Music for chilling out: Trip hop & ambient (part 2)

Not all music for chilling out falls under the heading of trip hop. In that swnse, the term โ€˜ambientโ€™ suits better. Its emphasis is more on the creation of an atmosphere than on message, melody or rhythm. Ambient has a calming effect or brings you in a contemplative mood. Pioneers of this style include Jean-Michel Jarre, Brian Eno, Vangelis, Mike Oldfield and the band Kraftwerk. 

Listen here to โ€˜Oxygeneโ€™, a composition by Jean-Michel Jarre from 1975

Brian Eno is credited with putting โ€˜ambientโ€™ on the map in 1978 with the album Ambient 1: Music for Airports[1]. For him, ambient is a style that remains exciting and unpredictable even as background music.  Ambient music aims to create peace and a space for reflection and meditation. You can listen to it in various ways, ranging from ignorance to becoming captivated. Listen to this album here.

Variants

Ambient has several variants, which I shall briefly outline:

New age

โ€˜New ageโ€™ refers to forms of โ€˜ambientโ€™ that are explicitly composed to support meditation and relaxation exercises. Consequently, this music has a repetitive dynamic and texture and avoids rapid changes in tempo, rhythm and timbre. Compositions are minimalist in design and instrumental rather than vocal. Common instruments include piano, strings and flute, often emulated by a synthesizer. It is mainly used in alternative medicine, yoga and meditation. 

Drone

โ€˜Droneโ€™ is a minimalist form of โ€˜ambientโ€™ music in which the emphasis is on the use of sustained sounds, notes or clusters of notes, known as drones. This form of music typically features long compositions with relatively little harmonic variation. La Monte Young, one of the pioneers in the 1960s, defined โ€˜droneโ€™ as โ€œthe sustained tone branch of minimalismโ€. Listen here to a composition by La Monte Young from 1960.

Speace

โ€˜Spaceโ€™ is a โ€˜variant of โ€˜ambientโ€™ that creates a celestriall timbre. This style is mainly used as background music, particularly in films, but also for conscious listening, relaxation, contemplation and inspisoms ration. The style is experienced as soothing and peaceful.  

Ambient technoย 

โ€˜Ambient technoโ€™, โ€˜intelligent dance musicโ€™ or โ€˜armchair ambientโ€™ border on electronic dance music (EDM), which was popular around the turn of the century. Some tracks were less suited to dancing and much more to daydreaming at home or unwinding.  This type of music came from artists such as Boards of Canada with the track โ€˜Music is Mathโ€™, and  Secede Outran, which you can listen to below:

Recent examples

Spotify and YouTube playlists with names such as Chilled Folk, Chill Hits, Evening Chill, Chilled R&B, Indie Chillout, Chill Hop, Lo-fi Hip Hop and Chill Tracks still have millions of followers today. Due to their enduring popularity, at the start of the 21th century various artists ventured into the realm of ambient and trip-hop, with the two genres being blended. Think of artists and groups such as Bjรถrk, Bowery Electric, Everything but the Girl, Anomie Belle, Alpha and Lamb. Some of these are discussed below. You can listen here to โ€˜Rhubarbโ€™ by Aphex Twin from the album *Selected Ambient Works, Vol. 2* (1994) 

Bjรถrk

Bjรถrk is an Icelandic singer, songwriter, composer, record producer and actress. Her vocal range spans three octaves. She has developed an eclectic musical style, incorporating elements of electronica, pop, dance, trip-hop, jazz and avant-garde. The development of her style has been influenced by composers such as Arnold Schรถnberg, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Philip Glass and Sun Ra, as well as groups like Kraftwerk and singers such as Joni Mitchell and Kate Bush. She was inspired by the music scene in London, where she lived for a time. That scene was partly defined in the 1990s by the trip-hop of Tricky, Portishead and Massive Attack.

Bjรถrkโ€™s album Debut (1993) is one of the first albums to introduce electronic music, and in particular โ€˜danceโ€™, to mainstream pop. Critics regard her albums Post (1995) and Homogenic (1997) as highlights of trip hop. You can listen to โ€˜Venus as a Boyโ€™ from the latter album here.

Elsiane

Elsiane is a band with strong trip-hop influences, which released its first album, Hybrid, in 2007. The group creates a warm, hypnotic atmosphere, comparable to the sounds of Massive Attack and Portishead in the 1990s. Listen to the title track of the eponymous album here.

