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Hypnagogic pop

Hypnagogic pop (abbreviated as h-pop) is pop or psychedelic music[5][6] that evokes cultural memory and nostalgia for the popular entertainment of the past (principally the 1980s). It emerged in the mid to late 2000s as American lo-fi and noise musicians began adopting retro aesthetics remembered from their childhood, such as radio rock, new wave pop, light rock, video game music, synth-pop, and R&B. Recordings circulated on cassette or Internet blogs and were typically marked by the use of outmoded analog equipment and DIY experimentation.

Hypnagogic pop
EtymologyHypnagogia, the transitional state from wakefulness to sleep
Other names
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsMid to late 2000s, United States
Typical instruments
Derivative formsVaporwave[4]
Other topics

The genre's name was coined by journalist David Keenan in an August 2009 issue of The Wire to label the developing trend, which he characterized as "pop music refracted through the memory of a memory."[7] It was used interchangeably with "chillwave" or "glo-fi" and gained critical attention through artists such as Ariel Pink and James Ferraro.[5] The music has been variously described as a 21st-century update of psychedelia, a reappropriation of media-saturated capitalist culture, and an "American cousin" to British hauntology.

In response to Keenan's article, The Wire received a slew of hate mail that derided hypnagogic pop as the "worst genre created by a journalist".[5] Some of the tagged artists rejected the label or denied that such a unified style exists.[5] During the 2010s, critical attention for the genre waned, although the style's "revisionist nostalgia" sublimated into various youth-oriented cultural zeitgeists. Hypnagogic pop evolved into vaporwave, with which it is sometimes conflated.

Characteristics

Hypnagogic pop is pop or psychedelic music that draws heavily from the popular music and culture of the 1980s[8][6][9] – also ranging from the 1970s[10] to the early 1990s.[11] The genre reflects a preoccupation with outmoded analog technology and bombastic representations of synthetic elements from these epochs of pop culture, with its creators informed by collective memory as well as their personal histories.[12] Per the imprecise nature of memory, the genre does not faithfully recreate the sounds and styles popular in those periods.[1] In this way, hypnagogic pop distinguishes itself from revivalist movements. As authors Maël Guesdon and Philippe Le Guern write, the genre can be described as "revisionist nostalgia, not in the sense that 'everything used to be better' but because it rewrites collective memory with a view to being more faithful to an idea or a memory of the original than to the original itself."[13]

Daniel Lopatin's self-described "eccojam" video "angel" (2009) juxtaposes a looped and echoed sample of Fleetwood Mac's 1982 song "Only Over You" with footage taken from 1980s TV ads. Critic Adam Trainer wrote that it "exemplifies hypnagogic pop's format for cultural appropriation" and "sonic renegotiation."[14][nb 1]

Examples of specific sounds evoked by hypnagogic pop artists range from "ecstatically blurry and irradiated lo-fi pop" to "seventies cosmic-synth-rock" and "tripped-out, tribal exotica".[16] Writing for Vice in 2011, Morgan Poyau described the genre as "making awkward bedfellows out of experimental music enthusiasts and weird progressive pop theorists."[17] He described a typical manifestation of the style as featuring long tracks "saturated with echo, delay, smothered guitars and amputated synths."[17] Critic Adam Trainer writes that, rather than a particular sound, the music was defined by a collection of artists who shared the same approaches and cultural experiences. He observed that their music drew from "the collective unconscious of late 1980s and early 1990s popular culture" while being "indebted stylistically to various traditions of experimentalism such as noise, drone, repetition, and improvisation."[18]

Common reference points include various forms of 1980s music, including radio rock, new wave pop, MTV one-hit wonders, New Age music, synth-driven Hollywood blockbuster soundtracks,[9] lounge music, easy-listening, corporate muzak, lite rock "schmaltz", video game music,[1] and 1980s synth-pop and R&B.[5][19] Recordings are often deliberately degraded, produced with analog equipment, and exhibit recording idiosyncrasies such as tape hiss.[11] It employs sounds that were considered "futuristic" during the 1980s which, due to their outmoded nature, appear psychedelic out of context.[11] Also common was the use of outmoded audiovisual technology and DIY digital imagery, such as compact cassettes, VHS, CD-R discs, and early Internet aesthetics.[15]

Origins

Background and hauntology

In the 2000s, a wave of retro-inspired home-recording artists begun dominating underground indie scenes.[20] The emergence of Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, in particular, prompted journalistic discussion of the philosophical concept of hauntology,[21] most prominently among the writers Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher.[22] Later, the term "hauntology" was described as a British synonym for hypnagogic pop,[3] while hypnagogic pop was described as an "American cousin" to Britain's hauntological music scene,[23][1][24]

Todd Ledford, owner of the music label Olde English Spelling Bee (OESB), attributed a correlation between the proliferation of hypnagogic pop and the rise of YouTube.[25] Reynolds attributed the origins of hypnagogic pop to Southern California and its culture. Trainer disagreed with Reynolds' assertion and said the style "arguably" emerged from numerous simultaneous scenes inhabited by artists working in a diverse form of "post-noise neo-psychedelia".[26] Pitchfork's Marc Masters offered that it may have originated "less [as] a movement than a coincidence".[27] The music was often issued in the form of limited-edition cassettes or vinyl records before reaching a wider audience through blogs and YouTube videos.[9]

Formative artists

 
Ariel Pink performing in 2007

Ariel Pink gained recognition in the mid 2000s through a string of self-produced albums, pioneering a sound that Reynolds called "'70s radio-rock and '80s new wave as if heard through a defective transistor radio, glimmers of melody flickering in and out of the fog".[28] He identified Pink and the Skaters as the "godparents of hypnagogic",[29] but singled out Pink as the central figure to what he calls the "Altered Zones Generation", an umbrella term he designed for lo-fi, retro-inspired indie artists who were commonly featured on Altered Zones, an associate site for Pitchfork.[20][nb 2] Tiny Mix Tapes' Jordan Redmond wrote that Pink's early collaborator John Maus was also placed "at the nexus of a number of recent popular movements" including hypnagogic pop, and that Maus was as "much of a progenitor of this sound as Pink, even though Pink has tended to be the headline-grabber."[31]

