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Trip hop

Trip hop (sometimes used synonymously with "downtempo")[3] is a musical genre that originated in the early 1990s in the United Kingdom, especially Bristol.[4] It has been described as a psychedelic fusion of hip hop and electronica with slow tempos and an atmospheric sound,[5][6][7] often incorporating elements of jazz, soul, funk, reggae, dub, R&B, and other forms of electronic music, as well as sampling from movie soundtracks and other eclectic sources.[8]

Trip hop
Other namesDowntempo
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsc. late 1980s – early 1990s, Bristol, England
Derivative forms
Regional scenes
  • United Kingdom
  • Australia
Other topics

The style emerged as a more experimental variant of breakbeat from the Bristol sound scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s,[9] incorporating influences from jazz, soul, funk, dub, and rap music.[10] It was pioneered by acts like Massive Attack, Tricky, and Portishead.[11] The term was first coined in a 1994 Mixmag piece about American producer DJ Shadow.[12] Trip hop achieved commercial success in the 1990s, and has been described as "Europe's alternative choice in the second half of the '90s".[9]

Characteristics edit

Common musical aesthetics include a bass-heavy drumbeat,[13] often providing the slowed down breakbeat samples similar to standard 1990s hip hop beats, giving the genre a more psychedelic and mainstream feel.[13] Vocals in trip hop are often female and feature characteristics of various singing styles including R&B, jazz and rock. The female-dominant vocals of trip hop may be partially attributable to the influence of genres such as jazz and early R&B, in which female vocalists were more common. However, there are notable exceptions: Massive Attack[14] and Groove Armada collaborated with male and female vocalists, Tricky often features vocally in his own productions along with Martina Topley-Bird,[15] and Chris Corner provided vocals for later albums with Sneaker Pimps.[16]

Trip hop is also known for its melancholic sound. This may be partly due to the fact that several acts were inspired by post-punk bands;[17] Tricky and Massive Attack both covered and sampled songs of Siouxsie and the Banshees[18][19] and the Cure.[20][21] Tricky opened his second album Nearly God with a version of "Tattoo", a proto-trip-hop song of Siouxsie and the Banshees initially recorded in 1983.[22]

Trip hop tracks often incorporate Rhodes pianos, saxophones, trumpets, flutes, and may employ unconventional instruments such as the theremin and Mellotron. Trip hop differs from hip hop in theme and overall tone. Contrasting with gangsta rap and its hard-hitting lyrics, trip hop offers a more aural atmospherics influenced by experimental folk and rock acts of the seventies, such as John Martyn,[23] combined with instrumental hip hop, turntable scratching, and breakbeat rhythms. Regarded in some ways as a 1990s update of fusion, trip hop may be said to "transcend" the hardcore rap styles and lyrics with atmospheric overtones to create a more mellow tempo.[24]

History edit

Late 1980s–1991: Origins edit

The term "trip-hop" first appeared in print in June 1994.[25] Andy Pemberton, a music journalist writing for Mixmag, used it to describe "In/Flux", a single by American producer DJ Shadow and UK act RPM, with the latter signed to Mo' Wax Records.[26][27]

In Bristol, hip hop began to seep into the consciousness of a subculture already well-schooled in Jamaican forms of music. DJs, MCs, b-boys and graffiti artists grouped together into informal soundsystems.[28] Like the pioneering Bronx crews of DJs Kool Herc, Afrika Bambataa and Grandmaster Flash, the soundsystems provided party music for public spaces, often in the economically deprived council estates from which some of their members originated. Bristol's soundsystem DJs, drawing heavily on Jamaican dub music, typically used a laid-back, slow and heavy drum beat ("down tempo").

Bristol's Wild Bunch crew became one of the soundsystems to put a local spin on the international phenomenon, helping to birth Bristol's signature sound of trip hop, often termed "the Bristol Sound".[28] The Wild Bunch and its associates included at various times in its existence the MC Adrian "Tricky Kid" Thaws, the graffiti artist and lyricist Robert "3D" Del Naja, producer Jonny Dollar and the DJs Nellee Hooper, Andrew "Mushroom" Vowles and Grant "Daddy G" Marshall. As the hip hop scene matured in Bristol and musical trends evolved further toward acid jazz and house in the late 1980s,[29] the golden era of the soundsystem began to end. The Wild Bunch signed a record deal and evolved into Massive Attack,[30] a core collective of 3D, Mushroom and Daddy G, with significant contributions from Tricky Kid (soon shortened to Tricky), Dollar, and Hooper on production duties, along with a rotating cast of other vocalists.[30]

Another influence came from Gary Clail's Tackhead soundsystem. Clail often worked with former The Pop Group singer Mark Stewart.[31] The latter experimented with his band Mark Stewart & the Maffia, which consisted of New York session musicians Skip McDonald, Doug Wimbish, and Keith LeBlanc, who had been a part of the house band for the Sugarhill Records record label.[32] Produced by Adrian Sherwood, the music combined hip hop with experimental rock and dub and sounded like a premature version of what later became trip hop. In 1993, Kirsty MacColl released "Angel", one of the first examples of the genre crossing over to pop, a hybrid that dominated the charts toward the end of the 1990s.

