discover:
The Rock & History Group

Featured Song

To listen to music and watch video on imeem, you'll need at least Macromedia Flash Player 7 and JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Rock & History Community on IMEEM

About

Description
A review of the revolution of rock, starting in the middle sixties and its evolution.

It is a style of rock music inspired by or attempting to replicate the mind-altering experiences brought on by drugs such as cannabis, psilocybin, mescaline, salvia divinorum, and especially LSD. There are also other forms of psychedelic music that started from the same roots and diverged from the prevalent rock style into electronic music.

In the history of rock music, psychedelic rock is a bridge from early blues-based rock to latter progressive rock and heavy metal, but it also drew heavily from non-Western sources such as Indian music.

13th Floor Elevators' frontman Roky Erickson was once asked by a friend to define psychedelic music. Invoking the image on the American one dollar bill, he famously replied, "It's where the pyramid meets the eye, man."

While the first musicians to be influenced by psychedelic drugs were in the jazz and folk scenes, the first use of the term "psychedelic" in popular music was by the "acid-folk" group The Holy Modal Rounders in 1964. The first use of the word "psychedelic" in a rock music context is usually credited to the 13th Floor Elevators, and the earliest known appearance of this usage of the word in print is in the title of their 1966 album The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators.

The psychedelic sound itself had been around at least a year earlier in the live music of the Grateful Dead and Pink Floyd, Donovan's hit Sunshine Superman and the landmark singles "Day Tripper", "Rain" and "Paperback Writer" by The Beatles.
Basic
date created
Mar 22nd, 7:58am
creator
group privacy
public

Featured Video

To listen to music and watch video on imeem, you'll need at least Macromedia Flash Player 9 and JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Rock & History Community on IMEEM

Latest Blog Posts

Post
 
Date
 
Jan 31st, 3:31am
 
Dec 27th, 12:19pm
 
Sep 21st, 5:40am
 
Apr 11th, 9:09am
RssFeed

Blog Post

blog post Midnight Oil - Biography.
Category: Biography
Posted: Jan 31, 2008 at 3:31 AM
By G-Mo



Australia's Midnight Oil brought a new sense of political and social immediacy to pop music: not only did incendiary hits like "Beds Are Burning" and "Blue Sky Mine" bring global attention to the plight of, respectively, aboriginal settlers and impoverished workers, but the group also put its money where its mouth was -- in addition to mounting benefit performances for groups like Greenpeace and Save the Whales, frontman Peter Garrett even ran for the Australian Senate on the Nuclear Disarmament Party ticket.



The band formed in Sydney in 1971 as Farm, and originally comprised guitarists Jim Moginie and Martin Rotsey, drummer Rob Hirst and bassist Andrew "Bear" James; Garrett, a law student known for his seven-foot-tall stature and shaven head, assumed vocal duties in 1975, and the group soon rechristened itself Midnight Oil. After months of sporadic gigs, they began making the rounds to area record companies; following a string of rejections, the group formed its own label, Powderworks, and issued their self-titled debut -- a taut, impassioned collection of guitar rock which quickly established the Midnight Oil sound -- in 1978.



After declaring their independence from the music industry, the Oils grew increasingly active and outspoken in the political arena; after performing in opposition to uranium mining, they supported the Tibet Council before turning their attentions to the unfair practices of the local music industry, and formed their own booking agency in response to the monopoly exerted by area agents and promoters. With their 1979 sophomore effort Head Injuries, the band scored their first hit single, "Cold Cold Change," and earned a gold record. James left the band the following year due to health problems; with new bassist Peter Gifford, they cut the EP Bird Noises, another chart success.



With 1981's Place Without a Postcard (recorded with producer Glyn Johns), Midnight Oil achieved platinum status on the strength of the smash "Armistice Day," which won the group an American deal with Columbia Records. Their follow-up, 1983's 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, spent over two years in the Australian Top 40; after 1984's Red Sails in the Sunset, Garrett made his run at Senate, losing by only a narrow margin. Participation in the Artists United Against Apartheid project followed, leading directly into Midnight Oil's increased interest in the battles of Australia's aboriginal settlers and a tour, dubbed "Black Fella White Fella," with the aborigine group the Warumpi Band.



The aborigines' plight came to the fore on 1987's Diesel and Dust, the Oils' breakthrough record; sparked by the hit single "Beds Are Burning," the album reached the U.S. Top 20 and made the band a household commodity. After bassist Dwayne "Bones" Hillman (ex-Swingers) replaced Gifford, Midnight Oil returned with 1990's Blue Sky Mining, which they followed with a concert outside of the Exxon corporation's Manhattan offices in protest the company's handling of the Alaskan oil spill. (A film of the performance titled Black Rain Falls was later released, with profits going to Greenpeace.) The album Earth and Sun and Moon appeared in 1993, followed three years later by Breathe. Midnight Oil next resurfaced in 1998 with Redneck Wonderland. The Real Thing, only available in Australia, followed in 2001. It was a solid collection of new songs and live tracks from Midnight Oil's magnificent run at the Metro Theatre in Sydney. Capricornia, issued on Liquid 8 in spring 2002, marked the band's 14th album of their career. In December, Peter Garrett announced his split from the band after 25 years. Garrett, who left Midnight Oil on good terms, wished to pursue other challenges. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide

Recent Forum Activity

Title
 
Replies
 
Last Updated
 
0
 
Jun 26th, 7:18pm
 
0
 
Apr 28th, 4:53pm
 
0
 
Apr 6th, 3:33pm
 
0
 
Mar 26th, 1:10pm
 
0
 
Dec 1st, 10:18pm
 
0
 
Nov 30th, 7:47pm
 
0
 
Nov 2nd, 8:05pm
 
6
 
Oct 27th, 9:17pm
 
0
 
Oct 26th, 7:14pm
 
1
 
Aug 13th, 11:34pm

Recent Media

  1. George Martin
  2. Phil Spector
  3. Brian Wilson
  4. Owen Bradley
  5. Steve Albini
Let The Good Times Roll - Sonics
(Duration: 2:05)
Feb 3rd, 11:24pm
Skinny Minnie - Sonics
(Duration: 2:16)
Feb 3rd, 11:24pm
Don't Be Afraid Of The Dark - Sonics
(Duration: 2:26)
Feb 3rd, 11:24pm
Cinderella - Sonics
(Duration: 2:45)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
Psycho (live) - Sonics
(Duration: 2:07)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
The Hustler - Sonics
(Duration: 2:15)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
Good Golly Miss Molly - Sonics
(Duration: 2:08)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
Strychnine - Sonics
(Duration: 2:14)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
Night Time Is Right Time - Sonics
(Duration: 2:58)
Feb 3rd, 11:23pm
Money (That's What I Want) - Sonics
(Duration: 2:01)
Feb 3rd, 11:22pm
Psycho - Sonics
(Duration: 2:17)
Feb 3rd, 11:22pm
Have Love Will Travel - Sonics
(Duration: 2:40)
Feb 3rd, 11:22pm
Dirty Robber - Sonics
(Duration: 2:02)
Feb 3rd, 11:22pm
Boss Hoss - Sonics
(Duration: 2:24)
Feb 3rd, 11:22pm