0
Neil Campbell
Neil Campbell
musician
1
Simon Joyner
Simon Joyner
American musician
2
A Band
A Band
British musical collective
3
Jandek
Jandek
American musician
4
Final
Final
band
5
Eric Gaffney
Eric Gaffney
American musician
6
Davenport Family
Davenport Family
musical collective from Madison, Wisconsin
7
Parasites
Parasites
American pop-punk band
8
Natural Snow Buildings
Natural Snow Buildings
French experimental music duo
9
Pussy Galore
Pussy Galore
American garage rock band
10
Velvet Acid Christ
Velvet Acid Christ
band
11
Grifters
Grifters
indie rock band
12
Nobunny
Nobunny
American musician
13
Chris Brokaw
Chris Brokaw
American musician
14
Okkervil River
Okkervil River
band that plays alternative country
15
Family Fodder
Family Fodder
British post-punk rock band
16
Die Form
Die Form
band
17
Machinefabriek
Machinefabriek
Dutch musician/sound artist and graphic designer
18
Vibracathedral Orchestra
Vibracathedral Orchestra
England-based drone ensemble
19
Jack Rose
Jack Rose
American guitarist
20
Magik Markers
Magik Markers
band
21
Controlled Bleeding
Controlled Bleeding
American band
22
yelworC
yelworC
band
23
Eric's Trip
Eric's Trip
Canadian indie rock band
24
Hellbastard
Hellbastard
English Band
25
David Lee Myers
David Lee Myers
American musician
26
Neptune
Neptune
noise music band from Boston
27
Growing
Growing
American band
28
Aidan Baker
Aidan Baker
Canadian musician
29
Masters of the Obvious
Masters of the Obvious
garage punk band from New Hampshire, USA
30
Snog
Snog
band
31
Brad Laner
Brad Laner
musician
32
Jesse Rae
Jesse Rae
British singer
33
Preoccupations
Preoccupations
musical group in Canada
34
Glaxo Babies
Glaxo Babies
Member of, past and present

Richard Youngs is an English musician with a prolific and diverse output, including many collaborations. Based in Glasgow since the early 1990s, his extensive back catalogue of solo and collaborative work formally begins with Advent, first issued in 1990. He plays many instruments, most commonly choosing the guitar, but he has been known to use a wide variety of other instruments including the shakuhachi, accordion, theremin, dulcimer, a home-made synthesizer (common on early recordings) and even a motorway bridge. He also released an album which was entirely a cappella.

For many years, live performances were very occasional and almost always in Glasgow; he has stated publicly that he finds live performance "incredibly nerve-racking: stomach cramps, tension headaches...". However, in recent years, he has performed more regularly (including a tour of New Zealand in 2010 and a UK tour in support of Damon and Naomi in 2011) and many of his recent shows have been predominantly vocal - he told The Wire (issue 284) "I went to a laptop concert and decided I was going to sing".