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Brian Ritchie
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Key Information

Brian Taigan Ritchie (born November 21, 1960) is an American musician, best known as the bassist for the alternative rock band Violent Femmes. Ritchie was born and raised in the United States and is currently a dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia, with his full-time residence in Australia.[1]
In 2007 the Violent Femmes broke up acrimoniously after an argument between Ritchie and singer Gordon Gano.[2] The band eventually re-formed and still tours today. It has since released several albums, including Hotel Last Resort in 2019.[3]
Ritchie was curator of MONA FOMA festival at Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Tasmania from 2007 until it was discontinued in 2024.[4]
In addition to his bass playing, Ritchie is proficient at the shakuhachi, a Japanese bamboo flute. He acquired a Jun Shihan (shakuhachi teaching license) in March 2003 from James Nyoraku Schlefer, and his professional name is "Tairaku" ("big music" in Japanese).[5]
Ritchie has released three solo albums: in 1987, The Blend, in 1989, Sonic Temple & Court of Babylon and I See A Noise in 1990.
In 2007 Ritchie produced and toured with the Italian punk/folk band The Zen Circus, which subsequently changed its name to The Zen Circus and Brian Ritchie. The first international album of the band, Villa Inferno, was released in 2008 for the Italian record label Unhip Records.
In 2008, Ritchie and his wife, Varuni Kulasekera, moved to Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, where he has guested in a band called The Green Mist.[6][7] Ritchie does most of his work in DV (David Vartanian) Studios.
On Australia Day 2012, Ritchie and his wife were naturalised as Australian citizens.[8]
In 2009 he curated the first Mona Foma (MoFo) festival[9] in Hobart, Tasmania. Since 2009 he has curated Mona Foma every year until 2024. At the 2012 MoFo, he organised an impromptu performance of the entire Violent Femmes first album by a 'super band' consisting of musicians playing at MoFo: the Dresden Dolls (Amanda Palmer, vocals, and Brian Viglione, drums), two musicians touring with PJ Harvey's band (Mick Harvey, guitar, and John Parish) and with Brian Ritchie himself on bass guitar and vibraphone.
In 2010 he toured as bassist with the Australian surf instrumental band called The Break, composed of Midnight Oil members Rob Hirst, Jim Moginie and Martin Rotsey. [10] Their debut album Church of the Open Sky was released on April 16, 2010, on the independent label Bombora, distributed by MGM.
In 2011 his home in Tasmania, designed by architect Stuart Tanner, was featured on the TV series Sandcastles.[11]
Discography
[edit]- 1987 – The Blend (LP)
- 1989 – Sonic Temple & Court of Babylon (LP)
- 1989 – "Sun Ra – Man from Outer Space" (single)
- 1990 – I See a Noise (LP)
- 2004 – Shakuhachi Club NYC (LP)
- 2006 – Ryoanji (LP)
- 2007 – Taimu (LP)
- 2008 – Villa Inferno (LP with The Zen Circus)
- 2010 – Church of the Open Sky (with The Break)
- 2011 – Tea Life (with Silas Be Ritchie)
- 2012 – Tea Life 2 (with Silas Be Ritchie)
- 2013 – Space Farm (with The Break)
- 2013 – Tea Life 3 / Teenage Strangler 12" vinyl split (with Silas Be Ritchie)
References
[edit]- ^ "Femmes' Brian Ritchie to become an Aussie". onmilwaukee.com. 25 January 2012. Retrieved 10 May 2022.
- ^ "The Weird Story of why the Violent Femmes Broke up in 2007". Ultimate-Guitar.com. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
- ^ Hann, Michael (26 July 2019). "Violent Femmes Hotel Last Resort Review". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 May 2024.
