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Robert Quine

 
Artist: Robert Quine
Robert Quine

Similar Artists:

Richard Hell & the Voidoids, The Lounge Lizards, Miles Davis, Lloyd Cole, Glenn Branca

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Worked With:

Carol Emanuel, Fernando Saunders, Ivan Julian, Bill Frisell, Anthony Coleman, Richard Lloyd, Marc Ribot, Jim Staley

Formal Connection With:

Fred Maher, Jody Harris, Matthew Sweet, Lou Reed, Material, Richard Hell, Lydia Lunch
  • Born: December 30, 1942, Akron, OH
  • Died: May 31, 2004, New York, NY
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar Representative Album: "Basic"

Biography

Though he first rose to fame through his work with Richard Hell, Robert Quine was by no stretch of the imagination a typical "punk rock guitarist." While his performing style sometimes embraced fractured guitar runs and discordant noise, Quine's eclectic style embraced influences from jazz, rock, and blues players of all stripes, and his thoughtful technique and uncompromising approach led to rewarding collaborations with a number of visionary musicians.

Quine was born in Akron, OH, in the waning days of 1942. While Quine's parents were music fans with a special enthusiasm for Brazilian music, young Robert's enthusiasm was piqued with the rise of rock & roll in the mid-'50s. The first record he purchased was "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?" by the Teenagers ("The sax solo in the middle was completely inappropriate -- it almost sounds like Albert Ayler," Quine told Jason Gross in a 1997 interview), and his early influences included James Burton, Ritchie Valens, and Buddy Holly. In 1958, Quine got a guitar and started learning how to play, and by the time he enrolled at Earlham College in Richmond, IN, he was playing Link Wray and Ventures covers with a local band. As rock & roll sunk into the teen idol era, Quine's passions turned to raw blues sounds such as John Lee Hooker and Lightnin' Hopkins and jazz players like John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Pharoah Sanders. However, his interest in rock was renewed by the rougher sounds of the Rolling Stones and, later, the Velvet Underground. A passionate fan of their recordings, Quine first saw the Velvets while he was studying law at Washington University in St. Louis, MO, in 1969, and after moving to San Francisco later that year he caught up with the band several more times. He struck up a friendship with the group and recorded a number of their shows on a portable cassette machine; tapes from Quine's archive later formed the basis of the three-CD set The Velvet Underground Bootleg Series, Volume 1: The Quine Tapes, released in 2001.

After failing to pass the bar exam in California, Quine lost interest in practicing law as well as playing live music (his dislike of the San Francisco music scene didn't help), and in 1971 he moved to New York City. For several years, he worked for Prentice-Hall Publishing, writing books on tax law, and began acquainting himself with the New York music scene. After quitting Prentice-Hall, Quine took a job at Cinemabilia, a fabled New York bookshop specializing in writings on film as well as rare movie posters and stills. There, Quine met fellow employee Richard Hell, and the two struck up a friendship over frequent discussions of music and film. After Hell left the Heartbreakers, he was keen to start a group of his own, and persuaded Quine to join him. It didn't take long for Richard Hell & the Voidoids to become one of the most popular and acclaimed bands on New York's budding punk rock scene, and more than a few critics singled out Quine's gritty but stylish lead guitar figures for special praise (while often noting his balding pate and fondness for black sport jackets and button down collars). One writer, the legendary Lester Bangs, even went so far as to hire Quine to play on his debut single, "Let It Blurt"/"Live," when Bangs made his belated debut as a vocalist. Blank Generation, the 1977 debut album for Richard Hell & the Voidoids, won rave reviews but only modest sales, and a combination of record company problems and a lack of enthusiasm on Hell's part for the music business meant that their follow-up, Destiny Street, wouldn't be released until 1982. While Quine popped up on sessions for Lydia Lunch and Material in the interim, he began earning a reputation as a choosy player who was more interested in working with people he respected rather than racking up lots of credits. Three musicians who certainly fell into that category were fellow New York underground guitarist Jody Harris, with whom Quine recorded a duo album, Escape; Material drummer Fred Maher, who paired up with Quine for another duo set, Basic; and former Velvet Underground frontman Lou Reed. Reed persuaded Quine to join his band for the recording of his 1982 album The Blue Mask, and the sessions marked a striking creative comeback for Reed as both a songwriter and a musician, while Quine's Stratocaster runs proved to be a perfect foil for Reed's guitar playing. Working with Reed considerably raised Quine's profile, and he returned for Reed's next album, 1983's Legendary Hearts, but the two had a falling out and Quine was fired shortly before Reed began work on 1984's New Sensations. When that album became an unexpected commercial success, Reed persuaded Quine to sign on for a world tour that was documented on Live in Italy.

