Peter Gutteridge (19 May 1961 – 15 September 2014) was a New Zealand musician, credited with pioneering the "Dunedin sound" with The Clean and The Chills.[1]
Peter Gutteridge | |
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| Born | (1961-05-19)19 May 1961 Dunedin, New Zealand |
| Died | 15 September 2014(2014-09-15) (aged 53) Auckland, New Zealand |
| Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter |
| Instruments | Guitar, keyboards |
| Years active | 1978–2014 |
| Labels | Flying Nun Records |
Gutteridge was a founding member of The Clean in 1978,[2] alongside Hamish and David Kilgour, whom Gutteridge had known from his schooldays.[3] He was a founding member of The Chills in 1980, staying with the band for only a few months.[4] He left because he found the environment "too controlling."[5]
In 1982–83 he was a member of The Cartilage Family, alongside Shayne Carter.,[6] for their two performances.[7] After leaving the band, he rejoined with The Clean's Kilgour brothers to form The Great Unwashed in 1983, bringing four songs he had written for The Cartilage Family.[7] The band later performed on the John Peel Show.[8]
Gutteridge later formed the band Snapper, with whom he performed from 1986.[9] Other bands in which Gutteridge has been involved have included the Alpaca Brothers and The Puddle.
Gutteridge released one solo album, Pure, on Xpressway Records in 1989.[10]
Peter Gutteridge died on 15 September 2014, in Auckland, New Zealand.
SPIN Magazine noted, "the lilting looseness of bands like Yo La Tengo, Ducktails, Beach Fossils, and Twerps owes a fair debt to the sound that Gutteridge helped craft."[1]
Yo La Tengo covered "Gentle Hour" and Wooden Shjips often covered "Buddy" in concert.[5]
Gutteridge did not particularly like being associated with the Dunedin sound. He stated, "People didn't think about the sound of things, people put on guitars and then clanged out stuff. I just got tired of a guitar sound that wasn't thought about. I had my own personal style. I mean, I wrote [The Clean's] Point That Thing [Somewhere Else]' at 17."[5][11]
Michael Hann, writing in The Guardian music blog, indicated that he derived some of his fame from his label: "Whatever Gutteridge’s feelings about his peers, he did not exist in a vacuum: part of what drew people to his work was the knowledge of the other Flying Nun bands" but that he was different and influential in his own right.[8]
| Title | Album details |
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| Pure |
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The Aotearoa Music Awards (previously known as New Zealand Music Awards (NZMA)) are an annual awards night celebrating excellence in New Zealand music and have been presented annually since 1965.
| Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
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| 2017 | Peter Gutteridge (as part of The Clean) | New Zealand Music Hall of Fame | inductee | [12] |
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The Chills | |
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* released as by "Martin Phillipps and The Chills"; ‡ released as by Martin Phillipps solo | |
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