- Art rock
Infobox Music genre
name=Art rock
bgcolor=crimson
color=white
stylistic_origins=Progressive rock Experimental rock
Avant-garde
cultural_origins= 1960sUnited Kingdom andUnited States
instruments=Guitar - Bass - Drums - Keyboard
popularity= Medium, some bands have had mainstream success.
derivatives=
subgenres=Avant-progressive rock
regional_scenes= Largely global, England - Scotland - Wales - Ireland - USA - Canada - Sweden - Japan - Czech Republic
other_topics=Art rock is a term describing a subgenre of
rock music that tends to have "experimental or avant-garde influences" and emphasizes "novel sonic texture."allmusicguide | id=77:374 | label=Art Rock] Art rock is an "intrinsically album-based" form, which takes "advantage of the format's capacity for longer, more complex compositions and extended instrumental explorations." The "Golden Age of Rock" lectures define art rock as "a piece of music in the rock idiom that is appealing more intellectually or musically, that is, not formulated along pop lines for mass consumption." The lectures note that it is "...usually somewhat experimental", using "a long structure with several themes like classical music" or "a suite of individual songs." Art Rock "almost always features keyboards more than guitar." As well, art rock is "not so much for dancing as for listening and it often tells a story or has a philosophical theme to the lyrics."The Golden Age Of Art Rock: Part One: Making It Last 2. Cosmik Debris Magazine Presents The Golden Age of Rock, January 2002 www.cosmik.com/aa-january02/go http://www.zoominfo.com/people/Rock_Art_96958714.aspx]Relationship with progressive rock
The concept of "art rock" has also sometimes been used to refer to the "
progressive rock " bands which became popular in the 1970s.Allmusic states that "Progressive rock and art rock are two almost interchangeable terms describing a mostly British attempt to elevate rock music to new levels of artistic credibility." Progressive rock eventually stuck as a label for a specific genre of rock music, while "art rock" was used to refer to a wider, more subjective and harder-to-categorize collection of bands.Princeton University's Wordnet dictionary states that "progressive rock, art rock" are "a style of rock music that emerged in the 1970s; associated with attempts to combine rock with jazz and other forms; intended for listening and not dancing". [wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn] As well, the book "American Popular Music" by Larry Starr & Christopher Watermandefines art rock as a "Form of rock music that blended elements of rock and European classical music. It included bands such as King Crimson; Emerson, Lake & Palmer; and Pink Floyd." [cite web | url=http://www.us.oup.com/us/companion.websites/019530053X/studentresources/chapter11/key_terms/ | title=Key Terms and Definitions | accessdate=2008-03-16] Bruce Eder's essay "The Early History of Art-Rock/Prog Rock" states that "'progressive rock,' also sometimes known as 'art rock,' or 'classical rock'" is music in which the "bands [are] playing suites, not songs; borrowing riffs from Bach, Beethoven, and Wagner instead of
Chuck Berry andBo Diddley ; and using language closer toWilliam Blake orT. S. Eliot than toCarl Perkins orWillie Dixon ." ["The Early History of Art-Rock/Prog Rock" by Bruce Eder (All-Music Guide Essay). Available at: http://www.vanguardchurch.com/the_history_of_art_rock.htm]The "Guide to the Progressive Rock Genres" lists "art rock" under the subheading "Forms Tangential and Peripheral to Symphonic Rock/Progressive Rock." The guide states that "art rock" is "another term often used interchangeably with progressive rock, [which] implies rock with an exploratory tendency." The guide also gives another definition of "art rock", which "describes music of a more mainstream compositional nature, tending to experimentation within this framework", such as "Early
Roxy Music ,David Bowie ,Brian Eno 's 70s rock music, andBe Bop Deluxe . [ [http://www.gepr.net/genre2.html A Guide to the Progressive Rock Genres ] ]Connolly and Company argue that the "creation of the “art rock” sub-genre, whose members were identified by music played with artistic ideals (e.g.,
Roxy Music ,10cc )...was in many ways a response to prog rock’s long-winded concepts, an attempt to condense progressive rock’s ideas into shorter, self-standing songs." He argues that "Art rock’s lifespan was brief, generally contained to the ‘70s." [ [http://www.connollyco.com/discography/whatis.html What is prog? ] ]Art rock may be considered "arty" through imitation of classical "art" music or literature, or simply through eclecticism. Examples of the former include Queen,
The Moody Blues ,The Who , [Stuessy, Joe. Rock and Roll: Its History and Stylistic Development, 5th ed., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2003. ISBN 0-13-099370-0] [ [http://uk.real.com/music/genre/Art_and_Progressive_Rock/ uk.real.com] ]Led Zeppelin ,Pink Floyd ,The Nice ,Emerson, Lake & Palmer ,David Bowie ,The Velvet Underground ,Kate Bush ,The Beatles and Love ("Forever Changes ") and examples of the latter includePeter Hammill ,Roxy Music , Genesis and Yes.History
1960s-1970s
Music critic
Piero Scaruffi claims that "the "emigration" of rock music from the USA to Britain [in the 1960s] was not only beneficial but even pivotal for the development and propagation of the new genre." He argues that when UK musicians such asThe Beatles andThe Rolling Stones toured the US in the so-called "British Invasion ," the rock music that they played was "a completely mutated species. The original "grass-roots" phenomenon [of US rock music] , raised in thousands of garages by illiterate kids, graduated to an intellectual discipline practiced by university alumni who belonged to artistic schools and movements." Scaruffi argues that " [i] n other words," the British rock bands had converted rock music into a " 'high' art." [ [http://www.scaruffi.com/history/cpt24.html The History of Rock Music - The Sixties ] ] Music critic George Graham argues that "... the so-called Art Rock scene arose" in the 1960s, "when many artists were attempting to broaden the boundaries of rock." He claims that art rock "was inspired by the classically-influenced arrangements and the elaborate production of theBeatles Sgt. Peppers