After parting ways with Reed a second time in 1985, Quine (who strongly disliked touring) stayed busy with a variety of studio projects, and played sessions for Tom Waits, Marianne Faithfull, Brian Eno, and John Zorn, among others. Quine also struck up unexpected partnerships with two respected pop songwriters, Lloyd Cole and Matthew Sweet; Quine added subtle but incisive lead guitar on Cole's albums Lloyd Cole (1990), Don't Get Weird on Me Babe (1991), and Love Story (1995), while he took on a more aggressive role on Sweet's breakthrough album Girlfriend (1991) and the follow-ups Altered Beast (1993) and 100% Fun (1995). Quine continued to work frequently with Zorn into the new millennium, and in 2000 recorded a one-song reunion with the original lineup of Richard Hell & the Voidoids, a tune called "Oh" which was recorded for an online music service (the track later appeared on the compilation album Beyond Cyberpunk). In August 2003, Quine's wife, Alice Quine, died unexpectedly, and many close to the guitarist reported he fell into a deep depression that he couldn't shake. The depression manifested itself in an unsuccessful suicide attempt in the spring of 2004; Quine tried again on May 31, 2004, and sadly succeeded, with his body found in his apartment five days later. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Robert Quine
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Robert Quine
Born December 30, 1942, Akron, Ohio, United States
Died May 31, 2004, New York
Genres Rock
Occupations Musician
Instruments Electric guitar
Years active 1975 - 2004
Labels Sire, RCA, Infidelity, Lust/Unlust, Zoo Entertainment, Red Star, Tzadik
Associated acts Lou Reed
The Voidoids
Matthew Sweet
Jody Harris
Material
John Zorn
Lloyd Cole

Robert W. Quine (December 30, 1942May 31, 2004) was an American guitarist, known for his innovative guitar solos.

A native of Akron, Ohio, Quine worked with a wide range of musicians, though he himself remained relatively unknown in comparison. Critic Mark Demming writes "Quine's eclectic style embraced influences from jazz, rock, and blues players of all stripes, and his thoughtful technique and uncompromising approach led to rewarding collaborations with a number of visionary musicians."[1]

His collaborators include Richard Hell & the Voidoids, Lou Reed (notably on The Blue Mask), Brian Eno (on Nerve Net), John Zorn, Ikue Mori, Marc Ribot, Marianne Faithfull (Strange Weather), Lloyd Cole, Tom Waits (Rain Dogs), Matthew Sweet, Odds, Jody Harris {Escape}, and many more, including a rare 7" by Lester Bangs.

Rock critic and friend Lester Bangs once said of him:

Someday Quine will be recognized for the pivotal figure that he is on his instrument — he is the first guitarist to take the breakthroughs of early Lou Reed and James Williamson and work through them to a new, individual vocabulary, driven into odd places by obsessive attention to On the Corner-era Miles Davis.

Quine is number 80 on Rolling Stone's "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" list.[2]

Quine was a nephew of the philosopher W. V. Quine and second cousin once removed of The Black Keys' guitarist/vocalist Dan Auerbach.

Contents

Early life

After graduating from Earlham College in 1965, Quine earned a law degree from Washington University. Quine practiced tax law for several years before abandoning it. Quine was enrolled in the Berklee School of Music for the 1967-68 semester.

