Garry Bradbury (1960 – January 2022) was a British-born Australian electronic musician active in Sydney's experimental music scene from 1979 to 2022.

Garry Bradbury
Born1960
England
DiedJanuary 2022 (aged 61–62)
Occupationelectronic musician
Instrument(s)tape, electronics
Years active1979–2022
LabelsTerse Tapes
Dogfood Prod Systems
Ink Records
Virgin Records
Zonar records
Dual Plover
Formerly ofSevered Heads

Career

edit

His first significant collaboration was in 1980, along with brothers Simon and Tim Knuckey as The Wet Taxis; a band specializing in heavily treated guitar and drum machine and various tape manipulations.

In 1981, Bradbury teamed up with two other musicians, Tokyo Rose and Montgomery Smythe, to form Hiroshima Chair, another electronic outfit featuring a vast arsenal of analogue synthesizers. In 1981, they released half a split album "Reset", with Texan band Culturcide. They also released a live C60 cassette through Terse tapes.

From October 1981, Bradbury teamed up with Tom Ellard's pioneering post punk / industrial band Severed Heads . This collaboration continued sporadically from 1981 to 1985. This resulted in several albums/eps on vinyl and cassette, most notably Blubberknife (1982), Since the Accident (1983-5), City Slab Horror (1985), Goodbye Tonsils (1985) and a compilation/retrospective Clifford Darling, Please Don't live in the Past (1986). Bradbury also directed and designed, with assistance and collaborative input from numerous others, several of the early infamous Severed Heads' independently produced videos: Goodbye Tonsils, Canine and Bigcar.

He has also experimented with customized pianola scrolls.[citation needed]

In 1988, he completed his first solo album, Drug Induced Sex Rituals. Its release was planned, abandoned, delayed repeatedly, for several years, until it saw an eventual CDr release through Sevcom in the 1990s.

In 1997, a CD entitled Actual Size, the bulk of which consisted of Bradbury's solo material, was issued first as a double CDr through Sevcom and then as a single CD through Zonar Recordings. Much of this material resurfaced on the later compilation PANSPERMIA.

Throughout the early 2000s Bradbury was commissioned by the Sydney Theatre Company on scores for King Lear, The Tempest and Macbeth.[1]

In the 2000s, he released two CDs, Ruffini Corpuscle in 2003 and Instant Oblivion in 2005, on the Dual Plover label.

Garry Bradbury's 2015 compilation, PANSPERMIA, consisting of 2 lp's and a bonus one sided 7",is an assemblage of remastered and re-edited works recorded sporadically over a period of around 20 years from 1986 to 2005, through the German based label Vinyl On Demand. Following this PANSPERMIA PLUS (a slightly more comprehensive version) was made publicly available as a free download thru the online download service bandcamp.

In 2016, a CD of new and reworked archival material was released under the title YAKOVLEVIAN TORQUE, made available as CD and/or download through No.Ware[check spelling] releases operating somewhere between Berlin and San Diego. Several of Bradbury's works also appear on the recent No-wares compilation No. No.II. (2016). A series of live performances throughout 2017 and 2018 revealed an intense, elaborately textural, less beat driven body of work which was to culminate in new releases in late 2019.[2][3] Bradbury died in January 2022.[4][5]

Discography

edit

Hiroshima Chair

edit
  • Reset split LP with Culturcide — Dogfood Production System (1981)

Severed Heads

edit

Size

edit
  • Actual Size — Zonar Recordings (1997)

Solo

edit
  • Drug Induced Sex Rituals (1988)
  • Ruffini Corpuscle — Dual Plover (2003)
  • "Corpuscle Plus" — Sevcom Cdr or bonus download
  • Instant Oblivion — Dual Plover (2005)
  • appears on "WiredLAB Open Day 2009" — Taiga Records 2011
  • Panspermia (Compilation 1986-2005) 2 lp + 7" Vinyl On Demand 2015
  • "Panspermia Plus"
  • Yakovlevian Torque
  • No. No II

References

edit
  1. ^ "Macbeth, Sydney Theatre Company Blueprints". The Sydney Morning Herald. 22 May 2002.
  2. ^ "RELEASES 2023 plus previous years until 2015". www.vod-records.com. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  3. ^ "4ZZZ". www.4zzzfm.org.au.
  4. ^ Thomas, Katie (11 January 2022). "Garry Bradbury, revered experimental artist and former Severed Heads member, has died". Resident Advisor. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Aus Electronic Music Pioneer Garry Bradbury Passes Away". The Music. 10 January 2022. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
edit