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Encyclopedia > Rowland S. Howard

Rowland Stuart Howard (born 1960) is an Australian rock musician, guitarist and songwriter, best known for his use of electric guitar audio feedback in the post-punk group The Birthday Party (with Nick Cave) and his collaborations with Lydia Lunch and Nikki Sudden. For other uses, see Rock music (disambiguation). ... the very definition of a guitarist is cody allen and taylor hines because of there un ending guitar skills and awsomnes. ... A songwriter is someone who writes the lyrics to songs, the musical composition or melody to songs, or both. ... Audio feedback (also known as the Larsen effect) is a special kind of feedback which occurs when a loop exists between an audio input (for example, a microphone or guitar pickup) and an audio output (for example, a loudspeaker). ... Post punk generally refers to the particularly fertile and creative period following the initial punk rock explosion. During the first wave of punk, roughly spanning 1976-1983, bands such as The Sex Pistols, The Clash, The Ramones and The Damned began to challenge the current styles and conventions of rock... The Birthday Party was an Australian post punk rock group, active from 1977 to 1983. ... Nicholas Edward Cave (born September 22, 1957) is an Australian musician, songwriter, author, screenwriter, and occasional actor. ... Lydia Lunch (born Lydia Koch on June 2, 1959 in Rochester, New York) is an American singer, poet, writer, and actress. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ...

Contents

1978-1990

As a member of Melbourne new wave band The Boys Next Door, Howard received acclaim for writing their underground hit, the ballad "Shivers" (later covered by the Australian rock groups No and Screaming Jets). When the band evolved into The Birthday Party Howard's aggressive use of distortion and audio feedback was one distinctive element in the group's "assault" on their audience. This article is about the Australian city; the name may also refer to City of Melbourne or Melbourne city centre. ... The Birthday Party was an Australian post punk rock group, active from 1977 to 1983. ... No were an Australian band, active during the late 1980s. ... The Screaming Jets are a band from Newcastle (New South Wales, Australia) from 1989 until 2001. ... The Birthday Party was an Australian post punk rock group, active from 1977 to 1983. ... Audio feedback (also known as the Larsen effect) is a special kind of feedback which occurs when a loop exists between an audio input (for example, a microphone or guitar pickup) and an audio output (for example, a loudspeaker). ...


The Birthday Party relocated from their native Melbourne, Australia to London, UK in 1980 and subsequently to Berlin, Germany in 1982, where they became a progressively experimental group, in part due to their art rock leanings, which were developed in the band's formative years. This article is about the Australian city; the name may also refer to City of Melbourne or Melbourne city centre. ... This article is about the capital of England and the United Kingdom. ... This article is about the capital of Germany. ... Art rock is a term used by some to describe rock music that is characterized by ambitious or avant-garde lyrical themes and/or melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic experimentation, often extending beyond standard modern popular music forms and genres, toward influences in jazz, classical, world music or the experimental avant...


In interviews with former members of the Birthday Party, Howard's songwriting was described as more precious and stolid than that of Cave and Mick Harvey, and that his music is generally built up around a bassline. Michael John Harvey (born 29 September 1958 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia), is an Australian rock musician, composer, arranger and record producer. ... In popular music a bassline, also bass line, is an instrumental part, or line, which is in the bass or lowest range and thus lower than the other parts and part of the rhythm section. ...


The Birthday Party's performances were confronting and provocative in the manner of bands such as The Stooges, The Contortions, PiL, Pere Ubu, Throbbing Gristle and The Pop Group. Their live shows in London were often scenes of drug-fuelled violence. The Birthday Party's records, considered by many of their fans to be avant-garde cultural artifacts, were released by Missing Link Records. Howard and Cave had creative differences and Howard then left the Birthday Party to become a member of Crime and the City Solution, a band led by Simon Bonney, and later formed These Immortal Souls with Genevieve McGuckin, Harry Howard, and Epic Soundtracks. The Stooges are an American rock band that was first active from around 1967 to 1974, and then reformed in 2003. ... PIL could mean Python Imaging Library PlantageNet Internet Limited In India, Public interest litigation Public Image Limited - a band Portland Interscholastic League This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. ... Pere Ubu are a rock music group formed in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1975. ... Throbbing Gristle (formed on September 3, 1975, in London) is a British experimental music and industrial music group that evolved from the performance art group COUM Transmissions. ... The Pop Group was a post-punk band from Bristol, England whose uncompromising, dissonant sound spanned punk, free jazz, funk and dub reggae. ... For other meanings, see Drug (disambiguation). ... A work similar to Marcel Duchamps Fountain Avant garde (written avant-garde) is a French phrase, one of many French phrases used by English speakers. ... Missing Link Records is a record store in Melbourne, Australia. ... Crime and The City Solution were a post-punk rock band formed by singer Simon Bonney. ... Simon Bonney is an Australian rock musician, best known as the lead singer in Crime and the City Solution. ... These Immortal Souls was an Australian Indie band active through the late 1980s and early 1990s. ... Genevieve McGuckin is a musician and song-writer from Melbourne, Australia. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...