R. Stevie Moore and Martin Newell were earlier artists who anticipated Pink's sound.[20] Matthew Ingram of The Wire recognized Moore's influence on Pink and hypnagogic pop: "through his disciple ... he has unwittingly provided the [genre's] template".[32][nb 3] Another precursor to the genre was Nick Nicely and his 1982 single "Hilly Fields (1892)". Red Bull Music's J.R. Moore wrote that Nicely's "uniquely haphazard DIY aesthetic" and contemporary take on 1960s psychedelic pop "basically invented the sound of the 2000s Hypnagogic Pop movement decades beforehand."[34][nb 4]

The Skaters were a noise duo consisting of James Ferraro and Spencer Clark, and like Pink, were based in California.[35] In the mid-2000s, they released dozens of CD-Rs and cassettes of psychedelic drone music, after which Ferraro and Clark each pursued solo outings.[11] From 2009 to 2010, Ferraro's music evolved to be increasingly rhythmic and melodic, as Trainer describes, "an oversaturated sonic palette of cheesy pop reminiscent of early video game soundtracks and 1980s Saturday morning cartoons."[36]

Complex contributor Joe Price felt that the h-pop movement was "birthed" by Ferraro and "the vastly overlooked [Missouri artist] 18 Carat Affair".[37] In Reynolds' description, "other rising figures" from the original California scene included Sun Araw, LA Vampires and Puro Instinct. He added: "Other key hypnagogues such as Matrix Metals and Rangers reside elsewhere but seem SoCal in spirit."[9] In a 2009 interview, Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never) stated that Salvador Dalí and Danny Wolfers were the "godfathers of hpop". He identified other progenitors to be DJ Screw, "retro kids", Joe Wenderoth, Autre Ne Veut, Church In Moon and DJ Dog Dick.[38]

Etymology and initial popularity

 
The term "hypnagogic pop" was inspired by comments made by James Ferraro (pictured in 2012) and Spencer Clark.[16]

Journalist David Keenan, who was known as a reporter of noise, freak folk, and drone music scenes, coined "hypnagogic pop" in an August 2009 piece for The Wire.[16] He referred to a developing trend of 2000s lo-fi and post-noise music in which artists began to engage with elements of cultural nostalgia, childhood memory, and outdated recording technology. Inspired by comments by James Ferraro and Spencer Clark, and while invoking a similar concept discussed by Russian esotericist P.D. Ouspensky, Keenan employed the term "hypnagogic" as referring to the psychological state "between waking and sleeping, liminal zones where mis-hearings and hallucinations feed into the formation of dreams."[11]

Among the artists discussed in Keenan's article were Ariel Pink, Daniel Lopatin, the Skaters, Gary War, Zola Jesus, Ducktails, Emeralds, and Pocahaunted.[11][nb 5] According to Keenan, these artists began to draw on cultural sources subconsciously remembered from their 1980s and early 1990s adolescence while freeing them from their historical contexts and "hom[ing] in on the futuristic signifiers" of the period.[11] He alternately summarized hypnagogic pop as "pop music refracted through the memory of a memory" and as "1980's-inspired psychedelia" that engages with capitalist detritus of the past in an attempt to "dream of the future."[11] In a later article, Keenan identified Lopatin, Ferraro, Clark, and ex-Test Icicles member Sam Mehran as hypnagogic pop's "most adventurous proponents".[39]

Once "hypnagogic pop" was coined, a variety of music blogs immediately wrote about the phenomenon.[17] By 2010, albums by Ariel Pink and Neon Indian were regularly hailed by publications like Pitchfork and The Wire, with "hypnagogic pop", "chillwave", and "glo-fi" employed to describe the evolving sounds of such artists, a number of which had songs of considerable success within independent music circles.[5] Pink was frequently called "godfather" of h-pop, chillwave or glo-fi as new acts that were associated with him (aesthetically, personally, geographically, or professionally) attracted notice from critics.[41] Some of his contemporaries, such as Ferraro, Clark, and War, failed to match his mainstream success. When this point was raised to Clark in a 2013 interview, he replied that Pink was simply "an ambassador of California, like the Beach Boys."[42]

In 2010, Pitchfork launched Altered Zones, effectively an online newsletter for hypnagogic acts.[39] Beginning that July, Altered Zones aggregated its content from a collective of leading blogs specializing in the movement.[16] By the end of the year, OESB, now known for its roster of hypnagogic acts such as Ferraro and Mehran, had grown to be one of the most prominent underground indie labels.[25] In January 2011, Keenan wrote that OESB was "the imprint most associated with H-pop" and "in many ways ... the label of 2010", although he mused, "It has been interesting to see how its demographic has morphed from an early underground/Noise audience to being embraced by the fringes of indie and dance culture, helped by groups like Forest Swords, who muddy the line between H-pop and dubstep."[39]

Chillwave and vaporwave

"Chillwave", a tag used to describe a similar trend[43] was coined one month before Keenan's 2009 article[44] and was adopted synonymously with "hypnagogic pop".[45] While the two styles are similar in that they both evoke 1980s–90s imagery, chillwave has a more commercial sound with an emphasis on "cheesy" hooks and reverb effects.[46] A contemporary review by Marc Hogan for Neon Indian's Psychic Chasms (2009) listed "dream-beat", "chillwave", "glo-fi", "hypnagogic pop", and "hipster-gogic pop" as interchangeable terms for "psychedelic music that's generally one or all of the following: synth-based, homemade-sounding, 80s-referencing, cassette-oriented, sun-baked, laid-back, warped, hazy, emotionally distant, slightly out of focus."[47]

The experimental tendencies of hypnagogic pop artists like Pink and Ferraro were soon amplified by the Internet-centric genre dubbed "vaporwave". Although the name shares the "-wave" suffix, it is only loosely connected to chillwave.[4] Sam Mehran was one of the earliest hypnagogic acts to anticipate vaporwave, with his project Matrix Metals and the 2009 album Flamingo Breeze, which was built on synthesizer loops.[48] That same year, Lopatin uploaded a collection of plunderphonics loops to YouTube inconspicuously under the alias sunsetcorp. These clips were later assembled for the album Chuck Person's Eccojams Vol. 1 (2010).[37] Stereogum's Miles Bowe summarized vaporwave as a combination of "the chopped and screwed plunderphonics of Dan Lopatin ... with the nihilistic easy-listening of James Ferraro’s Muzak-hellscapes on [the 2011 album] Far Side Virtual".[4][nb 6]

