Cut Hands

Cut Hands is a British electronic music project of William Bennett, previously of power electronics band Whitehouse. Cut Hands began in 2008, and its music is heavily inspired by African and Haitian Vodou music, being very rhythmic and percussion-based.[1]

Cut Hands
OriginUnited Kingdom
GenresElectronic music, experimental music, new-age music
Years active2008-present
LabelsSusan Lawly, Very Friendly, Blackest Ever Black, Dirtier Promotions
Associated actsWhitehouse
MembersWilliam Bennett

Early history

The project began when William Bennett was invited to DJ at Optimo, a large club in Glasgow. When he asked what they wanted him to play, they told him he could play whatever he wanted. At the time, he was very interested in the music of African culture, and thus he played ritual drumming music, mixed in with Haitian Vodou music.[2] The name "Cut Hands" is a reference to the Whitehouse song "Cut Hands Has the Solution", which was from their 2003 album Bird Seed.[3]

Bennett's work as Cut Hands has brought him considerable attention in mainstream media, being placed in documentaries such as VICE's Kings of Cannabis[4] and having songs like "Black Mamba" sampled in hip-hop such as Danny Brown's "Pneumonia".

Discography

Studio albums

  • Afro Noise I (Volume 1) (2011, Very Friendly)
  • Afro Noise I (Volume 2) (2011, Very Friendly)
  • Black Mamba (2012, Very Friendly)
  • Festival Of The Dead (2014, Blackest Ever Black)
  • Afro Noise I (Volume 3) (2014, Dirtier Promotions)
  • Afro Noise I (Volume 4) (2014, Dirtier Promotions)

EPs

  • Afro Noise I (2011, Artencio/Susan Lawly)

Singles

  • "Black Mamba" 12" (2012, Blackest Ever Black)
  • "Damballah" 12" (2013, Blackest Ever Black)
  • "Madwomen" 12" (2013, Downwards)

References

  1. Gibbs, Rory J. "Allmusic ((( More Than A Mind Can Take: An Interview With Cut Hands". The Quietus. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  2. Sande, Krain J. "William Bennett: Cut Hands Has The Solution". Fact. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  3. D., Chris. "William Bennett [Cut Hands] Interviewed". Decibel. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  4. "Cut Hands". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2020-06-25.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.