Howard has also collaborated with multi-media artist Lydia Lunch, Nikki Sudden, Jeremy Gluck, Kas Produkt, Barry Adamson, Einstürzende Neubauten, Chris Haskett, Jeffrey Lee Pierce, Fad Gadget, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Henry Rollins, and A.C. Marias. His distinctive style of technically limited, audio feedback-laden, blues guitar playing is regarded very highly by aficionados of the Southern Gothic-inspired rock and in 2005, was described by Sam Agostino of Digger and the Pussycats as "one of the most influential indie guitarists ever." To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... The definition of an artist is wide-ranging and covers a broad spectrum of activities to do with creating art, practising the arts and/or demonstrating an art. ... Lydia Lunch (born Lydia Koch on June 2, 1959 in Rochester, New York) is an American singer, poet, writer, and actress. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ... Barry Adamson (June 1, 1958) is a British rock musician who has worked with Magazine, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Pan Sonic, and has worked on film soundtracks for David Lynch. ... Einstürzende Neubauten is an experimental music band, originally from West Berlin, formed in 1980. ... Chris Haskett is an American guitarist. ... Jeffrey Lee Pierce was one of the founding members of the 1980s punk band The Gun Club, along with Kid Congo, who later joined The Cramps. ... Frank Tovey (September 8, 1956 – April 3, 2002), better known as Fad Gadget, was an influential British avant-garde electronic musician, an exponent of New Wave and early industrial music. ... Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds is a successful rock band with international personnel. ... Henry Rollins (born February 13, 1961 as Henry Lawrence Garfield[1]) is a singer and songwriter, spoken word artist, book author (prose and poetry), radio and TV personality, occasional movie actor, comedian, and voice-over artist. ... Audio feedback (also known as the Larsen effect) is a special kind of feedback which occurs when a loop exists between an audio input (for example, a microphone or guitar pickup) and an audio output (for example, a loudspeaker). ... Blues is a vocal and instrumental form of music based on the use of the blue notes and a repetitive pattern that most often follows a twelve-bar structure. ... For other uses, see Guitar (disambiguation). ... Southern Gothic is a subgenre of the Gothic writing style, unique to American literature. ...


Lydia Lunch and Thurston Moore recorded a sultry, slinky version of Howard's song "Still Burning" ("I catch most things in my blood you all lose between rooms") for Lunch's In Limbo (1984) mini-album. Still Burning had previously been recorded as a bass-heavy track with Howard on vocals, during the Honeymoon In Red recording sessions (1983-1987). Thurston Joseph Moore (born July 25, 1958 in Coral Gables, Florida) is an American musician best known as a singer and guitarist for Sonic Youth. ... An album or record album is a collection of related audio or music tracks distributed to the public. ... Honeymoon In Red was an Concept album released in 1987 as a Lydia Lunch album. ...


The Howard-Lunch collaborations saw Howard's singing and guitar playing moving into Lunch's lyrical obsessions such as retribution and murder, sparser arrangements, and in the case of the track "Dead In The Head", sung by Nick Cave and Lunch, Howard's furious guitar playing acknowledging that of Teenage Jesus & the Jerks, while remaining unmistakably his own style. Lunch and Howard sang duets on Howard's foreboding song "Come Fall" ("I am king, I can do anything, come follow me, come fall with me") and cover of Lee Hazlewood's "Some Velvet Morning," which was released as a 12-inch single with the catchy B-side "I Fell In Love With A Ghost", written by Lunch and Howard and sung by Lunch. Teenage Jesus & the Jerks was an influential New York city No Wave band fronted by Lydia Lunch and James Chance, who later left the band after some conflict about their direction. ... Lee Hazlewood (9 July 1929 â€“ 4 August 2007) was an American country singer, songwriter, and record producer, most widely known for his work with Nancy Sinatra in the sixties and with Duane Eddy during the late fifties and early sixties, co-writer with Eddy on hits such as Boss Guitar... Some Velvet Morning is a psychedelic pop song written by Lee Hazlewood and originally recorded by Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra in late 1967. ...