1991–1997: Mainstream breakthrough edit

 
Massive Attack, a British trip hop group that helped bring the genre to mainstream success in the 1990s[33]

Massive Attack's first album Blue Lines was released in 1991 to huge success in the United Kingdom.[34] Blue Lines was seen widely as the first major manifestation of a uniquely British hip hop movement, but the album's hit single "Unfinished Sympathy" and other tracks were not seen as hip hop songs in a conventional sense despite similarities in production methods such as using sample-based rhythms. Produced by Dollar, Shara Nelson (R&B singer) featured on the orchestral "Unfinished", and Jamaican dance hall star Horace Andy provided vocals on several other tracks, as he would throughout Massive Attack's career.[35] Massive Attack released their second album entitled Protection in 1994. Although Tricky stayed on in a lesser role and Hooper again produced, the fertile dance music scene of the early 1990s had informed the record, and it was seen as an even more significant shift away from the Wild Bunch era.

In the June 1994 issue of the UK magazine Mixmag, music journalist Andy Pemberton used the term trip hop to describe the hip hop instrumental "In/Flux", a 1993 single by San Francisco's DJ Shadow, and other similar tracks released on the Mo' Wax label and being played in London clubs at the time. "In/Flux", with its mixed up bpms, spoken word samples, strings, melodies, bizarre noises, prominent bass, and slow beats, gave the listener the impression they were on a musical trip, according to Pemberton.[36] Soon, however, Massive Attack's dubby, jazzy, psychedelic, electronic textures, rooted in hip hop sampling technique but taking flight into many styles, were described by journalists as the template of the eponymous genre.

 
Tricky, a major trip hop artist

In 1993, Icelandic musician Björk released Debut, produced by Wild Bunch member Nellee Hooper.[37] The album, although rooted in four-on-the-floor house music, contained elements of trip hop and is credited as one of the first albums to introduce electronic dance music into mainstream pop.[38][39] She had been in contact with London's underground electronic music scene and was romantically involved with trip-hop musician Tricky. Björk further embraced trip-hop with her 1995 album Post by collaborating with Tricky and Howie B. Homogenic, her 1997 album, has been described as a pinnacle of trip hop music.[40]

Trip-hop neared the peak of its popularity in 1994 and 1995, with artists such as Howie B and Earthling making significant contributions. Ninja Tune, the independent record label founded by the duo Coldcut, significantly influenced the trip-hop sound in London and beyond with breakthrough artists DJ Food, 9 Lazy 9, Up, Bustle & Out, Funki Porcini and The Herbaliser, among others. The period also marked the debut of two acts who, along with Massive Attack, would define the Bristol scene for years to come.

In 1994, Portishead, a trio comprising singer Beth Gibbons, Geoff Barrow, and Adrian Utley, released their debut album Dummy. Their background differed from Massive Attack in many ways: one of Portishead's primary influences was 1960s and 1970s film soundtrack LPs.[41] Nevertheless, Portishead shared the scratchy, jazz-sample-based aesthetic of early Massive Attack (whom Barrow had briefly worked with during the recording of Blue Lines), and the sullen, fragile vocals of Gibbons also brought them wide acclaim. In 1995, Dummy was awarded the Mercury Music Prize as the best British album of the year,[42] giving trip-hop as a genre its greatest exposure yet. Portishead's music was also widely imitated, to the point that they distanced themselves[43] from the trip-hop label they had inadvertently helped popularize, with Barrow stating "The whole trip-hop tag was nonsense. It was developed by people in London, and the people in Bristol just had to put up with it.".[44]

Tricky also released his debut solo album, Maxinquaye in 1995, to great critical acclaim. The album was produced largely in collaboration with Mark Saunders. Tricky employed whispered, often abstract stream-of-consciousness lyrics, remote from the gangsta-rap braggadocio of the mid-1990s US hip-hop scene. Even more unusually, many of the solo songs on Maxinquaye featured little of Tricky's own voice: his then-lover, Martina Topley-Bird, sang them, including her re-imagining of rap group Public Enemy's 1988 song "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos", while other songs were male-female duets dealing with sex and love in oblique ways, over beds of sometimes dissonant samples. Within a year, Tricky had released two more full-length albums, although they failed to find the same popularity as his Bristol contemporaries Massive Attack and Portishead.[45] Through his collaborations with Björk, however, he exerted influence closer to the pop and alternative rock mainstream, and he developed a large cult fan-base.

