Trey Spruance
Trey Spruance | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Preston Lea Spruance III |
Born | Clio, Iowa | August 14, 1969
Genres | Experimental music, experimental rock, avant-garde metal |
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, various keyboards and synthesizer, baglama, rabab, dumbek, zither, bass guitar, pipa, trumpet, vocals |
Years active | 1985–present |
Labels | Mimicry |
Preston Lea "Trey" Spruance III (born August 14, 1969) is an American composer, producer, and musician, perhaps best known as guitarist and keyboardist with Mr. Bungle. He is also leader of the multi-genre outfit Secret Chiefs 3. Originally a guitarist and trumpeter, Spruance later began playing vintage electronic organs, saz, santur, electric sitar, tar, pipa, and various other string and percussion instruments.
History
Spruance was a founding member of Mr. Bungle, along with Mike Patton and Trevor Dunn. He has focused on his band Secret Chiefs 3 for the last 15 years (though it began in 1996), expanding the role of the group into seven sub-groups on the 2004 album Book of Horizons. Spruance has composed, produced and released eight full-length albums with Secret Chiefs 3 to date, as well as numerous 7" inch recordings, and has arranged John Zorn's Masada music for Secret Chiefs 3 on two releases: Masada Book II "Xaphan" in 2007, and Masada Book III "Beriah" (forthcoming). Spruance has toured extensively as Secret Chiefs 3 band leader. Since 2007 they have performed over 500 shows in over 50 countries, having developed significant followings outside the USA in nearly every country of western and eastern Europe, Turkey, Israel, South America, Australia and Russia. Spruance regularly expands Secret Chiefs 3 into hybrid ensembles of varying sizes. In 2013 he scored his music for the 61-piece Traditional Russian Orchestra of Krasnoyarsk and performed with this orchestra in Kansk, Siberia, with Secret Chiefs 3 as the rhythm section. He has performed with John Zorn and works regularly in Secret Chiefs 3 with Eyvind Kang, Ches Smith and William Winant. He also contributed some guitar and tubular bells to the ASVA recordings Futurists Against the Ocean and What You Don't Know Is Frontier with whom he toured the US and Europe. He, notably also recorded with Patton for Faith No More on their 1995 album King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime.
As a producer
Spruance has often worked as a producer, beginning with Mr. Bungle's albums Disco Volante and California. In 2001, Spruance produced Chicago-based rock band Tub ring's first full-length album, Drake Equation. In 2004, he produced the album Death After Life for Oakland, CA death metal group Impaled, also contributing guitar solos for their songs "Resurrectionists", and "Medical Waste". Other production duties have included I'll Have What's She's Having (2004) by The Tuna Helpers and Faxed Head's Chiropractic (2001).
Record label
Spruance is the founder of Mimicry Recordings, which has released albums from a variety of different bands, including Cleric, Fat32, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Brazzaville, Matt Chamberlain, Dengue Fever, and Asva, amongst other projects.
Playing style
Known for his technical proficiency as a guitar player, Spruance's playing style as a guitarist is influenced by many diverse genres of music, such as surf rock, death metal, film music, world music, funk, space rock, country music, progressive rock and free jazz.
Sampling and foley work also play a large role in his recordings.
In movies
Though the legacy of film music composers like Bernard Hermann, Bruno Nicolai, Nino Rota and Jerry Goldsmith play a large enough role in Spruance's creative output to merit the attention of film music buffs, Spruance cherishes his status as an outsider artist who has never aspired to working within the actual film music industry. The only movie score he has worked on thus far was for a micro-independent, The Anna Cabrini Chronicles, directed by his friend Tawd B. Dorenfeld.
Composition style
Spruance's diverse compositional style has been influenced by Olivier Messiaen, Nino Rota, Ennio Morricone, Bernard Herrmann, R. D. Burman, Ananda Shankar, Pythagoras of Samos,[1][2][3] Devo, Fear of God, Mercyful Fate, and many others.
Discography
- The Raging Wrath of the Easter Bunny (1986)
- Bowel of Chiley (1987)
- Goddammit I Love America! (1988)
- OU818 (1989)
- Mr. Bungle (1991)
- Disco Volante (1995)
- California (1999)
- First Grand Constitution and Bylaws (1996)
- Second Grand Constitution and Bylaws: Hurqalya (1998)
- Eyes of Flesh, Eyes of Flame (1999)
- Book M (2001)
- Book of Horizons (2004)
- Path of Most Resistance (retrospective and rarities album) (2007)
- Xaphan: Book of Angels Volume 9 (2008)
- Traditionalists: Le Mani Destre Recise Degli Ultimi Uomini (2009)
- Satellite Supersonic Vol. 1 (2010)
- Book of Souls (2013)
- "Perichoresis" (2014)
- Weird Little Boy (1998)
With Eyvind Kang
- Theater of Mineral NADEs (Tzadik, 1998)
Faxed Head
- Uncomfortable But Free (1995)
- Exhumed at Birth (1997)
- Chiropractic (2001)
Band membership
- Secret Chiefs 3
- Mr. Bungle
- Faxed Head (as "Neck Head")
- Noddingturd Fan (also NT Fan)
- Scourge
- John Zorn
- ASVA
- The Three Doctors Band
- Weird Little Boy (a one-off studio project)
- Plainfield
- The Bon Larvis Band
- Faith No More
References
- ^ Jawsh Mullen. "The Secret Chiefs 3". Westword.
- ^ "Big, Bold and Epic". Tucson Weekly.
- ^ "Featured Content on Myspace". Myspace.
External links
- The Trey Spruance Gallery – a comprehensive list of Spruance's live and recorded projects
- Web of Mimicry
- Mimicry Records – Spruance's record label
- Official Site of Secret Chiefs 3 – official website containing member line-up and photos.