- Chris Hewitt
Chris Hewitt is a sound engineer, manager and
entrepreneur best known for his contributions to the British music industry, particularly in the North West of England, specificallyRochdale , and in particular his close association with the cultrock band Tractor.Early life
Hewitt mostly lived in Rochdale between the ages of 12 and 36; he attended
Hulme Grammar School inOldham but was asked to leave owing to his radical interest inrock music and his long hair.Fact|date=October 2007 In 1971 he went toRochdale College to study 'A' levels and became the Social Secretary of the Students Union. He first got involved in music festivals during this period, helping out at and selling tickets for the 1972Bickershaw Festival , which was organised byJeremy Beadle who congratulated Hewitt on his 2007 retrospective DVD documentary about the Bickershaw event writing "It's the job of historians like yourself to put things in context and explain their worth from a contemporary and present viewpoint. You have succeeded brilliantly". Hewitt also helpedRochdale Council stage manage its 1972 Music Festival, an event he would convince the council to repeat in the 1980s. Whilst at college Hewitt also founded Rochdale Community Benefit Concerts and then North West Community Music promoting bands such asMr Fox ,Medium Theatre , Easy Street,Bridget St John ,Quintessence ,Brinsley Schwarz ,Skin Alley and thePink Fairies . He also co-promoted concerts withLiverpool andManchester rock promoter Roger Eagle.Tractor
During 1972 Chris took a job with Tractor, who were just about to release their second album on
John Peel 'sDandelion Records label, as their production manager, a role he still fulfils.The following year, with other members of Tractor, he built the first of four recording studios he has been involved with in Heywood, partly funded by Peel.During 1975 Hewitt had a year away from Tractor working for a PA company in London He mixed sound forEast of Eden ,Sheer Elegance ,Carol Grimes Band andIan Dury (and "Kilburn and the High Roads"). In 1976 Hewitt and Tractor helped to found theDeeply Vale Festivals , the audience growing from 300 in 1976 to 3000 in 1977 and 20,000 in 1978 and 1979.During 1977 Hewitt was asked to provide PA equipment for a couple of North West dates for Motorhead. During 1977 to 1980 Hewitt built and maintained stage equipment for Joy Division and developed the Alembic/Amcron/Gauss/Marshall bass set up withMartin Hannett for bass player Peter Hook.Hewitt also built the stage and festival site for theLeigh Rock Festival 1979 which was a legendary outdoor festival forJoy Division and many other bands.In 1984 Hewitt bought the former Cargo Recording Studios, Rochdale with New Order bass player Peter Hook and renamed the studios Suite Sixteen, a name formulated between Hewitt and Tony Wilson.Hewitt still releases music on CD by North West and International musicians and is heavily involved in the Ozit Morpheus Records label, maintaining strong links with John Peel until his death. Peel often played tracks by Tractor and from the label on his
BBC Radio 1 show.Recent History
Hewitt has had a two page feature in Cheshire Life and another Cheshire magazine Limited Edition and appeared on BBC 1 and Channel M television in 2007 extolling the vitues of preserving the North West's musical heritage. A CD album "
It Started in Rochdale : The history of the 70's and onwards arts and music scene in Rochdale, Heywood and Whitworth" featuring tracks by various bands including a rare Rochdale Joy Division recording was released in March 2008.References
External Information
[http://www.tractor-ozit.com/ Ozit-Morpheus Records]
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