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Peter Gutteridge

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Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter

Name
  
Peter Gutteridge

Labels
  
Flying Nun Records


Years active
  
1978–2014

Instruments
  
Guitar, keyboards

Role
  
Musician

Peter Gutteridge Peter Gutteridge Member of the Clean and the Chills Dead

Associated acts
  
The Clean, Snapper, The Chills

Died
  
September 15, 2014, Auckland, New Zealand

Music groups
  
The Clean (1978 – 1979), Snapper, The Chills

Albums
  
Clean Out of Our Minds, Soft Bomb, Submarine Bells, Shotgun Blossom, Kaleidoscope World

Peter gutteridge pure no 2


Peter Gutteridge (19 May 1961 – 15 September 2014) was a musician from Dunedin, New Zealand, credited with pioneering the "Dunedin Sound" with The Clean and The Chills.

Contents

Peter Gutteridge Peter Gutteridge Archives Sound it Out

Peter gutteridge born in the wrong time live in brooklyn ny


Life and career

Peter Gutteridge RIP Peter Gutteridge

Gutteridge was a founding member of The Clean in 1978, alongside Hamish and David Kilgour, whom Gutteridge had known from his schooldays. He was a founding member of The Chills in 1980, staying with the band for only a few months. He left because he found the environment "too controlling."

Peter Gutteridge static2stuffconz13608092527088304708jpg

In 1982–83 he was a member of The Cartilage Family, alongside Shayne Carter., for their two performances. After leaving the band, he rejoined with The Clean's Kilgour brothers to form The Great Unwashed in 1983, bringing four songs he had written for The Cartilage Family. The band later performed on the John Peel Show.

Peter Gutteridge Extended Play Peter Gutteridge Early Dunedin Scene

Gutteridge later formed the band Snapper, with whom he performed from 1986. Other bands in which Gutteridge has been involved have included the Alpaca Brothers and The Puddle.

Peter Gutteridge Snapper Person AudioCulture

Gutteridge released one solo album, Pure, on Xpressway Records in 1989.

Peter Gutteridge died on 15 September 2014, in Auckland, New Zealand.

Legacy

SPIN Magazine noted, "the lilting looseness of bands like Yo La Tengo, Ducktails, Beach Fossils, and Twerps owes a fair debt to the sound that Gutteridge helped craft."

Yo La Tengo covered "Gentle Hour" and Wooden Shjips often covered "Buddy" in concert.

Gutteridge did not particularly like being associated with the Dunedin Sound. He stated, "People didn't think about the sound of things, people put on guitars and then clanged out stuff. I just got tired of a guitar sound that wasn't thought about. I had my own personal style. I mean, I wrote [The Clean's] Point That Thing [Somewhere Else]' at 17."

Michael Hann, writing in The Guardian music blog, indicated that he derived some of his fame from his label: "Whatever Gutteridge’s feelings about his peers, he did not exist in a vacuum: part of what drew people to his work was the knowledge of the other Flying Nun bands" but that he was different and influential in his own right.

Solo

  • Pure (1989), Xpressway Records X/WAY 9
  • with Snapper

  • Shotgun Blossom (1990), Avalanche Records (ONLYLP010)
  • re-released 1992, Flying Nun Records (FN216)
  • A.D.M. (1996), Flying Nun Records (FN294)
  • Extended plays

  • Snapper (1988), Flying Nun Records (FN110)
  • Singles

  • Snapper (1988) - Charted #49 on the NZ Singles chart.
  • "Dark Sensation" / "Snapper and the Ocean" (1990)
  • "Vader" / "Gentle Hour" (1993)
  • "Alive" / "Hammerhead" (2002)
  • References

    Peter Gutteridge Wikipedia