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William Orbit

 
Artist: William Orbit
William Orbit

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Performed Songs By:

Christine Leach

Worked With:

Laurie Mayer, Robert Hill, Madonna, Seal, Peter Gabriel

Formal Connection With:

Beth Orton, Torch Song, Bassomatic, Strange Cargo, Rico Conning, Blur
See William Orbit Lyrics
  • Active: '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Electronica
  • Instrument: Producer, Keyboards, Remixing
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Strange Cargos," "Hello Waveforms," "Strange Cargo III"
  • Representative Songs: "Barber's Adagio for Strings," "Water from a Vine Leaf," "Dark Eyed Kid"

Biography

Ambient pioneer, studio master, and omnipresent dance remixer William Orbit began his musical career in the new wave band Torch Song. Even while the group recorded several albums for IRS, Orbit remained in the studio to learn the ropes and began producing and remixing for artists including Sting, Madonna, Prince, the Human League, Erasure, and Belinda Carlisle. Orbit concurrently recorded his own material, and released his first solo album, Orbit, in 1987. That same year, he inaugurated the ambient project Strange Cargo, which released follow-up albums in 1990 and 1993. Also during the late '80s, Orbit latched onto the acid house explosion in England and founded one of the scene's most notable labels, Guerilla Records. Orbit's own Bassomatic recorded for Guerilla alongside British progressive acts Spooky and React 2 Rhythm plus excellent Chicago producers Felix da Housecat and DJ Pierre. Through Virgin, Bassomatic also released an album, Set the Controls for the Heart of the Bass.

Though his release schedule slowed slightly during the '90s, William Orbit continued producing and remixing at a furious pace. He also founded a new label, N-Gram Recordings, and prepared to release the classical crossover work Pieces in a Modern Style. The album, which featured electronic interpretations of classical pieces, drew angry protests from composers Arvo Pärt and Henryk Górecki, and they helped block the album's release. In 1998, after 15 years of behind the scenes post-production, Orbit's name hit the mainstream thanks to his helming the Madonna comeback album Ray of Light (Orbit not only produced the entire LP, but co-wrote many of the tracks). The album won Grammy awards for Best Pop Album and Best Dance Recording, and its success led to a host of remixing and production work, including Blur's 1999 album, 13. In 2000, Orbit finally released Pieces in a Modern Style, and the album became an unexpected hit thanks to Ferry Corsten's trance remix of Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings. In 2006 he returned with Hello Waveforms on the Sanctuary label. Finley Quaye appeared on the album along with former Torch Song/Strange Cargo vocalist Laurie Mayer. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: William Orbit
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William Orbit
Birth name William Mark Wainwright
Also known as William Orbit
Born 15 December 1956 (1956-12-15) (age 52)
Origin Shoreditch, Hackney, East London
Occupations Electronic musician: producer and composer
Website http://www.williamorbit.com

William Orbit (born William Mark Wainwright, 15 December 1956, Shoreditch, Hackney) is an English musician, composer and record producer, perhaps best known to most for his work on Madonna's album Ray of Light, which received four Grammy Awards, sold 4 million copies in the U.S.[1], and sold 16 million copies worldwide. He has also co-produced several unreleased Madonna songs originally recorded for other albums that were never used. In addition, he produced 13 by Blur, and remixed some of the songs on the album. He has three Grammy Awards.

Contents

Biography

In addition to being a producer, Orbit is also a composer and multi-instrumentalist who has specialised in keyboard electronica and much of his work also features accomplished guitar and bass guitar playing. He has also recorded several largely instrumental solo albums on I.R.S. No Speak under the name Strange Cargo which features vocals by Beth Orton, Laurie Mayer and Joe Frank, among others. "Water from a Vine Leaf" was a chart success from the album Strange Cargo 3.

Prior to that he formed the group Torch Song, with Laurie Mayer, in the 1980s. At that time the band first developed Guerilla Studios in an abandoned school on the Harrow Road. They shared the premises with a group of Spanish anarchists and it became known as El Centro Iberico. They were later joined by a third member, Rico Conning.

Orbit was the musical force behind Bassomatic in the early 1990s. Their hit in 1990 was "Fascinating Rhythm".

He has also produced and remixed songs by numerous other artists, such as French pop star Étienne Daho. Along with producer Rico Conning they produced the Pop Satori album, Scottish act One Dove, and Seal. He also remixed Prince's #1 hit song movie tie-in, "Batdance", from Batman in 1989. Orbit's remixes carry his signature electronic sounds and techniques, making them sought after by fans of his solo work.

