Lists

Picture of a musician: The Fall
Picture of a musician: The Godz
Picture of a musician: The Dead C
Picture of a musician: Can
Picture of a musician: Beat Happening
Picture of a musician: Dog Faced Hermans
Picture of a musician: DNA
Picture of a musician: Suicide
Picture of a musician: Teenage Jesus and the Jerks
Picture of a musician: King Tubby
Picture of a musician: feedtime
Picture of a musician: Bauhaus
Picture of a musician: The Birthday Party

13 Music Artists

fave music

Sort by:
Recent Desc

Inspired by this list

Picture of a musician: James Chance
music

James Chance

James Chance, also known as James White (born April 20, 1953 as James Siegfried in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States), is an American saxophonist, keyboard player, songwriter and singer.

A key figure in no wave, Chance has been playing a combination of improvisational jazz-like music and punk in the New York music scene since the late 1970s, in such bands as Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, James Chance and the Contortions, James White and the Blacks (as he appeared in the film Downtown 81), The Flaming Demonics, James Chance & the Sardonic Symphonics, James Chance and Terminal City, and James Chance and Les Contortions.

Born and raised in Milwaukee and Brookfield, Wisconsin, Chance attended Michigan State University, then the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music in Milwaukee. There, Chance joined a band named Death, which performed covers of the Stooges and the Velvet Underground before moving toward original songs. At the end of 1975, Chance dropped out and moved to New York City after the dissolution of the band and the death of its singer. He quickly became active in both the free jazz and no wave punk rock scenes. His first band in New York in 1976 was an instrumental quartet with violin, drums and bass called Flaming Youth. After studying for a short time under David Murray, Chance formed The Contortions, who fused jazz improvisation and funky rhythms, with live shows often ending in violence when Chance would confront audience members. The Contortions reached a wider audience with their contribution to the Brian Eno-compiled No New York collection of No Wave acts. The band appeared in Rosa von Praunheim's film Das Todesmagazin in 1979.