Shoegazing

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Shoegazing
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins
Early 1980s, England
Typical instruments
Mainstream popularity Small to medium
Fusion genres
Nu-Gaze, Post-rock
Regional scenes
The Scene That Celebrates Itself
Other topics
Notable artists

Shoegazing was a generalized tag given to some alternative rock bands that emerged from the United Kingdom in the late 1980s. It lasted until the mid 1990s, peaking circa 1990 to 1991. One could argue that it was simply a label for a generation of sullen bands using distortion and buried melodies already seen in previous years among bands like The Velvet Underground and The Jesus and Mary Chain. Momentum for yet another musical category was driven primarily by My Bloody Valentine's genuinely innovative otherworldly guitar textures utilizing reverse reverb. The "shoegaze" label would quickly encompass so many disparate bands and studio techniques as to be meaningless. The "shoegaze" label ended up having more to do with what label a band was on and country they were from than any particular sound or idea.

The British music press (notably NME and Melody Maker) called this genre "shoegazing" because the musicians in these bands often maintained a motionless performing style, standing on stage and staring at the floor while playing their instruments; hence, the idea that they were gazing at their shoes.[1] The shoegazing sound featured extensive use of guitar effects, and indistinguishable vocal melodies that blended into the creative noise of the guitars. Few shoegazers were dynamic performers or interesting interviewees, which prevented them from breaking through into markets in the United States.[1] A lump description given to shoegaze bands in London in the early 1990s was "The Scene That Celebrates Itself."[2] In the 1990s, shoegaze groups were pushed aside by the likes of American grunge and Britpop, forcing bands to breakup or evolve into a different style.[1] Recent times have seen a renewed interest in the genre, among so-called "nu-gaze" bands.[3]

Contents

[edit] Definitions

Common musical elements in shoegaze are distortion (aka "fuzzbox"), droning riffs and a "wall of sound" from noisy guitars. Typically, two distorted rhythm guitars are played together to give an amorphous quality to the sound. Although lead guitar riffs were often present, they were not the central focus of most shoegazing songs. Some, including Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine, have argued that the shoegaze tag is a meaningless label that puts disparate bands together who happen to come out around the same time. Overeager journalists looking to create a theme lumped any band that used any kind of distortion or blurring effects into this category making the category utterly meaningless. Young passionate fans picked up on faux movement and pretty much any English band who put out an album after 1989 has been called "shoegazers" by one person or another despite no common musical beliefs or techniques among the various bands.

Vocals are typically subdued in volume and tone, but underneath the layers of guitars is generally a strong sense of melody. While the genres which influenced shoegazing often used drum machines, shoegazing more often features live drumming. Chapterhouse and Seefeel utilised both samples and live drumming.

The name was coined in a review in Sounds of a concert by the newly-formed Moose in which singer Russell Yates read lyrics taped to the floor throughout the gig.[4] The term was picked up by the New Musical Express, who used it as a reference to the tendency of the bands' guitarists to stare at their feet (or their effects pedals), seemingly deep in concentration, while playing. Melody Maker preferred the more staid term The Scene That Celebrates Itself, referring to the habit which the bands had of attending gigs of other shoegazing bands, often in Camden, and often moonlighting in each other's bands.

The shatteringly loud, droning neo-psychedelia the band performed was dubbed shoegazing by the British press because the bandmembers stared at the stage while they performed.[1]

[edit] Influences

The bands first labelled as "shoegaze" were largely influenced by My Bloody Valentine, and emerged in the wake of their breakthrough in 1988 with the "You Made Me Realise" single and the album Isn't Anything,[5][6] and the "shoegaze" label has more recently been applied to My Bloody Valentine themselves.[7] Other artists that have been identified as influences on shoegazing include Dinosaur Jr, The Jesus and Mary Chain, the Cocteau Twins,[6][8] The Cure, Bauhaus, [7] and Galaxie 500.[9]

Michael Azerrad's book Our Band Could Be Your Life cites an early 1990s Dinosaur Jr tour of the United Kingdom as a key influence. While not classified as a shoegazing band, Dinosaur Jr did share a tendency to blend poppy melody with loud guitars and laconic vocals. A lengthy summer 1992 U.S. tour featuring MBV, Dinosaur Jr. and Yo La Tengo raised the genre's profile in the States considerably.

