Born: 9 / 3 / 1942
Location: Los Angeles
John Davies Cale (born 9 March 1942) is a Welsh musician, composer, and record producer who was a founding member of the American rock band the Velvet Underground. Over his six-decade career, Cale has worked in various styles across rock, drone, classical, avant-garde and electronic music.He studied music at Goldsmiths College, University of London (UoL), before relocating in 1963 to New York City's downtown music scene, where he performed as part of the Theatre of Eternal Music and formed the Velvet Underground. Since leaving the band in 1968, Cale has released seventeen solo studio albums, including the widely acclaimed Paris 1919 (1973) and Music for a New Society (1982). Cale has also acquired a reputation as an adventurous record producer, working on the debut studio albums of several innovative artists, including the Stooges and Patti Smith.
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"A man utterly inhabiting songs in one of the most revealing and vulnerable ways imaginable."
"It's a curious twist for the initiated, and a lesson in bitter as coal songwriting for newbs."
"Supersense, perhaps more than any other 'festival' we've attended, challenged the validity of its own form."
'Lisa Gerrard's voice simply inspires awe.'
Cale seems intent on deconstructing his canon, leaving his legacy for the purists while he lives in the moment, and the world is much better for such an approach.