Ethan James & Erin Kenney 1991
Ethan James - A Garden Of Hurdy-Gurdy Delights
Ethan James is one of the foremost American hurdy-gurdy players. The
instrument he specializes in is an ancient type of fiddle with a wheel,
which serves as a continuous bow, and drone and melody strings which
are stopped by keys. Its effect is somewhat like a cross between a
fiddle and a bagpipe. Its origins are obscured by time but by the late
medieval period it was played throughout Europe. Its modern presence is
most visible in France, Hungary and England but is found everywhere in
Europe and is gaining popularity in French Canada and even in the U.S.
His credits include several tours of Europe and the U.S, his own CDs,
performances with the San Francisco Mozart Festival Orchestra, the
Ashland Oregon Shakespeare festival, and the first Monterey World Music
festival. He appears on film scores (including the high school version
of Othello "O"), commercials and recording work ranging from pop to
traditional and early music to modern classical. In addition to a long
and varied career as a musician (he also plays other more common
instruments), he has spent many years as a studio owner, engineer and
record producer working with many well known alternative and pop
artists such as the Bangles, Jane?s Addiction, X, Black Flag,
Minutemen, Sonic Youth, the Descendents and many others. He has also
composed and performed scores for film and commercials. Besides his
personal Recordings, which include "Erin Kenney and Ethan James" (Play
It Again Sam, Belgium) "Shaking Hands With Kafka", "What Rough Beast"
(both on Moll, Germany), "The Ancient Music of Christmas" (Rykodisc,
USA), and "A Garden Of Hurdy Gurdy Delights" (Tasquim, US), he also
appears on "Prayer Cycle" Jonathan Elias, "Milla" Milla Jovavitch, and
CDs by Lowen and Novarro, Wild Colonials, Ricky Martin (title song from
Spanish language version of "Aladdin" by Disney" and Midge Uri. As a
hurdy-gurdy player he is interested in equal parts early music,
traditional music and original compositions. He considers the
hurdy-gurdy a living-evolving instrument and is involved in pushing the
borders of its use. "This is not some museum piece," says James "it has
been through cycles of popularity and obscurity for the last 1000
years. I think it is becoming more popular again, which is somehow
appropriate in the new millennium" James is a native of California and
lives in Los Angeles.
Ethan James presents informative and entertaining workshops on the
origins and history of the hurdy-gurdy and its related instrument the
nyckelharpa (Swedish key fiddle) He follows the beginnings and the
twisted and checkered trail through history that this instrument has
taken from the monasteries and churches through the streets and market
places and from the palaces to the countryside of Europe up to the
present modern use. His presentations include lecture, demonstration
and performance.
Are there any true originals anymore? When you speak of Ethan James and
his hurdy-gurdy, you are speaking of something rare indeed. Throughout
history this 1000 year old instrument has fascinated royalty and street
people alike with its rich otherworldly resonance. "The hurdy-gurdy is
a droning vibrating magical instrument that sounds like bagpipes with
an ancient feeling that transports me to another place" says James.
"it's not the barrel organ associated with the monkey." A specialist in
blending ancient and modern influences and instruments, James has
released four CDs of his original music in the US and Europe. The first
two, "Erin Kenney And Ethan James," and "Tapestries Of Smoke" were with
singer Erin Kenney. His following two solo releases with James
providing his own vocals were "Shaking Hands With Kafka," and "What
Rough Beast," both on MOLL Records in Germany. He also has recordings
released in the US of more traditional instrumental music entitled "The
Ancient Music Of Christmas" on the Hannibal/Rykodisc label and "A
Garden Of Hurdy-Gurdy Delights" on Taqsim Records. He has also composed
scores for feature films and television. His instrumental work blends
arrangements using single and multiple hurdy-gurdys with complementary
instruments such as the saz, portative organ, harmonium, guitar,
dulcimer, bazouki, nyckelharpa, and Arabic and other percussion.
