David Harrow
David Harrow is a record producer, DJ, and multimedia artist currently living and working in Los Angeles
Early life
In the early 80’s, David Harrow could be found as a fledgling performer around art school, various squats in London and the Warehouse Theatre in East Croydon. It was here that the young keyboardist met poet Anne Clark after one of her performances. He wrote the music and produced tracks on her next album Changing Places and would continue to write and produce a number of influential songs that have since been considered milestones of that musical era.Career
In 1982 David Harrow wrote and produced his first solo album, The Succession. He soon began performing live with Psychic TV, a psychedelic/punk video art and music group.Harrow began touring extensively in Europe performing both as a solo artist and with Anne Clark as well. In 1983 he wrote and produced music for her album Joined Up Writing, and then relocated to Berlin, where he met his lifelong friend Mike Vamp of the Märtini Brös. Harrow produced Vamp's record Desperado, and followed that up in 1984 with another 12" of his own, called No Easy Targets.
In 1985 he released Sufferhead EP with British vocalist Peter Hope and Bite the Hand that Feeds You with singer Pinkie Maclure.
His remixes of Anne Clark's tracks "Sleeper in Metropolis" and "Our Darkness" were released in Germany, and Harrow started producing for German music groups LeningradSandwich and Fougorki.
After working for six months in San Francisco at the request of seminal dance label Razormaid, as in-house musician/co-producer for acts such as Debora and Sylvester, then relocating to Holland and began working with Jah Wobble Live and recording their album Without Judgement.
In 1987 it was back to London at the height of the acid house movement, and Harrow recorded his final album with Anne Clark, Hopeless Cases. He began performing with "Rubber" Ron Elliston from Black Britain at acid house events around the UK, including the Shoom at London Bridge and Oranges at the Astoria.
The following year, Harrow started working with ONU as one of the many groups signed to the label, and began touring as ONU Soundsystem along with Barmy Army, African Headcharge, Strange Parcels, Dub Syndicate, Jesse Rae and vocalist Gary Clail. Harrow wrote recorded and co-produced tracks for artists such as Lee "Scratch" Perry, Bim Sherman and Mark Stewart, and performed worldwide with all of the above.
Harrow wrote and co-produced Clail's two big hits, "Human Nature" and "Who Pays the Piper", and in 1989 released Radio Morocco as PULSE8 on Nation Records. In 1990 Harrow remixed Depeche Mode’s "Enjoy the Silence" and Candi Staton’s "You Got the Love" to further critical acclaim.
In 1991, Harrow began working with Andrew Weatherall under the name Bloodsugar; the duo released both remixes and original material on Audio Emissions/Sabres of Paradise and secretly under the name Deanne Day.
1992, as a producer for many artists: Caligula, Headless Chickens, ATR, Salmonella Dub
Soon Harrow was signed to Weatherall’s label Sabres of Paradise under the moniker Technova, where he released the epic 12" "Tantra," followed by the albums Tantric Steps and Transcience. That same year, he performed a legendary party at the London club Blood Sugar, complete with naked dancers, fire eaters and body modification artists. Harrow also found time to collaborate with performance artist Ron Athey and throughout 1994 was still touring widely with ONU Soundsystem.
In 1995, Harrow wrote Billie Ray Martin's worldwide hit, "Your Loving Arms", and began secretly working under the names James Hardway and Magnetic. The following year, he released the first record as James Hardway, Wider Deeper Smoother Shit, and began touring nonstop as James Hardway, which would continue for the next four years.
In 1997 Harrow signed to U.S. label Shadow Records as Magnetic, and in 1998 he released Hardway albums Welcome to the Neon Lounge on Hydrogen Dukebox and Easy Is a Four Letter Word on Shadow Records. The album "A Positive Sweat" followed on label Recordings of Substance in 1999.
In 2000, Harrow relocated to Havana, Cuba and Kingston, Jamaica to begin work on the album Moors and Christians. A total departure from the jazzy drum and bass of his previous release, this new endeavor saw Harrow recording Santerían priests calling the Orishas to life as well as legendary vocalists such as Congo Ashanti Roy.
