Severed Heads

Severed Heads is an Australian electronic music group based and founded in Sydney in 1979 (see 1979 in music) as Mr. and Mrs. No Smoking Sign. The original members were Richard Fielding and Andrew Wright, and were soon joined by Tom Ellard. Fielding and Wright eventually left the group, leaving Ellard as the sole continuing member of the group. A variety of people have played in Severed Heads, including Garry Bradbury, Paul Deering, and Stephen Jones, but over time the group has devolved to Tom Ellard.

History

Early Severed Heads music was characterised by the use of tape loops, noisy arrangements of synthesizers, and other dissonant sound sources, putting Severed Heads in the general category of industrial music. After several releases in that vein, Severed Heads began incorporating various popular music tropes, such as a consistent 4/4 rhythm, strong melodic lines, and resolving chord arrangements. This move was underscored by the incorporation of mimetic devices, such as drum machines and bass synthesizers. The result was a striking hybrid of the avant-garde industrial and pop. Combined with Ellard's thin but gently eerie vocals and elliptical poetic lyrics, Severed Heads were signed to Nettwerk records in North America, and Volition Records in Australia, and charted in 1984 with the song "Dead Eyes Opened". This deal lead to a world tour, which was as much a multimedia event, thanks to the video work of Stephen Jones. They also charted in the United States in the late 1980s with a 12-inch single of "Greater Reward" (from the album Bad Mood Guy) assisted by several remixes by Sydney-based producer Robert Racic. Racic, who produced album tracks and various singles on and off through the late 1980s and early 1990s and became integral to the Severed Heads sound of that period. Nettwerk severed its relations with Ellard in the early 1990s, leaving the band adrift in the marketplace. Ellard sought out another label for his next release, Gigapus, in 1995, which was released on Volition in Australia and Decibel Records elsewhere. Around this time, the band had a major Australian hit with a remixed version of "Dead Eyes Opened". Both Volition and Decibel soon folded, and once again, Severed Heads were unaligned with the traditional music industry, and didn't fully own the rights to their music. This changed in 1998, when Sony Music sold Ellard the rights back for a nominal fee. With his music back in his hands and fully independent, Ellard took this on as a challenge and began developing an independent music system, which is entirely Internet based, at sevcom.com (the link is below). During the early 2000s, Tom Ellard blazed an independent path for his art and developed several innovative products, such as the Sevcom Music Server, a subscription based ambient music distribution system. Ellard has worked on a side project, Coklacoma, which released a few CDs in the late 1990s. As of 2004, he is working on new music and is heavily involved with developing video. Ellard has also worked extensively during the 1990s with other Sydney based electronic musicians and groups such as Paul Mac of Itch-E and Scratch-E and Boxcar, former alumni of the now-defunct Volition label.

Selected discography

Main article: Severed Heads discography
  • Ear Bitten (1980)
  • Blubberknife (1983)
  • Since the Accident (1983)
  • "Dead Eyes Opened" (1984)
  • City Slab Horror (1985)
  • Clifford Darling, Please Don't Live In The Past (1985)
  • Come Visit the Big Bigot (1986)
  • Bad Mood Guy (1987)
  • "Greater Reward" (1988)
  • Bulkhead (1988)
  • Rotund For Success (1989)
  • Retread (1991)
  • Cuisine (1991)
  • Gigapus (1994)
  • "Dead Eyes Opened 94" (1994) (remix)
  • Severything V. 1 (1996) (CD-ROM)

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
sweet honey in the rock
gnu chess
venona project
the corrections
lyon playfair, 1st baron playfair
law & order
belshazzar
sexual slavery
stephen stills
127 film
national holiday
sarah knauss
the cabinet of dr. caligari
simon's rock college
hemorrhoid
ron fricke
ludic
126 film
110 film
grokster
bla fleck and the flecktones
franz marc
pyrgi tablets
unterfranken
oberfranken
mittelfranken
book of tobit
indirect bandgap
direct bandgap
mobility
donald johanson
kerry packer
enoch
jeff buckley
advanced photo system
aps
joseph stilwell
sira
edwin h. land
johnny marr
bob foster
tracy kidder
disc film
hawking radiation