Although not as popular in the United States, bands like Portishead and Sneaker Pimps saw moderate airplay on alternative-rock stations across the country.[46]

1997–2010: Continued success and new directions edit

 
Björk, an artist who has often incorporated trip hop in her music[47][48][49]

After the initial success of trip hop in the mid-1990s, the artists who made their own interpretations of the genre include Archive, Baby Fox, Bowery Electric, Esthero, Morcheeba, Sneaker Pimps, Anomie Belle,[50] Alpha, Jaianto, Mudville and Cibo Matto and Lamb. These artists incorporated trip hop into other genres, including ambient, soul, IDM, industrial, dubstep, breakbeat, drum and bass, acid jazz, and new-age. The first printed use of the term "post-trip hop" was in an October 2002 article of The Independent, and was used to describe the band Second Person.[51]

Trip hop has also influenced artists in other genres, including Gorillaz, Emancipator, Nine Inch Nails, Travis, PJ Harvey,[52] How to Destroy Angels,[53] Beth Orton, The Flaming Lips, Bitter:Sweet, Beck, The xx and Deftones.[54] Several tracks on Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue's 1997 album Impossible Princess also displayed a trip hop influence.[55][importance of example(s)?] Various prominent artists and groups, such as Janet Jackson,[56] Kylie Minogue,[57] Madonna,[58][59] Björk,[60][61][62] and Radiohead,[63] have also been influenced by the genre. Trip hop has spawned several subgenres,[64] including illbient (dub-based trip hop which combines ambient and industrial hip hop).

Trip hop continued to influence notable artists in the 2000s. Norwegian avant-garde band Ulver incorporated trip hop in their ambient/electronic/jazzy album Perdition City. Atmospheric rock band Antimatter included some trip hop elements in their first two albums. Australian composer Rob Dougan proposed a mix of trip hop beats, orchestral music and electronics. RJD2 began his career as a DJ, but in 2001, began releasing albums under El-P's Def Jux Label.[65] Zero 7's album Simple Things, and in particular, its lead single "Destiny", was regarded highly by underground listeners and achieved significant popularity.[66] In 2006, Gotye debuted his second studio album, Like Drawing Blood. The songs on the album featured down-tempo hip-hop beats and dub style bass reminiscent of trip hop.[67] Hip hop groups Zion I and the Dub Pistols also displayed heavy trip hop influence.[68][69] Norwegian singer and songwriter Kate Havnevik is a classically trained musician, but also incorporates trip hop into her work.[70]

During the late 1990s and early 2000s trip hop achieved crossover success in the United States, often lumped under the "electronica" label. Trip hop songs were featured in film soundtracks of this era such as the Matrix series. Many producers who were not explicitly trip-hop artists also displayed its influence during this time. Daniel Nakamura, aka Dan the Automator, released two albums that were heavily inspired by trip hop. His 2000 album Deltron 3030[71] was a concept album about a rapper from the future, portrayed by Del the Funky Homosapien. 2001 saw the release of his side project, Lovage and the album Music to Make Love to Your Old Lady By,[72] with special guests Mike Patton, Prince Paul, Maseo, Damon Albarn, and Afrika Bambaataa. British producer Fatboy Slim's breakthrough album, Halfway Between the Gutter and the Stars,[73] was his most commercially successful release.[importance of example(s)?] Another heavily trip-hop influenced band, Elsiane, published their first album Hybrid in 2007, creating a "mellow, hypnotic atmosphere utilized in the ’90s by big names like Massive Attack, Portishead, etc."[74]

2010–present edit

Major notable trip hop releases from 2010s include Massive Attack's Heligoland, their first studio album in seven years; and Dutch's A Bright Cold Day in 2010, the latter group including Jedi Mind Tricks producer Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind.[75][76]

DJ Shadow's The Less You Know, the Better was released in 2011 after a highly publicised unveiling of songs, including appearances on Zane Lowe's BBC Radio 1 show and previews at a performance in Antwerp in August 2010.[77] The album was met with "generally favorable reviews" on Metacritic, with some criticising Shadow's lack of originality. Sam Richards of NME felt that the album sounded "like the work of a man struggling to recall his motivations for making music in the first place."

