Flour is the musical project and nickname of Minneapolis musician Pete Conway, who wrote songs and played bass guitar in the bands Rifle Sport and Breaking Circus until the mid-1980s.[1][2] He released four solo albums on Touch and Go Records from 1988 to 1994 on which he plays most of the instruments himself.[1] Flour toured as a live band twice with a lineup that featured ex-Big Black guitarist Steve Albini on bass and former Breaking Circus percussionist Todd Trainer on drums before they went on to form the band Shellac. Flour's solo recordings feature the drum machine sound characteristic of Big Black, which was also toyed with by many other independent rock bands in the Midwest during that time period. Flour's third solo album Machinery Hill was described by Allmusic's Richard Foss as "an oddball masterpiece of grinding guitar, fluid bass, hammering drums, and very creative ideas".[3]
In the mid-1990s, Conway was part of an all-bass trio, called Brits Out of America, along with Dana Cochrane of Mickey Finn, Amy Larson of Strumpet, and Ben Ivascu of Polica, STNNNG, Marijuana Deathsquads, etc.[4] In 1992, Conway performed as the bass player on the supergroup Pigface's "Fook You '92" tour.
Album discography
Solo albums
- Flour LP (1988)
- Luv 713 LP (1990)
- Machinery Hill LP,CD (1991)
- Fourth and Final CD (1994)
Collections
- Luv 713/Flour CD (1990)
As a band member
With Breaking Circus
- The Very Long Fuse EP (Homestead Records HMS012, 1985)
- The Ice Machine (Homestead Records HMS075, 1986)
- Smokers' Paradise EP (Homestead Records HMS092, 1987)
With Rifle Sport
- Voice of Reason (Reflex Records Reflex-E, 1983)
- "Complex EP" (Ruthless Records RRRS-014, 1985)
- White (Made In France) (Ruthless Records RRRS-016, 1987)
- Live At The Entry, Dead At The Exit (Ruthless Records RRRS-021, 1989)
- Primo (Big Money-Ruthless BMI-011, 1991)
References
- ^ a b Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, ISBN 1-84195-335-0, p. 483
- ^ Frampton, Scott "Flour", Trouser Press, retrieved 2010-03-27
- ^ Foss, Richard "Machinery Hill Review", Allmusic, retrieved 2010-03-27
- ^ "Music Notes: Last Nights Archived 2010-04-01 at the Wayback Machine", City Pages, April 24, 1996, retrieved 2010-03-26