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Steve Hillage

 
Artist: Steve Hillage

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Miquette Giraudy

Worked With:

Dave Stewart, Dr. Alex Paterson, Pierre Moerlen, Greg Hunter, Mike Howlett, Gilli Smyth, Didier Malherbe, Tim Blake

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: August 02, 1951, England
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar, Producer, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Introducing Steve Hillage," "Rainbow Dome Musick," "Motivation Radio"
  • Representative Songs: "It's All Too Much," "Electrick Gypsies," "Activation Meditation"

Biography

A guitarist who first found fame in the progressive-rock era only to later resurface as an ambient techno cult hero, Steve Hillage was born August 2, 1951. In 1967 he co-founded the group Uriel with bassist Mont Campbell, organist Dave Stewart and drummer Clive Brooks; the unit subsequently continued on as the trio Egg upon Hillage's 1968 departure for university. He did not return to music for another three years, reuniting with Stewart in 1971 in Khan, which recorded the 1972 prog-rock effort Space Shanty before soon splitting.

After touring in support of Kevin Ayers, Hillage joined Gong, winning acclaim for his echo- and delay-heavy brand of guitar work over the course of the group's 1972-1975 "Radio Gnome Invisible" trilogy (consisting of the LPs Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg and You). In 1975 Hillage went solo with the album Fish Rising, the first fruits of a longstanding writing partnership with keyboardist Miquette Giraudy. He next travelled to New York to cut 1976's L, produced by Todd Rundgren and featuring guest appearances from Utopia as well as jazz great Don Cherry.

At the peak of the punk era, Hillage's work was by no means fashionable, but he pressed on regardless; in 1977 he issued Motivation Radio, an album recorded with Malcolm Cecil (the creator of an influential early electronic project, the studio-synthesizer T.O.N.T.O.). 1978's Green, 1979's Rainbow Dome Musick (an early ambient outing) and Open, and 1983's separately released For to Next/And Not Or followed, but as interest in his music continued to dwindle, Hillage turned to production, helming records for the likes of Robyn Hitchcock and Simple Minds.

By the close of the 1980s, Hillage had largely disappeared from music; however, in 1989 he was visiting the ambient room of a local club when, much to his surprise, his own Rainbow Dome Musick began to play. He introduced himself to the DJ, one Alex Paterson, and soon Hillage was working with Paterson's seminal group the Orb; out of their collaboration grew a new Hillage-Giraudy project, System 7, a dance collective also comprised of club luminaries including Paterson and fellow DJ Paul Oakenfold.

After debuting with an eponymously-titled 1991 LP, System 7 plunged completely into blissed-out ambient sound on 1993's 777, which reached the Top 40 on the U.K. album charts. 1994's Point 3 appeared in two different versions: the first, The Fire Album, offered heavy beats and rhythms, while The Water Album featured drumless mixes of the same music. With 1996's Power of Seven, System 7 turned to Detroit techno, recruiting the services of mixers Carl Craig and Derrick May. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Steve Hillage
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Steve Hillage

Background information
Birth name Stephen Simpson Hillage
Born 2 August 1951 (1951-08-02) (age 58)
Chingford, London Borough of Waltham Forest, England
Genres Rock, Electronica
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1967 – present
Associated acts Uriel, Khan, Gong, The Orb, System 7

Steve Hillage (born Stephen Simpson Hillage, 2 August 1951, Chingford, London Borough of Waltham Forest, England) is an English musician, best known as a guitarist. He is associated with the Canterbury scene and has worked in experimental domains since the late 1960s. Besides his solo recordings he has been a member of Gong, Khan and System 7.

Contents

History

Early career

Whilst still at school, he joined his first band, a blues rock band called Uriel, with Dave Stewart, Mont Campbell and Clive Brooks. The band split up in 1968 with the other members going on to form Egg, but they briefly re-united under assumed names to record the album Arzachel in 1969. Hillage also guested on Egg's 1974 album The Civil Surface.

