Dr Leo Chadburn's Avatar

Dr Leo Chadburn

@leochadburn

Composer, performer, writer. FKA Simon Bookish. 🏳️‍🌈 www.leochadburn.com leochadburn.bandcamp.com

1,574
Followers
414
Following
125
Posts
01.10.2023
Joined
Posts Following

Latest posts by Dr Leo Chadburn @leochadburn

Absolutely. And you are not alone in continuing to untangle it, by any means. So many people experienced that "void" left by Section 28.

07.03.2026 19:43 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

(4/4) "we lived in a void. As [John] Grindrod writes of a group of school friends in suburban Stockport who only ended up coming out to each other once they finished full-time education, under Section 28 ’the idea that school is a place where they can be open about their sexuality is laughable'".

07.03.2026 15:18 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
The hidden history of Britain’s fight for queer rights Several new books explore the LGBTQ+ lives and narratives that have all too often been ignored

(3/4) If you have access to The Observer (register for free), I highly recommend this piece by my friend @luketurner.bsky.social, on the importance of archive material to our communities, which articulates an experience I think many will recognise:
observer.co.uk/style/featur...

07.03.2026 15:18 👍 6 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

(2/4) In practice, this meant schools simply never mentioned it. I never, not even once, heard a teacher say the word "gay", "lesbian" or "bisexual". It isolated a lot of kids. I believe many lingering mental health issues among people of my generation stem from this.

07.03.2026 15:18 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

(1/4) I'm still not sure many people release the full impact that Section 28 had on LGBT people growing up in the UK in the late 1980s / 1990s (such as me). This was Thatcher’s legislation banning "promotion of homosexuality" in schools and other institutions funded by local authorities.

07.03.2026 15:17 👍 13 🔁 5 💬 2 📌 0
Post image

2. Demolition of the no.6 pithead at Whitwick Colliery, Leicestershire, 1986.

06.03.2026 14:48 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Post image

...also, here's two of the many things that inspired the album:

1. The cooling towers at the decommisioned Ratcliffe Power Station, Nottinghamshire...

06.03.2026 14:47 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
“Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is a perfectly realised work, and visionary triumph” —Tom Bolton, The Quietus’ Albums of the Year 2025 

“Magical realism meets spoken-word memoir on this riveting new album” —Alan Pedder, The Needle Drop

“Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is an important document, a deeply respectful set of audio postcards moving between the past and the future, assuming considerable emotional weight” —Ben Hogwood, musicOMH's Album of the Week

“Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is his best work yet” —Tim Rutherford-Johnson, Purposeful Listening

The Best Contemporary Classical Music on Bandcamp, August 2025 —Peter Margasak, Bandcamp Daily

“Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is a perfectly realised work, and visionary triumph” —Tom Bolton, The Quietus’ Albums of the Year 2025 “Magical realism meets spoken-word memoir on this riveting new album” —Alan Pedder, The Needle Drop “Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is an important document, a deeply respectful set of audio postcards moving between the past and the future, assuming considerable emotional weight” —Ben Hogwood, musicOMH's Album of the Week “Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator is his best work yet” —Tim Rutherford-Johnson, Purposeful Listening The Best Contemporary Classical Music on Bandcamp, August 2025 —Peter Margasak, Bandcamp Daily

Here's some of the nice things people said about it. I'm working on some small new releases for later in the year, as usual on my tiny record label, so any sales today go towards funding new things. All your support is massively appreciated, always...

06.03.2026 14:46 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator, by Leo Chadburn 4 track album

If you haven't already heard my album 'Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator', and you'd like to buy a copy, today is the ideal day, it being Bandcamp Friday... leochadburn.bandcamp.com/album/sleep-...

06.03.2026 14:43 👍 7 🔁 4 💬 1 📌 0

Ooh! I wonder if the Margate show includes my new favourite painting? Certainly worth a day trip. And yes, I suspect the ubiquitity of her work in artbooks and online takes away from the power of seeing the paintings 'in the flesh'.

05.03.2026 12:17 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Post image

I've never given much thought to the work of Bridget Riley, which has always seemed a bit like trendy wallpaper to me, but I saw some images of this painting, "Vespertino" (1988), yesterday and I'm completely mesmerised by it. I'd really like to see the real thing somewhere...

05.03.2026 12:08 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Leo Chadburn - Freezywater (2016)
Leo Chadburn - Freezywater (2016) YouTube video by LibraryOfNothing

Like a motorway journey, the landscape changes incrementally, but the hum of the engine remains constant. This piece by me, 'Freezywater', premiered 10 years ago this week. www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUkl...

