Jimmy Cauty Explained

Birth Name:James Francis Cauty
Birth Date:19 December 1956
Birth Place:Wirral, Cheshire, England
Children:3
Years Active:1981–present
Module:
Embed:yes

James Francis Cauty (born 19 December 1956), also known as Rockman Rock, is an English artist and musician, best known as one-half of the duo the KLF, co-founder of the Orb and as the man who burnt £1 million.

He is married to artist and musician Alannah Currie, a former member of Thompson Twins.

Early life and career

Cauty was born on the Wirral Peninsula.[1] As a 17-year-old artist, he drew a popular The Lord of the Rings poster (and later, a counterpart based on The Hobbit) for British retailer Athena.[2]

In 1981–82, Cauty was guitarist in a band called Angels 1–5, who recorded a Peel session on 1 July 1981.[3] Lead vocalist was Cressida Bowyer, whom Cauty later married.[4] He then joined the band Brilliant[5] with which he remained until its break-up in 1986. Cauty was also an original member of Zodiac Mindwarp and the Love Reaction,[6] in 1985.

Artistic partnership with Bill Drummond

Cauty joined with Bill Drummond to form the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (the JAMs), a collaboration that played out in various guises and media over much of the next decade.

As an A&R man, Drummond had signed Brilliant to WEA.[5] Concocting a scheme for a hip-hop record on New Year's Day 1987, Drummond needed a like-minded collaborator with expertise in current music technology, and so contacted Cauty. Drummond later commented that Cauty "knew exactly, to coin a phrase, 'where I was coming from'". A week later, the JAMs had recorded their debut single, "All You Need Is Love".[7] Several singles and three albums as the JAMs followed (their debut, 1987; the follow-up, Who Killed the JAMs?; and compilation Shag Times) before a change of direction saw the duo mutate into dance and ambient music pioneers, the KLF. The duo had their first British number one hit single as the Timelords with the Gary Glitter/Dr. Who novelty-pop mash-up "Doctorin' the Tardis", claimed to be sung by Cauty's 1968 Ford Galaxie American police car. During this period, Cauty also worked with Tony Thorpe of the Moody Boys; besides remix and production work by the Moody Boys for the KLF and vice versa, Thorpe and Cauty recorded the single "Journey into Dubland" together at the KLF's Trancentral studios.[8] [9]

The KLF released two albums, Chill Out and The White Room, and a string of top 5 singles, becoming the biggest selling singles act in the world in 1991. In 1992, suddenly and very publicly, the KLF retired from the music industry and deleted their entire back catalogue.[10]

Drummond and Cauty re-emerged in 1993 as the K Foundation, releasing one limited edition single ("K Cera Cera") and awarding the £40,000 K Foundation art award for the "worst artist of the year". In 1994, the duo courted infamy by setting fire to one million pounds in cash on the Scottish island of Jura. In 1995, they undertook a screening tour of a film of the burning,[11] before signing a moratorium on K Foundation activities.

Cauty worked with Drummond again in 1997 with a campaign to "Fuck the Millennium", the highlight of which was a 23-minute live performance satirising the "pop comeback", in which Cauty and Drummond appeared as grey-haired pensioners and wheeled around the stage in electric wheelchairs. They returned as The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu in 2017, with a novel - - and a 3-day festival, "Welcome to the Dark Ages".[12] [13] [14] Cauty confirmed that the duo's work is an ongoing project.[15]

Throughout their career, Drummond has often been the mouthpiece of the group and was sometimes viewed, subjectively, as their chief protagonist. NME, for example, wrote: "One suspects that the real boiling genius of the duo is initiated by Drummond. The elements of the K Foundation affair are classic Drummond – honesty mixed with deranged publicity-seeking, pop terrorism ideas mixed with utter strangeness and mysticism..., and a sense that the things pop groups do should be visionary and above all should not be mundane." However, the initial idea for the K Foundation's one million incineration was Cauty's, although he was beginning to express regret in 1995 at which time Drummond remained resolute.