- ^ "MONA FOMA Calls It Quits". ABC. 5 April 2024. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
- ^ "Biographies – Brian Ritchie". Bigappleshak.com. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
- ^ "Violent Femmes' Brian Ritchie moves to Australia on". Fasterlouder.com.au. 27 June 2006. Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
- ^ Otterman, Sharon (29 July 2007). "Tasmania Goes Boutique, Nice and Slow". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
- ^ Darby, Andrew (27 January 2012). "Tasmania more fun than blisters in the sun". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 July 2013.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ "The Surf Instrumental Will Never Be The Same". The Break. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
- ^ "Episode 05 | Sandcastles". Sandcastlestv.com. 19 April 2012. Archived from the original on 10 July 2013. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
Brian Ritchie
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Upbringing in Milwaukee
Brian Ritchie was born on November 21, 1960, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, making him the only founding member of the Violent Femmes to be a true native of the city.[8][9] Raised in a blue-collar, lower middle-class family during the 1960s and 1970s, Ritchie grew up in an unpretentious environment shaped by Milwaukee's industrial heritage and Midwestern values of hard work and community.[10] His parents were Marilyn and Roger Ritchie (the latter deceased in 2001), and he had two older half-sisters, Stephanie and Paula, from his mother's previous relationship, as well as a younger brother, Peter, with whom he was closer than to his half-sisters; the family led a modest life without extravagance.[10] As a teenager, Ritchie attended John Marshall High School in Milwaukee, where he displayed early progressive leanings by becoming the first teenage boy in the United States to formally study feminism in 1975.[10] This interest was sparked by his teacher, Jane Mace, and reflected his budding awareness of social issues amid the city's evolving cultural landscape.[10] While his initial pursuits were non-musical, Ritchie soon encountered the raw energy of Milwaukee's burgeoning punk scene in the late 1970s, which would influence his artistic path.[11]Education and Musical Beginnings
Brian Ritchie attended John Marshall High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he engaged in self-directed studies on social issues during his teenage years. In 1975, he became the first teenage boy in the United States to formally study feminism, guided by teacher Jane Mace in a course that drew on foundational texts and figures like Germaine Greer.[10] Ritchie's early musical interests emerged during high school amid Milwaukee's vibrant 1970s scene, influenced by punk, folk, and rock acts that emphasized raw energy and experimentation. At age 15, he began playing guitar, partly as a social pursuit that helped him connect with peers, including a formative encounter inspired by his growing interest in music.[10] Key inspirations included Patti Smith, whose 1977 Milwaukee concert he attended and where he met her backstage, as well as broader punk figures like the Ramones for their high-energy minimalism, the Velvet Underground for narrative-driven storytelling, and rockabilly pioneers such as Gene Vincent and the Blue Caps for acoustic-driven rhythms.[10][12] Additional influences from jazz innovators like Sun Ra and John Coltrane, alongside the Rolling Stones' eclectic rock, shaped his versatile approach to instrumentation.[12] His Milwaukee upbringing, with its industrial grit and local music venues, fostered a raw, rebellious style rooted in the city's punk and new wave undercurrents.[12] Transitioning to bass in the late 1970s, Ritchie immersed himself in Milwaukee's garage and psychedelic scenes, self-teaching through hands-on participation in informal groups. He played guitar briefly with the neo-psychedelic garage-rock revival band Plasticland, contributing to early recordings that captured the era's experimental garage sound.[13] Soon after, he adopted bass, partnering with drummer Victor DeLorenzo to form a rhythm section that backed various local musicians and occasionally busked on Milwaukee streets, honing an innovative style that treated the bass as a prominent, lead-like instrument with acoustic tones and driving rhythms.[14][13] This period of garage experimentation in late-1970s Milwaukee laid the groundwork for his distinctive, minimalist bass technique, emphasizing portability and intensity over traditional amplification.[14]Musical Career
Violent Femmes
