Philip Jeck
Philip Jeck studied visual art at Dartington College of Arts. He started working with record players and electronics in the early '80's and has made soundtracks and toured with many dance and theatre companies as we as well as his solo concert work. His best kown work "Vinyl Requiem" (with Lol Sargent): a performance for 180 '50's/'60's record players won Time Out Performance Award for 1993. He has also over the last few years returned to visual art making installations using from 6 to 80 record players including "Off The Record" for Sonic Boom at The Hayward Gallery, London [2000].
Philip Jeck works with old records and record players salvaged from junk shops turning them to his own purposes. He really does play them as musical instruments, creating an intensely personal language that evolves with each added part of a record. Philip Jeck makes geniunely moving and transfixing music, where we hear the art not the gimmick.
www.philipjeck.com/
Claus van Bebber
German turntablist Claus van Bebber (b. 1949) is one of many avant-garde sound artists also fronting a career in the visual arts. His profile is similar to those of Martin Tétreault, Christian Marclay and Philip Jeck. In his solo concerts he uses a number of antiquated turntables (usually five or six) to play prepared records bought in cheap second-hand stores. His thick layering of sonic materials has little to do with Marclay's skipping quotes or Tétreault's humorous narratives (in his early years) and no-vinyl experiments (later), but it shares similarities with Jeck's soundscapes. As a visual artist, he is mostly interested in landscape art, returning the material of nature (wood and stone, mostly) to nature in abstract forms. Upon completing his basic education, Bebber trained to become an office clerk, following his father's wish. He abandoned this ambition after his military service, instead making a living putting together window displays while taking evening classes in painting.
He left his first traces in Germany's music history in the late ‘70s as the drummer in a free jazz trio that also included Ron Schmidt and released an LP titled Stück für Stück in 1977. Another of his first partners was trombonist Paul Hubweber, with whom he still works to this day. In 1982 he co-founded the artists' collective Heinrich Mucken. An intermedia platform animated by a handful of experimental musicians, visual and performance artists, the group also included Dieter Schlensog, Michael Vorfeld and Helmut Lemke who along with Bebber would all later become household names of the label NURNICHTNUR. Heinrich Mucken folded in 1990, leaving a trail of cassettes and a single. Bebber took the opportunity to retreat to his old cottage on the Lower Rhine and focus on his art career. In parallel he abandoned all things percussive and, inspired by Czech conceptual artist Milan Knizak, began to develop his concept of the "schallplattenkonzert," the record concert, literally a performance where one plays records (mismatched ones, all at once). Part sound installation, part musical performance, his concerts have been presented throughout Germany, in The Netherlands and Italy, often accompanied by exhibitions of his artwork.
A first solo EP, simply entitled Schallplattenkonzert, came out in 1993, followed by Herz two years later. Bebber has appeared on a number of CD projects curated by NURNICHTNUR, but has otherwise kept a low profile. His appearance at the Intermedium 2 festival in March 2002 alongside Philip Jeck has been released as Viny'l'isten. (text taken from François Couture, All Music Guide)
www.cvbebber.de/
dj sniff
For the last several months dj sniff has been developing his crossfader-triggered sampler cut'n play. This allows him to instantaneously capture and reconstruct sounds from the turntable into new rhythmic forms. Now a digitally mediated but spontaneous dialog with the recorded past becomes the driving force for his improvisations.
www.djsniff.com