
singly. Cutler is known to have had a long term relationship with King,
but they never married. Cutler also collaborated with pianist Neil
Ardley and singer Robert Wyatt.
Many of Cutler's poems and songs involve conversations
delivered as a monologue and, in these, one party is often Cutler as a
child. Cutler describes poverty and neglect from his parents with great
stoicism. He focuses on acceptance and gratitude for the basic elements
of life, nature and love, which allows him to make points about
mother-love in particular. The humour develops from the child's
curiosity and the playful or self-serving lies the parent tells him to
get, for example, a chore done or simply to stop the incessant
questions. Cutler recited his poems in a gentle Scottish burr, and
this, combined with the absurdity of the subject matter, is a mix that
earned him a faithful cult following.
Cutler was a member of the Noise Abatement Society and
the Voluntary Euthanasia
Society. He retired from performing in 2004, and died on 3 March 2006.
|
Contents
- 1 Early
life
- 2 Musical
career
- 3 Discography
- 4 Bibliography
- 5 DVD
video
- 6 Notes
and references
- 7 External
links
|
Early life
Cutler was born in Glasgow into a middle-class Jewish family of eastern
European descent. He cited his childhood as the source of his artistic
temperament, recalling a sense of displacement when his younger brother
was born: "Without that I would not have been so screwed up as I am,
and therefore not as creative."
In 1939 Cutler was evacuated to Annan".
He joined the Royal Air Force as a navigator in
1942 but was soon dismissed for "dreaminess".
He moved to London where he was employed by the Inner London
Education Authority to teach music, dance, drama and poetry to 7- to
11-year-olds.
Cutler's deeply-held views on humanity meant he disliked corporal
punishment, and on leaving a teaching job he held in the 1950s, he cut
up his tawse
and handed the pieces to the class.
He was married briefly and had two children.
Musical career
Cutler began writing songs and poetry in the late 1950s,
making the first of many appearances on BBC radio on the Home
Service, where he featured on the Monday Night at Home
programme on 38 occasions between 1959 and 1963.
He gained popularity playing songs where he would often accompany
himself on the harmonium,
and this success led to the release of a series a records starting with
1959's Ivor Cutler of Y'Hup EP. Cutler continued to
make appearances on the BBC's programmes during the 1960s, and as a
result of an appearance on the television show Late Night
Line-Up, he was noticed by Paul
McCartney, who invited Cutler to appear in the
Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour
film.
In the film, Cutler plays bus conductor Buster Bloodvessel, who becomes
passionately attracted to Ringo Starr's aunt Jessie.
Following this film role, Cutler recorded a second LP. Ludo
(1967), produced by the Beatles' George Martin, and credited to the
Ivor Cutler Trio, made up of Cutler with bassist Gill Lyons and
percussionist Trevor Tomkins. The LP, taking inspiration from trad jazz
and boogie-woogie, sees Cutler
playing the piano as well as his usual harmonium, and is considered the
most traditionally musical of all his records.
Ludo did not enjoy great commercial
success, and after its release Cutler continued to perform for BBC
radio, recording the first of his sessions for John Peel in
1969. Cutler's work on Peel's shows would introduce him to successive
generations of fans, and in the early 1990s, Cutler said, "Thanks to
Peel, I gained a whole new audience, to the amazement of my older fans,
who find themselves among 16-to-35s in theatres, and wonder where they
came from."
In the 1970s, Neil Ardley had Cutler sing on his A
Symphony of Amaranths LP (1971),
and former-Soft Machine singer Robert
Wyatt asked Cutler to play harmonium and sing on two of the
tracks on his Rock Bottom
LP (1974). The collaboration with Wyatt led to Cutler being signed to
Wyatt's record label Virgin Records, for whom Cutler
recorded three LPs in the mid-1970s: Dandruff
(1974), Velvet Donkey
(1975) and Jammy Smears
(1976). (It also led to Wyatt covering Cutler's "Go and sit upon the
grass", from Velvet Donkey, as "Grass" on his 1981 Nothing
Can Stop Us album.) Each of these discs intersperses Cutler's
poems and songs with readings by his performing companion Phyllis
King. During the decade Cutler used his sessions for John Peel to
introduce numerous episodes of his Life in a Scotch Sitting
Room series, culminating in the 1978 LP Life in a
Scotch Sitting Room, Vol. 2 (Volume 1 was a
track on the 1974 album Dandruff),
regarded as a particularly autobiographical work,
on which Cutler recounts tales from his childhood amid an environment
of exaggerated Scottishness. Cutler also produced the work as a book,
which was published in 1984 with illustrations by Martin
Honeysett.
