Merz (musician)

Last updated

Merz
Merz nyc2008.jpg
Merz (Conrad Lambert) performing at Joe's Pub, New York City, 17 September 2008
Background information
Birth nameConrad Ewart Lambert
Origin Dorset, England
Genres Alternative, electronica, folk
Years active1996–present
Labels Epic (1998–2001)
Grönland (2004–2009)
Accidental (2012–present)
Website merz.co.uk

Conrad Ewart Lambert, better known as "Merz" is an English multi-instrumentalist, singer and songwriter. He has released seven albums.

Contents

Biography

Born Conrad Lambert in Dorset, England, he grew up in West Bretton & Huddersfield, Yorkshire and moved to London in 1992.

Merz had three minor hits in 1999/2000 in the UK Singles Chart with Many Weathers Apart, Lovely Daughter and Lotus. [1] October 25th, 1999 his eponymous debut album was released on Epic Records. The album combined elements of 90’s electronica with strains of pastoral folk and drew wide critical acclaim. [2] However, the commercial success which had been predicted by many in the music industry and press failed to materialise, and Merz withdrew from his recording contract with Epic's parent company, Sony BMG, in 2001.

His second album, Loveheart, surfaced five years later on the independent Grönland label. It also won plaudits, was well received in the music press [3] and re-established Merz as a singular British musician.

Subsequently Merz toured UK & Europe extensively, played at festivals as diverse as UK's Green Man Festival, Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland and SXSW in USA. More acclaim followed in the US, where the track Dangerous Heady Love Scheme was iTunes Single of the Week, and Postcard From A Dark Star, Presume Too Much, Toy, Credo, Serene and Somewhere To Run were all selected as ‘Today's Top Tune’ for LA radio station KCRW.

The third Merz album Moi et Mon Camion (2008) was written on the move, as Merz was relocating from Bristol to the English coast to the rural city of Bath then subsequently to Bern the capital city of Switzerland. The album features two collaborations with Paul Hartnoll of Orbital.

Recorded at Peter Gabriel's Real World Studios just outside Bath, Rockfield Studios in Wales, produced with Bruno Ellingham the record features a few notable musicians: Charlie Jones, some time bass player with Robert Plant & Jimmy Page and Goldfrapp, Clive Deamer, drummer for Portishead and Radiohead, with The Earlies guesting on backing vocals. This 3rd album also gained Merz much critical acclaim [4] and saw Merz undertake his first pan-USA tour.

In 2012 Merz recorded his fourth album No Compass Will Find Home collaborating with electronic music pioneer Matthew Herbert on the production and mix. It was released in UK January 2013 by Accidental Records. Again the UK press praised the album, The Sunday Times making it Album of the Week [5] calling it a 'must buy' record. The XynthiaEP was released around the same time containing additional songs and a haunting Dimlite remix of The Hunting Owl.

On 27 September 2013 Merz, along with musicians Shahzad Ismaily and Julian Sartorius, performed a show in London consisting of only one song: Many Weathers Apart. Variations and extemporizations on elements of the original song and its ten different remixes were incorporated into a forty-five minute set. [6] It marked 15 years since the original release of the record.

In November 2013 a Drum and Vocal Renditions version of Merz's album No Compass Will Find Home was released by drummer/sound artist Julian Sartorius. Only the vocals from the original album were used to re-create the songs in drum and percussion arrangements. This record was released by Merz and Sartorius' respective labels Accidental Records and Everest Records. The album was toured as Merz feat. Sartorius Drum Ensemble with a line-up of four drummers (directed by Sartorius) and Merz on vocals. [7]

November 2015 Accidental Records released the fifth Merz album Thinking Like A Mountain, mixed by Matthew Herbert and featuring collaborations with musicians Shahzad Ismaily, Julian Sartorius, Dimlite, Gyda Valtysdottir and Ewan Pearson. Mojo Magazine called it “Merz's brave new beginning”. Uncut wrote “Strong return. Intimate ambient sophistication.” [8] Upon release it became one of the most played albums on KCRW Radio.