Lana Del Rey

Lana Del Rey is the stage name of Elisabeth (โ€˜Lizzyโ€™) Grant (born 1985), under which she released her first songs. She made her own music videos, thereby drawing attention to herself. Many of her songs are melancholic and draw on 1950s America. Her style is classified as โ€˜alternative popโ€™ and, certainly at the start of her career, she was influenced by psychedelic rock, hip hop and trip hop. This influence is clear on her debut album, Born to Die (2012). It topped the charts in eleven countries, including Australia, France, Germany and the United Kingdom, and sold 3.4 million copies. The album remained on the US Billboard 200 for 520 weeks. 

Tracks from this album include: Summertime SadnessVideogamesBlue Jeans and the title track Born to Die, which you can listen to below.

The sound, themes and production of Born to Die had a major influence on popular music. In 2019, The Washington Post named Del Rey one of the โ€œfive people who have helped shape the culture of the past decadeโ€. Al Horner of Red Bull described Born to Die as โ€œ[a] blueprint for a new musical worldโ€.  Like other artists discussed here, she has charted a new course alongside the ubiquitous electronic dance music (EDM).

Anomie Belle

Finally, Iโ€™d like to mention Anomie Belle, an American multi-instrumentalist, vocalist and composer. You can hear her here in the track Sleeping Pattern

Film music

Many films make use of โ€˜ambient musicโ€™, in all its forms. Examples include Blade Runner (1982), Dune (1984), Titanic (1997), The Passion of the Christ (2004), Chernobyl (2019) and Dune Part 2 (2021). Here you can listen to โ€˜Beginnings are such delicate timesโ€™ from the Dune: Part Two Soundtrack (2021).

The group Massive Attack has also written soundtracks for films, such as Danny the Dog (2005) and Bullet Boy (2005). Three more followed in 2007, namely for the films In Prison My Whole LifeBattle in Seattle and Trouble in the Water. The instrumental track Herculaneum from the film Gomorra won the award for best song in Italy. Watch and listen to the track Babel from this filmrecorded during the Melt Festival in 2010.

Neoclassicism 

Of a completely different nature, but worth mentioning in this context, is a movement that harks back to 19thย and early 20thย century romantic music. Rather than referring to it as neo-romanticism, this movement is called neoclassicism. The most prominent contemporary representative – with millions of downloads – is Ludovico Einaudi. His compositions are popular, both as background music and for listening to, presumably due to their simplicity: Almost all Einaudiโ€™s compositions are based on the first, fourth and fifth chords. That is why they sound so similar. Listen here to one or more of his compositions on his albumย 10 pieces by Ludovico Einaudi

One composer who can truly lay claim to the term โ€˜neoclassicalโ€™ is Erik Satie, a French composer from the early 20thcentury. He used Dada-inspired harmonic and formal experiments to create an early form of ambient music which he called โ€˜musique d’ameublementโ€™. His aim was to create a suitable atmosphere for specific activities, such as a dinner party, without drawing attention to the musician. Thanks to the variation in rhythm and timbre, his compositions lend themselves also to attentive listening, whether at home or in the concert hall. You can listen to his Gymnopรฉdie No. 1 here


[1] This music was trialled in airports for a while. Staff were largely negative about it.  They found the composition sombre and associated it with death and mourning

The Evolution of Disco: From Funk to EDM

In my previous post, I traced the development from gospel, through soul to funk. The step from soul and funk to disco is not a big one.  I think of The Supremes (here a medley of their best-known songs), but also Chaka Kahn’s “I’ am every woman” and Chic’s “Le Freak“. The difference between funk and disco is even harder to pinpoint. Just look and listen to “Kung Fu Fighting” by Berry White. 

Possibly also look at The Hues company (“Rock the boat“), George McGrae (“Rock your baby“) and KC and the Sunshine Band (“That’s the Way I Like It” and “Shake Your Booty“). I think funk seamlessly transitioned into disco, but at the same time some artists became attracted to jazz, like Candy Dulfer. With disco, you don’t stay in your seat; with jazz, you (usually) do.

Disco, like funk, is meant to be dance music. Disco was played in clubs such as the Copacabana in New York or sometimes at illegal rave parties. Almost always to the music of a live band. Dancing was mainly a form of individual expression, stimulated by the music, the light installation and the excessive use of drugs. During the 1970s, a range of disco dance styles developed, such as โ€œpenguin”, โ€œboogaloo”,โ€ watergate” and “robot”. 

This recording of MFSB “The Sound of Philadelphia”reveil some disco dancers showing their skills (up to minute 2.45).

