Henry Flynt & The Insurrections
Biography
Beginning in the early '60s and continuing for the next two decades, Henry Flynt performed with some of the most famous avant-garde musicians and artists in the world. After his final performances in 1983, he gave up music for a career in philosophy. He is considered a visionary in both fields. A few years after he stopped performing, there was next to nothing in terms of available recordings of Henry Flynt, and with the individual himself no longer pursuing a career in music, it might seem logical that Flynt's work vanish completely, but as is the case with much unique, quality work in any field of the arts, a demand begins to grow silently and steadily. As a result, by the new millenium there were several new CDs of Flynt recitals available and plans in the works for more to follow. And those interested in his philisophical works could spend hours perusing dozens of essays on the www.henryflynt.com website.
Not much information is available about the upbringing of this North Carolina native. He emerged in the avant-garde scene in New York City through a series of concerts at Yoko Ono's loft in February of 1961, and several years later, he was heard as electric violinist with the equally famous Velvet Underground.
Selected Discography

I Don't Wanna
2004
