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Mark Brydon

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Birth name
  
Mark Errington Brydon

Name
  
Mark Brydon

Role
  
Bassist


Mark Brydon risn murphy and mark brydon people Pinterest Films and Books


Also known as
  
Captain Thirdeye, DJ Plankton, The Mole Man, Skymoo

Born
  
22 December 1960 (age 63) (
1960-12-22
)

Origin
  
Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England

Occupation(s)
  
Composer, musician, arranger, recording engineer, producer

Instruments
  
Bass guitar, keyboards, guitar, programming

Associated acts
  
Moloko, Chakk, Krush, Cloud 9, Fon Force, Hula

Music groups
  
Moloko (1995 – 2006), Chakk, The Funky Worm

Genres
  
Electronica, Trip hop, House music, Acid jazz, Alternative dance

Albums
  
Statues, Do You Like My Tight Swe, Things to Make and Do, I Am Not a Doctor, All Back to the Mine

Similar People
  
Roisin Murphy, Eddie Stevens, Boris Dlugosch, Boy George, Simon Henwood

Mark Errington Brydon (born 22 December 1960) is an English bassist, guitarist, composer, arranger, recording engineer, remix artist and producer best known as a member of the group Moloko.

Contents

Mark Brydon Here There Everywhere The Storm Before The Calm Our Last

Previous work

Mark Brydon Mark Brydon Best known as the other half of Moloko but it Flickr

He comes from Sunderland, England, but established himself in the Sheffield music scene, most notably with the funk band Chakk whose advance from MCA Records financed the building of FON Studios. Before its bankruptcy, Brydon had divested himself of his interests in legendary FON Studios, for which he did everything from designing the studio architecture to hand-choosing equipment.

Mark Brydon Sing it back acoustic YouTube

Brydon made significant contributions to the 1987 British pop hit "House Arrest" by Krush. He furthered his career with contributions to records and remixes such as "The Funky Worm" (whose single "Hustle! (To the Music...)" would become a number one hit on Billboard's Dance Club Songs Chart in 1988) and efforts by The Human League, Psychic TV, Boy George, Art of Noise, Sly and Robbie, Cabaret Voltaire and other groups. As a bass player / producer, he was a member of Chakk and Cloud Nine.

Moloko

Mark Brydon Mark Brydon Photos 3 of 3 Lastfm

His biggest contribution to British art pop to date would come as a result of meeting Róisín Murphy, with whom he formed Moloko, at a cocktail party. The two hit it off immediately, and began working together first as a duo for two albums, then bringing in a full line-up to tour and record the last two Moloko albums. Moloko went on indefinite hiatus after the release of Statues in 2003, followed by a successful tour and the release of the full length concert video 11,000 Clicks in 2004 (filmed at their final performance in Brixton, at the end of the Statues tour).

Following Moloko's indefinite break-up, Brydon focused his energies on the design of a new studio. He also continues a side career as a remixer under such aliases as DJ Plankton.

References

Mark Brydon Wikipedia