Writers, fans, and artists struggled to differentiate between hypnagogic pop, chillwave, and vaporwave.[50] The earliest known use of the term "vaporwave" is generally attributed to an October 2011 blog post that discussed the hypnagogic album Surfs Pure Hearts by Girlhood.[50] Adam Harper surmised that the author cited the work as "vaporwave" instead of "hypnagogic pop" possibly because they were unfamiliar with the latter term. He jokingly remarked of "a special place in hell" for those who attempt to separate the three genres: "it's a back room where Satan forever explains the differences between death metal, black metal and doom metal."[50]

According to Harper, vaporwave and hypnagogic pop share an affinity for "trash music", both are "dreamy" and "chirpy", and both "manipulate their material to defamiliarise it and give it a sense of the uncanny, such as slowing it down and/or lowering the pitch, making it, as the term goes, ‘screwed’."[10] Of differences, vaporwave does not typically engage in long tracks, lo-fi productions, or non-sampled material, and it draws more from the early 1990s than it does the 1970s and 1980s.[10] Compared to hypnagogic pop, vaporwave bears a stronger musical connection to chillwave for its sampling of slowed-down synth funk.[50]

Impact, criticism, and decline

 
The vaporwave Internet meme amplified notions of self-referential irony and satire in hypnagogic pop.[10]

David Keenan's original Wire article incited a slew of hate mail that derided the "hypnagogic pop" label as the "worst genre created by a journalist".[5] As the movement's popularity grew, the analogue lo-fi aspirations of Pink and Ferraro were taken up by "groups with names like Tape Deck Mountain, Memory Tapes, Memory Cassette – and turned into cliché."[51] Both chillwave and vaporwave had been conceived as tongue-in-cheek, hyperbolic responses to such trends.[10][52]

Keenan became disenchanted with artists of the movement who streamlined their sound[53] and "chillwave" came to serve as a pejorative for such acts.[54] In the 2010 Rewind issue of The Wire, Keenan said that h-pop had "migrated from a process designed to liberate desire from marketing formulas to a carrot in the mouth of a corpse that has proved irresistible to underground musicians looking for an easy route to mainstream acceptance."[39][nb 7] He invoked chillwave as "one of the more meaningless sobriquets applied to the new future pop visions" and "a much more appropriate description of the mindless, depoliticised embracing of mainstream values that H-pop has come to be associated with."[39]

Some of the tagged artists, such as Neon Indian and Toro y Moi, rejected the h-pop tag or denied that such a unified style exists.[5][nb 8] The Guardian's Dorian Lynskey called the hypnagogic tag "pretentious",[58] while New York Times writer Jon Pareles criticized the style as "annoyingly noncommittal music". The latter described a showcase of such bands at the 2010 South by Southwest festival as "a hedged, hipster imitation of the pop they're not brash enough to make".[5] Altered Zones contributor Emilie Friedlander prophesied in 2011 that Ariel Pink, John Maus, James Ferraro, Spencer Clark, and R. Stevie Moore would be remembered as musicians who "elevated the crackle and grain of low-fidelity recording ... and made the vocabulary of pop music and the preoccupations of the avant-garde seem a lot less incompatible than much of the previous century had implied."[59] However, like Keenan, she later wrote of her disenchantment with the movement following the "deliberately cringeworthy" example of Ferraro's Far Side Virtual.[53][nb 9] Weeks after the album's release, Altered Zones shut down.[53][nb 10] OESB also went defunct the same year.[61]

Usage of "hypnagogic pop" has since diminished,[62] although the genre's "imagined sonic past" has sublimated into various pop culture zeitgeists.[63] Likewise, an affinity for the retro proved itself as a hallmark of 2010s youth culture.[53] In a 2012 interview, Pink acknowledged that he was aware that he "was doing something that sounded like the trace of a memory you can't place" and argued that such evocations had become so ingrained into modern music that "people take it for granted".[64] On websites such as Drowned in Sound, Dummy Mag, and Electronic Beats, hauntology and hypnagogic pop were ultimately supplanted by an interest in post-Internet artists.[61]

Cultural interpretations

Simon Reynolds described hypnagogic pop as a "21st-century update of psychedelia" in which "lost innocence has been contaminated by pop culture" and hyper-reality.[9] He notes a particular concern with the "scrambling of pop time", suggesting that "perhaps the secret idea buried inside hypnagogic pop is that the '80s never ended. That we're still living there, subject to that decade's endless end of History."[9] Guesdon and Le Guern posit that "the hypnagogic movement can be seen as an aesthetic response to the growing feeling that time is speeding up: a feeling that often proves to be one of the fundamental components of advanced modernity."[13]

Adam Trainer suggested that the style allowed artists to engage with the products of media-saturated capitalist consumer culture in a way that focuses on affect rather than irony or cynicism.[15] Adam Harper noted among hypnagogic pop artists a tendency "to turn trash, something shallow and determinedly throwaway, into something sacred or mystical" and to "manipulate their material to defamiliarise it and give it a sense of the uncanny."[10]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The woman in the clip is Japanese idol Yukiko Okada, who died by suicide in 1986. Lopatin was reportedly unaware of her identity, but said that the observation adds "another layer of materiality within that piece—and that's totally how they're supposed to function".[15]
  2. ^ In response to Reynolds' argument, critic Adam Harper wrote that Pink's "largely rock-based" music lacked "the pop-art pastiche of hypnagogic pop," and that instead of "the progenitor or the AZ Generation, Pink can easily be understood as the youngest member of this mid-80s Cassette Culture Generation."[20] Pink believed that his own music, while heavily indebted to 1960s pop, is not classifiable in any genre.[30]
  3. ^ Specifically, Moore's 1976 debut album Phonography.[32] Pink was a devout fan of his work and shared the same musical approaches, although Moore denies that they sound similar. After the two collaborated in the 2000s, Moore's exposure increased as a result of Pink's solo success.[33]
  4. ^ Nicely returned to live performances in 2008, after a long absence from the public, sharing concert billings with Pink and Maus.[34]
  5. ^ Also mentioned were Dolphins into the Future, Sora Eros, Infinity Window, Orphan Fairytale, and the Super Vacations.[11]
  6. ^ Another artist considered by some to be a hypnagogic precursor to vaporwave is 18 Carat Affair.[49]
  7. ^ In particular, he criticized Best Coast for leaving behind Pocahaunted to start a "simplistically twee-pop group that seems to exist solely to dance to whatever tune her current corporate sponsors – Converse, Target, Eskuche – care to call".[53]
  8. ^ Daniel Lopatin said: "I don't think the hpop tag is representative of a movement or constituted by a select group of artists. I see it more as a discussion about nostalgia and its subliminal effects on culture. I don't see anything wrong with the tag—it's just a way of engaging with a phenomenon."[55] Ariel Pink similarly found such tags to be simply a means of framing artists in an interesting way.[56] John Maus rejected the "hypnagogic pop" tag, as he did not intend his music to evoke 1980s nostalgia.[31] James Ferraro was uncertain whether he belonged under the h-pop umbrella and believed that the genre was "not really an influence on me".[57]
  9. ^ Writing for a 2019 retrospective on chillwave, Friedlander expressed that Keenan "wasn't wrong in thinking that lo-fi music was becoming a piece with the industry to which it once represented an alternative". She followed in his disillusionment after the release of Far Side Virtual, "a half-joking reclamation of the laptop that ... made me realise how out-of-hand the whole lo-fi conceit had become."[53]
  10. ^ The announcement came on November 30, 2011,[60] the same day the website published an artist feature on Ferraro.[59]