In June 2018 Merz created a performance titled A Monastic Gig (the title an homage to the Alice Coltrane album A Monastic Trio) and invited the American musician Laraaji and American visual artist Jed Ochmanek to join in the collaboration.

The event was held at Dampfzentrale Bern, transforming the ex-power station venue into a monastic vault. This atypical concert, featuring the live music created by Laraaji and Merz and the art, film and set design of Jed Ochmanek engineered an atmosphere similar to recitals in churches: calm, sublimity, respect, humility; free of old-world religiousness and iconography. The audience were requested to enter the hall in silence, listen and observe in silence and leave the hall in silence.

The latest Merz release Dreams of Sleep and Wakes of Sound is a collaborative, mainly instrumental album containing music created with both Laraaji and Shahzad Ismaily respectively. Described by Electronic Sound Mag as “A rewardingly singular and cerebral work that impresses hugely”  the album was selected as The Guardian newspaper’s Contemporary Album of the Week. [9] The cover art and double vinyl gatefold art was created and designed by Jed Ochmanek and Swiss design collective Maison Standard.

Merz has also co-written, appeared as a vocalist and musician with Victoria Williams, Fred Frith, Arto Lindsay, Orbital (band), Guy Called Gerald, Tom Middleton, Maxim (The Prodigy), Leftfield, Lemn Sissay, Leo Abrahams, Dive Index, Dan Le Sac, Dorit Chrysler, Tythe, Anne Marie Almedal, Manuel Troller, has created remixes for Matthew Herbert, Dan Le Sac, Hayley Ross, produced the debut album of the band Jon Hood, and has lectured a songwriting masterclass at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts.

Merz was the 2018-20 Associated Artist at the Dampfzentrale Centre for Music and Contemporary Dance. [10]

He is currently based in Joshua Tree, California.

Discography

Albums

EPs

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vigilantes of Love</span> Musical artist

Vigilantes of Love is an American rock band fronted by Bill Mallonee, with many secondary players drawn from the musician pool in and around Athens, Georgia, United States. In its later manifestations in the later 1990s and early 2000s, Mallonee usually sang, played lead and rhythm guitar and harmonica, although in earlier bands he played drums.

<i>Flex-Able</i> 1984 studio album by Steve Vai

Flex-Able is the debut studio album by American virtuoso guitarist Steve Vai. This was his first as a solo artist, and was created in Stucco Blue, a shed converted into a studio in Vai's old back garden. It is very different from many of his other albums, and is largely influenced by Frank Zappa, whom Vai was a member of his backing band from 1980 to 1983. Flex-Able does not rely as much on massive guitar arrangements and shred moments as the rest of his output from the 1990s onwards, with the exception of Leftovers which is a compilation of bonus tracks and remasters from his sessions at 'Stucco Blue'.

<i>Haughty Melodic</i> 2005 Mike Doughty Album

Haughty Melodic is an album by Mike Doughty released on May 3, 2005. The album title is an anagram of the artist's fuller name; Michael Doughty. Doughty described the album as "a bunch of songs about yearning, redemption, happiness and hope." The album's sound is dense, with multi-tracked guitars, horns, keyboards, and Doughty's own voice multiplied over himself in harmony; a departure both from the sounds of Soul Coughing and Doughty's solo acoustic work.

<i>Signify</i> (album) 1996 studio album by Porcupine Tree

Signify is the fourth studio album by British progressive rock band Porcupine Tree. It was released in September 1996 and later re-released in 2003 with a second disc of demos, which had previously been released on the b-side cassette tape Insignificance, and a third time, on vinyl, on 9 May 2011. It was the first album that frontman Steven Wilson recorded with the band on board from the beginning; previous albums had been essentially solo efforts with occasional help from other musicians.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laraaji</span> American multi-instrumentalist playing piano, zither and mbira (b. 1943)

Laraaji is an American multi-instrumentalist specializing in piano, zither and mbira. His albums include the 1980 release Ambient 3: Day of Radiance, produced by Brian Eno as part of his Ambient series.

