Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Centipede

 
Artist: Centipede

Group Members:

Similar Artists:

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1970
  • Disbanded: 1971
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Septober Energy

Biography

Centipede was a 50-piece jazz-rock orchestra assembled late in 1970 by pianist Keith Tippett (b. 1947) in order to perform his large-scale conceptual work "Septober Energy." Made up of a core of musicians drawn from Tippett's own band and the orbit of the Soft Machine and King Crimson, and augmented by various established professional players (including solid jazz men like Alan Skidmore) and student musicians, the group didn't sound quite like anything else to come out of the progressive rock boom.

Centipede gave live performances for the Jazz Center Society "Sigma" Organization of Bordeaux in France, the Lanchester Arts Festival, the Bristol University Student Union, and the Rotterdam Arts Council, garnering uneven reviews in the process. Some critics found the Tippett's music to be long and leaden, others saw it as a bold extension of the kind of free-form experimentation that Tippett and his band were already engaged in on a smaller scale -- Centipede merely added saxes, trumpets, and violins to the mix.

It must've impressed somebody at RCA's British arm, however, where -- apparently eager to get in on the progressive rock boom sweeping England's college campuses -- they signed Tippett and Centipede to a contract in the spring of 1971. At the time, he was neck-deep in the workings of King Crimson, having participated in the recording of three LPs by the band (In the Wake of Poseidon, Lizard, Islands), and had even been invited into the group formally, which he declined. Tippett did get Robert Fripp to produce the Septober Energy album. which was recorded that June in Wessex. Also on hand was ex-Crimson saxman Ian MacDonald on alto, alongside Elton Dean, while Crimson's Boz Burrell contributed vocals (along with Julie Tippett, Mike Patto, Zoot Money, and Maggie Nicols.

The resulting two-LP set came out as a British-only release in 1971, to indifferent or negative reviews. Some of this seemed justified by the structure of the work Septober Energy, which seemed to deliberately antagonize listeners with a long, meandering opening section that appeared to go nowhere. There was also some disappointment among Crimson fans (who comprised a major part of the purchasers) that Fripp, in the process of serving as ringmaster of this 50-piece circus, never got to play any guitar on the album, as had been his intent. Centipede broke up in 1971, the album having failed to garner the group any further engagements.

In 1974, American RCA, apparently hoping to elicit sales based on Fripp's presence as producer (and the very high visibility that a newer incarnation of King Crimson had gained in the previous year), issued Septober Energy in the United States. The results were disastrous, especially without a group (which had long since broken up) or even a group organizer to explain the project, for the album was far more jazz-oriented than King Crimson's brand of electric progressive rock. The noisy domestic pressings (and warped Dynaflex plastic) of the US release didn't enhance the experience of hearing this music.

In 1999, What Disc re-released the album as a double-CD in Europe, as part of a series of Robert Wyatt-related reissues. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Centipede (band)
Top
Centipede

Centipede performing at the Lyceum Theatre in London,
15 November 1970.
Background information
Origin London, England
Genres Free jazz, progressive rock
Years active 19701971, 1975
Labels Neon
Associated acts The Keith Tippett Group, Soft Machine, King Crimson
Former members
See Centipede members

Centipede were an English jazz/progressive rock/Canterbury sound big band with more than 50 members, organized and led by the British free jazz pianist Keith Tippett.[1][2][3][4] Formed in 1970, it brought together much of a generation of young British jazz and rock musicians from a number of bands, including Soft Machine, King Crimson, Nucleus and Blossom Toes.[2]

Centipede performed several concerts in England, toured France, and recorded a double-album, Septober Energy (produced by Robert Fripp), before disbanding at the end of 1971. They reformed briefly in 1975 to play at a few French jazz festivals.[2]

