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Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, the Doors, Country Joe & the Fish, The Byrds, The Who, Jethro Tull, Yes, Genesis, Sly & Family Stone, the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan, the Fever Tree, 13th Floor Elevators, and hundreds of other classik well-known psychedelic bands.

From new bands - Aaron Ferguson, Advance Trance, Anubis Spire, Autodidact, Be/Non, Big Green, Blue Ceiling, Bone Daddy, Brown Sox, Cabula, Cloud Cult, Crown Jewels, Currently Nameless, D. Logan Foster, David Hart & Amun Ra, Davis Waits, Diamonds and Rust, Farflung, Fran Banish, Gaia Consort, George Centeno, Gravitar, Headrush, Hollowman, Into The Woods, Jeff-N-Jen, Joe Rossi, Just Joe, Lacy's Blue, Leather Hyman, Living Proof, Lunar Detour, Minster Hill, Native, Overlight Underdark, Pied Piper, Quarkspace, Resin Sh'mantra, Soul Salad, Sticky Pistil, The Aqua Velvets, The Hellblinki Sextet, The Mindworms, The Reach, Tryptonite, Unicorn, Wooster Sang, Zak Godwin, Zallen.

The first use of the word "psychedelic" in a rock music context is usually credited to the 13th Floor Elevators, and the earliest known appearence of this usage of the word in print is in the title of their 1966 album The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators. The genre reached its maximum popularity in 1967 and then quickly tapered off, though a number of bands continued to produce it for several years, and there has been a revival since the 1980s.

In the 1960'sJimi Hendrix

In the United States, psychedelic music was particularly characteristic of the West Coast sound, with bands such as the Beach Boys, Grateful Dead, Country Joe and The Fish, Spirit, Quicksilver Messenger Service, the United States of America, Love and Jefferson Airplane in the vanguard. Jimi Hendrix and the Doors helped to popularize acid rock, a closely related style of music.

Initially, the Beach Boys, with their squeaky-clean image, seemed unlikely as psychedelicBeach Boys types. Their music, however, grew more psychedelic and experimental, perhaps due in part to writer/producer/arranger Brian Wilson's increased drug usage and burgeoning mental illness. Albums like Pet Sounds and Wilson's magnum-opus SMiLE which was never finished, and was remade by Wilson with a new band in 2004 show this growing experimentation.

There were also less well known psychedelic The Byrdsbands in outlying regions, such as the 13th Floor Elevators and Bubble Puppy working out of Texas, and the Third Bardo in New York City, a group which had a brief revival in the 1990s. The Byrds also contributed to psychedelia with "Eight Miles High," a song with odd vocal harmonies and an extended guitar solo that guitarist Roger McGuinn states was inspired by raga and John Coltrane. The influence was also felt in black music, where record labels such as Motown dabbled for a while with psychedelic soul, producing such hits as "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World is Today)" and "Psychedelic Shack" (by The Temptations), and "Reflections" (by Diana Ross & the Supremes), and the 11-minute-long "Time Has Come Today" by The Chambers Brothers, before falling out of favour.

In Britain, the impact of the psychedelic revolution was profound within the British music scene. Established artists such as Eric The WhoBurdon (previously of The Animals), The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and The Who produced a number of psychedelic albums and singles, including The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band ("Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"), The Rolling Stones' Their Satanic Majesties Request ("In Another Land"), and The Who's Sell Out ("I Can See for Miles"). The music of Kaleidoscope and of very early Pink Floyd is also representative of British psychedelia.

A good number of the bands who pioneered psychedelic rock gave Bob Dylanit up by the end of the 1960s. The increasingly hostile political environment and the embrace of amphetamines, heroin and cocaine by the underground led to a turn toward harsher music. At the same time, Bob Dylan released John Wesley Harding and the Band released Music from Big Pink, both albums that rejected psychedelia for a more roots-oriented approach. Many bands in England and America followed suit. Eric Clapton cites Music from Big Pink as a primary reason for quitting Cream, for example.

On the East Coast the Velvet Underground echoed the sonic Velvet Undergroundtechniques of psychedelia with their use of repetition and electronic improvisation. Their attitude, though, was more about nihilistic art-school cool than the more playful "flower power." This was accentuated in the drugs they celebrated in song--speed and heroin, for instance, rather than LSD.

