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Chris Freeman (Australian musician)
・ Chris Freeman (musician)
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Chris Freeman (Australian musician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Chris Freeman (Australian musician)

Christopher James "Chris" Freeman (c. 1950–1992) was an Australian multi-instrumentalist and teacher who specialised in six-string and 12-string guitar for classical and flamenco music. At the age of 17 he severed the fingertip of his left hand middle finger in a car accident. It was replaced by a silver cap, which gave him the nickname "Silver Finger". He released three solo albums, ''Thesilger'' (1976), ''Shifting Sands... Night & Day'' (1978) and ''Best of Chris Freeman'' (1991). He also issued four albums with keyboardist John Shaw, ''Chris Freeman and John Shaw'' (1981), ''Synthesized Orchestration'' (1983), ''Synthesized Orchestration Vol. 2'' (1984) and ''The Best of Chris Freeman and John Shaw'' (1990). Freeman died in 1992 after an asthma attack, aged 41 or 42. Australian musicologist Ian McFarlane described him as a "()ifted multi-instrumentalist" who "garnered considerable praise for his work, but he never embraced the notion of mainstream acceptance".
==Biography==
Christopher James Freeman (born c. 1950) was taught ukulele by his father when aged seven and learned guitar from the age of eight.〔〔〔 He began working on multi-tracking from the age of 16. In 1967, when aged 17, his left hand's middle fingertip was severed in a car accident, he had it replaced with a silver one crafted in a playing position.〔〔 Nicknamed "Silver Finger",〔 he learned to work around the injury using his left hand "only to press down on the strings".〔 At the age of 21 he travelled to Spain and was taught by flamenco guitar virtuoso, Manitas de Plata.〔〔
In 1976 he self-financed his debut album, ''Thesilger'', (named for the replacement finger) on T. S. F. Records.〔 Mike Daly of ''The Age'' felt that Freeman "experimented with quaint effects involving digital harmoniser and distorted vocals – with mixed results".〔 Two years later Freeman followed with ''Shifting Sands... Night & Day''.〔 When performing solo, he used a backing tape with orchestral tracks previously recorded on a Fairlight CMI.〔
In May 1981 Freeman combined with keyboardist and orchestral arranger, John Shaw, to issue an album, ''Chris Freeman and John Shaw'', independently on Chris Freeman Records and distributed by EMI Records.〔〔 Aside from his own work he also covered ''Gymnopedie'' by Satie and ''Recuerdos de la Alhambra'' by Tárrega.〔〔 Daly described this album as "a very different proposition" compared to Freeman's debut: here the "melodies are dominated by () lyrical adaptation of the rich flamenco style".〔 ''The Sydney Morning Herald''s Susan Molloy found it was "of precious quality and outstanding beauty" displaying a variety of styles "from classical to flamenco to rock and roll, from disco to calypso-reggae and soft country rock".〔
As well as recording and performing Freeman also taught flamenco and classical guitar techniques.〔 In early 1982 he toured with the Peter Stuyvesant International Music Festival.〔 He issued two further albums with Shaw, ''Synthesized Orchestration'' (1983) and ''Synthesized Orchestration Vol. 2'' (1984).〔 In 1990 Freeman and Shaw compiled their collaborations on CD, ''The Best of Chris Freeman and John Shaw''.〔 The following year he released a solo compilation album, ''Best of Chris Freeman''.〔 In 1992 Chris Freeman died after an asthma attack, aged 41 or 42.〔〔 Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described him as a "()ifted multi-instrumentalist" who "garnered considerable praise for his work, but he never embraced the notion of mainstream acceptance".〔

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