Discos had a tolerant atmosphere with few restrictions and where people felt at home regardless of skin color and sexual orientation. Movies like ‘Saturday night fever’ and ‘Thank God it is Friday’ contributed to the popularity of disco in the 1970s and 1980s. 

A classic song that became a disco hit is ‘I will survive’ by Gloria Raynor; ‘Queen of disco’. You can watch and listen to thatsong  now. 

Dorona Alberti sang the song during a performance by Andrรฉ Rieu in Maastricht. A feat of technical prowess, but it might be laid on too thickly. I am therefore more attracted to Gloria Gaynor’s version anyway.

From 1975 onwards, the number of disco hits is almost unlimited. I list a few of them. Choose for yourself which ones you want to listen to.  For example, The Electric Light Orchestra (“Evil  Woman“), ABBA “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!” (A Man After Midnight, Boney M. (“Rasputin“), Bee Gees (“Stayin’ Alive“, “Night Fever“)

Slowly, uneasiness against disco culture, which was blamed for superficiality, consumerism and escapism, grew among a section of young people who were particularly attracted to ‘rougher’ rock music. An anti-disco demonstration (“Disco demolition night”) during the intermission of a baseball game on 12 July 1979 inadvertently became a platform for homophobia, sexism and racism. Disco was already past its peak in the US and Europe by then, but continued to develop elsewhere in the world, from the Middle East to India. However, several established artists continued making disco music unabated, such as Kool and the Gang, Donna Summer, the Jacksons, and Gloria Gaynor also survived. 

In the following Years, others took over and essentially the style is still popular today, but the character of disco and, for that matter, of almost all popular types of music changed profoundly from the 1980s onwards and this was partly due to the rise of EDM, electronic dance music. 

The first step was to provide disco songs with an all-electronic accompaniment. The classic example is 1977’s Donna Summer’s “I feel love”, produced by Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte. Here is a recording where you first see Donna in the studio and then experience a performance in a disco (almost 9 minutes)

Electronic dance music (EDM)

What are we talking about?  Here is an excerpt from Jesse Saunders’ song “On and on” from Chicago in 1984, the very first recording of ‘house music’ put on a record. The influence of disco is still unmistakable.

Electronic dance music, of which house, techno and trance are the main forms, is produced with dedicated equipment, where any sound – including of musical instruments and voices – can be produced using software. This can be done ‘live’ by DJs or in a studio, in both cases, sometimes in combination with vocals and musical instruments.       

The most prominent feature of electronic dance music in general and house in particular, especially in the beginning, was the bass drum, on every beat and other percussion sound on beats 2 and 4 of each bar, lasting about ยฝ second. In addition, heavy bass tones can be heard on all the whole and half beats. 

Parties (‘raves’) take place in discotheques or illegal venues, but can also be massive in character, lasting a whole week-end like ‘Tomorrowland’ (200,000 – 300,000 visitors). Here, not only (hundreds of) DJs perform, but also entire orchestras, there are light shows and fireworks. Get an impression of this overwhelming spectacle by watching (parts of) the Tomorrowland 2023 ‘aftermovie’ (lasts 23 minutes in total).

In many ways, ‘dance’ culture matched that of disco. Dancing was a form of free expression, although it also used elements from countless existing styles, waackingvoguingcapoeirajazz danceLindy Hop et cetera. Here, too, there is generally a broad tolerance of diversity and the lyrics – if any – exude a spirit of freedom and equality. Use of all forms of drugs is widespread. 

The number of styles of EDM is vast. Between 1985 and 2000, house, electro, trance and Eurodance dominated. Nowadays, we mostly know mixed forms, with elements of ‘progressive house’ and trance playing the main role.

House

You can look at some examples here. The first is a ‘roof top’ house party. What you hear is predominantly deep house with a hint of afrohouse. The makers partly fall back on the ‘soulful’ nature of disco.

The music you hear is quite melodic.ย ย The next example is acid house, coming from Chicago, and it sounds more ‘heavy’. Let me add a few examples: Deep house: Larry Heard (‘mr. Fingers’) “Mistery of love“, Acid house: Brian Dougans : “Stakker Humanoid“. Hip house: Tyree Cooper (“Turn up the bass“). Jungle house: Omni Trio: “Renegade snares” and progressive house: Above and Beyond (“500“), Deadmau5 (“Strobe“) and Gat Decor: “Passion“.

Progressive house is itself another umbrella term, but a common feature is that it gave another ‘boost’ to house as dance music. Progressive house has common ground with trance. Both take time to build up the song, and the tracks often last an hour or more to do so.