In 2001, after the death of a close friend Bim Sherman, Harrow headed back to the West Coast of the United States, this time landing in Los Angeles. He soon released Straight from the Fridge as James Hardway, and began building a brand new studio for his new label Workhouse. In 2003 Harrow began scoring music for television and film, including Las Vegas, Sex Lives in LA and The Loaner, and in 2005 Harrow signed to Lunaticworks and released Over Easy as the James Hardway Collective.
2006 Harrow established online label Workhouse Digital. Initially established to release Harrow's back catalogue, Workhouse soon became a showcase for his new recordings and fresh collaboration.
Still in demand as a collaborator, in 2007 Harrow produced Salmonella Dub's album Heal Me for Virgin Records. Harrow and rapper Lord Zen from LA crew The Visionaries worked together to become LVX Collective; the duo released 50.50.10 on Pressure Sound Records later that year. Turning the other direction, Harrow released an ambient experimental work Frozen Poetry under the name Numb and Number.
In 2008, released LA Instrumental as James Hardway on Ubiquity Records, followed by a release Wolf in the Machine on his own Workhouse label with Mirai Kawashima in a collaboration known as Kotodama Network. The following year, Harrow released the second LVX Collective album, LVXDeluxe, as well as the last James Hardway album Snake Eyes.
After his visual projection work at a UCLA’s Summer Nights at Hammer Museum party lead to a large crowd response, Harrow began branching further into multimedia work and the new and exciting realm of video mapping. OICHO.tv was born.
A form of spatial media, video mapping projects mutating images, shining hallucinations and brilliant displays of color for a thrilling multidimensional experience of digital art. Not only a moniker for the visual realm, Harrow has also released several albums and EPs as Oicho.
2010 Harrow really began to revisit his early analogue Electronic roots. with a return to modular electronic music construction at his WORKHOUSE studio in East Los Angeles. performing live beat heavy modular Dub sets at the now defunct Low End Theory as well as more improvised ambient settings outside by the LA river for collective
more recent performances include. a modular electronic version of Terry Reilly's inC for the human resource centre/UCLA
accompanying Ron Athey at the Hammer museum, and live ambient music and theremin at the Broad museum
2015. he started Teaching electronic music production and sound design at Point Blanks LA music school
continuing to perform, produce and release music,via Bandcamp and his own label
2020. Harrow studied for three years at Middlesex, University of London, graduating in 2020 with a first-class BA honours degree in Music production.
Discography
ALBUMS:- The Succession 1983
- Technova 1994
- Our Little Girl 1983
- No Easy Targets 1984
- Sleeper in Metropolis 1985
- Sufferhead EP 1985
- Bite the Hand that Feeds You 1985
- Changing Places 1984
- Joined Up & Writing 1984
- Sleeper in Metropolis 1984
- Our Darkness 1985
- Pressure Points 1985
- Wallies 1985
- Sleeper in Metropolis 1987
- Wallies 1988
- Hope Road 1991
- Deeper, Wider, Smoother Shit 1996
- Welcome to the Neon Lounge 1997
- Welcome to the Neon Lounge / All You Can Eat 1997
- Reshuffle and Spin Again 1998
- Easy is a Four Letter Word 1998
- A Positive Sweat 1999
- Moors + Christians 2000
- Straight From the Fridge 2001
- Big Casino 2003
- L.A. Instrumental 2008
- Snake Eyes 2009
- A Darker Frame 2014
- Cool Jazz Motherfucker EP 1996
- Bastard Son of Swing 1996
- Theo Steps In 1997
- Illustrated Man 1997
- Grow / Sleep Tonight 1998
- Grow The Remixes 1999
- Go On - Single 1999
- Choco Blanco 2000
- Movin’ On 2000
- Pranksters Present: Infused 12 2001
- Speak Softly 2002
- Feel in Love 2003
- Tantric Steps 1994
- Transcience 1995
- Dirty Secrets 2002
- Electrosexual 2004
- Tantra 1994
- Transcience Remixes 1995
- Boxinglove 2002
- I Could Have Sex 2004
- Sing and Play Joy Division 2004
- Prozak 2009
- A La Magnetica 1998
- Fastlife 2000
- Lo Culture 2002
- Bull Roaring / Cheap Detective 1998
- Liebeziet / Step Up 1996
- Universal Hum 2009
- Downtime 2010
- Scent 2011
- Oicho 2009
- Yeah What 2010
- The Crackdown - Oicho Remix 2010