Brian Ritchie co-founded the Violent Femmes in 1981 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, alongside guitarist and vocalist Gordon Gano and percussionist Victor DeLorenzo, drawing inspiration from their street busking performances at Summerfest.[15] The band emerged as an acoustic punk outfit, playing unamplified sets on Milwaukee streets influenced by acts like Gene Vincent and the Blue Caps and the Velvet Underground, which helped them gain early exposure after opening for the Pretenders following an impromptu sidewalk audition.[11] Ritchie's role as bassist was central to the band's debut self-titled album, released in 1983 on Slash Records, where his acoustic bass lines defined their punk-folk fusion style through raw, improvisational energy.[16] He contributed the driving introduction and fanfare to "Blister in the Sun," as well as dynamic interplay in the freeform counting section of "Kiss Off," blending punk aggression with folk simplicity and jazz-inspired rhythms recorded at Castle Studios in July 1982.[14] The album's underground success propelled the Femmes into the 1980s alternative rock scene, securing a major label distribution deal through Slash's partnership with Warner Bros. and enabling extensive touring despite logistical strains from their minimalist setup and frequent club and festival gigs across over 30 countries.[17] Follow-up releases like Hallowed Ground (1984) and Why Do Birds Sing? (1991) further solidified their cult status, with the latter marking their peak mainstream crossover on Slash/Reprise, though internal tensions and grueling road schedules tested the lineup.[18] Tensions culminated in the band's 2007 breakup after Ritchie sued Gano over unpaid royalties and the unauthorized licensing of "Blister in the Sun" for a Wendy's commercial, leading to Ritchie's departure and a brief hiatus from the group.[19][20] The Femmes reunited in 2013 for festival appearances, including Coachella, with Ritchie returning on bass alongside Gano and a rotating rhythm section.[21] Ritchie contributed acoustic bass guitar, baritone guitar, and percussion to their 2019 album Hotel Last Resort, the band's first studio effort in 16 years, emphasizing their progressive folk-punk heritage.[22] As of 2025, the Femmes continue touring actively, with Ritchie expanding into a multi-instrumentalist role on bass, percussion, and more during shows like their fall U.S. leg and spring 2025 dates, maintaining their raw, spontaneous live energy.[23][24][25]Solo Projects and Collaborations
Brian Ritchie's early solo albums marked a departure from his work with Violent Femmes, showcasing his interest in experimental sounds. His debut, The Blend (1987), blended alternative rock and post-punk elements, featuring raw, introspective tracks that highlighted his multi-instrumental skills.[26] This was followed by Sonic Temple & Court of Babylon (1989), which incorporated psychedelic rock influences through layered instrumentation and atmospheric compositions.[27] His third album, I See a Noise (1990), continued this exploration, delving into alternative rock with abstract rhythms and unconventional structures.[4] Later solo releases included Interieur Extérieur (1997), an experimental work blending electronic and acoustic elements.[28] In the early 1990s, Ritchie began mastering the shakuhachi, a traditional Japanese bamboo flute, adopting the professional name Tairaku. He studied intensively in New York City under James Nyoraku Schlefer, earning a teaching license by 2003 after seven years of training.[29] Performing as Tairaku, Ritchie fused the instrument with world music, creating improvisational pieces that blended Eastern traditions with Western improvisation, often in live settings with groups like Shakuhachi Club NYC.[30] His shakuhachi work emphasized meditative and experimental tones, as heard in recordings like Shakuhachi Club NYC (2004), Ryoanji (2006), and Taimu (2007).[31] Ritchie's production and collaborative efforts further demonstrated his versatility. He produced and contributed to Villa Inferno (2008) by Italian band The Zen Circus, serving as a de facto fourth member and infusing the album with folk rock and rock & roll energy across multilingual tracks.[32] In 2010, he joined Australian supergroup The Break—featuring former Midnight Oil members Rob Hirst, Jim Moginie, and Martin Rotsey—providing bass and vocals on their debut album Church of the Open Sky, a surf rock-infused project, and toured with the band to promote it.[33] These endeavors reflected Ritchie's broadening into experimental and roots music, shaped by extensive global travels in the 1990s and 2000s that exposed him to diverse cultural sounds across more than 40 countries.[34]Life in Australia
Relocation to Tasmania
Brian Ritchie first met his future wife, entomologist Varuni Kulasekera, on November 11, 1994, following a Violent Femmes performance in Baltimore, Maryland, where an instant mutual attraction sparked between them.[5][10] Their relationship deepened quickly, leading to a move to New York City in 1995 after Kulasekera accepted a postdoctoral position at the American Museum of Natural History; the couple married in 1998 during the International Shakuhachi Festival in Boulder, Colorado.[35][5] They resided in New York for over a decade, navigating the contrasts between Ritchie's rock musician background and Kulasekera's academic environment, before seeking a change. In 2008, Ritchie and Kulasekera relocated from New York to Hobart, Tasmania, motivated by Ritchie's longstanding affection for Australian culture developed through repeated Violent Femmes tours since the 1980s, including visits to Tasmania that highlighted its serene landscapes and community.