Beak's album titled Beak>> was released in 2012 and received high scores from journalists, including an 8/10 from NME and Spin magazine.[78]

Lana Del Rey released her second album, Born to Die in 2012, which contained a string of trip hop ballads.[79] The album topped the charts in eleven countries, including Australia, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom; it has sold 3.4 million copies worldwide as of 2013 according to International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.[80]

Following the 2013 release of EP2, the music of FKA Twigs was described in a Pitchfork Magazine article as "trip hop for a new time", with "a menacing undertow reminiscent of Massive Attack's Mezzanine."[81]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Trip hop at Curlie
  • "Trip-Hop" Allmusic guide essay by Sean Cooper
  • "World of Trip Hop" Webpage 10 December 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • NPR's history of trip hop

trip, confused, with, illbient, chillhop, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verify. Not to be confused with Illbient or Chillhop This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Trip hop sometimes used synonymously with downtempo 3 is a musical genre that originated in the early 1990s in the United Kingdom especially Bristol 4 It has been described as a psychedelic fusion of hip hop and electronica with slow tempos and an atmospheric sound 5 6 7 often incorporating elements of jazz soul funk reggae dub R amp B and other forms of electronic music as well as sampling from movie soundtracks and other eclectic sources 8 Trip hopOther namesDowntempoStylistic originsElectronicahip hopreggaepsychedeliasouldubbreakbeatrockfunkR amp Bjazzskaalternative rock 1 2 loungeCultural originsc late 1980s early 1990s Bristol EnglandDerivative formsIllbientpost trip hopIDMRegional scenesUnited KingdomAustraliaOther topicsBristol underground sceneexperimental hip hopneo soulnu jazzacid jazzchill out musicpsychedelic rapThe style emerged as a more experimental variant of breakbeat from the Bristol sound scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s 9 incorporating influences from jazz soul funk dub and rap music 10 It was pioneered by acts like Massive Attack Tricky and Portishead 11 The term was first coined in a 1994 Mixmag piece about American producer DJ Shadow 12 Trip hop achieved commercial success in the 1990s and has been described as Europe s alternative choice in the second half of the 90s 9 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 History 2 1 Late 1980s 1991 Origins 2 2 1991 1997 Mainstream breakthrough 2 3 1997 2010 Continued success and new directions 2 4 2010 present 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksCharacteristics editCommon musical aesthetics include a bass heavy drumbeat 13 often providing the slowed down breakbeat samples similar to standard 1990s hip hop beats giving the genre a more psychedelic and mainstream feel 13 Vocals in trip hop are often female and feature characteristics of various singing styles including R amp B jazz and rock The female dominant vocals of trip hop may be partially attributable to the influence of genres such as jazz and early R amp B in which female vocalists were more common However there are notable exceptions Massive Attack 14 and Groove Armada collaborated with male and female vocalists Tricky often features vocally in his own productions along with Martina Topley Bird 15 and Chris Corner provided vocals for later albums with Sneaker Pimps 16 Trip hop is also known for its melancholic sound This may be partly due to the fact that several acts were inspired by post punk bands 17 Tricky and Massive Attack both covered and sampled songs of Siouxsie and the Banshees 18 19 and the Cure 20 21 Tricky opened his second album Nearly God with a version of Tattoo a proto trip hop song of Siouxsie and the Banshees initially recorded in 1983 22 Trip hop tracks often incorporate Rhodes pianos saxophones trumpets flutes and may employ unconventional instruments such as the theremin and Mellotron Trip hop differs from hip hop in theme and overall tone Contrasting with gangsta rap and its hard hitting lyrics trip hop offers a more aural atmospherics influenced by experimental folk and rock acts of the seventies such as John Martyn 23 combined with instrumental hip hop turntable scratching and breakbeat rhythms Regarded in some ways as a 1990s update of fusion trip hop may be said to transcend the hardcore rap styles and lyrics with atmospheric overtones to create a more mellow tempo 24 History editLate 1980s 1991 Origins edit The term trip hop first appeared in print in June 1994 25 Andy Pemberton a music journalist writing for Mixmag used it to describe In Flux a single by American producer DJ Shadow and UK act RPM with the latter signed to Mo Wax Records 26 27 In Bristol hip hop began to seep into the consciousness of a subculture already well schooled in Jamaican forms of music DJs MCs b boys and graffiti artists grouped together into informal soundsystems 28 Like the pioneering Bronx crews of DJs Kool Herc Afrika Bambataa and Grandmaster Flash the soundsystems provided party music for public spaces often in the economically