Contrasting with Drummond's image, Jimmy Cauty was perceived, or presented, as "Rockman Rock – cool dude";[16] the "quiet", enigmatic one, a "long-haired and quietly spoken chain-smoker: a leather-jacketed misfit [who] has carried his adolescent rock obsession into adulthood". However, as the previously quoted NME piece cautioned, "We can't underestimate the importance of Jimmy Cauty". Cauty was the musical bedrock of The KLF, whether laying down the starting track for "Doctorin' the Tardis",[17] or playing electric guitar, bass, drums and keyboard on "America: What Time Is Love?".[18] He and his wife, Cressida, were at the centre of KLF operations, living and working at Trancentral (actually the Cautys' squat in Stockwell, London) and driving the "JAMsmobile" (Cauty's 1968 Ford Galaxie American police car) as their regular, everyday vehicle.[19] Cressida, too, helped out, taking on an organisational role for KLF Communications, in addition to design and choreography work for The KLF, and her own work as an artist.

Engineer Mark Stent recalled Drummond as providing "big concepts and insane ideas", whereas Cauty - he said - was "literally a musical genius".[5]

John Higgs wrote in The KLF: Chaos, Magic and the Band who Burned a Million Pounds that:

Ambient house, 1988–1992

In the late 1980s, Cauty met Alex Paterson and the duo began DJing and producing together as the Orb. Paterson and Cauty's first release was a 1988 acid house anthem track, "Tripping on Sunshine" released on the compilation Eternity Project One, put together by Paterson's childhood friend[20] [21] and Cauty's ex-bandmate, Martin "Youth" Glover.[22] The following year, the Orb released the Kiss EP, a four-track EP based on samples from New York City's Kiss FM[22] on Paterson and Youth's new record label WAU/Mr. Modo Records.

After spending a weekend of making what Paterson described as "really shit drum sounds", the duo decided to abandon beat-heavy music and instead work on music for after-hours listening by "taking the bloody drums away".[23] [24] Paterson and Cauty began DJing in London and landed a deal in 1989 for the Orb to play the chill-out room at London nightclub Heaven.[25] Resident DJ Paul Oakenfold brought in the duo specifically as ambient DJs for his "The Land of Oz" event at Heaven.[21] [26]

Though initially the Orb's Monday night performances had only several "hard-core" followers, their "Chill Out Room" act grew popular over the course of their six-month stay at Heaven to the point that the small room was often packed with around 100 people.[27] The Orb's performances became especially popular among weary DJs and clubbers who sought solace from the loud, rhythmic music of the dancefloor. The Orb would build up melodies using multitrack recordings linked to multiple record decks and a mixer. They incorporated many CDs, cassettes, and BBC sound effects into their act, often accompanied with pieces of popular dance tracks such as "Sueño Latino".[27] Most often, they played dub and other chill out music which Bill Drummond described as "Ambient house for the E generation."[22] [28]

Throughout 1989, Paterson, Cauty, Drummond and Youth developed the musical genre of ambient house through the use of a diverse array of samples and recordings. The culmination of Cauty and Paterson's musical work came towards the end of the year when the Orb recorded a session for John Peel on BBC Radio 1. The track, then known as "Loving You", was largely improvisational and featured a wealth of sound effects and samples from science fiction radio plays, nature sounds, and Minnie Riperton's "Lovin' You". The Orb changed the title to "A Huge Ever Growing Pulsating Brain That Rules from the Centre of the Ultraworld". In 1990, Cauty and Drummond held a chillout party at Trancentral, Cauty's squat. A recording of Patersons DJing was made with a view to releasing it as an LP but the mix contained many uncleared samples and other records and was unusable. Later that year Cauty and Drummond went to the isle of Jura, Scotland to record a techno record called Gate. Instead they created a long form ambient film called Waiting (1990). During the same year Cauty and Drummond went into the studio and made the ambient LP Chill Out.[29] The Grove Dictionary suggests Chill Out to be the first ambient house album.[30]

When offered an album deal by Big Life, the Orb found themselves at a crossroads. Cauty preferred that albums by the Orb were released on his KLF Communications label, whereas Paterson wanted to ensure the Orb did not become an offshoot of The KLF.[31] Due to these issues, Cauty and Paterson split in April 1990, with Paterson keeping the name the Orb. Cauty removed Paterson's contributions from the recordings in progress and released the album as Space on KLF Communications.[21]

Post-KLF

In 1999 Cauty produced several remixes under the alias The Scourge of the Earth for Placebo, Marilyn Manson, Hawkwind, Ian Brown, the Orb, and others. In December 1999 he joined with Guy Pratt, Lloyd Stanton and Denise Palmer to record and release a mobile telephone-themed novelty-pop record "I Wanna 1-2-1 With You" under the name Solid Gold Chartbusters.[32] [33] It was released as competition for the Christmas Number One[32] [33] but only reached Number 62 in the UK Singles Chart.[34]