Ethan James first played at the Slavonic Cultural Center with Hungarian
musician, Ference Tobak in 1998. It was a mixed tamburitza and
hurdy-gurdy piece reflecting the music of the Serbian population in
southern Hungary. James has played Hurdy-Gurdy with the San Francisco
Mozart Festival orchestra (yes, Mozart wrote for the instrument). His
early music and modern classical credits include "Renaissance en
Provence" with The Terra Nova Consort, and "The Prayer cycle" with
Jonathan Elias.
Biography by Richard Foss Ethan James is a curious
figure, an artist who spent years playing, producing and engineering
other people's music before finally finding his own muse. Born Ralph
Burns Kellogg, he spent time as a teenager in San Francisco R&B
bands in the early-'60s and joined Blue Cheer in 1969, shortly after
the group found success with their cover of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime
Blues." He remained with Blue Cheer, touring and recording, until their
breakup in 1971. After spending the remainder of the '70s playing in
Los Angeles-area country & western bands, he changed his name and
rose to prominence in 1980 as the owner of Radio Tokyo Studios. James'
partner in the studio, who was supposed to handle some of the bookings,
broke his leg and was unable to drum up business. Since the studio was
empty, James invited a local band called the Unclaimed to make a record
for free just because he liked their sound. The resulting EP captured
the band well and brought James to the attention of up-and-coming
producer Bill Inglot. Through Inglot's connections, James was referred
to many bands in the paisley underground and punk scene and he
engineered albums for the Last, the Bangles, Rain Parade, and several
other groups.
Once, when things were slow, James decided he wanted to try producing
an album himself and he called up the Minutemen and asked them if they
were interested in being on a compilation. That was the beginning of
The Radio Tokyo Tapes, a series that ran into four full-length releases
and one double CD, which documented the L.A. scene like no other
project. It was also the beginning of an association with bands on the
SST label and with the Minutemen, for whom James recorded Double
Nickels on the Dime. By the mid-'80s, Radio Tokyo was a prestigious
studio and James had several assistants, many of whom went on to
careers in the music industry. It wasn't particularly profitable,
though, and James was getting tired of an L.A. rock scene that he
considered stagnant and predictable. He had also discovered early
music, and after his days of engineering rock bands, he was listening
to ensembles that featured medieval viols, krummhorns, and
hurdy-gurdies. The curious drone of the latter instrument fascinated
him, and he first bought one and taught himself to play it, then built
another. He sold Radio Tokyo Studios in late 1989 and focused on
creating his own music.
James teamed up with chanteuse Erin Kenney and recorded two albums that
are a curious amalgam of medieval and modern music. Both sold
moderately well and got appreciative critical attention and the duo
toured Europe and America. The pair broke up due to creative
differences, and James played several gigs in the L.A. area with an
ensemble of medieval instrumentalists playing ancient, modern, and
avant-garde music. The group elicited a mix of appreciation and
confusion among audiences as they opened for art rock and punk bands,
but, unfortunately, they recorded no albums at this time. James did
session work with his hurdy-gurdy both for film scores and backing rock
artists like Jerry Giddens, Seventeen Pygmies, the Wild Colonials, and
the Jackson Del Ray Band. His interest in Middle Eastern music came in
useful as he played with Ofera Haza and Nusrat Fatteh Ali Khan on
Jonathan Elias' Prayer Cycle CD. He was undoubtedly the only working
rock hurdy-gurdy player in Los Angeles at this time, and many people
who had never seen one got their first exposure when they saw him
cranking away at his instrument in some local club. In 1995 he released
an album of original music, Shaking Hands With Kafka, which featured
his hurdy-gurdy playing and original songs that were by turns gloomy,
mystical, and humorous. Though it was on an obscure German label, it
sold well enough that a follow-up was released, 1996's What Rough
Beast.
In slack times, James also worked as a street musician and he recorded
several tapes to sell cheaply at these informal gigs. At a friend's
urging he sent his tape of holiday music to Rykodisc, which released it
as The Ancient Music of Christmas. The CD received excellent reviews
and sold well for a seasonal piece. In 2000, James began playing with
the Terra Nova Consort, a group best known for their long-running
association with the Ashland Shakespeare Festival. James played on
their 1999 release Renaissance en Provence and toured with the group in
2000 and 2001. In June 2003, James quietly passed away in San Francisco
after a brief battle with liver cancer.