Pink Floyd was the leading light of the British underground scene, with vocalist/guitarist Syd Barrett the main writer behind such hits Pink Floydas "Arnold Layne" (a quirky, controversial song about a transvestite), and the spacey, driving instrumental "Interstellar Overdrive." He was a strong creative force until his worsening schizophrenia led to him being edged out of the band in 1968. Other British acts included the anarchic Tomorrow, which specialized in droning raga feedback and wild drumming; the operatic, flamboyant Arthur Brown; the R&B-flavored Pretty Things, and the Canterbury band Soft Machine, which incorporated "harmolodic" jazz into their psychedelic rock.

The musicians and bands who continued to embrace psychedelia often went on to create progressive rock in the 1970s, which maintained the love of unusual sounds and extended solos but added jazz and classical influences to the mix. For example, progressive rock group Yes sprang out of three British psychedelic bands: Syn (featuring Chris Squire), Tomorrow (featuring Steve Howe) and Mabel Greer's Toy Shop (Jon Anderson).

More recent bands
Phish, active from the early 1980s, played psychedelic music with a strong jazz influence and a great deal of technical skill, utilizing Phishelaborate modal melodies and complex rhythmic accompaniment. In the mid 1980s a Los Angeles-based movement named the Paisley Underground acknowledged a debt to the Byrds, incorporating psychedelia into a folky, jangle pop sound. The Bangles were the most successful band to emerge from this movement; amongst others involved were Green on Red, the Three O'Clock and Dream Syndicate.

A British counterpoint to the Paisley Underground was a number of post New Wave bands, most notably The Soft Boys and the solo albums of their singer Robyn Hitchcock, Hochzeitsautos Essen and The Teardrop Explodes and their vocalist Julian Cope. Hitchcock was heavily influenced by Syd Barrett and John Lennon, which accounts for part of the sound, though his famous flow-of-conciousness inter-song links in concerts is also responsible. Other british dabblers in Pschedelia include XTC and Martin Newell with The Cleaners from Venus and The Brotherhood of Lizards. Alternative rock groups also dabbled in psychedelia, most famously, Nirvana on their debut single, 'Love Buzz'.

Recently the group Kula Shaker, under the leadership Crispian Mills, created much Indian-influenced psychedelic music such as their most recent album 'Peasants, pigs and Astronauts'. A number of bands such as Ozric Tentacles and the Welsh Gorky's Zygotic Mynci continue to play psychedelic music, in a tradition that goes back to the sixties via acts such as Steve Hillage, Gong and their assorted side projects.

British bands Anomie and My Bloody Valentine are standard-bearers for British garage psychedelia, citing Pink Floyd and My Bloody ValentineHawkwind as their musical influences. Some electronic or electronic-influenced music now termed "ambient" or "trance" would have fallen within the category of psychedelia in the 1966 to 1990 period, such as Aphex Twin or Orbital. Stoner rock acts like Kyuss and their successors also carry forward the flag of explicitly psychedelic music into the present day. The Smashing Pumpkins fused psychedelic rock sounds with heavy metal, becoming a highly successful alternative rock act in the 1990s. Rising from the Japanese noise underground, Acid Mothers Temple mix the subtle, relaxing resonance of Blue Cheer and most obviously Grateful Dead's psychedelic sound, the thought provoking melodies of French folk, and concrete bursts of noise that run through music of Boredoms.

New York City’s The Drop Band
New York City’s favorite group of hippies, The Drop Band, plays an The Drop Bandoriginal brand of modern psychedelic rock with a distinctive classic rock vibe. The band was founded in 1997 as the house band for Paul Mascott and Hank Wagner’s downtown NY theatre piece Drop before developing into an act all it's own. more>

GreyGrey
Grey blends the psychedelic, progressive, acoustic, and alternative stylings of Rush, Yes, the Beatles, the Doors, and Pink floyd to create a unique rock and pop sound sometimes compared to that of Dave Matthews Band, Coldplay, Phish, and David Bowie. He has released the following CDs: studio albums: Anamnesis, Rock & Pop, Colours, Words & Music, musical histories: Faded Colours, Faded Colours II, live recordings: Live at Pegasys, and Acoustic Grey.
Grey often works with Jason Harbour (guitars), Patrick Costello (percussion), Mike Harbour (synth and drums), Kevin Bunch (bass), and Steve Harwood (piano). Grey records at his Grey Havens Studios in Enid, Oklahoma.more>

 

 
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