Robin Edmond Scott is an English singer and founder of the music project M. His career encompasses six decades.

<i>Kilimanjaro</i> (The Teardrop Explodes album) 1980 studio album by The Teardrop Explodes

Kilimanjaro is the debut album by the neo-psychedelic Liverpool band The Teardrop Explodes, released on 10 October 1980. It contains versions of the band's early singles – "Sleeping Gas", "Bouncing Babies", "Treason" and "When I Dream"; reissues of the album also include their biggest hit, "Reward". The album also includes the song "Books" – originally a song by Julian Cope's previous band, The Crucial Three, it was also recorded by Echo & the Bunnymen. In 2000, Q magazine placed Kilimanjaro at number 95 in its list of the "100 Greatest British Albums Ever".

<i>Dreams Less Sweet</i> 1983 studio album by Psychic TV

Dreams Less Sweet is the second studio album by English experimental band Psychic TV, released in 1983. It was the last Psychic TV album to feature co-founder Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson.

<i>Dread Beat an Blood</i> 1978 studio album by Poet and the Roots

Dread Beat an' Blood is the debut album by British reggae band Poet and the Roots released in 1978 on the Front Line label. It was produced by Vivian Weathers and Linton Kwesi Johnson. The "Poet" is dub poet Johnson and "the Roots" are Dennis Bovell, Lloyd "Jah Bunny" Donaldson, Desmond Craig, Winston Curniffe, Everald Forrest, Floyd Lawson, John Varnom, Lila Weathers and Vivian Weathers. Vivian Weathers and Winston Curniffe were school friends of Johnson's. They all attended Tulse Hill Secondary School. Most of the tracks are based on poems that first appeared in Johnson's 1975 book of poetry Dread Beat an' Blood.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">White Magic (band)</span> American psychedelic folk rock group

White Magic is a psychedelic folk rock group formed in Brooklyn and led by singer/guitarist/pianist/composer Mira Billotte. Billotte performs under this moniker both with accompaniment or solo, using a daf, shruti box, and singing a cappella. Invoking both traditional and experimental folk, White Magic's sound ranges from loud psychedelia to meditative trance.

<i>Homeland</i> (Laurie Anderson album) 2010 studio album by Laurie Anderson

Homeland is the seventh studio album by Laurie Anderson, released in 2010. A loose concept album about life in the United States, it was her first album of new material since 2001's Life on a String.

<i>Your Turn</i> 2013 studio album by Marc Ribot

Your Turn is a studio album by American guitarist Marc Ribot's Ceramic Dog which was released in April 2013 on Northern Spy Records.

<i>Take Me to the Land of Hell</i> 2013 studio album by Plastic Ono Band

Take Me to the Land of Hell is the 2013 album by Yoko Ono's band Plastic Ono Band. It is her fifteenth solo album overall and Ono's third since reforming the Plastic Ono Band in 2009 with her son Sean Lennon. It features guests Yuka C Honda, Keigo "Cornelius" Oyamada, Hirotaka "Shimmy" Shimizu, Yuko Araki, Nels Cline, Tune-Yards, Questlove, Ad-Rock & Mike D, Michael Leonhart, Bill Dobrow, Jared Samuel, Shahzad Ismaily, Lenny Kravitz, Andrew Wyatt, Erik Friedlander, Lois Martin, Joyce Hammann, Thomas Bartlett, Douglas Wieselman, Julian Lage, Toyoaki Mishima, Toru Takayama, Christopher Sean Powell, Christopher Allen, Andre Kellman, Michael H. Brauer, Bob Ludwig, Kevin Harper, Mark Bengston, Geoff Thorpe and Greg Kadel.

<i>What For?</i> (album) 2015 studio album by Toro y Moi

What For? is the fourth studio album by American recording artist Toro y Moi, released on April 7, 2015, by Carpark Records. The album includes 10 tracks at a run time of 36:38. Prior to the album release, Toro y Moi revealed three teaser tracks. These tracks include: "Empty Nesters", "Buffalo", and "Run Baby Run". This release follows his 2013 studio album Anything in Return.

