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  1. Identity. Nash was born in Toronto. He performed with surgical bandages covering his face starting in 1979. "During a gig at The Edge in the late 1970s to raise awareness of the threat from the Three Mile Island disaster, he walked on stage wearing bandages dipped in phosphorus paint and exclaimed: 'Look, this is what happens to you.'

  2. May 13, 2014 · Nash The Slash, the intriguing experimental rock musician who wrapped his head in gauze bandages and wore glasses, a top hat, bowtie and tuxedo — and who esteemed music crit Lester Bangs once...

    • Karen Bliss
  3. May 12, 2014 · The eccentric Toronto electric violinist, whose mummified stage wardrobe consisted of wrapping his face in bandages adorned by sunglasses and a top hat, was found at his city home over the...

  4. May 12, 2014 · Jeff Plewman, the Toronto electric violinist and experimental musician who performed as Nash the Slash with his face enveloped in surgical bandages, has died. He was 66.

  5. Mar 30, 2019 · Even now, you could find maybe three photos of him on the Internet without his bandages on. He relished the mystery and didn’t dissuade any of the many rumors of his true identity. For a while there, some people thought Nash was actually Anne Murray.

  6. Clad in a stage outfit that consisted of sunglasses, a top hat, tux with tails and facial bandages, Nash—formerly of 70s prog outfit FM—cut an imposing and unique shape in the fabric of...

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  8. Apr 8, 2019 · Exploring The Legacy of Nash The Slash and His Gnarly Skull Mandolin. “It always surprised me that he didn’t become huge, that the whole world didn’t recognize it,” English musician Gary Numan says about Nash The Slash in the trailer for an upcoming documentary about the Canadian outsider art icon.

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