Biography
Born in 1951, composer, multi-instrumentalist, and political activist Lindsay Cooper was a fixture on the new music scene in both Great Britain and Europe after she first appeared with Henry Cow in 1974. Initially emerging with links to the Canterbury scene, a place and period in which prog rock and modern British jazz spawned groups such as Soft Machine, Henry Cow, Hatfield and the North, National Health, Matching Mole, and many others, Cooper's restlessness and talents soon far outstripped those geographical musical origins.

Cooper began playing piano at age 11 in her native Hornsey, a suburb of North London, and switched to bassoon a few years later. From 1965-1968 she played in the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain and studied classical music exclusively. She later became a member of the Royal Academy of Music in London and relocated to New York for one year. It was in the United States that she first encountered recording projects outside the realm of classical music, doing spot work for film soundtracks.

Upon returning to the U.K., Cooper decided to leave classical music at the age of 20, and in 1971 joined a Canterbury band called Comus. Her stay in the band was brief (only a year), but it afforded her a look and listen to everything else that was happening at the time, and the experience changed her life. During this period she also began playing both oboe and flute. Cooper began doing session work for other musicians and more film work. She was one of the noted performers on Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells and Hergest Ridge albums in 1973 and 1974, respectively. During a theater project, Cooper first met the musicians in Henry Cow and after Geoff Leigh left the band, she replaced him in 1974.

Cooper's musical restlessness was the perfect balance for the members of Henry Cow, who included Fred Frith, John Greaves, Dagmar Krause, Peter Blegvad, Tim Hodgkinson, and Chris Cutler. Cooper recorded two albums with the band, Unrest in 1974 and Western Culture in 1979, and also recorded both Slapp Happy albums with them -- Desperate Straits and In Praise of Learning, both released in 1975 -- and played on Steve Hillage's 1975 Fish Rising album. In addition, she reunited briefly with Comus, recording one album with them called To Keep from Crying (1974), played with Egg on their Civil Surface recording (1974), and contributed to Hatfield and the North's The Rotters' Club disc (1975). By 1975 Cooper had helped to found and become the musical director for the City, a theatrical rock band and first encountered the personages of Lol Coxhill, Evan Parker, and Derek Bailey. She began to improvise and play with them later that year.

Cooper was virtually everywhere and anywhere there was art music to be made in the 1970s, and in 1977 (a year rife with musical change all over the West) she co-founded the Feminist Improvising Group with Maggie Nicols, Sally Potter, Georgie Born, and pianist Irène Schweizer. During the same year, in order to broaden her contribution to the group, Cooper began playing soprano saxophone, a decision that was to change her life as both a composer and a conceptual artist. At this time she also gave up playing the flute.

Henry Cow broke up in 1978, and the aforementioned illustrious Western Culture arrived the following year, with one side of the album devoted solely to Cooper's compositions. This was no mean feat for a woman coming out of the rock world in the late '70s. (But then, Henry Cow weren't an ordinary rock band, were they?) She joined National Health for a short time but left as the group struggled through lineup changes and record company indifference during the ascent of punk. She recorded her first solo album, Rags, in 1980, which featured her first collaboration with Phil Minton along with Born, Potter, Chris Cutler, and Fred Frith. She also recorded a stunning duet with bassist and vocalist Jöelle Léandre in early 1982.

Cooper, Born, Nicols, Potter, and Schweizer kept the Feminist Improvising Group alive through 1982, and during this time, Cooper also recorded and performed with Mike Westbrook, Maarten Altena, David Thomas the Pedestrians, and in that same year, she founded her own group, the Lindsay Cooper Film Music Orchestra. With this band she wrote and performed many film and TV scores, the most notable of which, at the time, was for Sally Potter's debut feature film, The Gold Diggers. From 1983 to 1986, Cooper recorded two of her signature albums, Music for the Small Screen, a collection of television pieces, and Music for Other Occasions with Alfred 23 Harth, Kate Westbrook, Krause, Nicols, and others.

Cooper did not, however, limit her activities to her own band. As the decade progressed she also joined Chris Cutler, Dagmar Krause, and Zeena Parkins in the group News from Babel. The band issued two albums: Work Resumed on the Tower in 1984 and Letters Home in 1986. Cooper wrote the music for both albums and Cutler wrote lyrics for Krause. Cooper was perhaps best known for her 1987 song cycle Oh Moscow. Featuring herself, Minton, Potter, Hugh Hopper, Marilyn Mazur, Harth, and Elvira Plenar, it was recorded in 1989 at the famed FIMAV festival in Quebec.

In 1991 Cooper was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. She declined to tell anyone and went on performing all over the world and issued her collection of dance pieces, Schrödinger's Cat, another collection of dance works called An Angel on the Bridge, and premiered "Songs for Bassoon and Orchestra" in Bologna. She also performed the debut of her "Concerto for Sopranino Saxophone and Strings" at the British Conservatory. A two-CD collection called Songs from the Bridge, which included these and other works, was issued in 1998. Cooper's last major work was the haunting and harrowing Sahara Dust, in collaboration with Australian singer/writer/director Robyn Archer. Sahara Dust is a meditation on the Gulf War. A studio recording for the venerable Intakt label, Cooper enlisted Minton, Plenar, Robyn Schulkowsky, Dean Brodrick, and Paul Jayasinha for the recording session. Arguably, it, and not Oh Moscow, is Cooper's masterwork, given its haunting theme of the world being reduced to Sahara dust (rain bearing particles of sand from the Middle East) little by little as people watch the conflict from their television screens, coming to realize that this is not a distant situation with far-flung consequences, but one on which the idea of community and collective survival depends. The interplay between Minton's voice singing and ringing out the poetry with the hypnotic winds, reeds, piano, and electronics is almost unbearable in its import. Yet it is so seductive the listener cannot help but to draw nearer to the sound.

In 1998 Cooper's battle with MS had become such a rigor that she was forced to disclose it to the musical community. She became largely inactive after that time as all of her energy and resources -- as a musician she had no health insurance proper and public assistance was hardly adequate -- were spent dealing with her disease. Active or not, Cooper remained a hugely respected and influential figure throughout Europe, with her works regularly performed and, in some visionary conservatories, even taught. In September 2013 Lindsay Cooper died from complications of the multiple sclerosis that had, many years previously, curtailed her unique and visionary musical career. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi




 
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Lindsay Cooper - Savannah
Lindsay Cooper - The Small Screen (cassette, 1984)
Lindsay Cooper (1951-2013): Slow Dance for Solo Bassoon (1986)
Lindsay Cooper - Mainz (Various, A Classic Guide To No Man's Land, 1988)
Lindsay Cooper - The Time of Their Lives
Lindsay Cooper Songbook at Zappanale #29, Germany, 2018 digest
Lindsay Cooper - The assasination waltz
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