Squarepusher

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Squarepusher
Tom Jenkinson on the cover of Ultravisitor
Tom Jenkinson on the cover of Ultravisitor
Background information
Birth name Thomas Jenkinson
Also known as Chaos A.D.
The Duke of Harringay
Tom Jenkinson
Squarepusher
Born January 17, 1975 (1975-01-17) (age 32)
Origin Flag of England Chelmsford, Essex, England
Genre(s) Jazz
Electronic music
Drum and Bass
Funk
Musique concrète
Occupation(s) Musician
Instrument(s) bass guitar, sampler, drum machine, synthesizer, drum kit, Classical Guitar, Keyboards, Turntable
Years active 1994 – Present
Label(s) Rephlex Records, Warp Records, Nothing Records

Squarepusher is the performing pseudonym of Tom Jenkinson, an English electronic music artist signed to Warp Records. He specialises in the electronic music genres of drum and bass, musique concrète, and acid, with a significant jazz influence.

Jenkinson was born in Chelmsford, Essex in 1975 and was educated at King Edward VI Grammar School. He went on to study Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design. A self-taught drummer and highly skilled bass guitar player, his style of extremely fast, cut-up beats mixed with fusion jazz and interlaced with synth lines and samples has gained him a cult following. He is a friend of Richard D. James (Aphex Twin), and Luke Vibert. His albums have been critically acclaimed for their forward-thinking approach to electronic music.

Jenkinson performs live, playing with a fretless or fretted bass guitar, a laptop, and other hardware. He appeared twice on BBC Radio 1's The Breezeblock show. On 26 June 2005, Squarepusher played at London's Royal Festival Hall as part of the Jimi Hendrix tribute show "Songs of Experience". His 12-minute performance was built up of a medley of Hendrix tracks played solely on the bass guitar with the use of effects.

His brother, Andy Jenkinson, is also a respected recording artist, under the name Ceephax Acid Crew.

Squarepusher's latest full-length album, Hello Everything, was released on October 16th, 2006.

Contents

Squarepusher sequenced his pre-2000 work on a BOSS DR-660 drum machine, which wasn't designed to sequence entire songs. He uses hardware for his electronic music such as King Tubby-style spring reverbs, Akai samplers, (S950 for early work, S6000 for later work), a Roland SH-101 acid house-type synthesizer, a Roland TB-303 acid bassline synthesizer, and a reel-to-reel tape machine. Around the year 2000, Squarepusher bought a computer with Reaktor and an Eventide Orville for digital processing. According to Squarepusher himself from his website he claims to own this:

Bass guitars: Music Man / Rickenbacker 4001 / Custom built 6 string.
Guitars: Classical and Baritone classical / custom electric guitar.
Software: Reaktor using only home made algorithms.
Electronic Hardware: Eventide "Orville" + "DSP4000" using only homemade algorithms/ Yamaha sequencer / 16 track tape machine / MackieDesk / Sine wave generator / Roland SH101 / Octave "Cat" synth / AKG414 mics / Home made + AKG analogue reverb units / DAT recorder.
Percussion: Ludwig drum kit / Balinese percussion / xylophone.
Other: some wires, mains leads, a room to put it all in, cooperative neighbors, etc.

He has been known to play Fender, Ernie Ball, and Warwick basses.

Perhaps the most ubiquitous rhythm associated with many Squarepusher songs is the use of the Amen break.

1994 Crot EP Released under name Tom Jenkinson.
1994 Stereotype EP Released under name Tom Jenkinson.[1]
1995 Conumber E:P Released on Spymania. Partially compiled into Burningn'n Tree.
1995 Alroy Road Tracks Released on Spymania under the alias The Duke Of Harringay, later all tracks included in Squarepusher compilation Burningn'n Tree.
1996 Bubble And Squeak Released under name Tom Jenkinson.[2]
1996 Dragon Disk 2 Split EP, released under name Tom Jenkinson.[3]
1996 Squarepusher Plays...
1996 Port Rhombus EP Also compiled in the US version of Big Loada on Nothing Records
1997 Vic Acid
1997 Big Loada Also released on Nothing Records in 1998.
1998 Remixes 12" Released under alias Chaos A.D. on Rephlex.
1999 Maximum Priest EP
1999 Anti-Greylord Protection Scheme Prelude Included with most copies of Selection Sixteen
2001 My Red Hot Car
2001 Do You Know Squarepusher Single for the album of the same name, no titles appear on this release, merely a single song "Do You Know Squarepusher".
2003 Ultravisitor Single for Ultravisitor.[4][5]
2004 Square Window Promo for Ultravisitor.
2004 Venus No. 17 Includes Venus No.17, acid mix of the track and Tundra 4, which is reworking of track 2 from Feed Me Weird Things album.
2006 Welcome to Europe Exclusive digital single #1: released September 4 (Also available on Hello Everything).
2006 Hanningfield Window Exclusive digital single #2: released September 18.
2006 Exciton Exclusive digital single #3: released October 2.
2006 Vacuum Tracks Released with certain editions of Hello Everything.
2006 Welcome to Europe 12" vinyl single.

Release date Released on Track Notes
1998 We Are Reasonable People "Freeman Hardy & Willis Acid" Song credited to "Squarepusher/AFX".
2003 Lost in Translation "Tommib"
2006 Marie Antoinette "Tommib Help Buss"

1996 DJ Food: "Scratch Yer Hed (Squarepusher Mix)" Appears on Refried Food and various Ninja Tune compilations.
1996 Funki Porcini: "Carwreck (Squarepusher Mix)" Appears on Carwreck EP.
1998 East Flatbush Project: "Tried By 12 (Squarepusher Mix)" Appears on Tried By 12 Remixes.
2001 Chaos A.D.: "Psultan (Squarepusher Mix)" Appears on Rephlex Records The Braindance Coincidence compilation.

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