Beaumont Hannant (born c. 1970) is a British musician, producer and DJ from York, England. His work includes ambient techno, IDM, hip hop and indie rock.[1] Hannant has received positive critical reviews,[citation needed] and he was named one of "The Faces of '94"[citation needed] by music magazine Select.

Biography

edit

Hannant became a hip-hop/electro DJ in 1986, after witnessing the 1986 World Mixing Championships.[citation needed] During 1993–1994, he released several solo albums on General Production Recordings rooted in ambient techno.[1] His music from this period has been described[citation needed] as eclectic, densely layered and textured.

Hannant's album Texturology (1994)[1] resulted in a top three independent album chart[citation needed] placing. Music from the album was used in a theatre presentation of the 17th-century play The Traitor.[citation needed]

By 1994, Hannant began to diversify. He provided remixes for Autechre, Björk and Ned's Atomic Dustbin, produced Lida Husik (who provided the vocals to some of his compositions) and managed Shed Seven. With his long-term engineer Richard Brown, Hannant started the trip hop duo Outcast, signing to the indie label One Little Indian in 1996.

Discography

edit
Releases

All on General Production Recordings

  • 1993: Tastes and Textures, Vol. 1 (EP)
  • 1993: Tastes and Textures, Vol. 2: Basic Data Manipulation (CD and double LP)
  • 1994: Tastes and Textures, Vol. 3 (EP)
  • 1994: Texturology (CD and double LP)
  • 1994: Texturology [Vol. 2] (limited additional double LP)[2]
  • 1994: Ormeau (single)
  • 1994: Sculptured (CD and double LP)
  • 1994: Bitter Sweet (recorded as YO3 alias)
  • 1995: Psi-Onyx (EP)
  • 1995: Notions of Tonality, Vol. 1 (EP)
  • 1996: Notions of Tonality, Vol. 2 (EP)

The cover of Notions of Tonality, Vol. 2 mentions a forthcoming album, Tones, but General Production Recordings folded before it could be released, and the album never surfaced.

Appearances include
Remixes include

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Colin Larkin, ed. (1998). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Dance Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 147. ISBN 0-7535-0252-6.
  2. ^ After the release of the main album both as a CD (GPRCD04) and a double LP (GPRLP04), came a limited additional double LP (GPRLLP04) with different tracks; though it is simply titled "Texturology" (in golden letters instead of the main release's black text), it is tagged "[Vol. 2]" to differentiate it from the main release.
edit