Space rock: Difference between revisions
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[[Star One]]'s 2002 [[Space Metal (Star One album)|''Space Metal'']] album mixes space rock and [[progressive metal]], and many of the songs are linked conceptually by having cult [[science fiction movies]] or [[TV series]] as their subjects. |
[[Star One]]'s 2002 [[Space Metal (Star One album)|''Space Metal'']] album mixes space rock and [[progressive metal]], and many of the songs are linked conceptually by having cult [[science fiction movies]] or [[TV series]] as their subjects. |
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===Fans of Space rock=== |
===={{Fans of Space rock}}==== |
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'''Semi-protect'''. High level of IP vandalism. [[User:Spacerock99|Spacerock99]] ([[User talk:Spacerock99|talk]]) 19:29, 8 October 2010 (UTC) |
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There are many fan based websites out there for Space rock. |
There are many fan based websites out there for Space rock. |
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Including, |
Including, http://www.spacerocktrading.com/ |
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==Examples of space rock== |
==Examples of space rock== |
Revision as of 19:29, 8 October 2010
Space rock | |
---|---|
Stylistic origins | Progressive rock, psychedelic rock, experimental rock, electronic music |
Cultural origins | Late 1960s, England |
Typical instruments | Guitar, synthesiser, bass guitar, drums, vocals |
Derivative forms | Noise pop |
Subgenres | |
Neo-psychedelia, post-rock, shoegazing (complete list) | |
Fusion genres | |
Dream pop, stoner rock, ambient music | |
Other topics | |
Jam band |
Space rock is a subgenre of rock music; the term originally referred to a group of early, mostly British, 1970s progressive rock and psychedelic bands such as Hawkwind and Pink Floyd,[1] characterised by slow, lengthy instrumental passages dominated by synthesizers, experimental guitar work and science fiction lyrical themes, though it was later repurposed to refer to a series of late 1980s British alternative rock bands that drew from earlier influences to create a more melodic but still ambient form of pop music.[2] The term was revived in the 21st century to refer to a new crop of bands including the Flowers of Hell,[3] Comets on Fire,[4] and Flotation Toy Warning [5] who diversely draw upon the ideas and sounds of both waves of the genre’s founders.
History
Emergence
Space rock emerged from the late 1960s psychedelic music scene in Britain and was closely associated with the progressive rock movement of the same time period.
The earliest example of Space Rock is the 1959 concept album I Hear a New World by British producer and song writer Joe Meek. The album was inspired by the space race and concerned man's first close encounter with alien life forms.[6]
Pink Floyd's early albums contain pioneering development of space rock on some tracks; "Astronomy Domine" [7] and "Interstellar Overdrive" [8] from their debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn are examples. Their second album A Saucerful of Secrets contained further examples: "Let There Be More Light" and "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun" with explicit science fiction themes. In early 1971, Pink Floyd began writing the song that would become known as Echoes, from the 1971 album Meddle. The song was performed from April until September 1971, with an alternate set of lyrics, written about two planets meeting in space. Before the Meddle album released, the lyrics were changed to an aquatic theme, because of the band's concern that they were being labelled as a Space Rock band.
The Beatles' song "Flying" (1967), originally titled "Aerial Tour Instrumental", was a psychedelic instrumental about the sensation of flying, whether in a craft or in your own head space.[9] The Rolling Stones' song "2000 Light Years from Home" (1967), which drew heavily on some of the aforementioned Pink Floyd songs, is another early form of space rock. Jimi Hendrix is also an early innovator of the genre, with such tracks as "Third Stone from the Sun", "1983... (A Merman I Should Turn to Be)" and "The Stars That Play with Laughing Sam's Dice".
During the middle of the second set of a Grateful Dead concert throughout the late 1970’s to 1990’s, the band would go into a drum solo to a space rock section.
David Bowie's "Space Oddity" (1969) is probably the best example of a space rock song achieving mainstream recognition. A major album in the history of space rock was Hawkwind's Space Ritual (1973),[10] a two-disc live album advertised as "88 minutes of brain-damage" documenting Hawkwind's successful 1972 tour of their blow-out show complete with liquid lights and lasers, nude dancers (notably the earth-mother figure Stacia), wild costumes and psychedelic imagery. This hard-edged concert experience attracted a motley but dedicated collection of psychedelic drug users, science-fiction fans and motorcycle riders. The science fiction author Michael Moorcock collaborated with Hawkwind on many occasions: for example, he wrote the lyrics for many of the spoken-word sections on Space Ritual.
Another example is Flaming Youth's only album Ark 2.
