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Certif1ed
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Topic: Acid Rock Posted: May 15 2004 at 13:22 |
Dick Heath:
Interesting age range - you should play them "Love Buzz" by Shocking Blue. Your audience will probably be familiar with Nirvana's version and be amazed that the original was written by the same group that wrote "Venus". I would also recommend "Love Machine" and "The Butterfly and I" (2nd section), which are both very "Austin Powers". For me, Shocking Blue are on a par with Jefferson Airplane.
Philippe:
Do you mean "Acid Rock" or "Psychedelia"? The genre known as "Kraut Rock" is more psychedelia than Acid Rock, I would have thought?
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philippe
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Posted: May 15 2004 at 11:00 |
Acid Rock...germans are simply the best in the genre
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Dick Heath
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Posted: May 15 2004 at 09:28 |
We broadcast from ~7.04pm Thursday nights via:
www.LCR1350.co.uk
follow the menu to the webcast - you can also download some
increasingly ancient recordings of my programme, The Alternative
Alternative Show - although most of them celebrate a jazzy guest. Try
the Trev Lever interview fora start. Don't expect 3 hours of prog - my
target audience is 17 to 25 year olds , so it's a bit of an education
for them, so a softly softly approach. However, I avoid most obvious
musical connections to Radio 1 or 2!! Hence, prog, jazz rock,
jazz, a little folk, psychedelia, world and obscurer archived
recordings - hence the Zappa and 13th Floor Elevators recently. And the
different and somewhat eclectic nature of the music and the chat,
appears to hauls them in - second most listened to show - after the all
Chinese pop show!!!!.
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Certif1ed
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Posted: May 15 2004 at 07:19 |
Is your radio show online? I'd like to hear it!
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Dick Heath
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 18:46 |
>My favourite is "Hey, Punk, where you goin' with those flowers in your
hand?", "I'm goin' down to 'Frisco to join a psychedelic band", set
roughly to the riff of "Hey Joe".
Coincidence, played that on my radio show last wee, back to back with 13th Floor Elevator's "Step Inside My House"
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Certif1ed
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 15:29 |
Some branches of Trance were incredibly progressive in the very late 1990s/early 2000s - I bought several mixed compilations and DJ mixes at that time. Yes they tend to be repetitive - hence "trance", but on the really good stuff, the repetitions "grow" slowly in an almost organic way. The same is true of some of the really good Drum and Bass, e.g. LTJ Bukem. Of course, there's the more way-out, jazzy DnB as well, like Aphrodite, Roni Size and Reprazent and so on. Both formats have potential for even further exploration - I'm keeping my eyes out, but as you say, mostly it's repetitive nonsense and it's quite hard to spot the good stuff.
The Ozrics I can help on, as I once played bass for them. They are the most incredible "Space Jam" band imaginable! Throw them a theme and they'll jam it for hours. Bit like trance, in a way... but not acid rock as the term was introduced in the mid-1960s (January 1966 for "8 Miles High").
I'm in full agreement on so-called "R & B" >ptui!<
{edit}
How could I have forgotten Frank Zappa? Not because he wrote acid rock, but more the opposite, really. He wrote AGAINST acid rock and the hippy "counter-culture". The album "We're Only In It For The Money" is a wonderful p*** take of the whole scene. My favourite is "Hey, Punk, where you goin' with those flowers in your hand?", "I'm goin' down to 'Frisco to join a psychedelic band", set roughly to the riff of "Hey Joe".
And then there's the Monkee's film "Head", in which Zappa played a guiding (and walk-on) role. It pokes fun at the whole psychedelic thing, with some neat, trippy tunes and visuals to boot!
Both are important documents, along with Burrough's "Naked Lunch", Bob Dylan and Timothy Leary - who are profound influences onthe whole era. It's quite amazing, the effect a single drug had on music and culture.
And I left out Pink Floyd (Barrett era!). I think my paper is in the loft...
Edited by Certif1ed
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Dick Heath
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 13:07 |
I feel the acid rock terminology had become redundant through lack of use, so I suppose I should ask, should there be a cut off date when the term can't be used for new bands? So what is/are OT then?
But the term R'n'B is at least through its 4th level of change - I like to confuse young folks nowdays by playing mid-40's jive and late 50's Chess blues and calling both musics R'n'B - as they were in the 40's and 50's respectively - nowadays R'n'B seems to mean glossy/over produced soul music, usually lacking any blues.