[7][36] The move also reflected a desire for a quieter life amid the band's hiatus following internal tensions in the mid-2000s, offering a stark departure from the urban intensity of New York and Ritchie's industrial Milwaukee upbringing.[37] Initial challenges included navigating Australia's immigration process as a couple—Kulasekera, originally from Sri Lanka, leveraged her scientific expertise for residency, while Ritchie obtained a partner visa—along with adjusting to Tasmania's isolated, temperate climate and slower pace compared to the continental U.S. bustle.[38] By 2011, the couple had settled into Tasmanian life, with their custom-designed Hobart home—built by architect Stuart Tanner—featured in an episode of the Australian television series Sandcastles, showcasing its integration with the local environment.[39] On Australia Day 2012, Ritchie and Kulasekera were naturalized as Australian citizens during a ceremony in Hobart, granting Ritchie dual U.S.-Australian citizenship and solidifying their commitment to the island state.[40][8] This adaptation allowed Ritchie to maintain his musical pursuits from a more tranquil base, including occasional collaborations.Festival Curation and Business Ventures
In 2009, Brian Ritchie was appointed artistic director of the inaugural MONA FOMA festival in Hobart, Tasmania, where he programmed avant-garde music and art events blending experimental performances, multimedia installations, and boundary-pushing collaborations.[41] He continued curating the annual summer festival for 16 years, emphasizing eclectic line-ups that featured one-third Tasmanian artists to support local talent and community engagement.[42] Ritchie's programming often highlighted innovative acts, such as world premieres and interdisciplinary works, transforming MONA FOMA into a key platform for alternative arts in Australia.[43] The festival concluded with its 2024 edition, after which founder David Walsh announced its permanent closure, citing the end of its creative "spell" amid broader challenges in the live arts sector.[44] Throughout his tenure, Ritchie occasionally performed at MONA FOMA events, including shakuhachi flute recitals, and facilitated collaborations between international headliners and Tasmanian creators, such as multimedia projects with University of Tasmania students.[45] These efforts underscored his role in blending curation with hands-on community involvement, elevating Hobart's cultural scene.[6] In 2010, Ritchie co-launched Chado The Way of Tea, a specialty tea shop in Hobart focused on rare Asian varieties sourced directly from producers in China, Japan, and other regions during his travels.[7] Inspired by his mastery of the shakuhachi—a traditional Japanese bamboo flute studied extensively in Asia—the business emphasized authentic tea ceremonies and high-quality imports, reflecting a cultural bridge between his musical pursuits and entrepreneurial interests.[46] The shop operated for several years, offering educational tastings and expanding its selection to include limited-edition blends while maintaining a focus on sustainable sourcing and traditional preparation methods, before closing around 2013.[47][48] This venture diversified Ritchie's professional portfolio in Tasmania during its operation, complementing his festival work with a hands-on commercial enterprise rooted in global cultural exchange.[37]Discography
With Violent Femmes
Brian Ritchie served as the bassist for Violent Femmes across their major releases, delivering raw, riff-driven bass lines that anchored the band's folk-punk energy. His playing often emphasized melodic hooks and rhythmic propulsion, as heard in key tracks from their early catalog.[49] On the debut studio album Violent Femmes (1983), Ritchie provided bass for all 12 tracks, including the singles "Blister in the Sun," where his upbeat, circular riff became a defining element of the song's enduring appeal; "Add It Up," featuring aggressive, tension-building bass; and "Gone Daddy Gone," with its punchy, syncopated lines supporting the track's raw intensity.[50][51] Ritchie's bass work continued on the second studio album Hallowed Ground (1984), where he contributed to the darker, more experimental sound across 9 songs, blending acoustic and electric tones to underscore the album's gothic folk influences.[52] For The Blind Leading the Naked (1986), Ritchie played bass on the 13-track release, delivering prominent lines that complemented the band's shift toward pop-infused punk, notably on tracks like "Children of the Revolution."[53] The 1989 studio album 3 featured Ritchie's bass on 12 tracks, showcasing the band's raw energy with covers and originals that highlighted his versatile playing style.[54] The 1991 studio album Why Do Birds Sing? featured Ritchie's bass on 13 songs, maintaining the group's acoustic edge while incorporating more varied rhythms during their post-hiatus return.[55] Ritchie provided bass for the introspective New Times (1994), a 13-track effort that explored mature themes with his steady, understated grooves supporting the album's eclectic arrangements.