Orbit also produced a version of Samuel Barber's "Adagio for Strings" (the original version of which was used as the main theme of the soundtrack to Platoon). "Adagio" was lifted from the successful album Pieces in a Modern Style which was a compilation of classical re-workings. Orbit's version of the track was itself remixed in 1999 by Ferry Corsten and became a big club music hit as well as reaching #4 in the UK Singles Chart.[2]

He has worked with girl groups All Saints ("Pure Shores", "Black Coffee") and Sugababes ("Spiral") and Pink ("Feel Good Time" from Charlie's Angels 2). He produced "Dice" for Finley Quaye in collaboration with Beth Orton; Quaye also played guitar and sang on other Orbit's tracks including the unreleased 'Arioso' featuring Madonna. He produced and played keyboards with U2 in the song "Electrical Storm" of their album The Best of 1990-2000.

He founded Guerilla Records in 1989.

Orbit has also created several radio shows. In the late 1990s, he had a series on Los Angeles-based KCRW, called Stereo Odyssey. Orbit's song, "Time To Get Wise" was used as a tag line in the 2004 film What the Bleep Do We Know!?.

In 2006, Orbit's album, Hello Waveforms was released on the Sanctuary label. Subsequently he produced two tracks — "Louise" and "Summertime" — for Robbie Williams' 2006 album, Rudebox. At this time, he also mixed several tracks on Laurie Mayer's most recent album, Black Lining.

In the fall of 2006, "Purdy," a track Orbit co-composed with Laurie Mayer and Rico Conning, was used as the soundtrack in a television ad campaign for H&M which starred Madonna and was directed by her and Dan Cadan. In 2007, Orbit composed his first orchestral suite for a full orchestra. The composition was performed for the first time on 8 July 2007, by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra in the Bridgewater Hall at the Manchester International Festival.

The 4 May 2009 saw Orbit's return with a new album, My Oracle Lives Uptown.

He sometimes DJs at Circus at the Soho Revue Bar in Central London. Orbit lives in North London and Los Angeles and has his office and studio in Hoxton Square, London.

"Purdy", appeared mixed by Chicane in Ministry of Sound: Inferno (2009). Orbit has enabled an internet radio (streamcast) which allow listeners to hear more than 10 hours of his music. In the playlist are variations of his well-known tracks, as well as previously released material.[3]

Discography

More complete discographies can be found when exploring external links.

Torch Song

  • Wish Thing
  • Ecstasy
  • Exhibit A
  • Toward the Unknown Region

Bassomatic

  • Set the Controls for the Heart of the Bass
  • Science & Melody

Solo

  • Orbit
  • Strange Cargo
  • Strange Cargo II
  • Superpinkymandy
    • Released in Japan only as a Beth Orton album, but the sound was characteristically Orbit, making this possibly his most sought after rarity.
  • Strange Cargo III
  • The Best of Strange Cargos
    • A compilation from Orbit's first three Strange Cargo albums, highlighted by two versions of "Water From A Vine Leaf", another collaboration with Beth Orton
  • Strange Cargo Hinterland
  • Pieces in a Modern Style (1995)
    • Original release by 'The Electric Chamber', withdrawn.
  • Pieces in a Modern Style (2000)
    • Altered re-release, minus uncleared tracks from first release, although with additional tracks in their place
  • Strange Cargo Vol.1-3 [Box Set]
  • William / Orbit
    • U.S. two-disc publishing CD set to support William Orbit's publishing catalogue [4]
  • Hello Waveforms (released 20 February 2006 in UK, and 21 February in U.S.)
  • My Oracle Lives Uptown (Digital version released 4 May 2009. CD with 4 additional tracks released 8 June 2009)

Misc

  • Stereo Odyssey
    • 4-CDR set of KCRW radio show William produced circa 1996
  • Rare Orbit Vol.1
    • A 3-CDR collection of rare & unreleased material & productions. 2008, source unknown. Contained unreleased sessions with Madonna, and some new material.
  • Essential Mix
    • 2-CDR set of UK BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix, 6th February 2000
  • XFM 2003
    • 30 minute CDR of UK XFM Radio 'Superchunk', a mix/mashup collection of special rare and unreleased material, 17 August 2003
  • XFM 2006
    • 30 minute CDR of UK XFM Radio 'Superchunk', another mix/mashup collection, 12th March 2006
  • World Odyssey Mix
    • 25 minute CDR of UK BBC Asia Network Radio 'Pathaans Musical Rickshaw', a diversified mix/mashup collection, 17 May 2009
  • KCRW 2009
    • 40 minute CDR of Los Angeles KCRW Radio Station show 'Morning Becomes Eclectic', a two piece live session with Laurie Mayer and interviews with Jason Bentley - 2nd July 2009

References

  1. ^ William Orbit
  2. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 409. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  3. ^ Orbitstreamcast.com
  4. ^ Discogs.com

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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
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