03.03.2026 20:23 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
BBC Radio 4 Extra - Diary of a Madman by Nikolai Gogol An insight into the mind of a man sliding into madness. Read by Kenneth Williams.

Kenneth Williams' 1963 reading of Gogol's 'Diary of a Madman' is on Radio 4extra this afternoon (part of a whole day of programmes to coincide with his centenary). It's an extraordinary performance: unexpectedly dreamlike, haunting. What a great dramatic actor he was. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...

22.02.2026 17:08 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
"Peux" from Pléiades - Kroumata (Iannis Xenakis cover)
"Peux" from Pléiades - Kroumata (Iannis Xenakis cover) YouTube video by Polar Music Prize

I take it you've seen this clip of Stevie Wonder really enjoying Pléïades? www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kU9...

13.02.2026 22:06 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 2 📌 0

Ha! "Guarantee you a nightmare" indeed. I'm reminded of Drew Daniel describing listening to La Legende d'Eer on acid... Personally, I hear something joyful in a lot of Xenakis - earthy, physical, cathartic, like dancing.

12.02.2026 20:48 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Xenakis forever!

12.02.2026 20:36 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Iannis Xenakis - Voile [w/score]
Iannis Xenakis - Voile [w/score] YouTube video by Four-hobbies-man

One of the things I love about the music of Iannis Xenakis is how “Xenaskissy” it can be. Unmistakeable, almost like he’s parodying himself sometimes. Who else would have written this? A little 5-minute cataclysm. Sounds like a fissure opening in the earth. Fantastic.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJMU...

12.02.2026 20:30 👍 13 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0

How lovely. X

12.02.2026 20:22 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Post image

Late to the party here, but I’m another fan of @leochadburn.bsky.social latest album: it’s swirling, mesmerising and I’m haunted by its stories of the Midlands - not far from where I grew up 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

03.02.2026 17:56 👍 5 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0

Oh thank you Caroline. Really great to hear it resonated with you!

04.02.2026 17:01 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Arte psalentes (Ballade)
Arte psalentes (Ballade) YouTube video by Mala Punica - Topic

I don't want to say that music peaked in the early 1400s and it's all been downhill since then, but listen to how astonishingly beautiful this is (Bartolomeo da Bologna's 'Arte psalentes'): www.youtube.com/watch?v=4He_...

02.02.2026 15:08 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0
Preview
Leo Chadburn Broadcasts a Radiophonic Lullaby of Decline The experimental composer's album 'Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator' transforms his childhood memories of Coalville's mines and factories into a dreamlike narrative about the East Midlands' vanished industry.

Experimental composer Leo Chadburn's album 'Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator' transforms his childhood memories of Coalville's mines and factories into a dreamlike narrative about the East Midlands' vanished industry.

Leo Chadburn Broadcasts a Radiophonic Lullaby of Industrial Decline:

10.01.2026 07:45 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

And THANKS, once more, to everyone who has supported, listened and spread the word about my album this year. It’s been so brilliant to know the music has reached you.

Wishing you all a splendid and joyful New Year. X x x

30.12.2025 16:57 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Leo Chadburn Leo Chadburn (London, UK) FKA Simon Bookish is a composer of experimental and 'avant-pop' music, vocalist and writer. His unpredictable work includes music for classical ensembles, dramatic solo perfo...

If you’d like to buy any of my physical or download releases on Bandcamp, I’m having a modest January sale. Use the discount code newyear2026 (valid till the end of January) to get 25% off anything of mine... leochadburn.bandcamp.com

30.12.2025 16:56 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
Purposeful Listening 5: Albums of the year, LCMF at Wigmore, London Sinfonietta play Grisey Collate/curate

"The record Chadburn has been working towards for years, gloriously realised..."

Thanks to Tim Rutherford-Johnson for putting my 2025 album in his top 10 releases of the year. Take a look at his other (impeccable) choices too, here: purlis.substack.com/p/purposeful...

