Sneha Girap (Editor)

Richard Witts

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Richard Witts

Name
  
Richard Witts

Years active
  
1978–present

TV shows
  
Oxford Road Show

Instruments
  
Percussion Keyboard

Albums
  
For All and None, Enflame

Genres
  
Music, musicology

Children
  
Rosa Witts


Richard Witts httpswwwedgehillacukmediafiles201106ric

Occupation(s)
  
Singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, author

Associated acts
  
The Passage Halle Orchestra Dreamtiger Ensemble

Role
  
Musicologist · richardwitts.com

Record labels
  
Cherry Red Records, Virgin Records

Music group
  
The Passage (1978 – 1983)

Richard witts the passage interview kanaliena gr rockzone part 1 of 2


Richard "Dick" Witts is a professional musicologist, music historian, and ex leader of 1980s band the Passage. He was born in Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire, England. He attended Clee Grammar School for Boys.

Richard Witts Richard Witts Wikipedia

He studied at the Royal Manchester College of Music and briefly at Manchester University. During this time he was a member of the Hallé Orchestra as a percussionist. During the mid-1970s he wrote for the contemporary classical music magazine Contact.

At that time, he was also involved in starting a Manchester Musicians Collective (on the model of the recently established London Musicians Collective). This led into contact with the growing punk scene and he formed the Passage, producing their recordings and singing on many of their releases.

He presented television programme Oxford Road Show in the early 1980s for the BBC from Oxford Road Studios, Manchester and was also a reporter for BBC Radio 3.

Thirty of his radio interviews and contributions are housed in the British Library Sound Archive. In 2003 he gave the Saul Seminar there on the history of music presentation in radio.

During the late 1980s he became involved in arts administration roles. He subsequently wrote a critical history of the Arts Council of Great Britain: Artist Unknown: An Alternative History of the Arts Council.

His first book, Nico – the Lives and Lies of an Icon, was a biographical study of the German singer and songwriter (Virgin Books, 1993).

Dick now lives in Liverpool and is a writer who has lectured at the University of Edinburgh, Goldsmiths College, London, the University of Surrey in Guildford and the University of Sussex. He was appointed Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh where he made a simple catalogue of the archive of Sir Donald Francis Tovey (1875–1940). In 2010 he was invited by Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, to design an Honours course in music.

His third book, a study of the music and history of The Velvet Underground, was published by Equinox (UK) and the Indiana University Press (USA) in September 2006. He has also written chapters for the following academic books: Kraftwerk: Music Non-Stop(Continuum, 2011), Mark E. Smith and the Fall: Art, Music and Politics, (Ashgate, 2010), and the Cambridge Companion To Recorded Music (Cambridge University Press, 2009).

Witts is mentioned in the book Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music. He is credited with sending a package containing some of Aphex Twin's music to Karlheinz Stockhausen. He is currently researching a book on the history of British music from 1941–2000.

Witts is consultant to the ensemble Icebreaker.

References

Richard Witts Wikipedia