References

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  2. ^ a b Pounds, Ross (June 30, 2010). "Why Glo-Fi's Future Is Not Ephemeral". The Quietus.
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  8. ^ Masters, Marc (July 18, 2011). "James Ferraro Night Dolls With Hairspray". Pitchfork.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Reynolds, Simon (March 2011b). "'Hypnagogic pop' and the landscape of Southern California". frieze. No. 137. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Harper, Adam (December 7, 2012). "Comment: Vaporwave and the pop-art of the virtual plaza". Dummy. from the original on April 1, 2015. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
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  12. ^ Trainer 2016, pp. 410–412.
  13. ^ a b Guesdon, Maël; Le Guern, Philippe (2014). "Analogue Nostalgias". In K. Niemeyer (ed.). Media and Nostalgia: Yearning for the Past, Present and Future. Springer. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-1-137-37588-9.
  14. ^ Trainer 2016, pp. 412–413.
  15. ^ a b c Trainer 2016, p. 412.
  16. ^ a b c d Reynolds 2011, p. 345.
  17. ^ a b c Poyau, Morgan (July 13, 2011). "The 80s Nostalgia Aesthetic Of Music's Hottest New Subgenre: Hypnagogic Pop". Vice Media. Retrieved August 15, 2016.
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  19. ^ Despres, Sean (July 18, 2010). "Whatever you do, don't call it 'chillwave'". The Japan Times. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  20. ^ a b c d Harper, Adam (April 23, 2014). "Essay: Shades of Ariel Pink". Dummy.
  21. ^ Fisher, Mark (26 April 2010). "Ariel Pink: Russian roulette". Fact.
  22. ^ Albiez, Sean (2017). Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World, Volume 11. Bloomsbury. pp. 347–349. ISBN 9781501326103. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
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  24. ^ Bell, David (September 18, 2010). "Deserter's Songs – Looking Backwards: In Defence of Nostalgia". Ceasefire Mag. Retrieved August 17, 2016.
  25. ^ a b Beauomont-Thomas, Ben (December 3, 2010). "Why Olde English Spelling Bee is creating a buzz". The Guardian.
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  27. ^ Masters, Marc (September 14, 2009). "The Decade in Noise". Pitchfork.
  28. ^ Reynolds, Simon (January 19, 2011a). "Leave Chillwave Alone". The Village Voice.
  29. ^ Reynolds 2011, p. 348.
  30. ^ Viney, Steven (November 14, 2017). "Is Ariel Pink finally being sincere?". Double J.
  31. ^ a b Redmond, Jordan (March 30, 2012). "John Maus - We Must Become The Pitiless Censors Of Ourselves". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  32. ^ a b Ingram, Matthew (June 2012). "Here Comes the Flood". The Wire. No. 340.
  33. ^ Burrows, Tim (September 9, 2012). "R Stevie Moore". Dazed Digital.
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  36. ^ Trainer 2016, p. 415.
  37. ^ a b Price, Joe (August 29, 2016). "Vaporwave's Second Life". Complex.
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  40. ^ Schreiber, Ryan. "Best New Track: "Round and Round" by Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
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  42. ^ Lynch, Martin (February 20, 2013). "Spencer Clark". Bomb.
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  45. ^ Weiss, Dan (July 6, 2012). "Slutwave, Tumblr Rap, Rape Gaze: Obscure Musical Genres Explained". LA Weekly.
  46. ^ Trainer 2016, p. 416.
  47. ^ Hogan, Marc. "Review: Psychic Chasms - Neon Indian". Pitchfork. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  48. ^ Bulut, Selim (July 30, 2018). "Remembering Sam Mehran, one of underground music's most unique talents". Dazed Digital.
  49. ^ Glitsos, Laura (January 2018). "Vaporwave, or music optimised for abandoned malls". Cambridge. ProQuest 1973993186. Retrieved 9 April 2022 – via The Wikipedia Library.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  51. ^ Reynolds 2011, p. 349.
  52. ^ Britton, Luke Morgan (September 26, 2016). "Music Genres Are A Joke That You're Not In On". Vice. from the original on March 31, 2017.
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  57. ^ "James Ferraro interview: "The city of dream."". Dummy. 2010. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
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  60. ^ Maloney, Devan (November 30, 2011). "Altered Zones, DIY/Indie Blog Collective, Shutters After 16 Months". Billboard.
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  62. ^ Howe, Brian (October 9, 2019). "On His Debut as Ssoft, a Chillwave Survivor Lets His Acid House Flag Fly". Indy Week.
  63. ^ Wray, Daniel Dylan (May 12, 2020). "'My studio is an extra limb right now': bedroom pop, the perfect genre for lockdown". The Guardian.
  64. ^ Bevan, David (August 21, 2012). "Ariel Pink: In Praise of Guilty Genius". Spin.