deprived council estates from which some of their members originated Bristol s soundsystem DJs drawing heavily on Jamaican dub music typically used a laid back slow and heavy drum beat down tempo Bristol s Wild Bunch crew became one of the soundsystems to put a local spin on the international phenomenon helping to birth Bristol s signature sound of trip hop often termed the Bristol Sound 28 The Wild Bunch and its associates included at various times in its existence the MC Adrian Tricky Kid Thaws the graffiti artist and lyricist Robert 3D Del Naja producer Jonny Dollar and the DJs Nellee Hooper Andrew Mushroom Vowles and Grant Daddy G Marshall As the hip hop scene matured in Bristol and musical trends evolved further toward acid jazz and house in the late 1980s 29 the golden era of the soundsystem began to end The Wild Bunch signed a record deal and evolved into Massive Attack 30 a core collective of 3D Mushroom and Daddy G with significant contributions from Tricky Kid soon shortened to Tricky Dollar and Hooper on production duties along with a rotating cast of other vocalists 30 Another influence came from Gary Clail s Tackhead soundsystem Clail often worked with former The Pop Group singer Mark Stewart 31 The latter experimented with his band Mark Stewart amp the Maffia which consisted of New York session musicians Skip McDonald Doug Wimbish and Keith LeBlanc who had been a part of the house band for the Sugarhill Records record label 32 Produced by Adrian Sherwood the music combined hip hop with experimental rock and dub and sounded like a premature version of what later became trip hop In 1993 Kirsty MacColl released Angel one of the first examples of the genre crossing over to pop a hybrid that dominated the charts toward the end of the 1990s 1991 1997 Mainstream breakthrough edit nbsp Teardrop source source track Sample of Teardrop by Massive Attack from Mezzanine Problems playing this file See media help nbsp Massive Attack a British trip hop group that helped bring the genre to mainstream success in the 1990s 33 Massive Attack s first album Blue Lines was released in 1991 to huge success in the United Kingdom 34 Blue Lines was seen widely as the first major manifestation of a uniquely British hip hop movement but the album s hit single Unfinished Sympathy and other tracks were not seen as hip hop songs in a conventional sense despite similarities in production methods such as using sample based rhythms Produced by Dollar Shara Nelson R amp B singer featured on the orchestral Unfinished and Jamaican dance hall star Horace Andy provided vocals on several other tracks as he would throughout Massive Attack s career 35 Massive Attack released their second album entitled Protection in 1994 Although Tricky stayed on in a lesser role and Hooper again produced the fertile dance music scene of the early 1990s had informed the record and it was seen as an even more significant shift away from the Wild Bunch era In the June 1994 issue of the UK magazine Mixmag music journalist Andy Pemberton used the term trip hop to describe the hip hop instrumental In Flux a 1993 single by San Francisco s DJ Shadow and other similar tracks released on the Mo Wax label and being played in London clubs at the time In Flux with its mixed up bpms spoken word samples strings melodies bizarre noises prominent bass and slow beats gave the listener the impression they were on a musical trip according to Pemberton 36 Soon however Massive Attack s dubby jazzy psychedelic electronic textures rooted in hip hop sampling technique but taking flight into many styles were described by journalists as the template of the eponymous genre nbsp Tricky a major trip hop artistIn 1993 Icelandic musician Bjork released Debut produced by Wild Bunch member Nellee Hooper 37 The album although rooted in four on the floor house music contained elements of trip hop and is credited as one of the first albums to introduce electronic dance music into mainstream pop 38 39 She had been in contact with London s underground electronic music scene and was romantically involved with trip hop musician Tricky Bjork further embraced trip hop with her 1995 album Post by collaborating with Tricky and Howie B Homogenic her 1997 album has been described as a pinnacle of trip hop music 40 Trip hop neared the peak of its popularity in 1994 and 1995 with artists such as Howie B and Earthling making significant contributions Ninja Tune the independent record label founded by the duo Coldcut significantly influenced the trip hop sound in London and beyond with breakthrough artists DJ Food 9 Lazy 9 Up Bustle amp Out Funki Porcini and The Herbaliser among others The period also marked the debut of two acts who along with Massive Attack would define the Bristol scene for years to come In 1994 Portishead a trio comprising singer Beth Gibbons Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley released their debut album Dummy Their background differed from Massive Attack in many ways one of Portishead s primary influences was 1960s and 1970s film soundtrack LPs 41 Nevertheless Portishead shared the scratchy jazz sample based aesthetic of early Massive Attack whom Barrow had briefly worked with during the recording of Blue Lines and