- Philip Brophy
Philip Brophy, born in Reservoir, Melbourne 1959 is an
Australia n musician, composer,sound designer , filmmaker, writer, graphic designer, educator and academic.Music
In 1977, Brophy formed the experimental group
→ ↑ → more often written (though wrongly) asTsk Tsk Tsk or Tch Tch Tch, (pronounced tsk tsk tsk) with Ralph Traviato and Leigh Parkhill. Sometimes compared toAndy Warhol 's Factory, the group produced experimental music (Brophy on drums or synthesiser), films, videos, and live theatrical performances exploring Brophy's aesthetic and cultural interests, often on a minimal budget. Over the ten years of the groups operation it involved over sixty of Brophy's friends and acquaintances including musicianDavid Chesworth , and visual artistsMaria Kozic and Jayne Stevenson. They performed in a wide range on Australian venues including pubs, galleries, university campuses and theClifton Hill Community Music Centre . They also performed or exhibited in Europe, includingLondon 's ICA. Brophy dissolved the group in the late 1980s, issuing a retrospective book "Made by → ↑ →", but continued to work with Kozic for some time.In 1980, he founded the Innocent Records label with fellow Melbourne musician
David Chesworth . Throughout the early 1980s, Brophy wrote numerous compositions and multi-media pieces. In the late 1990s, Brophy founded the Sound Punch label, and released both solo works, and collaborations with Maria Kozic, Bill McDonald, and fellow RMIT academicPhilip Samartzis .Film
After the dissolution of "Tsk Tsk Tsk", with whom Brophy had made numerous collaborative film and video works (including Super-8 and 16mm versions of "No Dance"), he set his ambitions on making higher budget films, and became more involved in Sound Design. In 1988 he made an experimental short film "Salt, Saliva, Sperm and Sweat". His first feature film, "
Body Melt ", was released in 1993, and was funded by theAustralian Film Commission andFilm Victoria . Two short films were produced in 2004, "The Sound Of Milk" and "Words In My Mouth - Voices In My Head (Anna)".Academia
Brophy has had works published in journals such as "Virgin Press", "Art & Text" and "Fast Forward" and has presented papers at various film conferences since the early 1980s. He began teaching sound and media at the
Phillip Institute of Technology in 1982. He began teaching cinema studies atRMIT in 1986.Other activities
Between 1985 and 2002 he co-presented, with
Bruce Milne , the irreverentcultural theory and music radio show "Eeek!", on Melbourne radio station3RRR (102.7 MHz). At the time it was the most popular show on the station.Brophy has regularly written for "The Wire" magazine about film soundtracks, alsoFilm Comment . He was the director of the Cinesonic International Conference on Film Scores & Sound Design, and has edited three journals from the conference.He has had two books published by the
British Film Institute .Philip Brophy has also exhibited his artworks in Art Galleries for exhibitions such as [http://artabase.net/exhibition/85-vox 'Vox'] .
Bibliography
* "Made by
→ ↑ → ", Ed. Philip Brophy, Melbourne, 1983
* "Kaboom: Explosive Animation", Ed. Philip Brophy, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, 1994
* "Cinesonic: The World of Sound in Film", Ed. Philip Brophy, AFTRS Publishing, Sydney, 1998
* "Cinesonic: Cinema and the Sound of Music", Ed. Philip Brophy, AFTRS Publishing, Sydney, 1999
* "Cinesonic: Experiencing The Soundtrack", Ed. Philip Brophy, AFTRS Publishing, Sydney, 2002
* "100 Modern Soundtracks", Philip Brophy, BFI, London, 2004
* "100Anime ", Philip Brophy, BFI, London, 2005
* "TEZUKA: The Marvel of Manga", Ed. Philip Brophy,National Gallery of Victoria , Melbourne, 2006External links
*http://www.philipbrophy.com/ Official website
* [http://www.simonsellars.com/sleepybrain/philip-brophy Kill 'Em All: An Interview with Philip Brophy] Scabrous interview with Brophy
*http://www.imdb.com
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