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Sospeso featured Elliott Sharp on electric guitar for Joshua Cody's score to the silent film The Goddess at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in October, and presented the
world premiere of Sharp's score to Un Chien Andalou,
the classic surrealist short film by Salvador
Dali and Luis Bunuel, at the Lincoln
Center Festival 2004 on Thursday,
July 22, 2004.
Elliott Sharp began playing the piano at six. According to Sharp, he was performing concerts by age eight. Sharp claims that his parents wanted him to be both a concert pianist and a scientist. He gave up piano, first in favor of the clarinet and then the guitar. His interest in science led him to build his own effects boxes for the instrument. He became intrigued with all types of experimental music, from contemporary classical to free jazz and sophisticated rock.
Sharp studied anthropology at Cornell, where he played in a band and took an electronics class with synthesizer inventor Robert Moog. At Bard College he studied with free jazz pioneer Roswell Rudd (future Lounge Lizards John and Evan Lurie were classmates). He went to graduate school in Buffalo, where his academic advisor was Morton Feldman. He moved permanently to New York City in 1979, where he played gigs at various underground performance spaces, including the notorious Mudd Club.
In the eighties Sharp became a major figure on the downtown New York experimental music scene, collaborating with many of its most prominent players, including
John Zorn, Wayne Horvitz, Bobby Previte, and Butch Morris. Over the years, Sharp has led his own bands more often than not. His music draws upon the wide range of his influences, from Coltrane to Zappa to
Xenakis and beyond. An improviser at heart, Sharp’s compositions tend to be quite loose, allowing plenty of room for the musicians to roam. Among his recent projects is the blues/hardcore/free jazz hybrid Terraplane, with bassist Dave Hofstra, saxophonist Sam Furnace, and drummer
Sim.
Chris Kelsey, All Music
Guide.
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