- Trip hop
Infobox Music genre
color=darkblue
bgcolor=white
name=Trip Hop
stylistic_origins=Hip hop,Downtempo , House,Breakbeat ,Acid jazz ,Reggae ,Rock music ,Psychedelic rock ,Alternative dance
cultural_origins=1990sBristol ,United Kingdom
instruments= Keyboards (especially Rhodes), turntables, samplers, brass, strings
popularity= High in the underground levels, mainly Western Europe and North America
derivatives=
subgenrelist=:Category:Trip hop
subgenres=Illbient -Trip rock -Post Trip Hop
fusiongenres=
regional_scenes=Bristol
other_topics=Bristol Urban Culture -Industrial hip-hop -Breakbeat -Nu jazz Trip hop is a music
genre also known as the Bristol sound or Bristol acid rap. The trip hop description was applied to the musical trend in the mid-1990s ofdowntempo electronic music that grew out ofEngland 's hip hop and house scenes. It is often rejected as a term by those artists to whom it is applied. It has also been described as "Europe 's alternative of choice in the second half of the '90s", and a fusion "ofHip-Hop andElectronica until neithergenre is recognizable." [ [http://www.slantmagazine.com/music/music_review.asp?ID=241 Slant Magazine Music Review: DJ Shadow: Endtroducing… ] ] It is thus categorized as a fairlyexperimental genre , and sometimes with elements ofDance .Sometimes characterized by a reliance on breakbeats and a sample-heavy, often moody sound pioneered by Coldcut's remix of Eric B. & Rakim's "Paid in Full", trip hop gained notice via popular artists such as
Massive Attack ,Portishead ,Tricky ,Björk ,Thievery Corporation ,Amon Tobin , and rock-influenced sound groups such as Ruby, California'sDJ Shadow ,Cut Chemist ,Unkle , and the UK'sGorillaz , Howie B.Morcheeba , originating from Hythe in Kent, LondonersGlideascope and New York'sBowery Electric are also often associated with this sound. The latest additions to this line of performers are Jem, Australia's Spook and the Anglo-Polish experimental collaborationFlykkiller .History
Listen
filename=Massive Attack - Teardrop.ogg|title="Teardrop" | description=Sample of "Teardrop" byMassive Attack , from Mezzanine.|format=Ogg Trip hop originated in the '90s inBristol ,England , during a time when American hip hop was taking overEurope 'smusic industry . Fact|date=May 2008BritishDJ s decided to put a local spin on the internationalphenomenon and developed hip hop into a different style, marking thebirth of trip hop. Thename is meant to suggest the spacey, down-tempo feeling of trip hop music. Originators in Bristol modified hip hop by adding a laid-backbeat ("down tempo") – Bristol'ssignature sound in hip hop (trip hop's predecessor) was characterized by its emphasis onslow andheavy drum beats and a sound drawing heavily onacid jazz ,Jamaica n anddub music . Trip hop took root in Bristol partly because of its deeply rooted sound system culture and its relationship with a black identity. It is important to note that, as an important slave-trading center in the 18th century, Bristol's black community has influenced black British identity for centuries; Bristol is 2.8 percent blackFact|date=August 2008. In addition, Bristol has a large multi-racial community (only 89.3 percent whiteFact|date=August 2008), as well as a well-integrated youth culture that grew out of the integrated school systems. [Hesmondhalgh, David and Caspar Melville. "Urban Breakbeat Culture: Repercussions of Hip-Hop in the United Kingdom." In Global Noise: Rap and Hip-Hop Outside the USA, 86-110. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 2001.] Under the influence of American hip hop from the 1980s both black and white British youth became consumers of hip hop. Hip hop in the UK was immediately fused with black soul and elements of dancehall.The term "Trip hop" was coined by music journalist Andy Pemberton in the UK magazine "
Mixmag " to describe the hip hopinstrumental "In/Flux ", a 1993 single byDJ Shadow , and other similar tracks released on theMo' Wax label and being played inLondon club s at the time. "In/Flux", with its mixed up bpms,spoken word samples, strings,melodies , bizarrenoise s, prominent bass, and slow beats, gave thelisten er the impression they were on a musical trip, according to Pemberton.Pemberton, Andy (June 1994). "Trip Hop". "Mixmag".]James Brendall termed the experience of trip-hop with the combination of "computer s and dope".Massive Attack 's first album "Blue Lines " in 1991, is often seen as the first manifestation of the "Bristol hip hop movement" (known as the "First Coming of Bristol Sound"). 1994 and '95 saw trip hop near the peak of itspopular ity. Massive Attack released their second album entitled "Protection". Those years also marked the rise ofPortishead andTricky . Portishead'sfemale lead singerBeth Gibbons ' sullenvoice was mixed with samples of music from the '60s and '70s, as well assound effect s from LPs, giving the group a distinctive style. Tricky's style was characterized bymurmur ing and low-pitched singing. Artists and groups like Portishead and Tricky led the second wave of the Bristol Movement. This second wave produced music that wasdream y and atmospheric, and sometimesdeep andgloom y. The British press termed this style of music "trip hop," referring to this evolved style of hip hop; this term should not, however, be confused with the American usage which is closer to rap music.Fact|date=April 2008 Other seminal, more commercial trip hop albums include "Homebrew" (1992) byNeneh Cherry and "Breath From Another" (1998) by Esthero. These albums, as groundbreaking as they were, sold very poorly regardless.Post trip hop