Works cited

  • Reynolds, Simon (2011). Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-1-4299-6858-4.
  • Trainer, Adam (2016). "From Hypnagogia to Distroid: Postironic Musical Renderings of Personal Memory". The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-932128-5.

hypnagogic, abbreviated, psychedelic, music, that, evokes, cultural, memory, nostalgia, popular, entertainment, past, principally, 1980s, emerged, late, 2000s, american, noise, musicians, began, adopting, retro, aesthetics, remembered, from, their, childhood, . Hypnagogic pop abbreviated as h pop is pop or psychedelic music 5 6 that evokes cultural memory and nostalgia for the popular entertainment of the past principally the 1980s It emerged in the mid to late 2000s as American lo fi and noise musicians began adopting retro aesthetics remembered from their childhood such as radio rock new wave pop light rock video game music synth pop and R amp B Recordings circulated on cassette or Internet blogs and were typically marked by the use of outmoded analog equipment and DIY experimentation Hypnagogic popA compact cassetteEtymologyHypnagogia the transitional state from wakefulness to sleepOther namesH pop 1 chillwave 2 glo fi 2 hauntology 3 Stylistic originsLo fi 1980s pop psychedelia electronic noise soft rock new age new wave drone experimental muzak 1980s film soundtracks R amp B synth pop neo psychedeliaCultural originsMid to late 2000s United StatesTypical instrumentsGuitars synthesizersDerivative formsVaporwave 4 Other topicsCassette underground cultural memory art pop avant pop experimental popThe genre s name was coined by journalist David Keenan in an August 2009 issue of The Wire to label the developing trend which he characterized as pop music refracted through the memory of a memory 7 It was used interchangeably with chillwave or glo fi and gained critical attention through artists such as Ariel Pink and James Ferraro 5 The music has been variously described as a 21st century update of psychedelia a reappropriation of media saturated capitalist culture and an American cousin to British hauntology In response to Keenan s article The Wire received a slew of hate mail that derided hypnagogic pop as the worst genre created by a journalist 5 Some of the tagged artists rejected the label or denied that such a unified style exists 5 During the 2010s critical attention for the genre waned although the style s revisionist nostalgia sublimated into various youth oriented cultural zeitgeists Hypnagogic pop evolved into vaporwave with which it is sometimes conflated Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Origins 2 1 Background and hauntology 2 2 Formative artists 3 Etymology and initial popularity 4 Chillwave and vaporwave 5 Impact criticism and decline 6 Cultural interpretations 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Works citedCharacteristics EditHypnagogic pop is pop or psychedelic music that draws heavily from the popular music and culture of the 1980s 8 6 9 also ranging from the 1970s 10 to the early 1990s 11 The genre reflects a preoccupation with outmoded analog technology and bombastic representations of synthetic elements from these epochs of pop culture with its creators informed by collective memory as well as their personal histories 12 Per the imprecise nature of memory the genre does not faithfully recreate the sounds and styles popular in those periods 1 In this way hypnagogic pop distinguishes itself from revivalist movements As authors Mael Guesdon and Philippe Le Guern write the genre can be described as revisionist nostalgia not in the sense that everything used to be better but because it rewrites collective memory with a view to being more faithful to an idea or a memory of the original than to the original itself 13 source source source source Daniel Lopatin s self described eccojam video angel 2009 juxtaposes a looped and echoed sample of Fleetwood Mac s 1982 song Only Over You with footage taken from 1980s TV ads Critic Adam Trainer wrote that it exemplifies hypnagogic pop s format for cultural appropriation and sonic renegotiation 14 nb 1 Examples of specific sounds evoked by hypnagogic pop artists range from ecstatically blurry and irradiated lo fi pop to seventies cosmic synth rock and tripped out tribal exotica 16 Writing for Vice in 2011 Morgan Poyau described the genre as making awkward bedfellows out of experimental music enthusiasts and weird progressive pop theorists 17 He described a typical manifestation of the style as featuring long tracks saturated with echo delay smothered guitars and amputated synths 17 Critic Adam Trainer writes that rather than a particular sound the music was defined by a collection of artists who shared the same approaches and cultural experiences He observed that their music drew from the collective unconscious of late 1980s and early 1990s popular culture while being indebted stylistically to various traditions of experimentalism such as noise drone repetition and improvisation 18 Common reference points include various forms of 1980s music including radio rock new wave pop MTV one hit wonders New Age music synth driven Hollywood blockbuster soundtracks 9 lounge music easy listening corporate muzak lite rock schmaltz video game music 1 and 1980s synth pop and R amp B 5 19 Recordings are often deliberately degraded produced with analog equipment and exhibit recording idiosyncrasies such as tape hiss 11 It employs sounds that were considered futuristic during the 1980s which due to their outmoded nature appear psychedelic out of context 11 Also common was the use of outmoded audiovisual technology and DIY digital imagery such as compact cassettes VHS CD R discs and early Internet aesthetics 15 Origins EditBackground and hauntology Edit Main article Hauntology music In the 2000s a wave of retro inspired home recording artists begun dominating underground indie scenes 20 The emergence of Ariel Pink s Haunted Graffiti in particular prompted journalistic discussion of the philosophical concept of hauntology 21 most prominently among the writers Simon Reynolds and Mark Fisher 22 Later the term hauntology was described as a British synonym for hypnagogic pop 3 while hypnagogic pop was described as an American cousin to Britain s hauntological music scene 23 1 24 Todd Ledford owner of the music label Olde English Spelling Bee OESB attributed a correlation between the proliferation of hypnagogic pop and the rise of YouTube 25 Reynolds attributed the origins of hypnagogic pop to Southern California and its culture Trainer disagreed with Reynolds assertion and said the style arguably emerged from numerous simultaneous scenes inhabited by artists working in a diverse form of post noise neo psychedelia 26 Pitchfork s Marc Masters offered that it may have originated less as a movement than a coincidence 27 The music was often issued in the form of limited edition cassettes or vinyl records before reaching a wider audience through blogs and YouTube videos 9 Formative artists Edit Ariel Pink performing in 2007 Ariel Pink gained recognition in the mid 2000s through a string of self produced albums pioneering a sound that Reynolds called 70s radio rock and 80s new wave as