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Primal Scream
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Primal Scream
's career could in many ways be read as a microcosm of British indie rock in the '80s and '90s.
Bobby Gillespie
formed the band in the mid-'80s while drumming for goth-tinged noise rockers
the Jesus and Mary Chain
, who were the exact opposite of
Primal Scream
-- the latter specialized in infectious, jangly pop on its early records. After a brief detour to punky hard rock, the group reinvented itself as a dance band in the early '90s,
following through on the pop and acid house fusions of
the Stone Roses
and
Happy Mondays
. With the assistance of producers
Andrew Weatherall
and
Hugo Nicholson
,
Primal Scream
created the ultimate indie pop and dance fusion album,
Screamadelica
, in 1991.
Screamadelica
broke down boundaries and changed the face of British pop music in the '90s, helping to make dance and techno acceptable to the rock mainstream. Instead of following through on the promise of the album,
Primal Scream
retreated to
Stonesy
boogie for their 1994 follow-up,
Give Out but Don't Give Up
. When that record was greeted with indifference, they returned to dance-rock fusions with 1997's
Vanishing Point
, which re-established the group as a major force in British rock.
Bobby Gillespie
(vocals) formed
Primal Scream
in 1984, while still drumming for
the Jesus and Mary Chain
. On its initial releases,
Primal Scream
was a group of '60s revivalists, crafting hooky, guitar-driven pop songs. The band signed to Creation Records in 1985, and over the next year, they released a pair of singles. However,
Primal Scream
didn't really take off until the middle of 1986, when
Gillespie
left
the Mary Chain
and guitarists
Andrew Innes
and
Robert Young
joined the band.
"Velocity Girl,"
a rush of jangly guitars, was a B-side that wound up on NME's C86 cassette compilation, a collection of underground pop groups that defined the U.K.'s mid-'80s indie pop scene. The band's debut,
Sonic Flower Groove
, fit into the C86 sound. After the band rejected the initial version recorded with
Stephen Street
, they re-recorded the album with
Mayo Thompson
, and the record was finally released in 1987 on the Creation subsidiary Elevation. The album was well received in the British indie community, as was its 1989 follow-up,
Primal Scream
, which demonstrated hard rock influences from
the Rolling Stones
and
New York Dolls
to
the Stooges
and
MC5
.
As the '80s drew to a close, Britain's underground music scene became dominated by the burgeoning acid house scene.
Primal Scream
became fascinated with the new dance music, and they asked a friend, a DJ named
Andrew Weatherall
, to remix a track from
Primal Scream
,
"I'm Losing More Than I'll Ever Have."
Weatherall
completely reworked the song, adding a heavy bass groove echoing dub reggae, deleting most of the original instrumentation (even the layers of guitars), and interjecting layers of samples, including lines of
Peter Fonda
's dialogue from The Wild Angels. The new mix was retitled
"Loaded,"
and it became a sensation, bringing rock & roll to the dancefloor and dance to rock & rollers.
"Come Together,"
the first single from their forthcoming third album, was in much the same vein, and was similarly praised.
For their third album,
Screamadelica
,
Primal Scream
not only worked with
Andrew Weatherall
and
Hugo Nicholson
, the pair who essentially designed the sound of the album, but also
the Orb
and former
Stones
producer
Jimmy Miller
. The resulting album was a kaleidoscopic, neo-psychedelic fusion of dance, dub, techno, acid house, pop, and rock, and it was greeted with rapturous reviews in the U.K. Released in the spring of 1991,
Screamadelica
also marked an important moment in British pop in the '90s, helping to bring techno and house into the mainstream. The album was a massive success, winning the first Mercury Music Prize in 1992.
In the wake of the groundbreaking
Screamadelica
, most observers wondered what
Primal Scream
would do next, yet few would have predicted their retreat to '70s hard rock for
Give Out But Don't Give Up
. Released in 1994, the album was eagerly awaited, but its
Stonesy
hard rock was not well received, and it was a relative commercial failure. More importantly, it hurt the group's reputation as innovators, a situation they reacted to with the title track to the hit 1996 film Trainspotting.
Primal Scream
's contribution to the soundtrack was a return to the dance stylings of
Screamadelica
, only darker. The band continued to work on its next album, entitled
Vanishing Point
, over the course of 1996, finally releasing it to enthusiastic reviews in the summer of 1997. The ultra-aggressive
XTRMNTR
followed in the spring of 2000. Two years later
Primal Scream
released
Evil Heat
, a guest-laden (even supermodel
Kate Moss
makes an appearance) album in line and on par with
XTRMNTR
, and in 2006
Riot City Blues
came out. Festival shows and gigs with
My Bloody Valentine
's
Kevin Shields
filled out the following year, capped off with the release of the single
"Can't Go Back."
That single reappeared on the 2008
Suicide
and
Alan Vega
-informed full-length
Beautiful Future
. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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Fan Comments
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allison whitmore
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permalink
)
Sep 13th, 5:11pm
If you like Primal Scream, you probably like The Stone Roses. They have released their legacy 20th anniversary album and it got a 10 on Pitchfork!!! I have NEVER seen Pitchfork give an album a perfect 10. Hit up their music and article by Pitchfork Here:
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/13449-the-stone-roses/
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Angel J. Castellanos B.
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Dec 26th, 12:10am
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Katina Weber
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Nov 11th, 10:28am
where can we get the theme song for SOA? The dreams we left behind? You guys rock!
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Albums (15)
Download
Beautiful Future
(11 songs)
Download
Screamadelica
(11 songs)
Screamadelica/Give Out But Don't Give Up
(23 songs)
Evil Heat/XTRMNTR
(21 songs)
view all
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