Contents

History

Centipede was formed by Keith Tippett in 1970 to perform an extended composition, Septober Energy that he had been working on.[2][1] The members were drawn from his own band at the time, The Keith Tippett Group, several British progressive rock, jazz-rock and avant-garde jazz groups, including Soft Machine (Robert Wyatt, Elton Dean, Nick Evans, Mark Charig), Nucleus (Karl Jenkins, Ian Carr, Brian Smith, Jeff Clyne, Roy Babbington, Bryan Spring, John Stanley Marshall) and King Crimson (Robert Fripp, Peter Sinfield, Ian McDonald, Boz Burrell), and students of the London School of Music.[2] Septober Energy consisted of four movements, or "concepts" that the band improvised around. It was first performed by the band live at the Lyceum Theatre in London on 15 November 1970.[2]

Centipede toured France in November 1970, giving two "memorable performances" at the Alhambra Theatre in Bordeaux.[2] They also played for the Rotterdam Arts Council in the Netherlands, at the Lanchester Arts Festival and the Bristol University Student Union. Centipede's concerts attracted "uneven reviews", with some critics calling Tippett's music "long and leaden", and others praising it as a "bold extension" of what Tippett and his band were already doing.[1]

In April 1971, Neon Records, a British sub-label of RCA in the United States, signed up Tippett and Centipede, and Centipede recorded Tippett's composition on a double album, Septober Energy in June that year. Robert Fripp produced the album and it was released in October 1971 in the United Kingdom only. Tippett had featured prominently on three of King Crimson's albums (In the Wake of Poseidon, Lizard and Islands) and Fripp had even invited Tippett to join the band (he declined). While some of the other Crimson members featured on Septober Energy, Fripp, who had performed live with Centipede, did not.[1]

Centipede, now reduced in size for economic reasons, gave two performances in London to promote the album, one at the Royal Albert Hall in October 1971, and the other at the Rainbow Theatre in December 1971.[2] But the album was not generally well received by critics[1][4] and as no further engagements were forthcoming, Centipede disbanded at the end of 1971.[1]

In 1974 RCA issued Septober Energy in the United States, hoping to cash in on Fripp's name as the producer, but it failed, particularly because Centipede did not exist to promote the album with performances.[1] The band did, however, reform briefly in October 1975, with David Cross from King Crimson, to perform at several French jazz festivals.[2]

Tippett said in a January 2003 interview that in 1970 the Centipede project was "quite innocent" and that "no-one was doing it for the money".[3] Their debut performance at the Lyceum was a benefit concert for the "Jazz Centre" (which never materialised). Tippett said that at the time there was considerable interest in the project, and that while the initial performance consisted of 50 musicians, "there could have been 100".[3]

Recordings

Members

The members below are the personnel that appeared on Centipede's album, Septober Energy.

Violins

  • Wendy Treacher
  • Jihn Trussler
  • Roddy Skeping
  • Wilf Gibson (lead)
  • Carol Slater
  • Louise Jopling
  • Garth Morton
  • Channa Salononson
  • Steve Rowlandson
  • Mica Gomberti
  • Colin Kitching
  • Philip Saudek
  • Esther Burgi

Cellos

  • Michael Hurwitz
  • Timothy Kramer
  • Suki Towb
  • John Rees-Jones
  • Katherine Thulborn
  • Catherine Finnis

Trumpets

Alto Saxophones

Tenor Saxophones

Baritone Saxophones

  • Dave White (doubling clarinet)
  • Karl Jenkins (doubling oboe)
  • John Williams (bass saxophone, doubling soprano)

Trombones

Drums

Vocalists

Basses

Guitar

Piano

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Eder, Bruce. "Centipede". Allmusic. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:d9fyxqt5ldke~T1. Retrieved 2009-06-18. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Centipede". Canterbury Website. http://calyx.perso.neuf.fr/bands/obscure.html. Retrieved 2009-06-18. 
  3. ^ a b c McKay, George. "Interview with Keith Tippett". Jazz in Britain. p. 14. http://www.ccm.salford.ac.uk/ccm/resources/uploads/File/Jazz%20interviews%20with%20images.pdf. Retrieved 2009-05-27. 
  4. ^ a b Kelman, John. "Septober Energy". All About Jazz. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=15383. Retrieved 2009-06-19. 

External links


Shopping: Centipede
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Centipede (band)" Read more