[edit] Heyday: "The Scene That Celebrates Itself"

The first stirrings of recognition came when indie writer Steve Lamacq referred to Ride in a review for the NME as "The House of Love with chainsaws". The genre label was quite often misapplied. Key bands such as Ride, Chapterhouse and Slowdive emerged from the Thames Valley and as such Swervedriver found themselves labelled shoegazers on account of their own (coincidental) Thames Valley origins - despite their more pronounced Hüsker Dü-meets-Stooges stylings.

The BBC's John Peel was a relentless supporter of the shoegaze scene; most U.K. bands of the genre recorded "Peel Sessions" before even releasing an album.

[edit] Dream pop

Main article: Dream pop

The shoegaze style is related to a genre that had existed since the mid 1980s, known as dream pop. Dream pop was a more ambient and abstract take on folk and pop music. It was pioneered by 4AD acts, such as Cocteau Twins and This Mortal Coil, who took advantages of the improvements in studio technology in the previous decades to create a new strain of pop music with a hazy, ethereal sound. Highly respected ambient artists like Harold Budd and Brian Eno (who went on to co-author a track on an emblematic shoegaze record, Slowdive's Souvlaki LP) have collaborated with dream pop acts, which serves to highlight the genre's connection with ambient music. The genre proved to be highly influential on the shoegazing scene that emerged in the early nineties, and certain acts straddle the two styles, though shoegaze can be distinguished by its noisier, psychedelic sound.

[edit] Decline

The coining of the term "The Scene That Celebrates Itself" was in many ways the beginning of the end for the first wave of shoegazers. The bands became perceived by critics as over-privileged, self-indulgent and middle-class. This perception was in sharp contrast with those bands who formed the wave of newly-commercialised grunge music which was making its way across the Atlantic, and those bands who formed the foundation of Britpop, such as Blur, Suede, Oasis and Pulp.[10] Britpop also offered intelligible lyrics, often about the trials and tribulations of working-class life; this was a stark contrast to the "vocals as an instrument" approach of the shoegazers, which often prized the melodic contribution of vocals over their lyrical depth. Lush's final album was an abrupt shift from shoegazing to Britpop, alienating many fans; the 1996 suicide of their drummer led to Lush's dissolution and served as a symbolic nail in the coffin of what was the shoegazing genre's original era. Nothing has surfaced from My Bloody Valentine since Loveless, although recently a reunion and plans for a new album have been confirmed, with frontman Kevin Shields explaining the band's silence with "I never could be bothered to make another record unless I was really excited by it".[11] As recent as 2007 publications have began to announce the "rebirth of shoegazer"[citation needed] with bands like Apollo Heights, Atlas Sound, Spindrift, Xu Xu Fang, Silversun Pickups, Autolux and Giant Drag at the forefront along with the reunions of other bands associated with shoegazing such as Swervedriver, Dinosaur Jr and My Bloody Valentine.

[edit] Post-movement directions

Slowdive eventually morphed into the country-infused Mojave 3, while other shoegaze bands either split or moved in other directions. The Verve (at the time known simply as "Verve") went more towards mainstream rock on their 1997 album Urban Hymns, before singer Richard Ashcroft went solo. Mark Gardener and Loz Colbert of Ride released an album as The Animalhouse; in 2006, Gardener's first solo album was released. Several former members of shoegazing bands later moved towards post-rock and the more electronica-based trip hop. Adam Franklin of Swervedriver released lo-fi albums under the moniker Toshack Highway.

