Dr. Didg's latest live album, from multitrack recordings made in February 2003. This album finally captures the full effect of
Dr. Didg as a 4 piece band, with live bass, guitar, drums and the usual didgeridoo and keyboard wizardry from Graham. Includes 4 new tunes, some familar favorites and some smoking improvs.
Dr. Didg's latest studio album, released in America by Narada Records. This album is the most electronic so far, based firmly
in the techniques of dance music. The didgeridoo is sampled, chopped up, pitch shifted, filtered, distorted and used as the driving force in a wide variety of solid dance grooves. Three
tracks feature the keyed didgeridoo, a totally unique instrument which Graham built in the physics workshop at Oxford University.
Dr. Didg's second studio album for the Rykodisc label. Tight, confident and funky, this album captures the core of the Dr.
Didg live sampling groove concept. Features a horn section on many tracks, plus two electronica-style bonus remix tracks.
Dr. Didg's first studio album, released on the Rykodisc label. Warmer and simpler than the second album
"Serotonality", this album brings the didgeridoo to the fore, and captures the joy of discovery as the band explores the possibilities of live sampling.
The original live improv CD, recorded on tour in Europe with the original Dr. Didg lineup prior to Graham's move to the U.S.
Solid danceable groove improv.
A collection of live improv and new tunes recorded on tour in 2000. This album comes closest to capturing the experience of a
live Dr. Didg performance, and has been very popular with fans
A collection of archive gems and unreleased studio recordings made since Dr. Didg has been in existence. It covers a wide
range of styles, from whacked psychedelic to Celtic folk and jazz. Features the slammingest version of "What Can I Say" ever released, and "What's the Matter", a crazy track with vocals which
was much too hot for the record company.
Solo didgeridoo by Graham Wiggins a.k.a. Dr. Didg. Based on the didgeridoo solos which start almost every concert, this album
consists almost entirely of solo performances with no overdubs, some just straight didgeridoo and some with digital delay effects.
Hugely influential didgeridoo album from Graham Wiggins' (a.k.a. Dr. Didg) first band. More acoustic and "world
music" oriented than the later Dr. Didg music, it features didgeridoo (no sampling, just flat out playing!), acoustic guitar, percussion and melodica. Reached #1 in the Billboard World
Music chart. Essential listening for any fan of the didgeridoo.
Outback: Dance the Devil Away (1991)
The second Outback album, released on the Hannibal/Rykodisc label. More developed than the first Outback album, it features
violin in addition to the usual didgeridoo, acoustic guitar and percussion. Full-on didgeridoo playing with no sampling, covering a wide range of strong compositions in a mellower, more
"world music" style than the later Dr. Didg material