Audio and visual equipment
©Jeremy Deller
Collection: Published by Blast First.
Live recording of the first Acid Brass concert performed by the Williams Fairey Band at The Bluecoat, Liverpool.
"Based on the connections I made in The History of the World, I decided to try to get a brass band to agree to perform a repertoire of acid house music. I was terrified of ringing up the bandleader of the Williams Fairey Band to ask if he would do this. I thought it would take lots of convincing and explaining – but he agreed immediately. He just said, "All right, we'll do it. We'll do it once and see how it goes", Which is exactly the attitude you want. So we performed it once, and it went really well, and we continued to perform it. The experience taught me a lot about working with the public. I realised that I didn't have to make objects anymore. I could just do these sort of events, make things happen, work with people and enjoy it. I could do these messy, free-ranging, open-ended projects, and that freed me up from thinking about being an artist in a traditional sense. I had been liberated by a brass band." – Jeremy Deller
Add to your list>Album Cover 'Jeremy Deller presents Acid Brass' (Williams Fairey Band at Manchester Airport), 1997
>Jeremy Deller presents Acid Brass
>Clip from an episode of 'The Culture Show' (BBC Two) that aired on 24.02.2012. Turner Prize winner Jeremy Deller is one of the most unconventional of contemporary artists. He is best known for his collaborative projects with everyone from striking miners to Manic Street Preachers. As he prepares for a major exhibition at the Hayward Gallery in London, The Culture Show meets up with him to look back at the creative process behind some of his major works to date and follows the artist to Texas as he films bats for his latest unpredictable project. The clip features the Acid Brass (The Fairey Band).
> Jeremy Deller.
> Exhibition: Energy Flash – The Rave Movement. M HKA, Antwerpen, 17 June 2016 - 25 September 2016.