Both Howard and Lunch used the bare minimum of MTV-style music video to promote their work, preferring to concentrate on the process of their work, and largely relying on word-of-mouth endorsement as marketing. Originally, Honeymoon in Red and In Limbo were released on Lunch's privately-owned record label, Widowspeak Productions. Their records were usually only available through specialist record bars. MTV (Music Television) is an American cable television network based in New York City. ... A music video is a short film or video that accompanies a complete piece of music, most commonly a song. ... “Next big thing” redirects here. ...


The Howard-Nikki Sudden collaboration consisted of Howard contributing to Nikki Sudden and the Jacobites albums and Howard and Sudden releasing the unplugged album Kiss You Kidnapped Charabanc (1987). Jeremy Gluck also worked with Sudden and Howard on the Burning Skulls Rise album (1988). A notable song to emerge from this era is the mellow Death Is Hanging Over Me (Sudden). An anthemic version of Burning Skulls Rise (Gluck, et al) appeared on 1992's Shotgun Wedding. Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ...


These Immortal Souls released their first album Get Lost, (Don't Lie!) in 1987 and held successful "gigs" in Europe and America, only returning to Australia for a short tour in 1988. Only two music videos by These Immortal Souls were broadcast on the ABC music video show Rage. The songs were "Marry Me (Lie! Lie!)" from the first album and "King of Kalifornia", from the second album. These Immortal Souls was an Australian Indie band active through the late 1980s and early 1990s. ... Look up Gig in Wiktionary, the free dictionary Gig may be: A slang term for a musical engagement A contraction for gigabyte An archaic term for a type of light carriage A type of spear A similarly designed type of fishing tackle A contraction for Captains Gig, a type... Rage is an all-night Australian music video program that is broadcast on ABC TV on Friday and Saturday nights. ...


Get Lost, (Don't Lie!) was at the time of its release said to be a latter-day Birthday Party, although apart from the thumping bass on the song "I Ate The Knife", the album was closer to dream pop with McGuckin's swirling organ playing and Soundtracks' and Harry Howard's frolicking rhythms sweetening the effect. Dream pop is a type of alternative rock that originated in Britain in the early 1980s, when bands like Cocteau Twins, The Chameleons UK, The Passions, Dead Can Dance, Dif Juz, Lowlife and A.R. Kane (to whom the term has been attributed) began fusing post-punk experiments with bittersweet...


1990s

After the release of These Immortal Souls' second album, I'm Never Gonna Die Again, (1992) and another Howard/Lunch collaboration Shotgun Wedding, Howard, Lunch and members of The Beasts Of Bourbon performed live on tour in Australia and Europe. Shotgun Wedding was re-released with a second Compact disc of live recordings. Shotgun Wedding was a swaggering rock 'n' roll album featuring covers of Led Zeppelin's "In My Time Of Dying" and Alice Cooper's "Black Juju". The Beasts of Bourbon were an Australian rocknroll band formed in 1983 and disbanding indefinately in 1997. ... A compact disc or CD is an optical disc used to store digital data, originally developed for storing digital audio. ... Rock and roll - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins/monobook/IE50Fixes. ... For the bands 1969 self-titled debut album, see Led Zeppelin (album). ... Alice Cooper (born Vincent Damon Furnier, February 4, 1948), is a rock singer, songwriter and musician whose career spans four decades. ...