the sullen fragile vocals of Gibbons also brought them wide acclaim In 1995 Dummy was awarded the Mercury Music Prize as the best British album of the year 42 giving trip hop as a genre its greatest exposure yet Portishead s music was also widely imitated to the point that they distanced themselves 43 from the trip hop label they had inadvertently helped popularize with Barrow stating The whole trip hop tag was nonsense It was developed by people in London and the people in Bristol just had to put up with it 44 Tricky also released his debut solo album Maxinquaye in 1995 to great critical acclaim The album was produced largely in collaboration with Mark Saunders Tricky employed whispered often abstract stream of consciousness lyrics remote from the gangsta rap braggadocio of the mid 1990s US hip hop scene Even more unusually many of the solo songs on Maxinquaye featured little of Tricky s own voice his then lover Martina Topley Bird sang them including her re imagining of rap group Public Enemy s 1988 song Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos while other songs were male female duets dealing with sex and love in oblique ways over beds of sometimes dissonant samples Within a year Tricky had released two more full length albums although they failed to find the same popularity as his Bristol contemporaries Massive Attack and Portishead 45 Through his collaborations with Bjork however he exerted influence closer to the pop and alternative rock mainstream and he developed a large cult fan base Although not as popular in the United States bands like Portishead and Sneaker Pimps saw moderate airplay on alternative rock stations across the country 46 1997 2010 Continued success and new directions edit nbsp Bjork an artist who has often incorporated trip hop in her music 47 48 49 After the initial success of trip hop in the mid 1990s the artists who made their own interpretations of the genre include Archive Baby Fox Bowery Electric Esthero Morcheeba Sneaker Pimps Anomie Belle 50 Alpha Jaianto Mudville and Cibo Matto and Lamb These artists incorporated trip hop into other genres including ambient soul IDM industrial dubstep breakbeat drum and bass acid jazz and new age The first printed use of the term post trip hop was in an October 2002 article of The Independent and was used to describe the band Second Person 51 Trip hop has also influenced artists in other genres including Gorillaz Emancipator Nine Inch Nails Travis PJ Harvey 52 How to Destroy Angels 53 Beth Orton The Flaming Lips Bitter Sweet Beck The xx and Deftones 54 Several tracks on Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue s 1997 album Impossible Princess also displayed a trip hop influence 55 importance of example s Various prominent artists and groups such as Janet Jackson 56 Kylie Minogue 57 Madonna 58 59 Bjork 60 61 62 and Radiohead 63 have also been influenced by the genre Trip hop has spawned several subgenres 64 including illbient dub based trip hop which combines ambient and industrial hip hop Trip hop continued to influence notable artists in the 2000s Norwegian avant garde band Ulver incorporated trip hop in their ambient electronic jazzy album Perdition City Atmospheric rock band Antimatter included some trip hop elements in their first two albums Australian composer Rob Dougan proposed a mix of trip hop beats orchestral music and electronics RJD2 began his career as a DJ but in 2001 began releasing albums under El P s Def Jux Label 65 Zero 7 s album Simple Things and in particular its lead single Destiny was regarded highly by underground listeners and achieved significant popularity 66 In 2006 Gotye debuted his second studio album Like Drawing Blood The songs on the album featured down tempo hip hop beats and dub style bass reminiscent of trip hop 67 Hip hop groups Zion I and the Dub Pistols also displayed heavy trip hop influence 68 69 Norwegian singer and songwriter Kate Havnevik is a classically trained musician but also incorporates trip hop into her work 70 During the late 1990s and early 2000s trip hop achieved crossover success in the United States often lumped under the electronica label Trip hop songs were featured in film soundtracks of this era such as the Matrix series Many producers who were not explicitly trip hop artists also displayed its influence during this time Daniel Nakamura aka Dan the Automator released two albums that were heavily inspired by trip hop His 2000 album Deltron 3030 71 was a concept album about a rapper from the future portrayed by Del the Funky Homosapien 2001 saw the release of his side project Lovage and the album Music to Make Love to Your Old Lady By 72 with special guests Mike Patton Prince Paul Maseo Damon Albarn and Afrika Bambaataa British producer Fatboy Slim s breakthrough album Halfway Between the Gutter and the Stars 73 was his most commercially successful release importance of example s Another heavily trip hop influenced band Elsiane published their first album Hybrid in 2007 creating a mellow hypnotic atmosphere utilized in the 90s by big names like Massive Attack Portishead etc 74 2010 present edit Major notable trip hop releases from 2010s include Massive Attack s Heligoland their first studio album in seven years