Print Page | Close Window

Mauve Sideshow for Progressive Electronic

Printed From: Progarchives.com
Category: Progressive Music Lounges
Forum Name: Suggest New Bands and Artists
Forum Description: Suggest, create polls, and classify new bands you would like included on Prog Archives
URL: http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=132323
Printed Date: November 27 2024 at 23:35
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: Mauve Sideshow for Progressive Electronic
Posted By: Gordy
Subject: Mauve Sideshow for Progressive Electronic
Date Posted: December 30 2023 at 23:49
Active in the 1990s, Mauve Sideshow were a North American kosmische ethereal wave band consisting of then-married duo Ramona Blair (Mellotron, electronics) and Treva Dea (vocals, electronics). Originally based in Houston, Texas, Mauve Sideshow later moved to Seattle, Washington, where they would operate until their divorce.

Mauve Sideshow evolved from Kangaroo Kourt, the pair's more Nurse With Wound-oriented sound collage project, morphing into a neoclassical darkwave band performing a no-less-tripped-out take on early Berlin School, fusing the spirit of Gong with the experimental electronics of Karlheinz Stockhausen and the dreamlike ambience of Tangerine Dream's Zeit and Atem. Blair's impressionistic, ever-changing soundscapes were untethered from melody and rhythm, providing a bed for Dea's Gilli Smyth-like English-word soliloquys. This idiosyncratic sonic template - and a love for the Ventricle M400 Mellotron - informed Blair's other projects Torn Curtain, Angel Provocateur, Steeple of Fyre and Mistress of Strands (among many more).

From 1990 to 1997, Mauve Sideshow released five full-length LPs and a self-titled compilation album, issuing the latter and their first two - 1990's Dark Flowers and 1991's Stray Apparitions - via Refraction Sound, with all releases from 1993 onward distributed through Blair's own Ventricle record label. While Mauve Sideshow never received more than a cult following, their profile was raised in an 1993 interview with the Legendary Pink Dots' Edward Ka-Spel, who gave them and Kangaroo Kourt a shout-out as his most recent inspirations.


"Dark Flowers" (1990)

"Meet Me in the Wasteland" (1993)

"Stray Apparitions" (1991)




Replies:
Posted By: wiz_d_kidd
Date Posted: December 31 2023 at 10:06
I get more of a RIO/Avant/Experimental vibe from this, as opposed to Prog Electronic.


-------------
“I don’t like country music, but I don’t mean to denigrate those who do. And for those who like country music, denigrate means to ‘put down.'” – Bob Newhart


Posted By: Gordy
Date Posted: January 22 2024 at 18:35
Now https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=12633" rel="nofollow - added



Print Page | Close Window

Forum Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 11.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Copyright ©2001-2014 Web Wiz Ltd. - http://www.webwiz.co.uk