As with Honeymoon In Red, the songs co-written by Lunch and Howard on Shotgun Wedding toyed with the erotics of violence and the poetics of unhappy occasions, albeit with driving rhythms and attractive guitar hooks. "Burning Skulls" had Lunch singing "They're coming for me now, nothing scares me anyhow, " and "I'm gonna let this one rip, I'm on another fucked up trip". These songs were released shortly after the 1991 Persian Gulf War, also at a time of waning fashionability of machismo in Western countries, and they demonstrated that Howard and Lunch were reflecting on realistic issues rather than strictly narcissistic concerns. Honeymoon In Red was an Concept album released in 1987 as a Lydia Lunch album. ... See also: 2003 invasion of Iraq and Gulf War (disambiguation) C Company, 1st Battalion, The Staffordshire Regiment, 1st UK Armoured Division The Persian Gulf War was a conflict between Iraq and a coalition force of 34 nations led by the United States. ... The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view. ... The term Western world, the West or the Occident (Latin occidens -sunset, -west, as distinct from the Orient) [1] can have multiple meanings dependent on its context (e. ... This article is about narcissism as a word in common use. ...


An exception was Incubator, (Howard/Lunch), a song that elegaically harked back to the melodic dirges of Honeymoon in Red, and seemed to have a jaundiced relation in So The Story Goes, on I'm Never Gonna Die Again.


Howard sang backing vocals on the Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds album Let Love In (1994). Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds was a prominent band in Australia throughout the 1990s, complemented by the success of peers such as The Dirty Three, You Am I, Ed Kuepper and The Cruel Sea. These bands were playing to wider audiences through music festivals such as The Big Day Out, and supported by the newly nationwide Australian youth radio broadcaster Triple J, an arm of the ABC. Howard was in the public's peripheral vision as a part of this cultural force. Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds is a successful rock band with international personnel. ... For The Goo Goo Dolls album see Let Love In (Goo Goo Dolls album) Let Love In is the 8th studio album by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, released in 1994. ... Dirty Three are an instrumental rock band, formed in 1993, in Melbourne, Australia. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Ed Kuepper is an Australian guitarist, singer and songwriter. ... The Cruel Sea were an Australian indie rock band from Sydney formed in 1988. ... The Big Day Out (BDO) is an annual music festival that tours Australia and New Zealand. ... For other uses, see JJJ. Triple J is a nationally-networked, government-funded Australian radio station (a division of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation), mainly aimed at youth (defined as those between 12 and 25). ... The Australian Broadcasting Corporation or ABC is Australias national non-profit public broadcaster. ...


In 1995 These Immortal Souls contributed their version of "You Can't Unring a Bell" to a Tom Waits tribute album Step Right Up, somewhat incongruously alongside very earnest acts such as Pete Shelley, Tim Buckley,Violent Femmes and 10,000 Maniacs. Thomas Alan Waits (born December 7, 1949) is an American singer-songwriter, composer, and actor. ... Pete Shelley Pete Shelley (born Peter McNeish, April 17, 1955 in Leigh, Lancashire) is an English singer, songwriter and guitarist, best-known as the leader of Buzzcocks, one of the first generation punk rock groups from England. ... Timothy Charles Buckley III (February 14, 1947 – June 29, 1975) was an experimental vocalist and performer who incorporated jazz, psychedelia, funk, soul, and avant-garde rock in a short career spanning the late 1960s and early 1970s. ... This article is about the band. ... 10,000 Maniacs is a United States-based alternative rock band, formed in 1981 and active with various line-ups since that time. ...


Paul Godfrey a.k.a. Epic Soundtracks, the outstanding drummer for These Immortal Souls was found dead in his London apartment on November 5, 1997, shortly after a relationship break-up, a successful tour and the release of the third of his accomplished solo albums. The cause of death was not determined despite an autopsy, and was rumoured to be suicide and / or a drug overdose although such claims have never been credibly substantiated, and have been rebutted as "scurrilous" by his brother, Nikki Sudden. Liner notes on the I'm Never Gonna Die Again (1992) Compact disc indicate that These Immortal Souls were not anticipating that they would record their next album with Epic Soundtracks. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ...


Howard lamented in a 1999 television interview (Studio 22, ABCTV (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)) with Clinton Walker that people still asked him about "Shivers", a song he wrote when he was sixteen years old which first became well known when it was sung by Nick Cave. Cave had by this time won a long-standing reputation for his macabre writings and his gruff, charismatic stage presence. Conversely, the guttural voiced Howard's plaintive ballads are often flavoured with cryptic puns and quixotic crooning. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation or ABC is Australias national non-profit public broadcaster. ... Clinton Walker is a leading historian of Australian popular music. ... Illustration by Arthur Rackham of the ballad The Twa Corbies A ballad is a story, usually a narrative or poem, in a song. ... (IPA: , but see spelling and pronunciation below), fully titled (The Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote of La Mancha) is an early novel written by Spanish author Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. ...


