Going Crazy Video
Here is a promo video for a forthcoming release called:
An English Eccentric – 1980/81: Contextualising Early Cassette Works by Peter Bright
An English Eccentric – 1980/81 comprises a series of cassette recordings presented in their original, unedited form. These recordings were not conceived as works for public dissemination; rather, they functioned as working notes, provisional sketches and exploratory fragments. Their preservation of tape hiss, mechanical instability and environmental noise situates them within the material conditions of early domestic recording practices, offering insight into the creative processes that preceded later formal outputs.
Between 1980 and 1981, Peter Bright was simultaneously involved in several experimental music projects, including T.34, In A Glass Darkly, and Finish The Story. The recordings gathered here were produced in the interstices of these activities — often late at night or in the liminal hours surrounding rehearsals and performances. As such, they occupy a space between documentation and experimentation, reflecting the porous boundaries between projects and the fluidity characteristic of the period’s independent music practices.
These works emerge from, and contribute to, the broader cassette‑culture underground, an international network of musicians, artists and small‑scale distributors who utilised home‑dubbing, mail‑order catalogues and fanzines to circulate sound outside the commercial music industry. Scholars have noted that cassette culture enabled a decentralised mode of production and exchange, privileging immediacy, informality and material contingency. Bright’s recordings exemplify these dynamics, foregrounding the aesthetic and social significance of low‑fidelity media.
The period also coincided with the flourishing of the mail‑art movement, in which artists exchanged sound, text, collage and ephemera through postal networks. Many of the recordings included in this collection travelled through these same circuits: tapes, notes and experimental fragments were mailed between collaborators across the UK, particularly between the Midlands and the South West. The temporal delay inherent in postal exchange — the anticipation, the physical handling of materials, the incremental accumulation of correspondence — became an integral component of the creative process. In this sense, the recordings function not only as sonic artefacts but also as documents of a communication system that shaped artistic production.
All tracks have been recorded using a Tascam 144 Portastudio, a domestic Philips reel‑to‑reel, and a basic cassette recorder.

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