1990s revival
By the early 1990s, the term "space rock" came to be used when describing numerous American and British alternative rock bands of the time. Shoegazing, stone rock/metal and noise pop genres emerged into the mainstream with the explosion of bands such as Kyuss, Slowdive, The Verve, My Bloody Valentine, Flying Saucer Attack, Loop, Ride, The Flaming Lips, Failure, Tool, Monster Magnet, Supergrass, Hum, Spacemen 3, Spiritualized, Mercury Rev and Muse. The sonic experimentation and emphasis placed on texture by these bands led them to be dubbed "space rock".
In the mid 1990s, a number of bands built on the space rock styles of Hawkwind and Gong appeared in America. Some of these bands (such as Pressurehed and Melting Euphoria) were signed to Cleopatra records, which then proceeded to release numerous space rock compilations. The Strange Daze festivals from 1997-2000 showcased the American space rock scene in 3 day outdoor festivals. The shows were headlined by Hawkwind and Nik Turner in 1997 and featured major players of American space rock: F/i, Alien Planetscapes, Architectural Metaphor, Quarkspace, Melting Euphoria, Pressurehed, Nucleon, Bionaut, Born to Go and others.
A Michigan based space rock scene included Burnt Hair Records, Darla Records, and bands such as Windy & Carl, Mahogany, Tomorrowland, Delta Waves, Starphase 23, Füxa, Auburn Lull, Monaural, Asha Vida, and Alison's Halo. This was a modern movement of the traditional "space rock" sound and was pinned Detroit Space Rock.
Space rock in the 21st century
Influences from space rock can be heard in UK bands Radiohead, Oceansize, Mugstar and Muse, American bands The Mars Volta, 30 Seconds to Mars, Angels & Airwaves, The Boxing Lesson, and the Australian bands Lunar Module and Space Project.
The first reported involvement of NASA and space rock came in 2009 when an off duty worker from the shuttle program synchronised footage of a Discovery launch with the Flowers Of Hell's 'Sympathy For Vengeance' in an online video which became popular amongst staff at the Kennedy Space Center[3][11]. Star One's 2002 Space Metal album mixes space rock and progressive metal, and many of the songs are linked conceptually by having cult science fiction movies or TV series as their subjects.
Semi-protect. High level of IP vandalism. Spacerock99 (talk) 19:29, 8 October 2010 (UTC) There are many fan based websites out there for Space rock. Including, http://www.spacerocktrading.com/
Examples of space rock
- 30 Seconds to Mars
- Acid Mothers Temple
- Agent Steel
- Amon Düül II
- Amplifier
- Angels & Airwaves
- Ash Ra Tempel
- Ayreon
- Babylon Zoo
- Bardo Pond
- Baxter Dury
- Broken Bells
- Brave Saint Saturn
- David Bowie
- The Boxing Lesson
- Bowery Electric
- The Byrds
- Captain Beyond
- Caspian
- Cave In
- Chasing Melfina
- The Church
- Julian Cope
- Cosmic Jokers
- Death In Vegas
- Do Make Say Think
- Eloy
- Empire of the Sun (band)
- Failure
- The Flaming Lips
- Flotation Toy Warning
- Flowers of Hell
- Flying Saucer Attack
- FM
- Füxa
- Gong
- Hawkwind
- Hidria Spacefolk
- Hum
- Igra Staklenih Perli
- The Klaxons
- Lansing-Dreiden
- The Life and Times
- Lothar and the Hand People
- The Kovenant
- M83
- Mandragora
- Man... or Astro-man?
- The Mars Volta
- Mercury Rev
- Midnight Juggernauts
- Modest Mouse
- Mogwai
- Monster Magnet
- Muse
- My Vitriol
- Nektar
- Oceansize
- Ozric Tentacles
- Passion Pit
- Pink Floyd
- Porcupine Tree
- Radiohead
- Ramases
- Rush
- Rockets
- The Secret Machines
- Shiner
- Slowdive
- The Soundtrack of Our Lives
- Spacehog
- Spacemen 3
- Space Ritual
- Spiritualized
- Star One
- Steve Miller Band
- UFO
- Underground Zero
- The United States of America
- Zager and Evans
- Zombi
See also
Notes
- ^ Richie Unterberger, Pink Floyd biography Allmusic
- ^ Space Rock, Allmusic
- ^ a b The Flowers of Hell blast off
- ^ Comets On Fire: Field Recordings from the Sun
- ^ Flotation Toy Warning Biography at Allmusic
- ^ Joe Meek: The RGM Legacy
- ^ Bruce Eder, Astronomy Domine song review, Allmusic
- ^ Richie Unterberger, Interstellar Overdrive song review, Allmusic
- ^ Allmusic Review by Richie Unterberger
- ^ Wilson Neate, Space Ritual review, Allmusic
- ^ Archive of Sympathy for Vengeance + Space Shuttle Discovery mashup