 | Psychedelic trance: Encyclopedia II - Psychedelic trance - History
Psychedelic trance - History
Psychedelic trance developed out of the early 1990s Goa Trance scene through the influence of artists such as Timeshard and Eat Static, both on the Planet Dog record label.
The first pure Psychedelic trance label was Dragonfly Records, formed by the artist and trance producer Martin "Youth" Glover (a former bassist for the band Killing Joke) in Brixton, London. For this he took advantage of the organization and the studio of his already existing label, Butterfly Records. It quickly became the center of the London Psychedelic trance scene. Raja Ram and Graham Wood first produced here as The Infinity Project. Simon Posford, who worked as a sound engineer at Butterfly, later released his legendary album, Twisted as Hallucinogen on Dragonfly. This album featured the classic track "LSD" featuring a voice sample from acid guru Ken Kesey. The first compilation from Dragonfly was released as a trance sampler and was soon followed by another compilation titled Project II Trace in August of 1993. These included work from such well-known artists as the French project Total Eclipse and Mandra Gora. In 1994 it released singles from Man With No Name, Prana, Ayahuasca, Slinky Wizard and Doof. The signature Order Odonata compilation was released the same year.
At this point the scene was growing rapidly and many new labels were created. Return To The Source, a party collective first appeared. Raja Ram and Graham Wood went on to found their own label, called TIP Records (now TIP World). Tsuyoshi Suzuki worked with John Perloff to create the Matsuri Productions label. Flying Rhino Records was established by James Monro, Dominic Lamb and George Barker (Slinky Wizard), who hired Sally Welch as manager. Simon Berry founded Platipus Records, who among other things, released the first vinyl by Technossomy. It also out licensed the famous Robert Miles' "Children". Simon's own project, Union Jack released their morning trance album There will be no Armageddon in 1996, featuring well-known tracks such as "Red Herring", "Cactus" and "Two Full Moons and a Trout".
Around this time a new label emerged in UK. Some consider Blue Room Released to be of the most important, and unusual, labels in the Psychedelic trance genre. It was led by Simon Ghahary and had solid financial backing from a British loudspeaker company. Allegedly, Ghahary had free reign to spend the money as he saw fit, regardless of sales figures. This allowed Blue Room to move away from "classic" Goa trance into new, more experimental directions. Some of the most well-known artists today were signed and had their work distributed on the Blue Room Released label. Their first compilation was titled "Outside The Reactor" was released in April of 1995 and featured work from artists such as Total Eclipse, Har-El Prussky, and Voodoo People. Three of the most well known projects - Juno Reactor, Total Eclipse and The Infinity Project also released their debut albums that year. Soon the German project X-Dream started working with Blue Room as well, releasing their "The Frog" single and the highly influential Radio album. At its height, the label went on to release such works as Violent Relaxation by Total Eclipse, Juno Reactor's Bible of Dreams, Saafi Brothers' Mystic Cigarettes and Dragon Tales by Koxbox.
Despite being the center of production for Psychedelic trance in the mid 1990s, England had a very limited party scene. This mostly due to the Criminal Justice Bill and requirements for early closing hours in nightclubs. On the other hand, Germany had much more liberal laws, which in addition to the recent unification contributed to the development of the scene there. The German label Spirit Zone Records opened up in 1994, and ended up signing on many foreign artists such as The Infinity Project (UK), K.U.R.O. (Japan), Etnica (Italy), and Har-El Prussky (Israel). It was also the home label of many German artists such as Electric Universe, Star Sounds Orchestra and S.U.N. Project. France was also becoming an increasingly important location, with not only Total Eclipse, but the now famous projects like Talamasca and Transwave emerging.
Around 1997, the original Goa trance scene was undergoing hard times, especially in the UK. Sales dropped and many big labels such as Flying Rhino went bankrupt, while others had to reinvent themselves and emerge under a new name as did TIP World. The death of Goa trance was "officially" declared by Tsuyoshi Suzuki on his Let it RIP album, where the liner notes read "RIP: Mother Theresa, Princess Diana, William Burroughs, Goa trance."
The new sound of what would become the Psychedelic trance of today emerged at this time. It included elements of minimalist and progressive trance, house, and techno, while focusing less on the original Goa melodies. Germany became the center of this movement in 1997 and 1998. Many Swedish artists also emerged playing a more progressive sound. The most successful and well known is Tomasz Balicki (Atmos). His track "Klein Aber Doctor" was the most successful release for Flying Rhino yet, which was in the process of restructuring. Even the Dragonfly label stated to switch to this new progressive sound, and Psychdelic trance was once again becoming popular. Debut releases from Atmos, Noma, S-Range and Son Kite only cemented this fact and made Sweden an important producer of psychedelic trance.