Techno

Techno originated in Detroit and then gained a foothold mainly in Berlin and a few cities in England. Synthpop, like Giorgio Moroderโ€™s and Pete Bellotteโ€™s song “I feel love”, sung by Donna Summer in 1977 was an inspiration. This song has full electronic accompaniment (see above). Techno sounds more transparent than house; but of course, the DJ can turn up the bass as much as he/she likes. A classic: Derrick May’s “String of life” (1987), which you can hear here.

Here are some other examples of techno: Model 500 (“No UFOs“), Inner city “Big fun“, Maurizio “T.T. / F. F.” and from Cybotron “Clear” and “Techno City

Trance

Trance is symphonic EDM, usually long tracks, sometimes using classical music. There are repeating melodic patterns, and a climax is built up which then culminates in a ‘drop’.  It is the specialty of leading Dutch DJs like as Ferry CorstenArmin Van Buuren and Tiรซsto. The latter was in the limelight in 2004 because he and hundreds of live musicians provided the music for the athletes’ entry at the 2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in Athens. Gardian magazine called this performance one of the 50 most important events in dance music. The entire ceremony lasted 3 1/2 hours. Scroll through it. You can see the entry of the Dutch team, among others, here.

Other Examples: Afrojack: Live in Tomorroland 2022, Above and Beyond (“500“), 4Voice (“Eternal spirit“). Armin van Buuren (“Airwave“), The visions of shiba (“Perfect day“)

Euro dance

Eurodance incorporates elements of disco, rap, techno and house. Eurodance has rich melodies; partly complemented by rap and features a solid bass. You can watch Dr Alban’s “It’s my life” here

Other Examples of Eurodance include: 2 Unlimited “No limit“, La Bouche: “Be my lover” and Black Box (“Ride on time“) and Vengaboys “Boom, boom, boom, boom“)

At the turn of the century, EDM producers occasionally made songs that were not suitable as ‘dance music’, instead, they were for home use to dream away or kick off.  This music was called intelligent dance music, armchair techno or ambient techno. Here are two examples: Secede “Outran” and Boards of Canada “Music is math“.

From 2000 onwards, we see the variety of styles increasing, which is why dance is increasingly referred to in short. The use of electronics still takes a dominant role, but more large-scale “rave parties” also feature live singing and sometimes entire orchestras contribute. The recording below is from “Sandstorm”.  A ‘rave party’ with a symphony orchestra, DJ and lightshow.

From the beginning of the 21ste century, there has been a particular reappraisal of the melodic component of EDM, or as is often said, ‘disco is back, but in a different way’. It is also more often bands again providing the accompaniment, usually supplemented by electronics.

According to music critics, the reason for disco’s continued popularity is its social nature. Tom Ewing: “Disco was a music of mutual attraction: cruising, flirtation, negotiation.” By contrast, electronic styles like house emphasised the personal transcendent experience.

Here is a series of examples of dance after 2000. The rhythmic character obviously remains and you can experience for yourself how the balance between ‘rhythm’ and melody moves more in the latter direction and the songs more closely resemble the disco style of yesteryear. The songs combine strong beats with uncomplicated melodies. In fact, you can no longer categorise 21ste century ‘danceable’ music. As an example, let me hear Kylie Minogue’s song “Magic” from her album, tellingly titled ‘Disco’ from 2020.

Examples from 2000 – 2010 include: Technotronics “Pump Up the Jam“, Kylie Minogue’s “Can’t Get You Out of My Head“, Robbie Williams’s “Rock DJ“, Jamiroquai “Little L” Sophie Ellis-Bextor “Murder on the Dancefloor” and Manic Street Preachers “Miss Europa Disco Dancer

From the decade 2010 – 2020 I note: Daft Punk “Get Lucky“, Karmin “I Want It All“, ‘Wrong Club’ by the Ting tinks and “Blow” by Beyoncรฉ .

Even beyond 2020, we can note successful disco numbers Doja Cat’s “Say So“, Lady Gaga’s “Stupid Love“, Dua Lipa’s “Don’t Start Now“, BTS – hailing from South Korea – “Dynamite” 

You can also see the influence of electronica more widely than in disco, namely in pop music in general. This was already true in the last decades of the 20steย century for groups like ‘Japan’ and ‘Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark’ and later ‘Depeche Mode’, ‘Eurythmics’, ‘Duran Duran’ and ‘Spandau Ballet’. Madonna’s 1998 album “Ray of Light” is full of ESD elements.