if heard through a defective transistor radio glimmers of melody flickering in and out of the fog 28 He identified Pink and the Skaters as the godparents of hypnagogic 29 but singled out Pink as the central figure to what he calls the Altered Zones Generation an umbrella term he designed for lo fi retro inspired indie artists who were commonly featured on Altered Zones an associate site for Pitchfork 20 nb 2 Tiny Mix Tapes Jordan Redmond wrote that Pink s early collaborator John Maus was also placed at the nexus of a number of recent popular movements including hypnagogic pop and that Maus was as much of a progenitor of this sound as Pink even though Pink has tended to be the headline grabber 31 R Stevie Moore and Martin Newell were earlier artists who anticipated Pink s sound 20 Matthew Ingram of The Wire recognized Moore s influence on Pink and hypnagogic pop through his disciple he has unwittingly provided the genre s template 32 nb 3 Another precursor to the genre was Nick Nicely and his 1982 single Hilly Fields 1892 Red Bull Music s J R Moore wrote that Nicely s uniquely haphazard DIY aesthetic and contemporary take on 1960s psychedelic pop basically invented the sound of the 2000s Hypnagogic Pop movement decades beforehand 34 nb 4 The Skaters were a noise duo consisting of James Ferraro and Spencer Clark and like Pink were based in California 35 In the mid 2000s they released dozens of CD Rs and cassettes of psychedelic drone music after which Ferraro and Clark each pursued solo outings 11 From 2009 to 2010 Ferraro s music evolved to be increasingly rhythmic and melodic as Trainer describes an oversaturated sonic palette of cheesy pop reminiscent of early video game soundtracks and 1980s Saturday morning cartoons 36 Complex contributor Joe Price felt that the h pop movement was birthed by Ferraro and the vastly overlooked Missouri artist 18 Carat Affair 37 In Reynolds description other rising figures from the original California scene included Sun Araw LA Vampires and Puro Instinct He added Other key hypnagogues such as Matrix Metals and Rangers reside elsewhere but seem SoCal in spirit 9 In a 2009 interview Daniel Lopatin Oneohtrix Point Never stated that Salvador Dali and Danny Wolfers were the godfathers of hpop He identified other progenitors to be DJ Screw retro kids Joe Wenderoth Autre Ne Veut Church In Moon and DJ Dog Dick 38 Etymology and initial popularity Edit The term hypnagogic pop was inspired by comments made by James Ferraro pictured in 2012 and Spencer Clark 16 Journalist David Keenan who was known as a reporter of noise freak folk and drone music scenes coined hypnagogic pop in an August 2009 piece for The Wire 16 He referred to a developing trend of 2000s lo fi and post noise music in which artists began to engage with elements of cultural nostalgia childhood memory and outdated recording technology Inspired by comments by James Ferraro and Spencer Clark and while invoking a similar concept discussed by Russian esotericist P D Ouspensky Keenan employed the term hypnagogic as referring to the psychological state between waking and sleeping liminal zones where mis hearings and hallucinations feed into the formation of dreams 11 Among the artists discussed in Keenan s article were Ariel Pink Daniel Lopatin the Skaters Gary War Zola Jesus Ducktails Emeralds and Pocahaunted 11 nb 5 According to Keenan these artists began to draw on cultural sources subconsciously remembered from their 1980s and early 1990s adolescence while freeing them from their historical contexts and hom ing in on the futuristic signifiers of the period 11 He alternately summarized hypnagogic pop as pop music refracted through the memory of a memory and as 1980 s inspired psychedelia that engages with capitalist detritus of the past in an attempt to dream of the future 11 In a later article Keenan identified Lopatin Ferraro Clark and ex Test Icicles member Sam Mehran as hypnagogic pop s most adventurous proponents 39 Sample of Ariel Pink s Haunted Graffiti s Round and Round 2010 source source The Atlantic highlighted Round and Round as a perfect representation of hypnagogic pop s breathless simplicity 5 while Pitchfork wrote that it evokes the sort of dusty 80s radio pop singles you find on defunct regional labels in thrift store bins 40 Problems playing this file See media help Once hypnagogic pop was coined a variety of music blogs immediately wrote about the phenomenon 17 By 2010 albums by Ariel Pink and Neon Indian were regularly hailed by publications like Pitchfork and The Wire with hypnagogic pop chillwave and glo fi employed to describe the evolving sounds of such artists a number of which had songs of considerable success within independent music circles 5 Pink was frequently called godfather of h pop chillwave or glo fi as new acts that were associated with him aesthetically personally geographically or professionally attracted notice from critics 41 Some of his contemporaries such as Ferraro Clark and War failed to match his mainstream success When this point was raised to Clark in a 2013 interview he replied that Pink was simply an ambassador of California like the Beach Boys 42 In 2010 Pitchfork launched Altered Zones effectively an online newsletter for hypnagogic acts 39 Beginning that July Altered Zones aggregated its content from a collective of leading blogs specializing in the movement 16 By the end of the year OESB now known for its roster of hypnagogic acts such as Ferraro and Mehran had grown to be one of the most prominent underground indie labels 25 In January 2011 Keenan wrote that OESB was the imprint most associated with H pop and in many ways the label of 2010 although he mused It has been interesting to see how its demographic has morphed from an early underground Noise audience to being embraced by the fringes of indie and dance culture helped by groups like Forest Swords who muddy the line between H pop and dubstep 39 Chillwave and vaporwave Edit Chillwave a tag used to describe a similar trend 43 was coined one month before Keenan s 2009 article 44 and was adopted synonymously with hypnagogic pop 45 While the two styles are similar in that they both evoke 1980s 90s imagery chillwave has a more commercial sound with an emphasis on cheesy hooks and reverb effects 46 A contemporary review by Marc Hogan for Neon Indian s Psychic Chasms 2009 listed dream beat chillwave glo fi hypnagogic pop and hipster gogic pop as interchangeable terms for psychedelic music that s generally one or all of the following synth based homemade sounding 80s referencing cassette oriented sun baked laid back warped hazy emotionally distant slightly out of focus 47 The experimental tendencies of hypnagogic pop artists like Pink and Ferraro were soon amplified by the Internet centric genre dubbed vaporwave Although the name shares the wave suffix it is only loosely connected to chillwave 4 Sam Mehran was one of the earliest hypnagogic acts to anticipate vaporwave with his project Matrix Metals and the 2009 album Flamingo Breeze which was built on synthesizer loops 48 That same year Lopatin uploaded a collection of plunderphonics loops to YouTube inconspicuously under the alias sunsetcorp These clips were later assembled for the