Y. Bhekhirst

Y. Bhekhirst (apparently born in 1952) is an outsider musician based in New Hyde Park, New York. Although not much is known about him, his sole known record, Hot in the Airport, released in 1986 and re-released in 1994 on New Hyde Park-based label HDG Records, is prized by some outsider music collectors for its decidedly dadaistic, shambling songs. Both releases of Hot in the Airport were cassette-only, and this, along with a 7" vinyl single (released in 1986 and 1991) containing songs from the cassette, is in fact the label's only release to date.

For the most part, Hot in the Airport is full of meandering lyrics on mundane subjects such as cars, rain and love (although the song "Freshing Air" seems to deal with political prisoners in an unspecified country, containing the lyrics, "No more detention ... now!"), sung in a thick accent. Musically speaking, Bhekhirst's method is to sing a verse (in itself very repetitive) two, four or six times, then stop abruptly (although the cassette's final piece, "Every Time I", lasts for nearly seven minutes). This is typically backed up by one or two guitars, bass, and drums, with each of the stringed instruments playing a different melodic fragment, over and over again, creating a texture made up of several strange, angular, asynchronous patterns. (It is not known whether the songs are the product of a band or one person repeatedly overdubbing parts on different instruments). When these patterns are combined with the semi-random drumming and the atypical vocals, the effect is unique. The title track of the cassette was also released contemporaneously as a 7" single; it is slightly more polished musically than the other songs, and, rather incongruously (see below), includes a number of lines sung in Spanish.

One song on Hot in the Airport, "I Will Sing," features the repeated line, "And I will do anything for love." By coincidence, the melody of this line is nearly identical to that of the title line of Meat Loaf's 1993 hit "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)." [1]

Information on Y. Bhekhirst is scarce, to say the least. Irwin Chusid, who brought Bhekhirst's music to the public's attention in the mid-90s, reported that a man calling himself Y. Bhekhirst was distributing his cassettes in New York record stores; handing them over to the clerks and then walking out abruptly without further explanation. Chusid and former colleague Michelle Boulé played selections from Hot in the Airport on numerous occasions when they worked together at station WFMU.

Recent searches at the U.S. Copyright Office have revealed that a man named Jose Hugo Diaz Guzman (born in 1946 and also known as Pepe Diaz Guzman) is somehow involved with Y's music, as the name "H. Diaz" or "H. Diazg" shows up on most known releases of material from Hot in the Airport. Some have speculated that Diaz Guzman and Bhekhirst are in fact the same individual.

This might be contradicted by several factors - the differing birthdates for both men, the fact that Bhekhirst's accent is decidedly not Spanish (it sounds more Indian or Sri Lankan) and the observation that he (Bhekhirst) seems to have a difficult time pronouncing the brief Spanish-language lyrics in the cassette's title track, "Hot in the Airport", which, like the other nine songs on the cassette, was written by Diaz Guzman.

Under various pseudonyms (such as "Al Pol" and, more amusingly, "Al Phool"), Diaz Guzman appears to have copyrighted numerous songs and cassette recordings, the earliest in 1981 and the latest in 1992. If these recordings were made publicly available, they do not seem to have come to the attention of the outsider music community as of yet.

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