Tom Ellard

Tom Ellard
Birth name Thomas Temple Ellard
Born 1962 (age 53)
Genres Experimental, electronic, synth-pop, IDM, industrial (Early years)
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Vocals, synthesizers, drum programming, tape loops
Years active 1979–present
Labels Sevcom, Nettwerk, Volition, Ink, Terse Tapes
Associated acts Severed Heads, Coklacoma, Fußßßball
Website tomellard.com

Thomas Temple (Tom) Ellard (born 1962), is an Australian electronic musician best known as the founding member of the electronic and industrial music group Severed Heads.

Early life

Ellard's first music contributions began in the late 1970s as a teenager when he was influenced by groups that emerged from the early United Kingdom and Australian punk movement.

Predating music technology such as MIDI and personal computers, Ellard's early work was performed with tape machines, tape loops and basic analogue equipment. In 1979, Richard Fielding and Andrew Wright formed an electronic dance group, Mr. and Mrs. No Smoking Sign, they were soon joined by Ellard.[1]

Career

Fielding renamed the group as Severed Heads. Through the 1980s Ellard began to take advantage of technological developments such as the music sequencer in combination with looping sounds before sampling arose. Severed Heads were probably most well known in Australia for chart success with a 1994 remix of the track "Dead Eyes Opened" (initially released in the early 1980s) which made the Australian top 40. Ellard is also noted for his early contributions to the electronic and industrial music movements in Australia and overseas.

In 2013, he created the interactive game Hauntology House.[2] He's expressed his interest in the computer gaming platform many times in interviews.[3]

Awards

In 2005 Ellard received the Australian Record Industry Association's ARIA Music Award for the best original soundtrack/cast/show for the soundtrack to the Australian film The Illustrated Family Doctor.[4]

Personal life

As of 2006 Ellard resides in Surry Hills, New South Wales and continues to record music and soundtracks. He also lectures at a variety of educational facilities on music production in Australia. He is the creator and director of sevcom.com, a website for alternative methods of music distribution and creation.

Discography

Solo albums

With Severed Heads

Main article: Severed Heads discography

With CoKlaComa

References

  1. Zachritz, Todd (1990). "Interview from Godsend 1990". Godsend Online. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  2. Smith, Casper. "Tom Ellard of Severed Heads: What I'm Thinking About". www.thegaurdian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved March 14, 2013.
  3. "RA.EX132 Severed Heads - Interview". youtube.cpm.
  4. Tadros, Edmund (2005-10-12). "Mainstream is for frogs, says ARIA winner". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2006-10-16.
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