Paul Clark (keyboardist)

Paul Clark
Background information
Born (1962-06-12) June 12, 1962
Leeds, Yorkshire, England
Genres electronic music
Occupation(s) Musician, Photographer
Instruments Digital Audio Workstation, Standalone Synthesizer, Analog Modular Synthesizer, Electro Mechanical Keyboards, Theremin, Guitar, Assorted Mechanical Keyboards
Associated acts The Bolshoi
Website Paul Clark

Paul Clark is an English musician best known as the keyboard player of post-punk band The Bolshoi. As a solo electronic artist he released a digitally remixed collection of analog four track recordings originally recorded between 1989 and 1991 titled Starship Oak, and is currently working on a new album with producer Mick Glossop titled Songs From Space.

Early life and education

Paul Wilson Clark was born in Leeds, England, and raised in Lofthouse, near Wakefield. At 18, Clark went to Jacob Kramer College of Art in Leeds to study Advertising Design. At around the same time he played keyboards with primarily Hard Rock, Progressive and New Wave bands before moving to London in 1984.[1]

Career

1984–1985: The Intimates

Shortly after moving to London Paul formed The Intimates with Jo Broadberry (Jo Broadberry and The Standouts), Danique Osborne and Drew. Mick Rossi (Slaughter And The Dogs) and John Altman (Nick Cotton in Eastenders) also made appearances on their only recording. It was around this time that Paul was introduced to Mick Ronson and shortly afterwards met The Bolshoi manager Pete McCarthy.[2]

1985–1990: The Bolshoi

After meeting The Bolshoi in a SE London pub one dark and stormy night Paul later joined as keyboard player and a few weeks later made his first appearance with the band at what turned out to be their first sold out show at The Marquee Club on London's Wardour Street. Several months later the band recorded Friends, their first full-length album, at Townhouse Two, with producer Mick Glossop.[3]

Several tours, singles and another full-length album later the band disbanded.[4]

1992–1993: Rorschach Test

After moving to Seattle and continuing work on his solo recording Paul attended a show by Seattle-based industrial band Rorschach Test and shortly thereafter joined as keyboard player. Several months later the band recorded a demo tape for Island Records at Sonic Ranch, Texas with Neil Kernon as producer but Paul later decided he couldn't commit to a touring schedule and left the band.[5]

1994–: Paul Clark

While continuing to record music for a solo record Paul purchased electronicmusic.com in 1995 with a view to using the domain to get copies of new software to review on the site and also use in the recording of his album, but the popularity of the domain started taking more of his time and the recording fell by the wayside. A couple of years later Paul was hired by encoding.com to be one of only a handful of digital media compressionists worldwide to prepare movie trailers for playback on the internet.[6]

After the .com bubble burst in 2001 Paul started a real estate media business and started recording music again. By 2008, with several hours of music laying around on analog cassette tape, CD-ROM discs and removable hard drives, Paul began the process of importing all the music into Logic Pro with the help of mastering engineer and author of Desktop Mastering Steve Turnidge, and mixed down ten tracks that became Paul's first solo album Starship Oak.[7]

See also

References

  1. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 1.
  2. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 2.
  3. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 3.
  4. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 4.
  5. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 5.
  6. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 6.
  7. Clark, Paul. ‘’About Paul Clark’’. www.paulclark.com/about.html, 2016, p. 7.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.