Results for Brian Williams
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Artist:

Lustmord

Born:
in Wales

Representative Albums:

The Place Where the Black Stars Hang, Purifying Fire, Paradise Disowned

Is Also Known As:

Brian Williams

Similar Artists:

  • Birth Name: Brian Williams
  • Genre: Electronica
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Instrument: Producer

Biography

While his days are spent working on sound design for Hollywood scores by Graeme Revell, sound designer Brian Williams records experimental ambience and dark space music as Lustmord. His recordings have been embraced by a variety of ambient fans, ranging from the '70s traditionalists at the Hearts of Space label to the ambient-techno experimentalists at Plug Research. Born and raised in Wales, Williams first performed as Lustmord in 1980 as a series of unannounced "support slots" at larger gigs, with Williams simply leaping onstage and performing until security became aware of the situation. Though understandably brief, the rock terrorism gained Williams contact with like minds in the proto-industrial scene including SPK and Throbbing Gristle. He soon began appearing with SPK on tour and in the studio, and in 1982 released a self-titled Lustmord LP, including work by Coil's John Balance and Nocturnal Emissions' Nigel Ayers. His second album Paradise Disowned (released by SPK's Side Effects label in 1984), featured recordings made in a variety of subterranean locales including the crypt at Chartres Cathedral, Dunster Abattoir in Bangor, Wales and on the oceanfloor. By that time, Williams had also taken over the running of Side Effects.

Though he released no additional Lustmord material during the rest of the 1980s, Williams did record (and do sound research) for albums by Current 93, Nurse with Wound, SPK, Chris & Cosey and SPK member Graeme Revell's solo project The Insect Musicians. Lustmord returned in 1990 and released a pair of albums for Side Effects, The Monstrous Soul in 1992 and Place Where the Black Stars Hang in 1994. Williams moved to California in the mid-'90s after being recruited by Graeme Revell to work on his sound library for the scores of feature films including Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Street Fighter, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Crow and Spawn, among others.

Another Williams collaboration, this with space-music pioneer Robert Rich, debuted with the 1995 release of Rich's Stalker album, recorded for Hearts of Space. One year later, Williams responded to requests from the ambient-techno DJ community for Lustmord material on vinyl by releasing a single for Plug Research. The recording inspired his next project, a collaborative live album named Lustmord Vs. Metal Beast that skirted the edges of dark-ambient-techno. Purifying Fire appeared in summer 2000, but it was his critically acclaimed Metavoid that raise eyebrows. He also has several ongoing projects including Arecibo, Isolrubin BK and Terror Against Terror. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: Brian Williams (sportscaster)

Brian Williams (born in Winnipeg, Manitoba and raised in Hamilton, Ontario[1]) is a Canadian sportscaster who is best known for his coverage of the Olympic Games. Williams was long associated with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's sports coverage since joining the network in 1974, after radio employment at Toronto's CFRB and CHUM. On June 5, 2006, he announced plans to move to rival CTV, and its sports network TSN, in December 2006. However, on June 8, 2006, the CBC fired Williams, thereby clearing him to join CTV/TSN effective immediately, and will initially serve as on-site host of TSN's Canadian Football League coverage. (This position should not be confused with the "studio host" position that remains held by Dave Randorf.)[2]

His unique voice and quirks such as frequently announcing the time, sometimes in several different time zones at once, has made him one of Canada's most distinctive broadcasters. He is a frequent subject of parody on Canadian comedy shows such as Royal Canadian Air Farce.

Williams served as the studio host for the CBC's CFL coverage for the past few years and formerly announced Toronto Blue Jays baseball games for the network. Along with Terry Leibel and Ron MacLean, he was a regular studio anchor for CBC's Olympic Games coverage, and will serve a similar role at CTV in 2010 and 2012, but will be limited to hosting TSN's cable coverage, at most, in 2008. He also covered the 2002 FIFA World Cup for CBC.

Williams also worked with Peter Mansbridge during CBC 2000 Today, CBC's coverage of the millennium. He also co-hosted Don Cherry's Grapevine, along with Don Cherry.

References

  1. ^ The Hamilton Spectator (2006-05-19). Celebrity High: Westdale Secondary Alumni (Brian Williams). Press release. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  2. ^ http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060610.WILLIAMS10/TPStory/TPSports/OtherSports/

External links

Multimedia

  • CBC archives - Brian hosting the opening of SkyDome in Toronto.

Websites


Preceded by
Unknown
CBC Olympic Anchor with Terry Leibel and Ron MacLean
1980s-2006
Succeeded by
Ron MacLean and TBA

 
 

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Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Brian Williams (sportscaster)" Read more

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