period" and states that the "style had its heyday in the 1970s with huge commercial success by Yes, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer, and later Genesis." However, Graham notes that art rock "quickly faded whenpunk rock and then so-calledalternative rock arose at the end of that decade, exactly as a reaction to the sophistication, and in many cases, pretense of big, elaborate rock productions, be they art rock or slickly-produced pop singers." Graham claims that since the late 1970s, "art rock has remained at the fringes and become one of many venerable styles...that attracts small numbers of avid fans, and continues to be perpetuated by a combination of some of the original artists and new generations of players." [ [http://georgegraham.com/reviews/ttaylor.html George Graham Reviews Tom Taylor's "The Crossing" ] ]In the US, a number of late-1960s bands experimented with "long compositions", with each band "trying to out-psychedelic the other" with unusual sonic experiments. The Golden Age Of Art Rock lectures state that the "piece that caused the explosion of Art Rock more than any other, starting in 1968" was
Iron Butterfly 's "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida ". In response, many other bands tried to emulate this art rock style, such as "Jefferson Airplane ,The Steve Miller Band ,The Grateful Dead ,Quicksilver Messenger Service , H.P. Lovecraft andIt's A Beautiful Day ." The Steve Miller Band "had quite a lot of Art Rock in the early albums. The lecture argues that the "two main long pieces" byThe Doors ("The End" and "When The Music's Over") are "good examples of Art Rock."Similarly,The Beach Boys ' "Pet Sounds " album could be included in Art Rock. However, in the 1970s, US rock music "moved away from Art Rock", as southern rock bands became popular. Art rock reached its commercial height with the popularity of the aforementionedprogressive rock bands, such asKing Crimson , Yes, Rush, Genesis, and especiallyPink Floyd . After thepunk rock revolution of the late 1970s putDIY simplicity back in style, and as openly 'progressive' bands drifted toward the mainstream with hit singles and more commercial productions, their 'art rock' designation fell away. Brian Eno has been called the "experimental end of the [art rock] spectrum" for his early 1970s recordings.1980s-1990s
In the 1980s explosion of "New Wave Music, Art Rock faded away to the background", with the exception of "
Laurie Anderson , who had wonderful solo albums like "Mr. Heartbreak" and "Strange Angels " even up into the Nineties." Anderson's experimentalperformance art included performances with her homemade "tape-bow violin" which has a tape head in place of strings, and a strip of magnetic tape in place of the hairs on a bow. Since the later 1990s Anderson collaborated withLou Reed on a number of recordings, such as "Call On Me" from Reed's collaborative project, "The Raven".However, "new wave" was a marketing phrase used in promoting music of various forms in the United States after the rise of punk, rather than an easily defined genre in itself. Since new wave and post-punk acts ranged from old fashioned rock 'n roll to dance-oriented "new romantic"
synth pop to experimental collisions of genres and mergers of various forms of international pop music, the term "art rock" may have been applied, depending on the writer's opinion, to a large variety of music produced during the 1980s. For example,Kate Bush found mass popularity during the new wave period with music dominated by keyboards and even harpsichord accompaniments reminiscent of classical music. Her albums were structured conceptually as suites, and her lyrics were sometimes based on literary classics. All of these elements are in most definitions of art rock, yet Bush was not marketed as an "art rock" act. In fact, even Laurie Anderson has been categorized as a "new wave" or "alternative rock" act in some reviews. [http://music.yahoo.com/release/147469]Anderson provides an example of a tenuous defition because she was also an artist in mediums outside of music, exhibiting her artwork and music primarily in art museums for a decade prior to making any concert tours, singles or albums. While the term "art rock" may suggest a crossover with other forms of art, and while a large number of "art rock" musicians may also be visual or performance artists, Anderson "went pop" only after establishing herself primarily in the art scene, and as such she was more of an outsider to the rock music world than is typical of "art rock" musicians. For instance, Brian Eno also studied art and participated in the avant garde art scene, but he first became known as the keyboard player for Roxy Music.
2000s
In 2004, the phrase "art rock" was used by British writers from music publications such as "NME" to describe a group of new, mostly "indie" bands influenced by the 1970s/1980s work of artists including
David Bowie , David Byrne,Tom Verlaine ,Peter Gabriel ,Kate Bush , andBrian Eno , and by the UKpost punk scene in general.Other arguably "art rock" bands such as
TV on the Radio ,Queens of the Stone Age ,Stereolab ,Tortoise ,Oceansize ,The Red Paintings , Tool,Thrice ,Deerhoof , [cite web | url=http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/9182191/deerhoof_make_magical_art_rock | title=Deerhoof Make Magical Art Rock | accessdate=2008-03-16 ]Radiohead ,Glassjaw andAxis of Justice generally eschew self-conscious descriptions as "art rock", there is also a continuing subcultural movement of underground, sometimes highly uncommercial music with original roots inpunk rock ,post punk or the radicalavant-garde whose style or philosophy would fall under common definitions of "art rock". Some of these bands may also be described asexperimental rock , while the even more abrasive and abstract acts such asWolf Eyes andMerzbow may be described asnoise music .Notes
References
*Rockwell, John. "Art Rock" in Henke, James et al. (Eds.) (1992). "The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll: The Definitive History of the Most Important Artists and Their Music". ISBN 0-679-73728-6.
*Stuessy, Joe. Rock and Roll: Its History and Stylistic Development, 5th ed., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2003. ISBN 0-13-099370-0
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