In 1969, Hillage began studies at Kent University in Canterbury, befriending local bands Caravan and Spirogyra and occasionally jamming with them. Meanwhile he wrote songs and, by late 1970, had accumulated enough material for an album. Caravan put him in touch with their manager Terry King, who got Hillage signed with Deram on the basis of a demo of his material recorded with the help of Dave Stewart of Egg. In early 1971, Hillage formed Khan with bassist/vocalist Nick Greenwood, formerly of Crazy World Of Arthur Brown. Although future Gong and Hatfield and the North drummer Pip Pyle was involved in the early stages, the line-up finally settled with the inclusion of organist Dick Henningham and drummer Eric Peachey (ex-Dr K's Blues Band), both of whom had recently collaborated on Greenwood's solo project Cold Cuts, recorded in California in 1970 but belatedly released in 1972.

Following a series of concerts throughout 1971, several of them supporting labelmates Caravan, Khan began recording their debut album in November, by which time Henningham had left, forcing Hillage to bring in his former bandmate Dave Stewart to play the keyboard parts. By the time Space Shanty came out in May 1972, Canadian Val Stevens (formerly of Toronto's popular soul-rock band Grant Smith & The Power) had filled the vacancy, making his debut on a short European tour (including a televised appearance at the Montreux Festival) and continuing with a UK tour supporting Caravan in June.

By then, musical disagreements between Hillage and Greenwood culminated with the latter's departure. Hillage decided to form a new line-up with a slightly different direction, retaining the services of Peachey and asking Stewart back (Egg having recently broken up), and adding Nigel Griggs (later of Split Enz) on bass. New compositions by Hillage and Stewart were added to the repertoire, including "I Love Its Holy Mystery", which would form the basis of Hillage's later epic "Solar Musick Suite". Unfortunately, neither manager Terry King nor label Decca showed much faith in the new music, leaving Hillage with no choice but to break up the band in October 1972.

Steve Hillage playing Hyde Park, 1974

Hillage promptly joined Kevin Ayers' new live band Decadence, participating in Ayers' 1973 album Bananamour (Harvest, May 1973) (his solo on "Shouting In A Bucket Blues" was particularly memorable) and touring the UK and France for two months. Having in the meantime become a fan of Gong, Hillage stayed in France after the tour to join the band. In January 1973 he took part in the sessions for Flying Teapot, the first installment of the "Radio Gnome" trilogy, and soon after graduated to full-time membership. The 'classic' line-up of Gong was now in place, with Daevid Allen, Gilli Smyth, Didier Malherbe, Tim Blake, Mike Howlett and Pierre Moerlen, and recorded two further albums, Angels Egg and You, before disintegrating in 1975.

In November 1973, Hillage participated in a live-in-the-studio performance of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells for the BBC[1]. It is available on Oldfield's Elements DVD.

When Allen, Gong's founder and mastermind, left in April 1975, Hillage took over leadership but found this position increasingly uncomfortable, and by the year's end had jumped ship to launch his solo career, his motivation to do so fuelled by the success of his solo album Fish Rising, recorded while still in Gong and featuring most of his bandmates. His next effort L album was recorded in the USA using musicians from Todd Rundgren's Utopia, and on its release Hillage formed a touring band which toured to critical and public acclaim in late 1976. During the latter half of the 1970s, Hillage made a name for himself as a guitarist and prog-rock / fusion composer and performer in the post Hendrix / pre-punk scene. 1977's Motivation Radio, with its shorter tracks, marked a departure from the long instrumental workouts of previous efforts, but 1978's Green, co-produced by Pink Floyd's Nick Mason, was something of a return to his earlier, spacier work.