In the 1980s, Rough Trade Records released
three LPs—Privilege
(1983), Prince Ivor
(1986) and Gruts
(1986). He also released the single "Women of the World", recorded with
Linda Hirst, through the label in 1983. Cutler enjoyed further interest
from the Creation record company in the
1990s, best known at the time as Oasis'
record label. The label released two new volumes of poems and spoken
word work: A Wet Handle
(1997) and A Flat Man (1998).
Discography
- Ivor Cutler of Y'Hup EP (1959)
- Who Tore Your Trousers? (1961)
- Get Away from the Wall EP (1961)
- Ludo (1967)
- Dandruff
(1974)
- Velvet Donkey
(1975)
- Jammy Smears
(1976)
- Life in a
Scotch Sitting Room, Vol. 2 (live) (1978)
- Privilege
(1983)
- Prince Ivor
(1986)
- Gruts
(1986)
- Peel Sessions EP (1989)
- A Wet Handle
(1997)
- A Flat Man (1998)
- An Elpee and Two Epees
(2005)
Bibliography
- Poetry
- Many Flies Have Feathers (1973). Trigram
Press.
- A Flat Man (1977). Trigram Press. ISBN 0-85465-053-9
- Private Habits (1981). Arc Publications.
ISBN
0-902771-89-2
- LARGE et Puffy (1984). Arc Publications.
ISBN
0-902771-70-1
- Fresh Carpet (1986). Arc Publications. ISBN 0-902771-68-X
- A Nice Wee Present from Scotland (1988).
Arc Publications. ISBN
0-902771-73-6
- A Fly Sandwich and Other Menu (1991).
Methuen. ISBN
0-413-65940-2
- Is That Your Flap, Jack? (1992). Arc
Publications. ISBN
0946407762
- A Stuggy Pren (1994). Arc Publications. ISBN 0-946407-94-0
- A Wet Handle (1996). Arc Publications. ISBN 1-900072-06-8
- South American Bookworms (1999). Arc
Publications. ISBN
1-900072-35-1
- Scots Wa' Straw (2003). Arc Publications
ISBN
1-900072-94-7
- Prose
- Cockadoodledon't!!! (1966). Dennis
Dobson.
- Life in a Scotch Sitting Room, Vol.2
(1984). Methuen. ISBN
0-413-73580-X
- Gruts (1986). Methuen. ISBN 0-413-40810-8
- Fremsley (1987). Methuen. ISBN 0-413-15540-4
- Glasgow Dreamer (1990). Methuen. ISBN 0-413-73600-8
- Children's books
- Meal One. Armada Lions.
- Balooky Klujypop. Heinemann.
- The Animal House. Armada Lions.
- The Vermillion Door (1984). Walker Books.
- The Pomegranate Door (1984). Walker
Books.
- Herbert the Chicken (1984). Walker Books.
- Herbert the Elephant (1984). Walker
Books.
- Herbert the Questionmark (1984). Walker
Books.
- Herbert the Herbert (1984). Walker Books.
- One and a Quarter (1987). ISBN 0-233-98060-1
- Herbert: 5 Stories (1988). Walker Books.
ISBN
0-7445-4778-4
- Grape Zoo (1991). Walker Books. ISBN 0-7445-2327-3
- Doris the Hen (1992). Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-93354-6
- The New Dress (1995). The Bodley Head. ISBN 0-370-31873-0
- Other
- Befriend a Bacterium: Stickies by Ivor Cutler
(1992). Pickpocket Books. ISBN
1-873422-11-3 (A collection of stickers that Cutler used to hand out to
people).
DVD video
Notes and references
External links
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Cutler, Ivor |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES |
|
| SHORT DESCRIPTION |
Scottish poet, humorist |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
15 January 1923 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH |
Glasgow,
Scotland |
| DATE OF DEATH |
3
March 2006 |
| PLACE OF DEATH |
|