album Chuck Person s Eccojams Vol 1 2010 37 Stereogum s Miles Bowe summarized vaporwave as a combination of the chopped and screwed plunderphonics of Dan Lopatin with the nihilistic easy listening of James Ferraro s Muzak hellscapes on the 2011 album Far Side Virtual 4 nb 6 Writers fans and artists struggled to differentiate between hypnagogic pop chillwave and vaporwave 50 The earliest known use of the term vaporwave is generally attributed to an October 2011 blog post that discussed the hypnagogic album Surfs Pure Hearts by Girlhood 50 Adam Harper surmised that the author cited the work as vaporwave instead of hypnagogic pop possibly because they were unfamiliar with the latter term He jokingly remarked of a special place in hell for those who attempt to separate the three genres it s a back room where Satan forever explains the differences between death metal black metal and doom metal 50 According to Harper vaporwave and hypnagogic pop share an affinity for trash music both are dreamy and chirpy and both manipulate their material to defamiliarise it and give it a sense of the uncanny such as slowing it down and or lowering the pitch making it as the term goes screwed 10 Of differences vaporwave does not typically engage in long tracks lo fi productions or non sampled material and it draws more from the early 1990s than it does the 1970s and 1980s 10 Compared to hypnagogic pop vaporwave bears a stronger musical connection to chillwave for its sampling of slowed down synth funk 50 Impact criticism and decline Edit The vaporwave Internet meme amplified notions of self referential irony and satire in hypnagogic pop 10 David Keenan s original Wire article incited a slew of hate mail that derided the hypnagogic pop label as the worst genre created by a journalist 5 As the movement s popularity grew the analogue lo fi aspirations of Pink and Ferraro were taken up by groups with names like Tape Deck Mountain Memory Tapes Memory Cassette and turned into cliche 51 Both chillwave and vaporwave had been conceived as tongue in cheek hyperbolic responses to such trends 10 52 Keenan became disenchanted with artists of the movement who streamlined their sound 53 and chillwave came to serve as a pejorative for such acts 54 In the 2010 Rewind issue of The Wire Keenan said that h pop had migrated from a process designed to liberate desire from marketing formulas to a carrot in the mouth of a corpse that has proved irresistible to underground musicians looking for an easy route to mainstream acceptance 39 nb 7 He invoked chillwave as one of the more meaningless sobriquets applied to the new future pop visions and a much more appropriate description of the mindless depoliticised embracing of mainstream values that H pop has come to be associated with 39 Some of the tagged artists such as Neon Indian and Toro y Moi rejected the h pop tag or denied that such a unified style exists 5 nb 8 The Guardian s Dorian Lynskey called the hypnagogic tag pretentious 58 while New York Times writer Jon Pareles criticized the style as annoyingly noncommittal music The latter described a showcase of such bands at the 2010 South by Southwest festival as a hedged hipster imitation of the pop they re not brash enough to make 5 Altered Zones contributor Emilie Friedlander prophesied in 2011 that Ariel Pink John Maus James Ferraro Spencer Clark and R Stevie Moore would be remembered as musicians who elevated the crackle and grain of low fidelity recording and made the vocabulary of pop music and the preoccupations of the avant garde seem a lot less incompatible than much of the previous century had implied 59 However like Keenan she later wrote of her disenchantment with the movement following the deliberately cringeworthy example of Ferraro s Far Side Virtual 53 nb 9 Weeks after the album s release Altered Zones shut down 53 nb 10 OESB also went defunct the same year 61 Usage of hypnagogic pop has since diminished 62 although the genre s imagined sonic past has sublimated into various pop culture zeitgeists 63 Likewise an affinity for the retro proved itself as a hallmark of 2010s youth culture 53 In a 2012 interview Pink acknowledged that he was aware that he was doing something that sounded like the trace of a memory you can t place and argued that such evocations had become so ingrained into modern music that people take it for granted 64 On websites such as Drowned in Sound Dummy Mag and Electronic Beats hauntology and hypnagogic pop were ultimately supplanted by an interest in post Internet artists 61 Cultural interpretations EditSimon Reynolds described hypnagogic pop as a 21st century update of psychedelia in which lost innocence has been contaminated by pop culture and hyper reality 9 He notes a particular concern with the scrambling of pop time suggesting that perhaps the secret idea buried inside hypnagogic pop is that the 80s never ended That we re still living there subject to that decade s endless end of History 9 Guesdon and Le Guern posit that the hypnagogic movement can be seen as an aesthetic response to the growing feeling that time is speeding up a feeling that often proves to be one of the fundamental components of advanced modernity 13 Adam Trainer suggested that the style allowed artists to engage with the products of media saturated capitalist consumer culture in a way that focuses on affect rather than irony or cynicism 15 Adam Harper noted among hypnagogic pop artists a tendency to turn trash something shallow and determinedly throwaway into something sacred or mystical and to manipulate their material to defamiliarise it and give it a sense of the uncanny 10 See also EditMicrogenreNotes Edit The woman in the clip is Japanese idol Yukiko Okada who died by suicide in 1986 Lopatin was reportedly unaware of her identity but said that the observation adds another layer of materiality within that piece and that s totally how they re supposed to function 15 In response to Reynolds argument critic Adam Harper wrote that Pink s largely rock based music lacked the pop art pastiche of hypnagogic pop and that instead of the progenitor or the AZ Generation Pink can easily be understood as the youngest member of this mid 80s Cassette Culture Generation 20 Pink believed that his own music while heavily indebted to 1960s pop is not classifiable in any genre 30 Specifically Moore s 1976 debut album Phonography 32 Pink was a devout fan of his work and shared the same musical approaches although Moore denies that they sound similar After the two collaborated in the 2000s Moore s exposure increased as a result of Pink s solo success 33 Nicely returned to live performances in 2008 after a long absence from the public sharing concert billings with Pink and Maus 34 Also mentioned were Dolphins into the Future Sora Eros Infinity Window Orphan Fairytale and the Super Vacations 11 Another artist considered by some to be a hypnagogic precursor to vaporwave is 18 Carat Affair 49 In particular he criticized Best Coast for leaving behind Pocahaunted to start a simplistically twee pop group that seems to exist solely to dance to whatever tune her current corporate sponsors Converse Target Eskuche care to call 53 Daniel Lopatin said I don t think the hpop tag is