These 1970s works (tacitly in collaboration with his longtime girlfriend Miquette Giraudy) blended complex studio production techniques with dreamscape anthems and hooky, progressive passages of new world lydian electric fusion. With lyrics about "electric Gypsies", Hillage was seen as something of a hippie figure, and his sales took a fall with the arrival of punk rock. Hillage himself was somewhat enthusiastic about the energy and freedom of punk rock and the CD version of his 1979 album Open includes the unambiguously punky "1988 Aktivator" (which originally appeared on the fourth studio side of the live album Live Herald), whilst other songs on Open (such as "Getting In Tune", and "Don't Dither Do It") have an identifiable, if diluted, punk flavor. Hillage spent time in the Ladbroke Grove area of London, home of the UK Underground and worked with Nik Turner founder member of Hawkwind (one of the original Underground Community Bands).

Later career

In 1979, Hillage played guitar on "Nuclear Waste" by The Radio Actors with lead vocals by Sting.

During the 1980s, Hillage worked as a record producer, working for artists such as It Bites, Simple Minds, Murray Head, Nash The Slash, Real Life, Cock Robin and Robyn Hitchcock. He returned to producing in the 90s, working on The Charlatans self-titled disc in 1995.

After hearing the likes of The Orb playing his 1979 ambient record Rainbow Dome Musick, Hillage teamed up with Giraudy again in the early 1990s to form their own ambient dance act: System 7. They soon became part of the underground dance scene in London. Hillage also produced in the 1990s a raï musical show called '1, 2, 3 Soleils', featuring Algerian singers Faudel, Rachid Taha and Khaled he also arranged many songs of Latifa.

Since the mid 1990s, Hillage has been an important contributor to Rachid Taha's music, as guitarist and producer.

In November 2006, he made a surprise return to the Gong fold when he and Giraudy performed at the Gong Unconvention in Amsterdam, as the "Steve Hillage Band" (playing material from the 70's albums - mainly from Fish Rising, which was itself essentially Hillage using most of the rest of the Gong band as his own), as System 7, Hillage and Giraudy's current set up, and also as members of Gong. At the Unconvention, Hillage also contributed to the "Glissando Orchestra", a one hour plus performance where a number of guitarists (ten or more at some stages, including Hillage and Gong lead man Daevid Allen) all played mostly continuous drone notes with some gentle melodic lines overlaid.

This participation in the Gong band was reprised in a small number of concerts held by Gong in London in June 2008, where Hillage and Giraudy were among the line up which also included Daevid Allen, Gilli Smyth, and Mike Howlett. At those concerts, Hillage also played one track from his own solo repertoire: "Light in the Sky" from Motivation Radio.

In January 2007, four of his albums - Fish Rising, L, Motivation Radio and Rainbow Dome Musick - were released in the UK remastered on CD, each, except the latter, with previously unreleased bonus tracks.

In February 2007, Green, Live Herald, Open and For To Next/And Not Or followed, similarly remastered with bonus content.

Hillage also collaborated with Ozric Tentacles on the 2004 album Spirals in Hyperspace.

"Light in the Sky", from his 1977 album Motivation Radio, is used as the theme for The Sunday Night Project on Channel 4.

The new Gong album entitled 2032, released on 21 September 2009, features both Hillage and Giraudy as part of a return to the classic 1973-1975 line-up of the band.

Discography

  • (1975) Fish RisingUK #33
  • (1976) L – UK #10
  • (1977) Motivation Radio – UK #28
  • (1978) Green – UK #30
  • (1979) Live Herald – UK #54
  • (1979) Rainbow Dome Musick – UK #48
  • (1979) Open – UK #71
  • (1980) Aura
  • (1983) For To Next – UK #48
  • (1994) BBC Radio 1 Live
  • (2003) Light in the Sky
  • (2004) Live at Deeply Vale Festival 1978
  • (2008) Evan Marc & Steve Hillage - Dreamtime Submersible (Somnia Records)

[2]

References

  1. ^ "Mike Oldfield (with Mick Taylor, Steve Hillage and members of Henry Cow, Gong and Soft Machine) - Tubular Bells (Live BBC Video 1973)". MOG. http://mog.com/Willard/blog/1252954. Retrieved 2009-05-23. 
  2. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 253. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
777 (Electronica Band, '90s)
Gong: Live at the UNcon 2006 (2006 Music Film)
Aura (1980 Album by Steve Hillage)

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