Comus (band)

Comus

Contemporary promotional image
Background information
Genres Psychedelic folk, progressive rock
Years active 1969–1972, 1974, 2008–present
Labels Dawn
Virgin Records
Members Roger Wootton
Glenn Goring
Andy Hellaby
Colin Pearson
Bobbie Watson
Jon Seagroatt
Past members Rob Young
Gordon Caxon
Keith Hale
Lindsay Cooper

Comus are a British progressive folk band which had a brief career in the early 1970s; their first album, First Utterance, gave them a cult following which persists. They reunited in 2009 and have played several festivals and released a new album.

History

Comus was formed in 1969 by fellow art students Roger Wootton and Glenn Goring who developed their musical style performing in folk clubs in and around Bromley in Kent. The band was named after Comus (a masque by John Milton), and is also from the name of the Greek god Comus. The band grew from the early folk duo to the six piece ensemble that David Bowie came to appreciate. They appeared regularly at his Arts Lab project in Beckenham, Kent. He also invited them as support act for a 1969 concert at London's Purcell Rooms.[1]

Their first album, First Utterance, with cover art by Wootton and Goring, appeared in 1971. The music is largely acoustic art rock (also described as acoustic metal and acid folk) that blends elements of Eastern percussion, early folk and animal-like vocals. The lyrics involve violence, murder, mental disorder and the mystical.

After the album, woodwind player Rob Young was replaced by Lindsay Cooper, and the new lineup developed material for a never-released second album. No recording by this lineup would see the light of day for another 40 years. The group disbanded for a time, but Wootton, Hellaby, and Watson reformed the band with new members for their second album, To Keep from Crying, in 1974.

In 2005, a complete box set was released which featured both studio albums, their only single, "Diana", and a previously unreleased track called "All the Colours of Darkness". The liner notes feature an exclusive interview with some members of the band. They reformed for the Mellotronen Festival in Sweden in March 2008.[2] They have continued to perform occasional gigs, including some new material.[3]

On 13 June 2009 Comus performed for the first time in the UK in 37 years at the Equinox Festival at Conway Hall.[4]

In June 2012 a reunion album, Out Of The Coma, was released. It contains three new tracks: The Return (Goring), Out of The Coma (Wootton), The Sacrifice (Wootton) and a 1972 live recording of material from their abandoned followup to First Utterance, "The Malgaard Suite".[5]

Wootton also appears on some recordings by Slapp Happy. Cooper went on to join Henry Cow. Reed player Jon Seagroatt is also a member of free improvising trio Red Square. Seagroatt and singer Bobbie Watson married in 2003.[6]

Influence

In 1998, Opeth singer and songwriter Mikael Åkerfeldt used a part of a sentence from "Drip Drip" for the title of the album My Arms, Your Hearse. The full line was "As I carry you to your grave, my arms your hearse".

Another nod to Comus was given on the 2005 Opeth album, Ghost Reveries. The second track "The Baying of the Hounds" was derived from a line in the song "Diana" which reads "And she knows by the sound of the baying, by the baying of the hounds".

English experimental band Current 93 covered the song "Diana" from First Utterance on their studio album Horsey. Musically this version is considerably different from the original, with David Tibet singing the lyrics in an agonizing fashion and constructing most of the song from a loop based around a vertiginous violin arrangement from the original.

Personnel

Current members
Former members

Discography

Studio albums
Live albums
Box sets
EPs
Roger Wootton solo single

References

  1. Sleeve notes from the 1995 remastered version of First Utterance (BGO CD275)
  2. "Comus Official myspace". Retrieved 2008-04-26.
  3. "Roger Wootten page". Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  4. "Comus News". Retrieved 2012-12-20.
  5. "July 2012". Comusmusic.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-06-22.
  6. "Comus – Bobbie Watson". Comusmusic.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-04-01.

External links

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