Career

In 1969, Quine made a series of cassette recordings of The Velvet Underground performing live. These saw official release in 2001 by Polydor Records, titled Bootleg Series Volume 1: The Quine Tapes. Though lo fi in sound quality, the album is an important document of the group. In the liner notes, Quine writes: "I got a lot of pleasure and inspiration from these performances. As a guitar player, they were an important element in shaping what musical direction I wanted to take."

Quine then worked in a movie memorabilia store in New York City with Richard Hell and Tom Verlaine. Later, Hell invited him to join his new band The Voidoids. Hell's two Voidoid albums feature Quine's distinctive guitar work; guitarist Marc Ribot once said about Quine that "in terms of punk rock guitar soloing, [Quine] could definitely be called the inventor,"[3] while critic Ira Robbins describes his work as "stunning and underrated"[4].

After The Voidoids broke up, Quine recorded with Lydia Lunch, Jody Harris and Material. From September 1979 to July 1980, Quine and Harris recorded various guitar improvisations with a drum machine. In 1981, some of those experiments were released as the Harris/Quine album, Escape. With Material bandmate Fred Maher, Quine recorded his only other solo album, Basic, released in 1984.

In the early 1980s, former Velvet Underground frontman Lou Reed drafted Quine to join his group. He appeared on Reed's The Blue Mask (1982), acclaimed as one of Reed's best albums. The Reed-Quine guitar work crafted interlocking duels that blur the lines between rhythm and leads. Reed's 1983 album Legendary Hearts featured most of the same group, but Quine eventually quit the group due to tensions with Reed. Reed persuaded Quine to rejoin for a world tour, which is documented on the video A Night with Lou Reed (1983) and the album Live in Italy (1984); Quine disliked touring, but agreed to the tour for financial reasons. He ended his partnership with Reed for good in 1985.

Throughout the remainder of the 1980s, Quine made scattered appearances as a session player on records by Tom Waits, John Zorn, Marianne Faithfull and Scritti Politti.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Quine began collaborations with a few musicians who would introduce him to new audiences, and who would raise his profile a bit. Saxophonist/composer John Zorn hired Quine for several experimental projects. He appeared on absurdist post-punk band They Might be Giants' 1994 album John Henry, and he also worked with pop songwriters/singers Lloyd Cole and Matthew Sweet during this period. Sweet's biggest hit song, "Girlfriend," is anchored by Quine's frenetic, squealing guitar work.

Death

Depressed after the death of his wife Alice in August 2003, Quine committed suicide by heroin overdose in his New York home on May 31, 2004.[5]

Quotes

"You gotta hear this new box I got, it creates the most offensive noise ..." (to Lester Bangs)[6]

Discography

Solo

  • Escape (with Jody Harris) (1981)
  • Basic (with Fred Maher) (1984)
  • Come Together: Guitar Tribute to the Beatles, Vol. 2 (with Jody Harris) (1995)

Richard Hell & the Voidoids

Richard Hell

  • Go Now (1995)
  • Time (2002)

Lou Reed

Matthew Sweet

Lloyd Cole

  • Lloyd Cole (1990)
  • Don't Get Weird On Me Babe (1991)
  • Love Story (1995)
  • Etc. (2001)

Material

  • Temporary Music (1981)
  • Red Tracks (1982)
  • Secret Life (1998)
  • Best of Material (1999)

John Zorn

Other artists

Notes

  1. ^ Allmusic
  2. ^ 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
  3. ^ Toma Jazz
  4. ^ TrouserPress
  5. ^ Hell, Richard (June 14, 2004). "Delicate Rage". New York Magazine. http://nymag.com/nymetro/news/people/columns/intelligencer/9310/. Retrieved 7 May 2009. 
  6. ^ Lester Bangs, "A Reasonable Guide to Horrible Noise" (included in Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung)

External links


 
 
Learn More
Basic (1984 Album by Robert Quine with Fred Maher)
Film Works, Vol. 5: Tears of Ecstasy (1996 Album by John Zorn)
A Night with Lou Reed (1983 Music Film)

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