Sweet Exorcist (band)

Sweet Exorcist was a British music duo consisting of Richard Barratt (DJ Parrot) and Richard H. Kirk. Their sound is usually categorized as techno and IDM.

Sweet Exorcist
OriginSheffield, England
GenresTechno, IDM
Years active19901994
LabelsWarp, Touch Records, Plastex
Past membersRichard Barratt
Richard H. Kirk

Career

Sweet Exorcist, which was named after a Curtis Mayfield track, was the project of Sheffield-based musicians Richard H. Kirk (Cabaret Voltaire) and Richard ‘DJ Parrot’ Barratt (later a member of All Seeing I).

Kirk and Barratt knew each other since the mid-1980s.[1] Barratt had already supported a Cabaret Voltaire tour of the UK in 1986.[1] After both worked on several tracks together, Parrot suggested making a club track with studio test tones.[1] In January 1990, the tracks were released as "Testone" on Warp. It defined the bleep techno sound, by making playful use of sampled sounds from Yellow Magic Orchestra's Computer Game (1978) and the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).[2] The next release was "Clonk", also on Warp. For both singles, remix versions were released.

In 1991, the duo released the C.C.E.P., which later came as a CD version, C.C.C.D. and was also known as Clonks Coming. The band released the album Spirit Guide to Low Tech on Touch Records.

2011 saw the release of the compilation album RetroActivity on Warp.[3]

Discography

Albums

  • 1994: Spirit Guide to Low Tech (Touch Records)
  • 2011: RetroActivity (compilation album; Warp)

Singles & EPs

  • 1990: "Testone" (Warp)
  • 1990: "Testone Remixes" (Warp)
  • 1990: "Clonk" (Warp)
  • 1990: "Per Clonk (Remix)" (Warp)
  • 1991: C.C.E.P. (Warp)
  • 1991: "Popcone" (Plastex)

References

  1. Interview Sweet Exorcist/Richard H. Kirk: This Used To Be The Future, themilkfactory.co.uk, 2011, retrieved 23 February 2014
  2. Dan Sicko, Bill Brewster: Techno Rebels: The Renegades of Electronic Funk. Wayne State University, 2010, ISBN 978-0814334386
  3. Sweet Exorcist: RetroActivity (Warp Records), themilkfactory.co.uk, 2011, retrieved 23 February 2014
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