and Dutch s A Bright Cold Day in 2010 the latter group including Jedi Mind Tricks producer Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind 75 76 DJ Shadow s The Less You Know the Better was released in 2011 after a highly publicised unveiling of songs including appearances on Zane Lowe s BBC Radio 1 show and previews at a performance in Antwerp in August 2010 77 The album was met with generally favorable reviews on Metacritic with some criticising Shadow s lack of originality Sam Richards of NME felt that the album sounded like the work of a man struggling to recall his motivations for making music in the first place Beak s album titled Beak gt gt was released in 2012 and received high scores from journalists including an 8 10 from NME and Spin magazine 78 Lana Del Rey released her second album Born to Die in 2012 which contained a string of trip hop ballads 79 The album topped the charts in eleven countries including Australia France Germany and the United Kingdom it has sold 3 4 million copies worldwide as of 2013 according to International Federation of the Phonographic Industry 80 Following the 2013 release of EP2 the music of FKA Twigs was described in a Pitchfork Magazine article as trip hop for a new time with a menacing undertow reminiscent of Massive Attack s Mezzanine 81 See also editChill out music Acid house List of electronic music genres List of trip hop artistsReferences edit Mitchell Tony 2002 Global Noise Rap and Hip Hop Outside the USA Wesleyan University Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 8195 6502 0 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Whiteley Sheila Bennett Andy Hawkins Stan 2004 Music Space And Place Popular Music And Cultural Identity Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 84 ISBN 978 0 7546 5574 9 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Reighley Kurt B January 2000 Peace Orchestra CMJ New Music Monthly No 77 ISSN 1074 6978 Goldman Vivien 31 January 2012 Local Groove Does Good The Story Of Trip Hop s Rise From Bristol npr org Twells John Fintoni Laurent 30 July 2015 The 50 best trip hop albums of all time Fact Retrieved 22 December 2016 Staff Downtempo Music Guide 5 Popular Downtempo Musical Acts Masterclass Retrieved 4 July 2021 Cinquemani Sal 2 November 2002 Slant Magazine Music Review DJ Shadow Endtroducing Slantmagazine Slantmagazine com Retrieved 24 September 2010 Trip hop music Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 24 November 2020 a b Trip Hop Electronic Electronica Trip Hop Explore Trip Hop AllMusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 James Hannaham 17 April 2008 Did Portishead kill trip hop salon com Feature When Bristol music went Out of the Comfort Zone Epigram org uk 20 April 2019 Retrieved 7 January 2021 Michaelangelo Matos 25 August 2011 Genre busting the origin of music categories theguardian com a b Andersen Ragnhild Brovig September 2005 Groove in trip hop music PDF UIO Massive Attack Credits AllMusic Retrieved 16 December 2019 Martina Topley Bird Credits AllMusic Retrieved 16 December 2019 Sneaker Pimps Credits AllMusic Retrieved 16 December 2019 The 10 best trip hop tracks according to Nouvelle Vague s Marc Collin Dummymag com Retrieved 16 December 2019 moon palace de Tricky web Site Tricky covered Tattoo a pre trip hop song of Siouxsie and the Banshees from 1983 for the opening track of his second album Nearly God in 1996 Inflightdata com Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Massive Attack sampled and covered Metal Postcard of Siouxsie and the Banshees in 1997 on the movie soundtrack The Jackal Tricky site The Lovecats by Cure covered by Tricky inflightdata com massive attack discography tune info lyrics man next door Inflightdata com Archived from the original on 2 May 2008 Siouxsie Sioux RocknFolk com Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2011 Dombal Ryan 29 January 2009 Folk Jazz Icon John Martyn R I P Pitchfork Retrieved 17 July 2020 Andersen Ragnhild Brovig Groove in trip hop music PDF University of Oslo Retrieved 19 December 2015 Michaelangelo Matos 25 August 2011 Genre busting the origin of music categories theguardian com Pemberton Andy June 1994 Trip Hop Mixmag Rick Snoman 10 September 2012 The Dance Music Manual CRC Press p 294 ISBN 9781136115585 a b The story of the Bristol Sound British Council Britishcouncil org il Retrieved 16 December 2019 Wheaton RJ 2001 Portishead s Dummy Continuum p 14 ISBN 1441194495 a b Red Lines Bristol England Red lines co uk Retrieved 16 December 2019 On U Sound In The Area Mark Stewart Maffia biography Skysaw org Retrieved 16 December 2019 SPIN September 1987 September 1987 Retrieved 14 September 2011 Ankeny Jason Massive Attack Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Massive Attack Out of the Comfort Zone The British Library Retrieved 7 January 2021 Service clouddataservice co uk Cloud Data Features Honest Ulsterman Retrieved 7 January 2021 Pemberton Andy June 1994 Trip Hop Mixmag Cragg Michael 5 July 2013 Bjork s Debut celebrating 20 years of innovation The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 December 2019 Debut Turns 20 StereoGum 3 July 2013 Retrieved 23 September 2014 Bjork s Debut Turns 20 Backtracking Idolator com 12 July 