Solipsism is Craig Murphy, an
Experimental Musician and Recording Artist from Glasgow in Scotland.
His cross-genre style incorporates elements of Ambient, Techno, IDM,
Electro and Experimental Music and his releases have been featured on
various Radio Stations from across the Globe, including BBC Radio 1,
BBC6 Music, XFM London and Digital Nimbus (U.S.A). He is also a member
of the Psychedelic/Folk band Shoosh, alongside Ed Drury and Neil
Carlill. The latter who had several Top 40 hits in the UK with his
band Delicatessen (Rough Trade, Big Life). Shoosh have released music
on Awkward Silence Recordings and Herb Recordings.
Murphy founded the Independent Record
Label Herb Recordings in 2006 and he continues to run it to this day.
Herb Recordings is distributed on CD by Cargo Records of London and on
Digital Formats by State51 also of London. Previously they have been
distributed by Amato and INGrooves.
Herb Recordings has released albums
globally by many Artists both from the UK and abroad, such as;
Kingbastard, Engine7, Skytree, Shoosh, Solipsism, Jack Marchment, Haz,
Shamanic Technology and Mosca.
The Label was set up by Solipsism as a
platform to release music that had the right blend of melody and
experimentalism at a time when Electronic Music was being dominated by
Producers rather than Musicians. Herb Recordings therefore became a
platform for Producers who were also serious Musicians and as such,
their output has warmth that’s often lacking in contemporary
Electronic Music.
After Amato Distribution of London went
into administration in October 2008, the Label switched both their
Physical and Digital operations to Cargo Records. They remain with
Cargo Records for Europe-wide CD and Vinyl distribution, but as of
February 2011, they have been distributed on Digital Formats by
State51. State51 specialises is Experimental, Independent Labels and
also distributes the likes of The Leaf Label, Lo Recordings and
Twisted Nerve.
In 2010 Herb Recordings was nominated as
one of the Top Ten Experimental labels by the highly respected Igloo
Magazine. The full article along with an interview with Craig Murphy
can be read here;
Igloomag.
From 2002 to 2007 Murphy worked on
Solipsism material with the American Multi-Instrumentalist Ed Drury,
from Portland, Oregon. Drury was a Folk Singer and guitarist from the
early 1970s New York “Café Scene”. Some of the original 1970s
compositions were resurrected and re-worked for their 2008 release
with Neil Carlill as Shoosh titled Orpheum Circuit. The album was
inspired by American Cop Shows from the 1970s, 1920s Vaudeville
Theatre and Spaghetti Westerns. The Orpheum Circuit was a Vaudeville
Theatre Company established in 1919 by Martin Beck in the State of
Delaware.
Since 2007 Murphy has worked solo on the
Solipsism material while continuing to work with Ed Drury on the
Shoosh project. As well as his official releases, Solipsism has
released material on a number of Compilation Albums. The most notable
of which was the “Is This Music?” Magazines’ Cover CD featuring the
track “At The Beach”. Is This Music? is a highly-respected and
long-running Music Magazine from Scotland covering innovative artists
and bands from around the World. Magazine:
http://www.isthismusic.com
Solipsism’s latest release It Could Be
Clouds was released on the 13th of December 2010 via Herb Recordings.
He has just completed working on a new album titled "Refract Me, Don't
Subtract Me" featuring heavily-effected guitars that will be released
later in 2011. “An adventurous foray into extraterrestrial techno and
subsequent experiments in ambient sound design, but don’t let the
genre tags skew any pre-conceived notions of Solipsism’s established
panoramic modulation.”
Igloomag
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