[56] The 1995 studio album Rock!!!!! included Ritchie's bass on 15 tracks, reflecting the band's playful and energetic return to roots with high-tempo punk influences.[57] On the live album Something's Wrong (2001), Ritchie performed bass on a mix of studio outtakes and unreleased live recordings from the band's archives, capturing their energetic stage presence across 22 tracks.[58] Freak Magnet (2000), the band's sixth studio album, included Ritchie's bass on 15 songs, showcasing his adaptability to the group's experimental rock direction in the new millennium.[59] The live compilation Added All Together (2000) featured Ritchie's bass performances from various 1990s tours, compiling fan-favorite renditions that highlighted the band's improvisational live dynamic.[60] Ritchie's contributions appear on the live album Something You Forgot... (2008), where his bass lines from select tour recordings from the 1980s onward preserved raw, unpolished versions of classics and rarities.[60] The 2016 studio album We Can Do Anything featured Ritchie's bass on 10 tracks, marking a mature phase with introspective lyrics and refined production.[61] Finally, on the studio album Hotel Last Resort (2019), Ritchie played acoustic bass guitar and baritone guitar across 13 tracks, contributing to the band's reflective, stripped-back sound in their later years.[2] Throughout the 1980s to 2020s, Ritchie's bass featured on numerous live recordings from tours, including bootlegs and official releases like Viva Wisconsin (1999), emphasizing the band's enduring connection with audiences through high-energy performances.[62]Solo and Other Releases
Brian Ritchie's solo and collaborative releases outside of Violent Femmes span experimental rock, world music, and traditional Japanese instrumentation, highlighting his multi-instrumental skills and diverse influences. Beginning in the late 1980s, his work shifted toward eclectic sounds, incorporating elements of folk, jazz, and ethnic traditions, often self-produced or involving select collaborators. Over two decades, he issued seven principal albums between 1987 and 2007, followed by additional projects reflecting his relocation to Australia and deepening interest in shakuhachi flute performance.[63][4] His debut solo album, The Blend (1987, SST Records), showcases Ritchie's prowess on bass alongside instruments like Arabic tabla and kalimba drums, fusing funk, blues, and ethnic rhythms in an alternative rock framework. The follow-up, Sonic Temple & Court of Babylon (1988, SST Records), delves into alternative and folk rock with ambient textures and dedications to figures like Brian Wilson, emphasizing sonic experimentation. In 1990, I See a Noise (Dali Records) continued this exploratory vein, blending alternative rock with folk sensibilities across tracks like "Eva" and "Religion Ruined My Life."[64][27][65] After a period focused on Violent Femmes, Ritchie contributed to the collaborative Intérieur Extérieur (1997), partnering with bandmates Gordon Gano and Guy Hoffman alongside composer Pierre Henry to merge rock structures with electronic and experimental electronics over 15 tracks. His immersion in shakuhachi, studied for seven years in New York under James Nyoraku Senza, informed later solo efforts; Shakuhachi Club NYC (2004, Weed Records) features solo and ensemble flute performances evoking traditional Japanese motifs amid jazz influences. This phase peaked with Ryoanji (2006, Thylacine Records), an avant-garde jazz album of shakuhachi interpretations of pieces like "Kiso Bushi," and Taimu (2007, Thylacine Records), a trio recording with John Sparrow on guitar and Dave Gelting on percussion that integrates blues and spacey improvisations.[30][66][67] Subsequent releases include Villa Inferno (2008, Unhip Records), a folk-infused collaboration with Italian band The Zen Circus, born from their joint tour, and Tea Life 3 / Night Trap (2013, After Music Recordings), an LP under the pseudonym Silas Be Ritchie and Teenage Strangler blending experimental and rock elements. These works underscore Ritchie's evolution from punk roots to global musical dialogues, often self-released via his Thylacine label after moving to Tasmania.[63][68]| Album Title | Year | Label | Key Collaborators/Style Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Blend | 1987 | SST Records | Solo; funk-blues-ethnic fusion |
| Sonic Temple & Court of Babylon | 1988 | SST Records | Solo; alternative/folk rock with ambient elements |
| I See a Noise | 1990 | Dali Records | Solo; alternative/folk rock |
| Intérieur Extérieur | 1997 | N/A (various) | With Gordon Gano, Guy Hoffman, Pierre Henry; rock-electronic experimental |
| Shakuhachi Club NYC | 2004 | Weed Records | Solo/ensemble; shakuhachi jazz |
| Ryoanji | 2006 | Thylacine Records | Solo; avant-garde shakuhachi/jazz |
| Taimu | 2007 | Thylacine Records | With John Sparrow, Dave Gelting; shakuhachi-blues improvisation |
| Villa Inferno | 2008 | Unhip Records | With The Zen Circus; folk rock |
| Tea Life 3 / Night Trap | 2013 | After Music Recordings | As Silas Be Ritchie and Teenage Strangler; experimental rock |