In 2001, Cauty joined with former collaborators Alex Paterson and Pratt in a London recording studio, together with Dom Beken, an associate of Pratt.[35] Recording later continued in Cauty's Brighton studio. In 2003, the group released their first single, "Boom Bang Bombay", under the name Custerd.[36] Subsequently, they settled on the name "Transit Kings". Cauty left the band in 2004 to work on other projects. Two years later, the Transit Kings released their debut album, Living in a Giant Candle Winking at God; Cauty is listed as a composer on seven of the album's 12 tracks.[37]

In 2002, Cauty's two remixes of U2's "New York" were featured as B-sides on the band's Electrical Storm single.

Art

Cauty was, until mid-2005, part of art/music collective Blacksmoke, together with James Fogarty and manager Keir Jens-Smith.[38] [39]

Cauty works with the L-13 Light Industrial Workshop, London which he explains "is not a gallery, it's a support system, spiritual home and technical epicentre for a small group of artists"[40] which includes Billy Childish, Jamie Reid, and Harry Adams. Cauty first worked in conjunction with L-13 on the Cautese Nationál Postal Disservice. Subsequent collaborations included the Riot in a Jam Jar exhibitions and the ADP Riot Tour - is a vast 1:87 scale model in a 40-foot shipping container which tours historic riot sites around the world. L-13 continue to collaborate with Cauty and Drummond, running "dead perch merch", official merchandise operatives to The JAMs.

Following 2003 media speculation that Saddam Hussein could launch a poison chemical attack on London, Cauty designed the Stamps of Mass Destruction for Blacksmoke Art Collective. The 1st, 2nd and 3rd class stamps featuring the Queen's head wearing a gas mask were released as limited edition prints and exhibited at Artrepublic Gallery, Brighton.[41] Following a legal battle over alleged copyright infringement, the stamps were sent to Royal Mail for destruction.[42] [43]

In 2004, Cauty installed a gift shop, Blackoff, at the Aquarium Gallery, based on the UK government's Preparing for Emergencies leaflet. The installation included "terror aware" items, such as "terror tea towels", "attack hankies" and "bunker-buster jigsaw puzzles" (the latter missing one piece). He commented, "The gift shop becomes the place we can explore our branding ideas, Cash for trash – it represents the futility and the glory of it all."[44]

In response to the Iraq War troop surge of 2007, Cauty developed Operation Magic Kingdom, a series of images showing US forces in Iraq wearing masks of lovable and friendly Disney characters, adopting the UK's "winning hearts and minds" tactics in a bid to gain the confidence of the Iraqi people. In Operation Magic Kingdom "the rules of engagement have been changed to include 'try and be more fun' before firing."[45] The images were launched at the Bayswater Road Sunday Art Exhibition,[46] bombed onto billboards and fly-posted across London, as well as being released by The Aquarium as limited edition prints and stamps.

In 2008, Jimmy Cauty held a public exhibition in The Aquarium L-13 named "Splatter", which was an altered version of several classic Looney Tunes cartoons, with characters, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and others depicted in shocking acts of violence, often murder. The idea was suggested by his 15-year-old son.

In June 2011 he held another public exhibition at The Aquarium L-13 entitled A Riot in a Jam Jar consisting of a series of scale dioramas depicting violent confrontations between British rioters and police, each contained within an inverted glass jar. In 2012, Cauty premiered his short film, Believe the Magic, starring Debbie Harry, Nick Lehan and Branko Tomović, at Tate Modern as part of the annual Merge festival.[47] [48]

The ideas of A Riot in a Jam Jar evolved into the Aftermath Dislocation Principle, shown at the Hoxton Arches in October 2013.[49] The 448-square-foot installation at 1:87 scale (representing approximately one square mile) details the desolate and charred aftermath of what appears to have been a devastating riot. The sculpture, constructed by modifying components of traditional model railway kits, took approximately 8 months to complete includes nearly 3,000 police figures and a soundtrack pitched to match the 1:87 scale. The piece "makes a political statement about societal freedom and state control".[50] The Aftermath Dislocation principle then toured the Netherlands, being shown at Piet Hein Eek Gallery, Eindhoven (November 2013),[51] Cultuurwerf, Vlissingen (April 2014),[52] and Mediamatic, Amsterdam (July–August 2014).[53]

In 2015, the work was exhibited at Banksy's Dismaland and then in London.[54] Following this it was re-engineered to fit inside a 40-foot shipping container and now tours historic riot sites around the world.[55]

In 2014, Cauty released a series of limited edition Smiley Riot Shields. Each are all ex-police riot gear painted over with a yellow smiley face. He originally designed the riot shields in 2012 as a symbol of "non-violent direct action"[56] and as a practical self-protective measure for his step-daughter during the Occupy St Paul's eviction.