30.12.2025 16:53 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
On his new album, acclaimed British musician and composer Leo Chadburn, who also releases music under the name Simon Bookish, has created an extraordinary self-contained world set in the East Midlands of England, in the county of Leicestershire—a world that that both harks back to the past, to a time of coal mines and power stations, and stretches out far into a post-apocalyptic future. Over four pieces, all around 10 to 11 minutes long, Chadburn narrates his poems, somewhat in the spirit of Ivor Cutler or Alan Moore. Track 1 transports us to abandoned post-industrial towns (it opens with the words “Held in the open hand of the crease of the valley/This town has been abandoned twice”). The opening of track 2 is Chadburn narrating a list of flowers of the East Midlands, and then he turns to the lost occupations of the region (“Collier/Farrier/Rollerman/Waterman/Steeplejack”). On track 3, there are forgotten machines of disused coal mines. Finally, we’re shot through time, to 1000 years from now, on track 4, a landscape of the future where “pink aeroplanes drift overhead/Without pilots/Without passengers/And the sky is a gauze between this world and infinity.” Beneath his words, Chadburn plays bass drum, bass recorder, bowed vibraphone, cymbals, glockenspiel, harmonica, harmonium, prepared piano (fishing line, neodymium magnets and neoprene), shortwave radio, tam-tam, thundersheet, wine glasses, and synthesizers—he creates ambient electronics and drone (track 1), Gregorian chants (track 2), intense, percussive beats with a krautrock feel, beats that become increasingly frantic and train-like (track 3), and crunching footsteps over twisting synth-lines (track 4). “Sleep In the Shadow of the Alternator” is a monumental artistic creation and achievement.

On his new album, acclaimed British musician and composer Leo Chadburn, who also releases music under the name Simon Bookish, has created an extraordinary self-contained world set in the East Midlands of England, in the county of Leicestershire—a world that that both harks back to the past, to a time of coal mines and power stations, and stretches out far into a post-apocalyptic future. Over four pieces, all around 10 to 11 minutes long, Chadburn narrates his poems, somewhat in the spirit of Ivor Cutler or Alan Moore. Track 1 transports us to abandoned post-industrial towns (it opens with the words “Held in the open hand of the crease of the valley/This town has been abandoned twice”). The opening of track 2 is Chadburn narrating a list of flowers of the East Midlands, and then he turns to the lost occupations of the region (“Collier/Farrier/Rollerman/Waterman/Steeplejack”). On track 3, there are forgotten machines of disused coal mines. Finally, we’re shot through time, to 1000 years from now, on track 4, a landscape of the future where “pink aeroplanes drift overhead/Without pilots/Without passengers/And the sky is a gauze between this world and infinity.” Beneath his words, Chadburn plays bass drum, bass recorder, bowed vibraphone, cymbals, glockenspiel, harmonica, harmonium, prepared piano (fishing line, neodymium magnets and neoprene), shortwave radio, tam-tam, thundersheet, wine glasses, and synthesizers—he creates ambient electronics and drone (track 1), Gregorian chants (track 2), intense, percussive beats with a krautrock feel, beats that become increasingly frantic and train-like (track 3), and crunching footsteps over twisting synth-lines (track 4). “Sleep In the Shadow of the Alternator” is a monumental artistic creation and achievement.

A masterpiece, one for the ages, a truly monumental artistic creation & achievement, by @leochadburn.bsky.social

"Sleep in the Shadow of the Alternator," self-released

My favorite experimental/spoken word album of 2025

leochadburn.bandcamp.com/album/sleep-...

Here's the review I wrote for WXDU

10.12.2025 15:29 👍 8 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

Thank you so much Gavin! Wonderful.

11.12.2025 13:56 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
The Marian Consort: The Language of Flowers | Barbican Acclaimed choral ensemble Marian Consort pays tribute to flowers and gardens both actual and allegorical, with music from the late Renaissance to the present day.

Tomorrow (Sunday 7th December), brilliant vocal ensemble The Marian Consort are performing "Flower Dictionary" by me, at Milton Court / The Barbican. This is its first performance in London. Gorgeous programme inspired by plants and nature. Tickets here: www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/202...

06.12.2025 12:30 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
The Quietus Albums of the Year 2025 (In Association with Norman Records) | Page 4 of 5 | The Quietus

My album is # 24 in @thequietus.com's 100 albums of 2025. Thank you so much to all tQ writers who chose it! Do go and peruse the whole 100: as usual, the list highlights so many under-sung and brilliant records: thequietus.com/tq-charts/al...

01.12.2025 17:47 👍 8 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Cover Image of RED AND BLUE by Leo Chadburn: a glowing red and blue symmetrical object (mutations of Margaret Thatcher's face) floats in a void.

Cover Image of RED AND BLUE by Leo Chadburn: a glowing red and blue symmetrical object (mutations of Margaret Thatcher's face) floats in a void.

Released 10 years ago today, my single-track EP "RED AND BLUE", an anxious collage of pop fragments, field recordings and synthscapes, reflecting on the 1980s UK-US political relationship. I've made it "Name Your Price" (i.e. free to download) on Bandcamp: leochadburn.bandcamp.com/album/red-an...

27.11.2025 16:10 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0