Christ. (musician)

christ.
Birth name Christopher Horne
Also known as Chris H.
Origin Scotland
Genres Electronic
Occupation(s) Musician
Years active 1996-present
Labels Benbecula, Hyperact, Parallax Sounds, XL
Associated acts Hexagon Sun Boards of Canada

Christopher Horne, known on-stage as christ., is a Scottish musician. He disclaims any religious meaning in the stage name; he describes it as short for his full name, and the full stop or period as indicating that status as an abbreviation.

christ. performs as a solo electronic music artist, and his music is often likened to that of the (also Scottish) electronic group Boards of Canada. In fact, credited as Chris H., he was an early participant in the nebulous Hexagon Sun collective from which Boards of Canada emerged, and was a collaborator with the group until approximately 1995. He appeared on the Twoism album, reissued by Warp in 2002.[1] Horne’s departure was amicable and he thanks the duo on his Pylonesque EP issued on the Benbecula Records label in 2001. He followed this release with a full-length album Metamorphic Reproduction Miracle on the same label which was very well received within the genre.[2][3]

christ. has toured the UK, Europe and Japan and performed a live session for John Peel at Maida Vale studios in London on 17 December 2003. This session became notable among Peel’s fans as being the only known occasion upon which the legendary DJ requested an encore.[4] He released his fourth full-length album, his second for Benbecula, on 22 January 2007 (after delays, due to manufacturing and marketing issues extending past the intended November 2006 date).

Discography

Albums

EPs

Live

References

  1. Matador Records Archived 18 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. themilkfactory.co.uk Archived 4 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. Dusted Magazine (14 Aug 2003)
  4. Benbecula Records (archived 21 Jul 2011)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.