<i>Crime Cutz</i> 2016 EP by Holy Ghost!

Crime Cutz is the second EP by American synth-pop duo Holy Ghost!, released on April 29, 2016, through DFA Records. Its title came from the name of a person of the same name who offered a drum break for the title track that was not included in the final mix. Containing a 1980s-style atmosphere and noted by one reviewer to be the duo's cleanest sounding release so far, the extended play was influenced by Russian disco records Frankel found on eBay. DFA released the title track as a single in February 2016 to promote the EP's release. The EP went on to receive positive reviews from music critics.

Jennifer Turner is an American singer-songwriter, musician and producer.

<i>Lily-O</i> 2014 studio album by Sam Amidon

Lily-O is the fifth album by singer and multi-instrumentalist Sam Amidon. The album is a collection of reworked folksongs, arranged and sung by Amidon, accompanying himself on guitar and banjo, with a band consisting of Bill Frisell, Shahzad Ismaily and Chris Vatalaro. The album was recorded and mixed by Valgeir Sigurðsson at Greenhouse Studios in Reykjavik, Iceland and was released on Nonesuch Records in 2014.

<i>The Following Mountain</i> 2017 studio album by Sam Amidon

The Following Mountain is the sixth album by singer and multi-instrumentalist Sam Amidon, released in 2017 by Nonesuch Records. It is Amidon's first album of original compositions, the previous albums having been made up primarily of re-worked traditional folk songs. The album was produced by Leo Abrahams with additional production from Shahzad Ismaily, and it includes contributions from legendary free jazz drummer Milford Graves, as well as the saxophonist Sam Gendel, drummer Chris Vatalaro, multi-instrumentalist Ismaily, and Jimi Hendrix percussionist Juma Sultan on the song "Juma Mountain." Amidon himself plays fiddle, banjo, acoustic and electric guitars, and Moog synthesizer on the album, along with his own vocals.

<i>YRU Still Here?</i> 2018 studio album by Marc Ribots Ceramic Dog

YRU Still Here? is a studio album by American guitarist Marc Ribot's Ceramic Dog which was released in April 2018 on Northern Spy Records.

Gyða Valtýsdóttir is an Icelandic musician and multi-instrumentalist and winner of the 2019 Nordic Council Music Prize. She was an original member of the experimental music group Múm and has released four full-length solo albums, created music for films, installations, theater and dance.

References

  1. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 361. ISBN   1-904994-10-5.
  2. groenlandrecords (21 February 2008), Merz on Later with Jools Holland, archived from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 28 September 2017
  3. "Album: Merz" . The Independent. 14 October 2005. Archived from the original on 12 May 2022. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
  4. "Album Review: Merz - Moi Et Mon Camion". DrownedInSound. Archived from the original on 28 September 2017. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
  5. Davis, Mark Edwards, Dan Cairns, Stewart Lee and Clive (2013). "Pop, Rock & Jazz, Jan 6". The Sunday Times. ISSN   0956-1382 . Retrieved 28 September 2017.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. MERZvideos (16 December 2014), Merz - Many Weathers Apart /variations\ 'One Song Show' feat. Shahzad Ismaily & Julian Sartorius, archived from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 28 September 2017
  7. Zatter (4 February 2014), Merz feat. Sartorius Drum Ensemble - The Hunting Owl (Julian Sartorius Drum & Vocal Rendition), archived from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 28 September 2017
  8. "Video Premiere: Merz - Ten Gorgeous Blocks" . Retrieved 28 September 2017.
  9. "Merz/Laraaji/Ismaily: Dreams of Sleep and Wakes of Sound review | John Lewis's contemporary album of the month". The Guardian. 21 June 2019. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  10. "Associated Artists". Dampfzentrale . Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  11. "Laraaji, Merz and Shahzad Ismaily: Dreams of Sleep and Wakes of Sound — an experimental odyssey". www.ft.com. 5 July 2019. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  12. Lewis, John (21 June 2019). "Merz/Laraaji/Ismaily: Dreams of Sleep and Wakes of Sound review". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 12 November 2020.