2000s

Howard released a well received solo album called Teenage Snuff Film in 2000. These recordings were brasher and more guitar focussed than the elegantly orchestrated atmospheric work of Crime and the City Solution and These Immortal Souls in the 1980's. Teenage Snuff Film is the first solo album by Rowland S. Howard. ...


One of The Birthday Party's most raucous songs Release the Bats was used in the popular true crime film Chopper (2000), a box office success in Australia. The Birthday Party is the name of an acclaimed play (and later movie) written by Harold Pinter: The Birthday Party (play); and an influential post-punk band led by Nick Cave: The Birthday Party (band). ... True crime is a non-fiction genre in which the author uses an actual crime and real people as a point of departure. ... Chopper is an Australian 2000 drama-crime thriller-black comedy film written and directed by Andrew Dominik based on the autobiographical books by Mark Brandon Chopper Read, an infamous Australian criminal, convicted for wounding a man, admitting to murder many. ...


An unofficial Rowland S. Howard fan website was established as the amount of Rowland S. Howard related information and file swapping grew steadily on the internet from the mid 1990's.


Howard cameod in the 2002 vampire movie Queen of the Damned as a musician in a vampire club band. Peter Jackson in The Fellowship of the Ring (top), The Two Towers (middle) and The Return of the King (bottom). ... Queen of the Damned is a 2002 film adaptation of the third novel of Anne Rices The Vampire Chronicles series, The Queen of the Damned; although the film contained many plot elements from that novels predecessor, The Vampire Lestat. ...


Currently, Rowland S. Howard lives in Melbourne, Australia and produces and performs occasionally, to the delight of a small, self-renewing audience who consider Howard to be a member of Australian underground rock royalty[citation needed]. This article is about the Australian city; the name may also refer to City of Melbourne or Melbourne city centre. ...


September 2007 sees Rowland S. Howard joining forces with Australian rock legends Magic Dirt and Beasts of Bourbon for what will be a tour of the east coast of Australia.


Band history

Ollie Olsen was born in 1958 in Melbourne, Australia. ... The Birthday Party was an Australian post punk rock group, active from 1977 to 1983. ... Nicholas Edward Cave (born September 22, 1957) is an Australian musician, songwriter, author, screenwriter, and occasional actor. ... Michael John Harvey (born 29 September 1958 in Rochester, Victoria, Australia), is an Australian rock musician, composer, arranger and record producer. ... Tracey Pew, musician, bass guitar player was a member of The Birthday Party (band) and performed on Lydia Lunchs Honeymoon In Red. ... Phill Calvert (b. ... The Birthday Party was an Australian post punk rock group, active from 1977 to 1983. ... Blixa Bargeld, born Christian Emmerich on January 12, 1959 in West Berlin, Germany, is a composer, author, actor, singer, musician, performer and lecturer in almost any field of interpretative art. ... Anita Lane is an Australian singer and songwriter who directly influenced the early 1980s European post-punk landscape. ... Genevieve McGuckin is a musician and song-writer from Melbourne, Australia. ... Honeymoon In Red was an Concept album released in 1987 as a Lydia Lunch album. ... Lydia Lunch (born Lydia Koch on June 2, 1959 in Rochester, New York) is an American singer, poet, writer, and actress. ... Jim G. Thirlwell (1960-present), aka Clint Ruin, aka Jim Foetus, is a seminal No Wave and Industrial artist. ... Thurston Joseph Moore (born July 25, 1958 in Coral Gables, Florida) is an American musician best known as a singer and guitarist for Sonic Youth. ... Crime and The City Solution were a post-punk rock band formed by singer Simon Bonney. ... Simon Bonney is an Australian rock musician, best known as the lead singer in Crime and the City Solution. ... Alexander Hacke (also known as Alexander von Borsig, Alex Hacke, Hacke, born October 11, 1965 in Berlin/Neukölln) is a guitarist, bass-guitar player, singer, experimental / industrial / electronic musician from Germany. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... These Immortal Souls was an Australian Indie band active through the late 1980s and early 1990s. ... Anthony Thistlethwaite born 1955 was a member of 1980s folk rock group The Waterboys. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ... Jeffrey Lee Pierce was one of the founding members of the 1980s punk band The Gun Club, along with Kid Congo, who later joined The Cramps. ... For information on gun clubs, see shooting ranges. ... Lydia Lunch (born Lydia Koch on June 2, 1959 in Rochester, New York) is an American singer, poet, writer, and actress. ... Spencer P. Jones is a New Zealand-born guitarist and songwriter, long based in Melbourne, Australia. ... Teenage Snuff Film is the first solo album by Rowland S. Howard. ...