Personal life

Cauty was married to Cressida (Bowyer), with whom he has twins and a younger son. He later married artist and musician Alannah Currie (formerly of Thompson Twins)[57] in 2011.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: findmypast.co.uk. Search.findmypast.co.uk. 20 January 2018. registration.
  2. News: The KLF. Western Mail. Cardiff. 4 March 2005. 29.
  3. Web site: BBC - Radio 1 - Keeping It Peel - 01/07/1981 Angels 1 - 5. Bbc.co.uk. 20 January 2018.
  4. News: Jimmy Cauty is the Jam Jar rebel. 24 May 2011. Evening Standard.
  5. Web site: Return of the KLF: 'They were agents of chaos. Now the world they anticipated is here'. Andrew. Harrison. 27 April 2017. The Guardian.
  6. Web site: Robbins. Ira. Trouser Press. KLF. 4 September 2006.
  7. It's a Steal - Sampling . The Story of Pop . . 48 . en . . . 31. First broadcast in 1994, per Web site: The Story of Pop. . 9 March 2020.
  8. Journey into Dubland. XL Recordings. XLEP-107. 1990. The Moody Boys.
  9. Music Technology. Music Maker Publications. May 1994. Phil. Ward. Mood Music. 18 March 2020.
  10. KLF Communications advertisement in New Musical Express, 16 May 1992.
  11. News: Banks-Smith. Nancy. Nancy Banks-Smith. From cash to ash. The Guardian. Manchester]. 30 August 1995. T.009.
  12. Web site: Paterson. Colin. Colin Paterson. The KLF return 23 years after bowing out of the music industry. BBC News. 23 August 2017. 27 February 2020. video.
  13. Web site: The Ice Kream Van Kometh: The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu Return. 24 August 2017. 26 February 2020. Max. Pilley. Drowned in Sound. 26 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200226003707/http://drownedinsound.com/news/4151283-the-ice-kream-van-kometh--the-justified-ancients-of-mu-mu-return.
  14. Web site: The KLF: Pop's saboteurs return after 23 years. 23 August 2017. BBC News. 26 February 2020.
  15. News: KLF's Jimmy Cauty: 'We don't make records, we make pyramids out of dead people'. 26 November 2018. 26 February 2020. Ian. Youngs. BBC News.
  16. Sounds, 6 February 1988
  17. Drummond. Bill. Bill Drummond . . Saturday Sequence . . December 1990. https://web.archive.org/web/20060524180959/http://www.brandnew.co.uk/klf/billdrummond/Bill%20Drummond%20Interview_Radio1%20Dec90.mp3 . 24 May 2006 .
  18. Sleevenotes. The KLF. KLF Communications. America: What Time Is Love?. KLF USA 4CD. 1992.
  19. The KLF interview, Snub TV, 30 January 1989
  20. News: . Simpson . Dave . 19 January 2001 . 6 . Interview with Alex Paterson of the Orb: 'If you print that, I'll come looking for you'. 6 March 2020.
  21. News: How we made the Orb's Little Fluffy Clouds. Interview with Youth and Alex Paterson. Dave. Simpson. 7 June 2016. The Guardian. 7 March 2020.
  22. Book: Shapiro, Peter. The Rough Guide to Drum 'n' Bass. Peter Shapiro (journalist). 1999. 1-85828-433-3. Rough Guides. 327.
  23. News: Doerschuck. Robert. Keyboard Magazine. June 1995. Inside the Ambient Techno Ultraworld.
  24. News: McCormick. Neil. Neil McCormick. Yes, this is the cutting edge of rave music. The Daily Telegraph. London. The Arts. 26. https://web.archive.org/web/20160226082656/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/4710794/Yes-this-is-the-cutting-edge-of-rave-music.html. 26 February 2016. 11 October 1998. 11 March 2020.
  25. Book: Prendergast, Mark . The Ambient Century: From Mahler to Moby-The Evolution of Sound in the Electronic Age . . 2003 . 1-58234-323-3 . 408 .
  26. News: The Irish Times. Boyd. Brian. 23 October 1998. 12. Unidentified Flying Orb.
  27. Book: Toop, David. David Toop. Ocean of Sound. limited. Serpent's Tail. 59–62. 2001. 1-85242-743-4.
