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Alan Vega

 
Artist: Alan Vega
Alan Vega

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Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Liz Lamere, Ilpo Väisänen, Mika Vainio

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

Martin Rev, Suicide
  • Born: 1938, Brooklyn, NY
  • Active: '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Cubist Blues," "Jukebox Babe/Collision Drive," "Saturn Strip"
  • Representative Songs: "Jukebox Babe," "Fireball," "Ghost Rider"

Biography

One half of the seminal electronic duo Suicide, Alan Vega was born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1948. He began his career as a visual artist, gaining notoriety for his "light sculptures"; eventually Vega opened his own lower Manhattan gallery space, which he dubbed the Project of Living Artists. The Project served as a stomping grounds for the likes of the New York Dolls, Television, and Blondie as well as the 15-piece jazz group Reverend B., which featured a musician named Martin Rev on electric piano. Soon, Vega and Rev formed Suicide, whose minimalist, aggressive music -- a fusion of Rev's ominous, repetitive keyboards and Vega's rockabilly snarl -- helped paved the direction for the electronic artists of the future.

Suicide disbanded in 1980, and both Vega and Rev undertook solo careers. Vega's self-titled 1980 debut and his 1981 effort Collision Drive continued to explore the fractured rockabilly identity he had established in his earlier work. 1983's Saturn Strip, produced by longtime fan Ric Ocasek, marked Vega's debut for Elektra Records; corporate relations soured during production for 1985's Just a Million Dreams, however, and at one point the label even attempted to remove the singer from his own studio sessions.

Suicide briefly re-formed in 1988; a year later the solo Vega appeared, followed in 1990 by Deuce Avenue. After the release of 1991's Power on to Zero Hour, Suicide again reunited and toured. In 1995, Vega resurfaced as a solo artist with New Raceion; a year later, he returned with Dujang Prang. At the turn of the decade, he also began exploring new media outlets: Deuce Avenue War/The Warriors v3 97, his first book of photography, appeared in 1990, while Cripple Nation, a collection of prose and lyrics, bowed in 1991. Power on to Zero Hour and Cubist Blues (with Alex Chilton and Ben Vaughn) wrapped up his '90s recordings, followed in the early 2000s by yet another Suicide re-formation (which yielded 2002's American Supreme) and 2007's solo Station on Blast First Records. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Alan Vega
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Alan Vega

Alan Vega in 2004
Background information
Birth name Boruch Alan Bermowitz
Born June 23, 1938 (1938-06-23) (age 71)[1]
Brooklyn, New York, United States
Genres Post-Punk, Punk Rock, Experimental Rock, No Wave, Industrial Music, Synthpop, Rockabilly
Occupations Musician
Instruments Singing
Years active 1971-present day
Associated acts Suicide, The Sisterhood

Alan Vega (born Boruch Alan Bermowitz on June 23, 1938)[1] is the vocalist for 1970s and 80s no wave duo Suicide.

Bermowitz graduated with a degree in art from Brooklyn College and began his artistic career doing light sculptures.[1] In 1974 he opened a small gallery in lower Manhattan, where he started to create the "Project of Living Artists", a pluri-artistic place to develop various happenings or artistic attempts. Here, he met a jazz band called Reverend B, in which Martin Rev (Martin Reverby) played electric piano. Martin Rev would later become Alan Vega's partner in Suicide. In 1980, Alan Vega released his eponymous first solo record, which contained "Jukebox Babe", one of his best known songs, and defined the kind of rockabilly style that he would follow for some years. Later in his career he made a commercial attempt ("Just a Million Dreams"), which proved to be unsuccessful.[2].

Vega teamed up with Martin Rev again toward the end of the 80's and released the third Suicide album, A Way of Life (1988), then met future wife and music partner Liz Lamere while piecing together sound experiments which would evolve into his fourth solo album, Deuce Avenue (1990). Deuce Avenue marked the return toward a more repetitious and electronic approach (similar to his work with Suicide) in which Vega mixed beat driven machines and effects with spoken word and free-form prose. More solo albums, Suicide performances and music collaborations followed, then in 2002 Vega constructed the exhibit "Collision Drive" which contained a series of light sculptures mixed with found art and crucifixes. 2007 saw the release of Vega's tenth solo album, Station on Blast First Records, which took five years in the making and can be considered his most politically charged and cacophonous work yet. Alan Vega still continues to perform solo and with Suicide to this day.

Contents

Quotations from Alan Vega

  • "... I never heard anything avant-garde. To me it was just New York City Blues." (1980)
  • "Suicide was always about life. But we couldn't call it Life. So we called it Suicide because we wanted to recognize life." (1985)
  • "Where I grew up in Brooklyn, man, a punk was like a wuss, the guy who ran away from the fight. “You’re a punk. You’re a weasel. You’re nothing.” Now it has this connotation of being the tough-guy thing. The revolution, are you kidding? So I liked the word and used the term “punk music mass,” maybe inadvertently trying to turn it into something else. One day I wake up and there’s the word punk all over the place. That’s when it became meaningless to me. Somebody said that Suicide had to be the ultimate punk band because even the punks hated us." (2008)

Discography

Albums

  • Alan Vega (1980)
  • Collision Drive (1981)
  • Saturn Strip (1983)
  • Just a Million Dreams (1985)
  • The Sisterhood - "Gift" (1986) (playing synthesizer and vocals)
  • Deuce Avenue (1990) (bonus track "Wacko Warrior" on Infinite Zero CD reissue)
  • Power on to Zero Hour (1991)
  • New Raceion (1993)
  • Dujang Prang (1995)
  • Getchertiktz (1996, with Ric Ocasek and Gillian McCain)
  • Cubist Blues (1996, with Alex Chilton and Ben Vaughn) (re-issued as a double CD in 2006)
  • Endless (1998, with Pan Sonic)
  • Righteous Lite (1998, with Stephen Lironi as 'Revolutionary Corps Of Teenage Jesus')
  • Daddy Died - A Brooklyn Nightmare (1999, with Stephen Lironi as 'Revolutionary Corps Of Teenage Jesus')
  • Sombre (1999) (soundtrack to the film by Philippe Grandrieux)
  • 2007 (1999)
  • Listen to the Hiss / Meet the Heat (single) (2003, with DJ Hell)
  • Resurrection River (2004, with Pan Sonic)
  • Station (2007)

Compilations

  • 2006 - Silver Monk Time - A Tribute to the Monks (29 bands cover The Monks) label play loud! productions
  • 2006 - The Wiretapper 16 free cd issued to subscribers of The Wire and available on some over the counter issues, but not all.

Books

  • Cripple Nation - 2.13.61 (1994)
  • 100,000 Watts Of Fat City - Editions Anna Polerica (2000)

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "Suicide: How the godfathers of punk kept the faith", Paul Lester, The Jewish Chronicle, Oct 10 2008.
  2. ^ Valdivia, Victor W: Just a Million Dreams review on Allmusic

External links

see the documentary "around vega" directed by Hugues Peyret


 
 
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