Going "unplugged" has become a popular route to take for former lead singers of shoegaze bands: Gardener, Franklin, Ashcroft, Rob Dickinson of Catherine Wheel, and Slowdive/Mojave 3, have all reinvented themselves as acoustic troubadours.

Lately new acts such as Air Formation, Alcian Blue, Airiel, Astral, The Daysleepers, Douglas Heart, Hartfield, Highspire, Sonicflyer, Tears Run Rings revived the genre.[citation needed] Also early recordings of Televise (a band by former Slowdive member Simon Scott) can be subsumed under these bands. Jesu[12], Asobi Seksu,[10], Maps[10] Amusement Parks on Fire[citation needed], Silversun Pickups[13][14][15], Van She[16] and M83[17] also borrow heavily from the shoegaze movement.

[edit] Use of electronic manipulation

There is another thread of shoegaze-influenced music which maintains the emphasis of texture (through the use of guitar effects pedals and digital signal processing) but departs, to some degree, from the rock structures and full-band instrumentation of shoegaze music. Also, there are little to no vocal elements. This “post-shoegaze” glitch and experimental electronic music has achieved some critical praise, especially releases Televise, Fennesz and Tim Hecker. Also aspects of Seefeel, late-era Flying Saucer Attack, Main, lovesliescrushing, The Third Eye Foundation, Pacific UV, Oppressed by the Line, and M83 have explored this territory as well in the mid-'90s and beyond.[citation needed]

Often using the digital studio of a computer, these artists focus much attention on creating spacious atmosphere. The outcome tends to be compositions ranging from ambient stretches of droning tones, distorted walls of sound, and reverb-laden atmospherics. What separates this from other strands of glitch or noise compositions and places it in the realm of shoegaze, are the inclusion of melodies that call to mind pop and rock music.[citation needed]

[edit] Song Sample

Ride - "Unfamiliar"

Unfamiliar by Ride
Problems listening to the file? See media help.

[edit] Shoegaze timeline

Selected bands and events in the genre:

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c All Music: Genre: Shoegaze. Retrieved April 12, 2007.
  2. ^ Lester, Paul (1992-09-12). "Whatever Happened to Shoegazing?" Melody Maker, p.6. Retrieved April 12, 2007 from Proquest Research Library.
  3. ^ Smart, James (2005-06-13). "Review: Pop: Ambulance LTD: The Venue, Edinburgh 3/5." The Guardian. Retrieved April 12, 2007 from Lexis Nexis Academic.
  4. ^ Larkin, Colin (1992). The Guinness Who's Who of Indie and New Wave Music. Square One, 188. ISBN 0-85112-579-4. 
  5. ^ Strong, Martin C. (1999). The Great Alternative & Indie Discography. Canongate, 427. ISBN 0-86241-913-1. “"The full extent of their pioneering guitar manipulation - responsible for a whole scene of "shoegazing" musical admirers, stand up Ride, Moose, Lush etc., etc., ..."” 
  6. ^ a b Allmusic genre article on "Shoegaze"
  7. ^ a b The Muso: "Shoegazing - A Brief Overview"
  8. ^ " MBV, JAMC, Corgan, Coyne, Reznor in Shoegaze Doc" - Pitchfork Media article
  9. ^ All Music: Portable Galaxie 500. Retrieved January 5, 2008.
  10. ^ a b c Jude Rogers talks to the pioneers of nu-gazing. | | guardian.co.uk Arts
  11. ^ Kevin Shields: MBV Will "100%" Make Another Album. Retrieved on January 16, 2007.
  12. ^ Jesu: Conqueror: Pitchfork Record Review
  13. ^ Silversun Pickups: Carnavas : Music Reviews : Rolling Stone
  14. ^ Silversun Pickups: Carnavas - PopMatters Music Review
  15. ^ Silversun Pickups - Carnavas Review from Music Emissions
  16. ^ The Blurb: Van She interview
  17. ^ M83: M83: Pitchfork Record Review

[edit] External links

[edit] See also