In 1994 Trip-Hop was applied to a wide variety of electronic music that was later divided into sub categories such as
Big Beat , and Electro. After the success of Massive Attack, Portishead and Tricky albums in '94 and '95, a new generation of trip hop artists emerged with a more standardized sound. "Post trip hop" artists includedMorcheeba ,Sneaker Pimps , Chloe Day, Alpha, Mono, Mudville,The Aloof ,Glideascope ,Cibo Matto , etc. These artists integrated trip hop with Ambience,R&B ,Breakbeat ,Drum 'n' Bass ,Acid Jazz , New Age, etc. Furthermore, vocals expanded beyond melancholy female voices. The first printed record for the use of the term "Post trip hop" was as late as October 2002 when British newspaperThe Independent used it to describe Second Person and their hybrid sound. Trip hop has now developed into a diversified genre that is no longer limited to the "deep, dark style" of the early years, eliminating the original impression of trip hop as "dark and gloomy." See Hidden Door for example.The overall feel of Trip-Hop has also reverberated in recent times to seemingly non related music genres and artists. Traces of the sound can be found in many works by artists such as
Nine Inch Nails andDeftones .Trip-hop description
James Lavelle , founding member ofUNKLE and owner of the famous trip hop labelMo'Wax stated, "British hip hop lacks the lyrical skills of US counterparts, but British kids have got the musical side, " and "They know about records. That's the step forward. Now they can do their own style, they don't have to copy anything." An absence of vocals in trip hop (in its earliest days) lead it to find its own voice by replacing vocals with more abstract sounds and having less of a focus on imitating American hip hop.Musical aesthetics
Trip hop is known for its melancholy aesthetics. This is due to the fact that several acts were inspired by
post punk bands; in the 1990s,Massive Attack andTricky both coveredSiouxsie and the Banshees andThe Cure . [ [http://www.moon-palace.de/tricky/cover.html Tricky site] "Tattoo" by Siouxsie and "The Lovecats" by Cure, covered by Tricky] [ [http://www.inflightdata.com/superpredators.html Massive Attack site] "SuperPredators" with a sample of "Metal Postcard" by Siouxsie& the Banshees] [ [http://www.inflightdata.com/mannextdoor.html Massive Attack site] "Man Next Door", with a sample of "10:15 Saturday Night" by The Cure] ]In some instances, the trip hop sound relies on jazz samples, usually taken from old vinyl jazz records. This reliance on sampling has changed the way record labels deal with clearing samples for use in other people's tracks. Trip hop tracks often sample
Rhodes piano s,saxophone s,trumpet s, andflute s, and develops in parallel to hip hop, each inspiring the other. However, categorically, Trip hop differs from hip hop in theme and overall tone. Instead of gangsta rap (e.g.NWA ) or conscious rap (e.g.KRS-One ) with its hard-hitting lyrics, trip hop offers a more aural atmospherics with instrumental hip-hop, turntable scratching, and breakbeat rhythms. Regarded in some ways as a nineties update of fusion, trip hop transcends thehardcore rap styles and lyrics with atmospheric overtones to create a more mellow tempo that has less to do with black American urbanite attitude and more to do with a middle-class British impression of hip-hop.Fact|date=September 2008 AsSimon Reynolds put it, "trip hop is merely a form of gentrification" [Simon Reynolds, "Generation Ecstacy." p.324]Trip hop production is historically
lo-fi , relying on analog recording equipment and instrumentation for an ambience.Portishead , for example, records their material to old tape from real instruments, and then sample their recordings, rather than recording their instruments directly to a track. They also tend to put their drums through considerable compression.Later artists have taken inspiration from many other sources including world and orchestral influences, as well as, film scores. In fact, artists such as
DJ Shadow orPortishead extensively used film soundtracks as an influence with its acoustic instruments and orchestral sounds designed to create a mental imagery of a cinematic experience and immerse the listener to a mood of aural reverie rather than a focused attention to social commentaries or lyrics ofgangsta rap .See also
*
List of electronic music genres
* Chillout
*Downtempo
*Industrial hip-hop References
External links
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=19:T721 "Trip-Hop" Allmusic guide essay by Sean Cooper]
* [http://www.triphop-music.com/ "World of Trip Hop" Webpage]
* [http://www.ilovetriphop.com/ I Love Trip-Hop (informational page)]
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