Ed Alleyne-Johnson
Ed Alleyne-Johnson | |
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Ed Alleyne-Johnson busking in York, January 2009 | |
Background information | |
Born |
1959 Liverpool, England |
Genres | Classical, folk, rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Electric violin |
Years active | 1992–present (as recording artist) |
Labels | Equation, Wingspan |
Associated acts | New Model Army |
Ed Alleyne-Johnson is a British electric violinist and prolific busker. He has been busking since he was a Fine Art student at Oxford University in the early 1980s. He uses an electric violin he carved with a kitchen knife,[1] a custom pedalboard, and an amplifier he modified to run off rechargeable batteries. This setup has enabled him to perform on the street in almost every major city in Europe, and across the United States and Canada.
He was a member of the English post-punk/alternative rock band New Model Army recording and touring with them for five years, with several concerts in Germany in over 200 concerts worldwide, supporting acts as diverse as Simple Minds, Bob Dylan, David Bowie, The Cure, Midnight Oil, and Faith No More
Early life
Ed was born in Liverpool in 1959 where his father, Brian, was a teacher. The pupils he taught included future Beatles members George Harrison and Paul McCartney. At the age of five, Ed's father made him a wooden model of John Lennon's guitar to play. Subsequently, Ed inherited a violin from his grandfather.
Ed learned to played violin at school and joined the Liverpool Schools Symphony Orchestra. He built his own electric violin at the age of 13 which was made of plywood and pine. At 16 Ed's father bought him a bass guitar to enable him to join a school rock band. On leaving school Ed was offered a place at Pembroke College, Oxford where he studied fine art. Whilst at university Ed started busking and hitchhiked around Europe with friends. His guitar was too heavy so he took his grandfather's violin, which he had sprayed purple. He played the violin on the streets using an amplifier and digital delay equipment. This was to form the basis of his future work.
During his time in Oxford in the late 1980s he played bass guitar in local band, Raindance. Three Raindance tracks were included on The Mad Hatters Club compilation album released on the independent March Hare Music label.[2] The band self-released a nine-track album (Raindance) in 1987 (catalogue no. Axis XIS 121).
New Model Army period
In 1989 Ed was invited by a member of the band, New Model Army, to play violin as a session musician on Vagabonds, which was to be a track being recorded for their forthcoming Thunder and Consolation album. He partially improvised on this track and also played violin on two others. Vagabonds was released as a single in the UK and Ed was invited to join the band and tour with them, playing violin and keyboards. As a member of the band he played on 5 albums (three studio and two live) released in the UK between 1989 and 1995. In addition to playing with the band on tour Ed also supported the band with his own solo set featuring his own composition, Purple Electric Violin Concerto.
Before New Model Army's 1991 American tour Ed built a new, 5 string, electric violin included a midi pick-up. At this point Ed decided to record the Purple Electric Violin Concerto.
Ed left New Model Army after the recording of their 1993 album, the Love of Hopeless Causes. However he continues to play with them on tour.
Solo work
Ed recorded Purple Electric Violin Concerto in 1992, recording all the tracks live with no overdubs or re-mixing. 500 cassettes of the album were produced . The sale of the cassettes funded a CD pressing of the album, which was subsequently released by Equation Records in the UK. Ed promoted the album through a busking tour of UK record shops. In 1993 China Records licensed the album from Equation they reissued it and issued the track Oxford Suite part 1 as a single (Catalogue no. EQCDS01 Equation Records, under agreement with China Records Ltd).
Ed's second solo album Ultraviolet received significant interest in the UK reaching No. 68 on UK Albums Chart.[3] in 1994.
Purple Electric Violin Concerto 2 was released in 2001. Ed's next 2 albums, Echoes, Reflections consist of instrumental covers of popular rock and pop tracks. The 2011 Arpeggio album led off with a crashing, cover version of The Who's Baba O'Riley and also included another cover of Human by The Killers; the album contains seven of Ed's own compositions alongside seven covers. He has also released two further albums with his wife Denyze on their own Wingspan Records label.
In July 2008, Ed performed the Beatles tracks 'Yesterday' and 'Eleanor Rigby' in front of 7,000 people at Liverpool's Echo Arena for a Beatles Day charity gig.
A 20th anniversary special edition of The Purple Electric Violin Concerto album was released in 2012. This consisted of a two-CD set containing a remastered version of the original album alongside a re-recorded version.
Ed continues to busk alongside his other work. He has busked in nearly every major city in Europe and across America.[4]
Discography
Solo albums
- Purple Electric Violin Concerto (1992)
- Ultraviolet (1994) – UK No. 68
- Purple Electric Violin Concerto 2 (2001)
- Echoes (2004)
- Reflections (2006)
- Symphony (2008)
- Arpeggio (2011)
- Purple Electric Violin Concerto – 20th Anniversary Special Edition (2012)
Albums with Denyze Alleyne-Johnson
- Fly Before Dawn (1995)
- 2020 Vision (1998)
Singles
- Oxford Suite Part 1 (1994)
- Red (1994)
References
- ↑ Alleyne-Johnson, Ed (2004). Echoes (CD sleeve notes). Wingspan Records.
- ↑ March Hare Music website includes album, which is still in their catalogue, at 29 May 2014, Ed is credited on the sleeve, there is a photo on the reverse of the sleeve on the company website.
- ↑ "Ed Alleyne-Johnson | Artist". Official Charts. 18 June 1994. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
- ↑ Early Life, New Model Army Period and Solo work information originally sourced from published sleeve notes accompanying the 2012 Purple Violin Concerto – 20th Anniversary Edition album (Catalogue no. EDSK7026; label, Edsel).
External links
- Official Website of Ed Alleyne-Johnson
- Unofficial site of Ed and Denyze Alleyne-Johnson
- Video of Ed Alleyne-Johnson busking in Chester on YouTube
- Review of Ed Alleyne-Johnson's work, with sample
- Ed Alleyne-Johnson Facebook page
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