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TIM
HUTTON
Tim
Huttons musical career began in the
early 80s playing drums and bass for
two bands, The Mob and Zounds, on the anarchist
punk label Crass Records, and touring Europe
and UK several times over.
A burgeoning fascination for funk led to
him striking out on his own, enlisting Babylons
help by signing to EMI and recording an
album as the Neighbourhood, actually a seven
piece band (including Dexys original
horn section) which he had subsequently
put together. More touring followed, and
a spot featuring as a singer on Afrika Bambaatas
album The Light.
Two more solo albums followed, and stints
working with the Horny Horns, Lee Perry
and reggae singer Bob Andy amongst others,
before the Acid House boom took him, along
with many others, in a different musical
direction.
What
followed was several albums, twelves and
eps, under various guises on labels
such as Reflex, Germanys Source and
San Franciscos Reflective. This was
purely electronic music, with no involvement
of any instrument playing or singing; as
a long time singer and player of guitar,
bass, drums, brass and keyboards, this was
a period of stripping back, influenced by
the faceless techno bollocks
represented by artists and labels such as
Aphex Twin and Basic Channel.
It was followed after a while by two albums
of more pronounced musicality welded to
the electronic and dance music values he
had explored in the previous few years.
These were his solo album Everything
on PIAS Recordings (an album of songs taking
in lo-fi, jazz standard and electronic-tinged
folk influences) and Variations
under the moniker Soul Ascendants (along
with DJ Nick the Record) on Nuphonic. The
latter was a mixture of house, jazz and
afro-beat, featuring collaborations with
Fela Kutis bandleader and drummer
from the Africa 70, Tony Allen.
Both these albums were released in 2000,
and it was at this time that he was asked
to contribute as writer and vocalist to
Groove Armadas third album Goodbye
Country Hello Nightclub. This preceded
a period of touring with the band during
2001 2002 as vocalist, also helping
on trumpet, guitar and keyboards duties,
and featuring as vocalist on their next
album Lovebox.
Moving on once again, at the end of 2002
he toured with Paul Oakenfold in the States
as lead and bass guitarist and vocalist
to promote the Oakenfold album Bunkka,
and then touring as bass player with the
breaks-based outfit Hybrid, providing live
the bass parts Peter Hook had played on
record.
In
late 2003 he formed Sugardaddy with Tom
Findlay from Groove Armada, and in 2004
provided horns on several songs on Ian Browns
album Solarized, one of which
Time Is My Everything he co-wrote
with Ian and also played guitars and bass.
At present, he is writing and recording
another solo album, starting to record the
Sugardaddy album for completion summer/autumn
2005, writing further material and touring
with Ian Brown, and writing and recording
with various other artists including Hybrid
and Terry Hall.
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