Brian Hopper

{{Short description|English guitarist and saxophonist}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2021}}

{{Use British English|date=June 2012}}

File:WildeFlowers.jpg in 1966]]

Brian Hopper (born 3 January 1943) is an English guitarist and saxophonist.

Hopper was born in Whitstable, Kent, England, and is the older brother of the late bassist Hugh Hopper. With Hugh, he was a member in the early Canterbury scene band Wilde Flowers. He co-wrote several tracks on Soft Machine's 1968 debut album. After guesting on saxophone during the sessions for the follow-up album Volume Two in early 1969, he joined Soft Machine full-time for five months from May to October 1969. The death of two bandmates in the early 1970s discouraged Hopper from pursuing a proper career in music, so he went into agricultural crop protection research and development instead.{{cite web |url=http://calyx.club.fr/mus/hopper_brian.html |title=Brian Hopper |accessdate=2007-07-14 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070922041734/http://calyx.club.fr/mus/hopper_brian.html |archivedate=22 September 2007 }}

Only in the latter part of the 1990s, did Hopper re-emerge as an artist of contemporary as well as historical significance. One of his projects was Canterburied Sounds, a four-CD compilation of archival Canterbury scene recordings from his private collection.

Discography

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1962Various ArtistsCanterburied Sounds (volumes 1 to 4, released 1998)
1965The Wilde FlowersThe Wilde Flowers (released 1994)
1969Soft MachineVolume Two
2003Brian Hopper (with Robert Fenner)Virtuality
2004Brian HopperIf Ever I Am
2006Brian Hopper & Robert FennerJust Desserts{{Cite web|url=https://burningshed.com/store/brianhopper/product/102/485/|title=Stores|website=Burningshed.com|accessdate=9 May 2020}}

Filmography

References

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