I suppose you've read that one of the sub-sub-branches of house or trance or some such dj generated/musician-free dance music, is called progressive - odd when the tunes neither go anywhere (most of this stuff seems increasing cliched and interminable, being one theme played endlessly), nor suggest any form of progression from other types of house. Did you know some dance dj remixers, took Gong's "You", sampled it and came out with "Gong You Are Remixed", which was over two and half times longer than the original album (and it was approved by Hillage etal)?
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 12:50 |
What about Ozric Tentacles?
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Dick Heath
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 12:50 |
>I need to go back to my notes (I did a project on this at uni), but I believe the term psychedelic or acid rock was first applied to the Byrds, after they released the controversial "8 Miles High" - an acid rock classic if ever there was one, and arguably the first.
Thanks for this observation - I don't think there are enough hard references to anchor dates for a lot of terminology thrown around nowadays and somewhat taken for granted.
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Certif1ed
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 12:37 |
I seem to remember the term originated in the San Fransisco Bay area - the "scene" moved to Haight Ashbury - and was applied to the GD and Jefferson Airplane particularly, although loads of other bands were lumped under that category (you know what categories are like!). One famous band from that era was Blue Cheer, who named themselves after a brand of acid that was popular. It is recommended, however, that you do not try to listen to this band in any psychedelic state, as the idea of their music was to induce a bad trip. They were a major influence on Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, The Doors and to some extent Led Zeppelin and the Who, even though they were only lightly talented, technically speaking.
I need to go back to my notes (I did a project on this at uni), but I believe the term psychedelic or acid rock was first applied to the Byrds, after they released the controversial "8 Miles High" - an acid rock classic if ever there was one, and arguably the first.
Other bands included those named after foods; Chocolate Watchband, Strawberry Alarm Clock, Vanilla Fudge and all manner of other confections. 13th Floor Elevators are a good example - I see you have them, but also check out Shocking Blue (from Holland, I think), and the Small Faces produced a lot of tongue-in-cheek psychedelia, including Ogden's Nut Gone. I'm fairly sure the Crazy World of Arthur Brown fit the category too.
I totally agree though - the cross-over to "prog" is but a shadow away. Gong are a very psychedelic band indeed - but I would not class them as acid rock - acid jazz, maybe. I find it hard to consider Hawkwind as prog at all - they were just a psychedelic "space jam" band really, and Spirit were but a very, very talented Blues band who pushed (a lot!). To include Spirit would be to leave out John Mayall, Savoy Brown and Quicksilver Messnger Service.
More recently, the wonderful Magic Mushroom Band have been flying the flag of acid rock on the underground circuit - although is it really acid rock...? Psilocybin rock, maybe?
Oh those wonderful grey areas
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 10:54 |
I think the band MOST closely linked to the acid rock term is the Grateful Dead. I also remember Bloodrock's DOA being a big AR theme in my youth, as well as Steppenwolf's 20+ minute "The Pusher." Don't forget Iron Butterfly.
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Dick Heath
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Posted: May 14 2004 at 07:57 |
I was checking out a track off the Traffic compilation "Smiling Faces" issued on CD by Island Records, and spotted a term used by the liner notes writer, I had just about forgotten: "Acid Rock" (acid house, acid jazz came much later). Traffic were acid rock because rather than having a lost weekend, they reportedly had a lost half decade in a Berkshire (?) cottage. This made me think what sort of music/bands related to and when did we use the term "acid rock", rock generated by or for the use of those who used acid, see below? But I sure in the mid to late 60's acid rock/ underground music/progressive music/psychedelic rock could be used interchangeably for some bands' music - although other bands' categorisation would be more precise, for instance, with the appearance of Renaissance's and King Crimson's first albums, their music would have been "progressive music" because nothing else conveniently fitted. Having been told recently that a prog fan had been using the term "Art Rock" since mid 60's, but in the UK I can' remember hearing/reading that term until the appearance of Roxy Music 5 years later, I'm now wondering was he thinking "acid rock"?
Other acid rock groups? Jefferson Airplane, Soft Machine, Pink Floyd, Moby Grape, Spirit, the Doors, Hendrix's Experience, 13th Floor Elevators, Hawkwind are suggested.
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