representative of a movement or constituted by a select group of artists I see it more as a discussion about nostalgia and its subliminal effects on culture I don t see anything wrong with the tag it s just a way of engaging with a phenomenon 55 Ariel Pink similarly found such tags to be simply a means of framing artists in an interesting way 56 John Maus rejected the hypnagogic pop tag as he did not intend his music to evoke 1980s nostalgia 31 James Ferraro was uncertain whether he belonged under the h pop umbrella and believed that the genre was not really an influence on me 57 Writing for a 2019 retrospective on chillwave Friedlander expressed that Keenan wasn t wrong in thinking that lo fi music was becoming a piece with the industry to which it once represented an alternative She followed in his disillusionment after the release of Far Side Virtual a half joking reclamation of the laptop that made me realise how out of hand the whole lo fi conceit had become 53 The announcement came on November 30 2011 60 the same day the website published an artist feature on Ferraro 59 References Edit a b c d Stone Blue Editors September 11 2015 William Basinski Musician Snapshots SBE Media pp Chapter 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last1 has generic name help a b Pounds Ross June 30 2010 Why Glo Fi s Future Is Not Ephemeral The Quietus a b Witmer Phil August 18 2017 Frank Ocean s Seigfried Builds on the Beatles Production Legacy Vice Retrieved March 26 2020 a b c Bowe Miles July 26 2013 Band To Watch Saint Pepsi Stereogum Retrieved 26 June 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Hinkes Jones Llewellyn 15 July 2010 Downtempo Pop When Good Music Gets a Bad Name The Atlantic a b Sherburne Phillip October 20 2015 Songs in the Key of Zzz The History of Sleep Music Pitchfork Sherburne Philip May 22 2012 Last Step Going to Sleep to Make Music to Sleep To Spin Magazine Retrieved 4 July 2016 Masters Marc July 18 2011 James Ferraro Night Dolls With Hairspray Pitchfork a b c d e f Reynolds Simon March 2011b Hypnagogic pop and the landscape of Southern California frieze No 137 Retrieved July 4 2016 a b c d e f Harper Adam December 7 2012 Comment Vaporwave and the pop art of the virtual plaza Dummy Archived from the original on April 1 2015 Retrieved February 8 2014 a b c d e f g h i Keenan Dave August 2009 Childhood s End The Wire No 306 Trainer 2016 pp 410 412 a b Guesdon Mael Le Guern Philippe 2014 Analogue Nostalgias In K Niemeyer ed Media and Nostalgia Yearning for the Past Present and Future Springer pp 77 78 ISBN 978 1 137 37588 9 Trainer 2016 pp 412 413 a b c Trainer 2016 p 412 a b c d Reynolds 2011 p 345 a b c Poyau Morgan July 13 2011 The 80s Nostalgia Aesthetic Of Music s Hottest New Subgenre Hypnagogic Pop Vice Media Retrieved August 15 2016 Trainer 2016 p 410 Despres Sean July 18 2010 Whatever you do don t call it chillwave The Japan Times Retrieved November 8 2016 a b c d Harper Adam April 23 2014 Essay Shades of Ariel Pink Dummy Fisher Mark 26 April 2010 Ariel Pink Russian roulette Fact Albiez Sean 2017 Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Volume 11 Bloomsbury pp 347 349 ISBN 9781501326103 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Reynolds 2011 p 346 Bell David September 18 2010 Deserter s Songs Looking Backwards In Defence of Nostalgia Ceasefire Mag Retrieved August 17 2016 a b Beauomont Thomas Ben December 3 2010 Why Olde English Spelling Bee is creating a buzz The Guardian Trainer 2016 pp 409 410 Masters Marc September 14 2009 The Decade in Noise Pitchfork Reynolds Simon January 19 2011a Leave Chillwave Alone The Village Voice Reynolds 2011 p 348 Viney Steven November 14 2017 Is Ariel Pink finally being sincere Double J a b Redmond Jordan March 30 2012 John Maus We Must Become The Pitiless Censors Of Ourselves Tiny Mix Tapes Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Ingram Matthew June 2012 Here Comes the Flood The Wire No 340 Burrows Tim September 9 2012 R Stevie Moore Dazed Digital a b Moores J R October 9 2014 Speaking to the cult king of psychedelia and influencer of Ariel Pink Temples and more Red Bull Reynolds 2011 p 347 Trainer 2016 p 415 a b Price Joe August 29 2016 Vaporwave s Second Life Complex Krinsley Jeremy 2009 DANIEL LOPATIN of ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER Impose Retrieved May 20 2020 a b c d e Keenan David January 2011 Wake Up Call The Wire No 323 p 43 Schreiber Ryan Best New Track Round and Round by Ariel Pink s Haunted Graffiti Pitchfork Media Retrieved 27 April 2017 Harper Adam March 2014 Lo Fi Aesthetics in Popular Music Discourse Thesis Wadham College pp 334 338 Retrieved March 10 2018 Lynch Martin February 20 2013 Spencer Clark Bomb Schilling Dave April 8 2015 That Was a Thing The Brief History of the Totally Made Up Chillwave Music Genre Grantland Trainer 2016 pp 409 416 Weiss Dan July 6 2012 Slutwave Tumblr Rap Rape Gaze Obscure Musical Genres Explained LA Weekly Trainer 2016 p 416 Hogan Marc Review Psychic Chasms Neon Indian Pitchfork Retrieved 13 January 2020 Bulut Selim July 30 2018 Remembering Sam Mehran one of underground music s most unique talents Dazed Digital Glitsos Laura January 2018 Vaporwave or music optimised for abandoned malls Cambridge ProQuest 1973993186 Retrieved 9 April 2022 via The Wikipedia Library a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d Harper Adam July 29 2013 Essay Invest in Vaporwave Futures Dummy Reynolds 2011 p 349 Britton Luke Morgan September 26 2016 Music Genres Are A Joke That You re Not In On Vice Archived from the original on March 31 2017 a b c d e f Friedlader Emilie August 21 2019 Chillwave a momentary microgenre that ushered in the age of nostalgia The Guardian Bowe Miles April 21 2019 Macintosh Plus Floral Shoppe Pitchfork Keith Kawaii November 24 2009 Oneohtrix Point Never interview Tiny Mix Tapes Retrieved 15 August 2016 Raffeiner Arno September 14 2017 Interview Ariel Pink Red Bull Music Academy James Ferraro interview The city of dream Dummy 2010 Retrieved May 21 2020 Lynskey Dorian February 25 2010 Chillwave or twee fi Pop s latest genre folly The Guardian a b Friedlander Emilie November 30 2011 Artist Profile James Ferraro Altered Zones Archived from the original on December 2 2011 Maloney Devan November 30 2011 Altered Zones DIY Indie Blog Collective Shutters After 16 Months Billboard a b Harper 2014 p 379 Howe Brian October 9 2019 On His Debut as Ssoft a Chillwave Survivor Lets His Acid House Flag Fly Indy Week Wray Daniel Dylan May 12 2020 My studio is an extra limb right now bedroom pop the perfect genre for lockdown The Guardian Bevan David August 21 2012 Ariel Pink In Praise of Guilty Genius Spin Works cited Edit Reynolds Simon 2011 Retromania Pop Culture s Addiction to Its Own Past Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 1 4299 6858 4 Trainer Adam 2016 From Hypnagogia to Distroid Postironic Musical Renderings of Personal Memory The Oxford Handbook of Music and Virtuality Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 932128 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hypnagogic pop amp oldid 1146646734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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