Evelyn Morris

Evelyn Ida Morris, also known as Pikelet, is a musician from the outer suburbs of Melbourne, Australia.[1] Although playing piano from a young age Morris's career in music began as a hardcore/punk-obsessed drummer, performing in many bands but mostly in Baseball[2] and True Radical Miracle. In 2003 Morris switched from drum kit to a mix of instruments and a loop pedal for recordings as Pikelet.[3] The project employs delay pedals, piano accordion, guitar, drums, and other forms of percussion.[4]

Morris does not identify as either male or female and prefers to use "they", "them" and "their" as pronouns.[5]

The name "Pikelet" comes from Evelyn's mother, who used to spoil her kids with pikelets (Australian pancake) when she was a little short of money. "She always had eggs, she always had flour and powdered milk in the cupboard, so she would just throw together pikelets", Evelyn told Mess+Noise in 2007. "It was a really big deal for me, but I found out later that it was just what she did when she had nothing else".[6]

Pikelet released their self-titled album in 2007.[1] They have toured throughout Australia, Europe and New Zealand playing with acts including Frida Hyvönen,[7] Jens Lekman,[8] Beirut, Camera Obscura, Darren Hanlon, The Blow, Sufjan Stevens, Broadcast and Ned Collette.

They released four albums; Pikelet (2007), Stem (2010), Calluses (2013) and Tronc (2016) on the Chapter Music label. Not So Still is the title of their 2009 EP released on Special Awards Records.

From 2010 Pikelet has frequently referred to a band consisting of Morris, Shags Chamberlain, Tarquin Manek and Matthew Cox. Later releases have been described as "deep psych pop", and songs have been written collaboratively.[9]

They played at the Melbourne International Arts Festival in 2010, and Morris was a speaker at the 2010 Melbourne live music rally.

Morris provided the score for the Australian film Acute Misfortune, an adaptation of the biography of Adam Cullen by Erik Jensen, directed by Thomas M. Wright.[10]

Morris issued a predominantly wordless, piano-based self-titled album in 2018.[5]

On 18 March 2019, Morris released the final Pikelet album, Goodbye.[11]

Discography

As Pikelet

  • Pikelet (Chapter Music, 2007)
  • Pre-Flight Jitters (Sabbatical, 2008)
  • Not So Still (Special Awards Records, 2009)
  • Stem (Chapter Music, 2010)
  • Calluses (Chapter Music, 2013)
  • Tronc (Chapter Music, 2016)
  • Goodbye (Baby Race Records, 2019)

As Evelyn Ida Morris

  • Evelyn Ida Morris (Milk! Records, 2018)
gollark: HAHAHAHAHAHA
gollark: They do actions. They're just bad actions.
gollark: Nobody is doing *anything* about the imminent [REDACTED] apioform █████ ██████ ███████████ ████ in 2026, either.
gollark: I mean, the MiniLM thing Minoteaur prototypes use for semantic search is only 80MB on disk so probably about the same in RAM.
gollark: ddg! Bitter lesson (AI)

References

  1. "Pikelet's sweet as". The Age. 25 May 2007. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  2. "Snowman, Baseball, Stature:Statue @ The Zoo, Brisbane". FasterLouder. 22 July 2008. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  3. "SoKo, Pikelet and The Harpoons @ The Corner, Melbourne". FasterLouder. 6 January 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  4. "Melbourne musicians go all loopy". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 16 October 2008. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  5. "Evelyn Ida Morris, former punk drummer, explores gender identity through piano music". ABC News.
  6. Sarlos, Eliza "The Pikelet Recipe" Mess+Noise, 11 February 2007 Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  7. "A gilded ride into a much deeper place". The Age. 29 January 2010. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  8. "O'Questrada: Concerto do Dia". Cotonete. Optimus Clix. 17 July 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2010.
  9. "Calluses, by Pikelet". Chapter Music.
  10. "Learning More Language Around Gender & Moving on From Pikelet". The Music.
  11. Frostick, James (1 March 2019). "Listen: Pikelet – 'Plovers'". Weirdo Wasteland. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.