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#工业音乐
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欧美

艺人介绍

by Nathan BushMaking music on the fringe since punk ignited in the late 1970s, Genesis P-Orridge has developed an impressively large and uncompromising body of work as a member of Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, among others. Initially shunned for his attempts to expose the hidden taboos of what he considered a corrupt and complacent society, P-Orridges integrity and persistence eventually won him a sizable cult following, both in England and the United States.Born Neil Megson, Genesis P-Orridges controversial performing career began in Hull, England, in 1969. That year, he formed the abrasive improv outfit COUM Transmissions with then-partner Cosey Fanni Tutti. Unable to find many clubs willing to book the bands blend of fluxus-influenced performance art and industrialized punk rock, the collective often took to the streets, setting up at various outdoor locations throughout the city. Eventually acquiring grant money, COUM established a communal live-work space in Hull before moving to London after two members were arrested. In October of 1976, with a new lineup that included designer Peter Sleazy Christopherson and Chris Carter, COUM assembled Pornography, an exhibit at Londons Institute of Contemporary Art. The quartet appeared for the opening, performing Music From the Death Factory under their new name, Throbbing Gristle. Due to its status as a publicly funded event, the ICA and Throbbing Gristle drew fierce criticism and vicious attacks from the press. Being left with little possibility of finding a label to fund and promote the bands music, Throbbing Gristle established their own Industrial Records. In 1977, a year that spawned a number of seminal punk releases, P-Orridge (bass, electric violin, vocals), Tutti (guitar, cornet), Christopherson (tapes, trumpet), and Carter (keyboards) entered a studio to record their debut, Second Annual Report. An unyielding industrial onslaught, the record was based around multiple versions of Slug Bait and Maggot Death, songs that detailed acts of serial killing. It was followed by the single United/Zyklon B Zombie (the latter of which takes its name from a lethal gas employed by Hitler) and the abrasive audio collage of DOA: The Third and Final Annual Report (both 1978). Throbbing Gristle dissolved following 1980s Heathen Earth with Carter and Tutti forming Chris & Cosey and P-Orridge establishing Psychic TV with Christopherson and John Balance. Partly predicted by the abiding intensity and peculiar beauty of Throbbing Gristles 20 Jazz Funk Greats, Psychic TV would allow a newfound pop sensibility to co-exist with their predecessors penchant for indigestible noise and a love of the cut-up philosophy pioneered by William Burroughs and Brion Gysin. The group only released two proper studio collections (1982s Force the Hand of Chance and 1983s Dreams Less Sweet), but managed an astonishing 18 live albums and scored a minor hit with Godstar, an ode to late Rolling Stone guitarist Brian Jones. Christopherson and Balance departed early however to focus on electronic outfit Coil. P-Orridge maintained a shifting Psychic TV lineup into the early 1990s, when controversy struck once again. During the bands 1991 U.S. tour, the groups tattoo artists had been arrested over an incident dubbed Operation Spanner. P-Orridge was pursued by a television crew that raided his home in an unsuccessful attempt to turn up incriminating evidence. The singer opted to remain in the U.S. through most of the 1990s. Upon returning to England he discovered that many of the cultural taboos that once had his critics so incensed had now found their way into the fabric of a more liberal society. Ever searching for the ideal musical outlet, P-Orridge formed Thee Majesty in the late 1990s — a collaboration with Larry Thrasher and Moroccan Jajouka musicians Bachir and Mustafa Attar. The group appeared alongside a re-formed Psychic TV at Londons Royal Festival Hall in 1999.


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