  28. Crispy. Don. Alex Paterson. Metropolis. 20 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20070704194423/http://metropolis.co.jp/tokyo/590/clubs.asp. 4 July 2007.
  29. Book: Reynolds, Simon. 1999. 0-415-92373-5. Routledge. Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. 191.
  30. Fulford-Jones . Will . Ambient house.
  31. News: Don't make negative waves. Toop. David. David Toop . 3 June 1994. The Times.
  32. The World's First Novelty Supergroup present: 'I Wanna 1-2-1 With You'. Virgin Records. 1999.
  33. IT'S CRAPMASSSSSSS!!!!. 10 November 1999. NME. 20 March 2020.
  34. Web site: Solid Gold Chartbusters. The Official Charts Company. 20 March 2020.
  35. Web site: Transit Kings' official biography. https://web.archive.org/web/20061214212217/http://www.transitkings.com/TransitKings/WaitingRoom.html. 14 December 2006. usurped.
  36. Web site: Custerd. Discogs.com. 20 January 2018.
  37. Web site: Transit Kings - Living in a Giant Candle Winking at God. Discogs.com. 21 August 2006 . 20 January 2018.
  38. "Row over gas masked Queen", BBC News, 4 June 2003 (link)
  39. Interview: The KLF's James Cauty . Butler . Ben . https://web.archive.org/web/20071210011728/http://rocknerd.org/article.pl?sid=03%2F06%2F18%2F0539252 . 10 December 2007 . interview with Jimmy Cauty for The Big Issue Australia. Rocknerd. 18 June 2003. Its just me and this heavy metal maniac called James Fogerty, he writes the basic stuff in his parents basement in the middle of the night. I deconstruct it and apply a blacksmoke template, mix it and package it for the mass market. There's also Kier our project manager who hates the music business and refuses to use the telephone. Quite a brilliant team I think..
  40. Appel, Marco. "La pequeña insurrección de Cauty.", Proceso, 5 October 2016.
  41. Web site: James Cauty. artrepublic.com.
  42. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/southern_counties/2963414.stm Row Over Gas Masked Queen
  43. Left, Sarah. Royal Mail Stamps Down on Postage Art, The Guardian, 4 June 2003.
  44. Arendt, Paul."The art that stole Christmas", The Guardian, 18 November 2004; retrieved 1 September 2007.
  45. Cauty, James. "Operation Magic Kingdom press release", The Aquarium, April 2007.
  46. Web site: Bayswater Road Artists . Bayswater-road-artists.co.uk.
  47. http://mergefestival.co.uk/artists/believe-the-magic-by-jimmy-cauty.html Believe The Magic
  48. http://www.film-news.co.uk/show-news.asp?nItemID=18426 Jimmy Cauty's 'Believe the Magic' trailer starring Debbie Harry
  49. Pilger, Zoe."Art review: James Cauty, The Aftermath Dislocation Principle Parts I and II", The Independent, 11 October 2013.
  50. Tucker, Johnny."Devil in the Detail: James Cauty's Dystopia in Miniature", Blueprint, 10 January 2014.
  51. Web site: Piet Hein Eek. pietheineek.nl. 12 August 2016.
  52. http://cultuurwerf.nl/expos/james-cauty-the-aftermath-dislocation-principle/ "James Cauty the Aftermath Dislocation Principle"
  53. http://www.mediamatic.net/370219/en/opening-the-aftermath-dislocation-principle "Opening: The Aftermath Dislocation Principle – A Disaster Tour with Jimmy Cauty"
  54. Web site: James Cauty Installation at Dismaland – Weston Super Mare, UK. StreetArtNews.net. 25 August 2015.
  55. Web site: Jimmy Cauty: Sustained Resistance. Crack Magazine. March 2016. Augustin. Macellari. 18 March 2020.
  56. http://skrufff.com/2014/02/jimmy-cauty-the-art-of-smiley-riot-shield-protest-i-am-more-of-a-rough-chip-shop-artist-interview "Cauty: The Art of Smiley Riot Shield Protest"
  57. Web site: Back From The Ashes - Jimmy Cauty. 30 May 2012. Kris. Needs. Kris Needs. Clash Music. 2 March 2020.