Soon Psychedelic trance was expanding rapidly once again, and for the first time differences became apparent in the music being produced in different countries. Parallel scenes also developed in countries like Israel, Germany and Japan. There are also smaller, but active scenes in New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, Brazil, Mexico, The Netherlands,Switzerland, Austria, Greece, Portugal, Finland, Russia, Ukraine, Thailand, Denmark, Poland, Canada and even the United States.
Psychedelic trance - Development in Israel
In 1988 due to a change of laws and the political situation in Israel, many Israelis were allowed to get Indian travel visas for the first time. Many of them had just completed military service and were looking for a vacation. The beaches of Goa were a natural destination. Many of them returned from the trips bringing back recordings on the new style of music. Developing mostly separately from the scenes elsewhere, Israeli DJs emerged playing their own variations on the sound. Some of them were Avi Nissim and Lior Perlmutter (SFX and later Astral Projection), Har-El Prussky and Miko (California Sunshine), Guy Sebbag, Avi Algranati (Phreaky, Space Cat) and Ofer Dikovsky (Oforia). Naturally, Israeli labels formed, including Melodia Records, Trust In Trance, Phonokol and Krembo Records. With the emergence of new innovative artists such as Infected Mushroom, psychedelic trance became a big part of the culture in Israel, more so than in any other country in the world.
Other related archives1200 Mics, 1988, 1990s, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 3D Vision, AU, Absolum, Access Virus, Alien Project, Ambient music, Astral Projection, Astrix, Atmos, August, Australia, Austria, Blue Room Released, BooM! Records, Brazil, British, Brixton, Broken Toy, California Sunshine, Canada, Cannabis, Chakra & Edi Mis, Children Of Paradise, Classical Mushroom, Converting Vegetarians, Cosma, Cosmosis, Criminal Justice Bill, Crop Circles, Cubase, Dance For The Celestial Beings, Dark Soho, Deedrah, Denmark, Devils Mind Records, Digital Structures, Dimension 5, Doof, Dragonfly Records, Eat Static, Ecstasy, Electric Universe, England, Eskimo, Etnica, Finland, Flying Rhino Records, Fools and Tools, France, French, Fruity Loops, G.M.S., Gataka, Germany, Glissando, Goa, Goa Trance, Goa trance, Goa trance music, Greece, Green Nuns Of The Revolution, Hallucinogen, Har-El Prussky, Hux Flux, Iboga, Inanna, Indian, Indian classical music, Infected Mushroom, Irritant, Israel, Jaia, Jan Muller, Japan, Juno Reactor, K.U.R.O., Ken Kesey, Killing Joke, Koxbox, Koyote Records, Krembo Records, LSD, List of psychedelic trance artists, Logic, Logic Bomb, London, Man With No Name, Mandra Gora, Marcus Maichel, Martin "Youth" Glover, Matsuri Productions, Melodia Records, Menog, Mexico, Modular synthesizers, Mother Theresa, Netherlands, New Zealand, Noma, Nord Lead, Oforia, Organic Noise, POF Music, Panic In Paradise, Phonokol, Phreaky, Planet B.E.N., Planet Dog, Platipus Records, Pleiadians, Poland, Portugal, Prana, Princess Diana, Progressive trance, Propellerheads Reason, Protoculture, Psychedelia, Psychedelic music, Psydrop, Psysex, RIP, Radio, Raja Ram, Reaktor, Robert Miles, Roland JP-8000, Russia, S-Range, S.U.N. Project, Saafi Brothers, Serbia and Montenegro, Shiva Chandra, Shpongle, Simon Ghahary, Simon Posford, Skazi, Slinky Wizard, Son Kite, South Africa, Space Cat, Space Tribe, Spiral Trax, Spirit Zone Records, Spun Records, Star Sounds Orchestra, Swedish, Switzerland, TIP Records, TIP World, Talamasca, Technossomy, Thailand, The Delta, The Gathering, The Infinity Project, The Lone Deranger, The Netherlands, Ticon, Tikal, Tim Schuldt, Timeshard, Total Eclipse, Trance music, Transient Records, Transposition, Transwave, Trip To Trancesylvania, Trust In Trance, Tsuyoshi Suzuki, Tunnel Records, Twisted, Twisted Records, UK, Ukraine, Union Jack, United States, Urban Alien, VST, Voodoo People, We Created Our Own Happiness, We Interface, William Burroughs, X-Dream, Yahel, Younger Brother, amphetamine, anthem, arpeggios, bankrupt, bassist, beats per minute, cocaine, copyright infringement, goa trance, harmonic, house, liner notes, loudspeaker, minimalist, minimalist trance, nightclubs, plugins, progressive, progressive trance, psychedelic drugs, psychedelic mushrooms, psychedelic trance projects, publicity, raga, record label, samplers, sound engineer, sound synthesis, space travel, techno, trance music
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |