Cousin Silas

Cousin Silas

Cousin Silas
Background information
Origin Huddersfield West Yorkshire, England
Genres Ambient
Drone
Sound Alchemy
Years active 2001 – present
Labels Acustronica, Aural Films, BFW Recordings, Earthrid, Earth Monkey Productions, Fflint Central Records, Free Floating Music, Just Not Normal, Sucu Music, Tree Trunk Recordings, We Are All Ghosts, Withering Trees
Website cousinsilas.blogspot.com
Members David Hughes

Cousin Silas is the stage name of English electronic music artist David Hughes. The name comes from a character in King Crimson's song, "Happy Family".[1] He has released over sixty albums on various netlabels. Between 1990 and 2000 he wrote several short stories, poetry, prose, and articles that were published in small press magazines such as Back Brain Recluse, Nova SF, The Scanner, REM, Nerve Gardens, The Lyre, Auguries and Focus. On 28 January 2004 Cousin Silas made an appearance on BBC Radio 1 played by John Peel.[2] As of May 2014, he had collected 35 guitars[3] for use in his music (by August 2014 this number had increased to 41).

Biography

David Hughes, born 7 May 1959, is an English musician and electronic music producer most notable for his ambient and drone music. David was born in Huddersfield, and spent most of that time in the Colne Valley. He attended Crow Lane, Royds Hall School, Colne Valley High School and Kirklees College, formerly known as Huddersfield Technical College. He then apprenticed as an electrical engineer and moved on to become a telecommunications engineer. Before experimenting with soundscapes in 2000, David played guitar in a couple of local bands doing new wave and punk covers. His current style of music is influenced by JG Ballard, Brian Eno, and Forteana.[4] The musician is a self-proclaimed "sound alchemist" and has referred to his music as "audio photographs" or "moodscapes."[5] He is a fan of science fiction novels written between 1950 and 1980 by authors such as Clark Ashton Smith, HP Lovecraft, M.R. James, Brian Aldiss, and Michael Moorcock.[6]

Discography

Each section is listed in chronological order.

Solo albums

Collaborations

Compilations

References

External links