2013 Retrieved 23 September 2014 Zercoe Cole 21 November 2011 Second Look Bjork Homogenic Beats per Minute Retrieved 8 December 2014 Rogers Jude 24 August 2019 Dummy wasn t a chillout album Portishead had more in common with Nirvana The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 16 December 2019 Oxley Macon 1 November 2015 Mercury Winners Portishead Dummy 1995 Retrieved 16 December 2019 Reynolds Simon 28 May 1995 POP VIEW Another City Another New Sound The New York Times Retrieved 15 February 2022 Simpson Dave 11 February 2008 Portishead The Guardian Retrieved 15 February 2022 Tricky comeback makes for trip hop trilogy The Guardian 9 May 2008 Retrieved 19 December 2015 Top Songs of 1997 Q101 Chicago Alternative Retrieved 25 March 2014 Thomas Stephen 21 November 1965 Bjork Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Phares Heather 13 June 1995 Post Bjork Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Phares Heather 22 September 1997 Homogenic Bjork Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Liu Marian 28 October 2008 Anomie Belle brings politically conscious trip hop to the Tractor Sunday The Seattle Times Second Person The Independent 23 October 2002 p 12 Mike Boehm 27 September 1998 Four Star Performers Los Angeles Times Polly Jean Harvey simultaneously falls back on the elemental blues grounding that sets her apart from most of her generation while zooming ahead into trip hop and techno Trent Reznor s How to Destroy Angels Premiere First Track Spinner 4 May 2010 Retrieved 26 April 2012 Sputnik Music Review Sputnikmusic 27 February 2005 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Kylie Minogue Impossible Princess album review Sputnikmusic 17 July 2009 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Since acknowledging her capabilities for sensuality on the album Janet Miss Jackson uses The Velvet Rope to explore her sexuality including obsession frustration and even coy allusions to sexual preference layering her lyrics with fashionable trip hop beats overt sampling and trademark grooves Elita Bradley 17 September 1998 Ushering back Janet Jackson Velvet Rope singer due for another show Pearl Jam also on tap The Washington Times p M 2 ISSN 0732 8494 Kylie Minogue Impossible Princess Music Review Slant Magazine 19 November 2003 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Thomas Stephen 3 March 1998 Ray of Light Madonna AllMusic Archived from the original on 16 October 2011 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Rob Sheffield 2 April 1998 Ray Of Light Album Reviews Rolling Stone Retrieved 17 November 2011 Phares Heather Debut Bjork AllMusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 Phares Heather 13 June 1995 Post Bjork AllMusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 Phares Heather 22 September 1997 Homogenic Bjork AllMusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 Radiohead OK Computer album review Sputnikmusic Retrieved 17 November 2011 Deruty Emmanuel Tardieu Damien 3 February 2014 About Dynamic Processing in Mainstream Music Journal of the Audio Engineering Society 62 1 2 42 55 doi 10 17743 jaes 2014 0001 ISSN 1549 4950 Biography TripHop Music com Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 May 2015 Tim DiGravina 12 June 2001 Simple Things Zero 7 Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 O Brien Jon Like Drawing Blood Gotye Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Azpiri Jon Zion I Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Bush John Dub Pistols Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Kate Havnevik Me EP Album Review and US Tour Dates MuuMuse 11 November 2009 Huey Steve 23 May 2000 Deltron 3030 Deltron 3030 Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 M F DiBella 6 November 2001 Lovage Music to Make Love to Your Old Lady By Lovage Nathaniel Merriweather Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Bush John 7 November 2000 Halfway Between the Gutter and the Stars Fatboy Slim Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Martin Andrew 4 September 2008 Elsiane Hybrid Pop Matters Retrieved 12 November 2018 Bush John 9 February 2010 Heligoland Massive Attack Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 AllMusic Review AllMusic Retrieved 7 November 2012 Cooper Sean DJ Shadow Music Biography Credits and Discography AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Phares Heather 10 July 2012 gt gt Beak gt Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic Retrieved 25 April 2013 Sheffield Rob 30 January 2012 Born To Die Album Reviews Rolling Stone Rolling Stone Wenner Media Retrieved 11 September 2013 IFPI Digital Music Report 2013 PDF IFPI org Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2013 FKA twigs Pitchfork August 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trip hop Trip hop at Curlie Trip Hop Allmusic guide essay by Sean Cooper World of Trip Hop Webpage Archived 10 December 2020 at the Wayback Machine Triptica An internet Radio dedicated to Trip Hop NPR s history of trip hop Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trip hop amp oldid 1187575913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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