Some Rowland S. Howard Songs

Say A Spell, After A Fashion, Still Burning, Shivers, Death by Drowning, The Guilt Parade, The Red Clock, Blundertown, I Mistake Myself, Waving My Arms, King of Kalifornia, So the Story Goes


Cover Versions Performed By Rowland S. Howard

  • White Wedding (Billy Idol)
  • Hey! Little Child (Chilton)
  • Open Up And Bleed (Pop/Williamson)
  • (With Lydia Lunch) Some Velvet Morning (Hazelwood)
  • (With Nikki Sudden) Don't Explain
  • (With The Devastations) Ocean (The Velvet Underground)

Filmography

Wings of Desire is the English title of Der Himmel über Berlin, a 1987 film by the German-born director Wim Wenders. ... The Queen of the Damned is the third novel of Anne Rices The Vampire Chronicles series. ...

Production credits

  • Hungry Ghosts Hungry Ghosts LP (Reliant, 1999)
  • HTRK Marry Me Tonight LP

HTRK (pronounced Hate Rock), also known as hTRKRTIO (pronounced Hate Rock Trio), is a three-piece band from Melbourne. ...

External links

A Selection Of Rowland S. Howard Information On The Internet

  • Nick Cave Collector's Hell
  • Scaruffi
  • Cooking Vinyl
  • Inner City Sound
  • Howlspace
  • stewartlee.co.uk
  • Secretly Canadian
  • Trouser Press
  • www.iae.nl/users/maes/cave/seeds/rowland.html

Further Reading / Bibliography

  • Extensive archival information on www.burning-heart.net
  • From Pop to Punk to Postmodernism: Popular Music and Australian Culture from the 1960s to the 1990's, (Edited by Philip Hayward).
  • Bad Seed: A biography of Nick Cave, Ian Johnston (1995).
  • NME
  • Future Pop: Music for the Eighties, Peter Noble (1983)
  • Stranded: The Secret History of Australian Independent Music 1977-1991, Clinton Walker.
  • Incriminating Evidence, Lydia Lunch. Last Gasp Books.
  • Nikki Sudden weblog.
  • Nikki Sudden quote taken from Nikki Sudden weblog, 23 March 2006.
  • Tape Delay: Confessions From The Eighties Underground, Charles Neal.
  • Fast Forward, Tape Zine, Melbourne.

Not to be confused with the Canadian music magazine Music Express The New Musical Express (better known as the NME) is a Popular music magazine in the United Kingdom which has been published weekly since March 1952. ... Clinton Walker is a leading historian of Australian popular music. ...

Related American and European Acts

Lydia Lunch (born Lydia Koch on June 2, 1959 in Rochester, New York) is an American singer, poet, writer, and actress. ... Nikki Sudden (July 19, 1956 – March 26, 2006) born Adrian Nicholas Godfrey in London, was a prolific British singer-songwriter and guitarist. ... For information on gun clubs, see shooting ranges. ... Swans were an influential American rock, experimental, folk and post-industrial band active from 1982 to 1997, led by singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Michael Gira. ... Magazine were an English rock group active from 1977 to 1981. ... Sonic Youth is a seminal American alternative rock group formed in New York City in 1981. ... Jim G. Thirlwell (1960-present), aka Clint Ruin, aka Jim Foetus, is a seminal No Wave and Industrial artist. ... Henry Rollins (born February 13, 1961 as Henry Lawrence Garfield[1]) is a singer and songwriter, spoken word artist, book author (prose and poetry), radio and TV personality, occasional movie actor, comedian, and voice-over artist. ... Chris Haskett is an American guitarist. ...

Related Antipodean Discophile Art Rock Groups


 

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