Rudolph Grey
Rudolph Grey is a musician and writer.
As an electric guitarist, Grey has recorded and performed with Mars,[1] under his own name, as well as leading various ad hoc ensembles called The Blue Humans.[2] His music draws on no wave and free jazz.
Grey is also a motion picture historian and has written Nightmare of Ecstasy (1992), a biography of Ed Wood, the director of notoriously awful films. Tim Burton's Ed Wood was based on Nightmare.
In 2001, Grey rediscovered a copy of Ed Wood's final feature-length film, Necromania, which had been presumed to be lost.[3]
Discography
Mars
Date | Album | Notes | Label |
---|---|---|---|
Feeding Tube/Negative Glam | |||
Rudolph Grey
Date | Album | Notes | Label |
---|---|---|---|
New Alliance | |||
New Alliance | |||
Blue Humans
Date | Album | Notes | Label |
---|---|---|---|
New Alliance | |||
New Alliance | |||
Shock | |||
Audible Hiss | |||
Blast First | |||
Red Transistor
Date | Album | Notes | Label |
---|---|---|---|
Ecstatic Peace! | |||
Recordings of sessions led by others
Date | Artists | Album | Label |
---|---|---|---|
The Lotus Sound | |||
Bibliography
Published works include:
- 1992: Nightmare of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of Edward D. Wood Jr., Feral House, ISBN 978-0-922915-04-0; reprinted 1994, ISBN 978-0-922915-24-8 – Biography of Ed Wood
References
- ↑ Marc Masters, (2007) No Wave London, Black Dog Publishing, pp. 42-46
- ↑ The Blue Humans bio in Allmusic.com
- ↑ New Yorker: Weird Love
- ↑ http://www.allmusic.com/album/live-at-irving-plaza-mw0002412659
External links
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