The Flying Luttenbachers | |
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Origin | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
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Members | Weasel Walter, drums, guitar, bass, keyboards, woodwinds, electronics, main composer Luke Polipnick, bass guitar (2023-present), James Paul Nadien, drums (2024-present) |
Past members | Hal Russell, tenor and soprano saxes, trumpet, vibraphone, drums, co founder (1991-1992) Chad Organ, tenor sax, moog synthesizer, baritone sax (1992-1994) Ken Vandermark, tenor sax, Bb and bass clarinets (1992-1994) Jeb Bishop, bass, Casio keyboard, trombone (1993-1994, 2022) Dylan Posa, guitar, Casio keyboard (1993-1994, 1998) Chuck Falzone, guitar, bass (1995-1998) William Pisarri, bass, Bb clarinet, voice, etc. (1995-1998) Aaron Dilloway, drums (1997) Kurt Johnson, bass, contrabass (1998-2000) Michael Colligan, tenor sax, Bb and alto clarinets, etc. (1998-2000) Julie Pomerleau, violin (1998) Fred Lonberg-Holm, cello (1998-2000) Alex Perkolup, bass (2001-2002, 2022) Jonathan Hischke, bass (2001-2002) Ed Rodriguez, guitar, bass (2003-2006) Mike Green, bass (2003-2005, 2006) Mick Barr, guitar, bass (2005) Rob Pumpelly, guitar, bass (2006) Tony Dryer, bass (2006) Chris Welcome, guitar (2017) Evan Lipson, bass (2018) Brandon Seabrook, guitar (2018-2019) Henry Kaiser, guitar (2007, 2019) Wendy Eisenberg, guitar (2019) Tim Dahl, bass (2017-2021) Matt Nelson, tenor sax (2018-2021) Alex Ward, guitar (2019) Katie Battistoni, guitar (2019-2021) Sam Ospovat, drums (2020-2021) Charlie Werber, drums (2022-2024) |
Website | www |
The Flying Luttenbachers are an American instrumental noise rock band led by multi-instrumentalist, composer, improviser and producer Weasel Walter. [1]
The Flying Luttenbachers have created a body of work focused on musical extremity and dissonance. Their music ranges from intense all-acoustic free improvisation to complex and modernistic rock composition, and from electronic noise to punk-inspired jazz. [2] Walter has been quoted as saying he has drawn musical inspiration from the fields of punk, death metal, free jazz, and no wave. [3]
The Flying Luttenbachers formed in December 1991 in Chicago, Illinois, as a punk jazz trio, with Hal Russell (tenor and soprano saxes, trumpet, vibraphone, and drums; co founder), Chad Organ (tenor sax, moog synthesizer, and baritone sax) and Weasel Walter (drums, guitar, bass, keyboards, woodwinds, electronics, and main composer). The band derived their moniker from Russell's birth name, Harold Luttenbacher. [4] Russell left the band in June 1992, and was soon replaced by Ken Vandermark for the recording of The Flying Luttenbachers' first 7″ record.
Since its formation, the band's personnel have changed several times under Walter's leadership. The band has featured several free jazz and experimental rock musicians including Fred Lonberg-Holm, Kurt Johnson, Jeb Bishop, Alex Perkolup, Mick Barr, Ed Rodriguez, Mike Green, and Jonathan Hischke. The Flying Luttenbachers have toured Europe and the US extensively with bands including The Locust, Arab On Radar, Lightning Bolt, U.S. Maple, Erase Errata, Bobby Conn, and Wolf Eyes.
Walter moved from Chicago to Oakland, California, in 2003, [5] and then again to the San Francisco Bay Area. [6] He refreshed The Flying Luttenbachers with the addition of bassist Mike Green, guitarist Ed Rodrigues and later Mick Barr. The band played their final concert in November 2006 before officially disbanding in November 2007 with the release of a studio album (recorded solo by Walter).
In 2017, after a 10-year hiatus, The Flying Luttenbachers reformed, accepting an invitation to play at the Sonic Protest festival. [7] Walter (on drums) was joined by guitarist Chris Welcome and bassist Tim Dahl. The group opened three shows for Oh Sees in October 2018 [8] before touring Europe in April 2019. [9]
In 2019, a quartet version of the band released Shattered Dimension. Joining Walter (on drums) was saxophonist Matt Nelson, bassist Tim Dahl, and guitarist Brandon Seabrook. Over the next few years, the band's varying lineup included bassist Evan Lipson; guitarists Henry Kaiser, Wendy Eisenberg, Katie Battistoni, and Alex Ward; and drummer Sam Ospovat. [10]
Since 1996’s Revenge album, the Flying Luttenbachers’ musical output has been underlined by a gradually unravelling storyline concerning the self-obliteration of the planet Earth and the resulting aftermath. The 2006 album Cataclysm concerns an interstellar battle between two monolithic entities: The Void (a dark, silent spectre detailed in 2004’s album of the same name) and The Iridescent Behemoth (a massive planetoid being whose tale was told in 2003’s complex Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder album). The music energetically utilizes deliberate harmonic dissonance and the material operates on a principle of intelligent transformation of concise amounts of interrelated themes.[ citation needed ]
Hal Russell was an American free jazz composer, band leader and multi-instrumentalist who performed mainly on saxophone and drums but occasionally on trumpet or vibraphone. Russell's fiery music was marked by significant humor, not unlike much of Dutch drummer Han Bennink's output. His music was so accessible that People magazine hailed The Finnish Swiss Tour on ECM as one of its top 5 albums of the year. Russell set the table for the free improv and free jazz scene which exploded later in the 1990s in Chicago.
Weasel Walter is an American composer, improviser, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and founder of ugEXPLODE Records. Walter's work has been informed by techniques and traditions of music including Avant-garde, experimental, no wave, free jazz, extreme metal, punk jazz, hardcore punk, noise, new music and free improvisation. He coined the term "brutal prog" to describe the aggressively dissonant strain of prog played by groups like his band the Flying Luttenbachers.
Dazzling Killmen was an American math rock band from the St. Louis, Missouri area. Formed in 1990, the group issued four singles and two full-lengths before officially ending in 1995, with a majority of it released through the independent label Skin Graft Records. Taking influence from hardcore punk and jazz music, the band has been noted by critics to have helped influence genres such as math rock and post-metal.
Ex Models is an American no wave-influenced post-hardcore band based in Brooklyn, New York.
Tim Kinsella is an American musician, author, and film director from Chicago, Illinois.
U.S. Maple was an American noise rock band. The group formed in Chicago in 1995. The band consists of Al Johnson, Mark Shippy (guitarist), Pat Samson (drummer), and Todd Rittmann (guitarist).
Brise-Glace was a 1990s instrumental avant-rock "supergroup" composed of Jim O'Rourke, Darin Gray, Dylan Posa (guitar), and Thymme Jones (drums).
Jenny Hoyston is an American producer, vocalist, guitarist, and trumpeter based in Austin, Texas, United States. She composed, recorded, and toured as part of the San Francisco, California, political punk and no wave band Erase Errata from 1999 to 2015 and records and performs with William Elliott Whitmore as Hallways of Always, with former Erase Errata bandmate Ellie Erickson as Hey Jellie, and as a solo artist, at times under the name Paradise Island. She also co-produces FABULOSA Fest near Yosemite every year since 2008.
Behold… The Arctopus is an American avant-garde metal band from Brooklyn, New York City, formed in 2001.
Cheer-Accident is an American progressive rock ensemble headed by Thymme Jones. Jones took the name of the band from a Hallmark Cards shopping display, and first formed the group in 1981 with singer Jim Drummond and drummer Mike Greenlees.
Cellular Chaos is an American noise-punk band from Brooklyn New York that was founded by Weasel Walter. Music journalist Brad Cohan described the band's status as such:
"Cellular Chaos, black sheep of Brooklyn’s DIY noise-punk underground, have trudged on through myriad iterations, losing bassists at a furious clip and trading in drummers for drum machines while going label-less for a bulk of their lifespan. Still, these provocateurs have managed to churn out their gnarly and sweaty mishmash of glam raunch, rock histrionics and no wave noise-fuckery with a take-no-prisoners attitude.
Despite the roadblocks, Flying Luttenbachers mastermind Weasel Walter and vocalist Admiral Grey, the two constants of Cellular Chaos since its inception a half decade or so ago, have persevered, shoring up their lineup recently with drummer Rad Chaines and signing on with noise-rock institution Skin Graft Records.
That union has yielded fruit in the form of their Skin Graft debut, Diamond Teeth Clenched, a scorched-earth statement propelled by animalistic wailing, neck-snapping guitar blowouts and a rhythm section to die for."
Tim Dahl is a professional electric and double bass player, vocalist, keyboardist and composer living in New York City. He is best known as the bass player of the noise-rock band Child Abuse and Lydia Lunch Retrovirus. He also writes and performs for the jazz ensemble Pulverize The Sound.
Live at WNUR 2-6-92 is a live album by The Flying Luttenbachers, released in 1992 through ugEXPLODE.
Constructive Destruction is an album by the Flying Luttenbachers. It was released in 1994 by ugEXPLODE.
Revenge is the third album by The Flying Luttenbachers, released on August 20, 1996 through Skin Graft Records.
Gods of Chaos is the fourth album by The Flying Luttenbachers, released on November 17, 1998 through Skin Graft Records.
Big Head Eddie is the debut album by American jazz reedist Ken Vandermark, which was recorded in 1993 and released on Platypus.
Child Abuse is a noise rock trio featuring Tim Dahl, Eric Lau, and Oran Canfield (drums) based out of Brooklyn, New York. Originally formed in 2004 as a duo with keyboardist/singer Luke Calzonetti, and drummer Oran Canfield, the group expanded into a trio with the addition of bassist Tim Dahl in the summer of 2005. In 2011, Luke Calzonetti left the band and was replaced by Eric Lau on keyboards. It was during this lineup change that Dahl added vocals in addition to his role as the bassist. Child Abuse has shared bills with many bands including Suicide, Ruins, Arab on Radar, The Locust, Thee Oh Sees, AIDS Wolf, Liturgy, Rhys Chatham and many more. In 2014 Child Abuse joined the Skin Graft Records label for their third album Trouble in Paradise. This same lineup was used for their fourth and most recent album Imaginary Enemy.
16-17 is a band from Basel, Switzerland. Their music combines punk rock, hardcore punk, jazz and industrial music.
Jeb Bishop is primarily known as an improvisational jazz trombonist. However he occasionally plays other instruments on both jazz and rock recordings as noted.
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