Psychedelic Music Past and Present


Psychedelic Music: Past and Present is an informative blog about the history of psychedelic electronic music.

The topic of psychedelic electronic music is important to me because I am a musician that was greatly inspired by the scene growing up in the early 2000’s.

I believe the psychedelic electronic music scene brought a lot of people together, creating a sense of community that has continued to this day. This sense of community inspired me as a young person to be more creative and open-minded, which has influenced my life tremendously.

I started this blog to share my love for psychedelic music. I am a big fan of the golden era of psytrance (1996-2000), but have gotten into newer music like progressive house and minimal techno. This is a very informative blog about psychedelic electronic music, past and present.

Psychedelic Electronic Music: Past and Present

Psychedelic electronic music, sometimes shortened to psytrance, is a style of electronic dance music known for its trippy, otherworldly qualities. The genre has been gaining popularity in the United States since the 1990s. However, it originated in the late 1980s in Goa, India, where hippies and other travelers would gather to listen to custom-made mixtapes at all-night parties. Psytrance was born out of a desire to create something completely new that could be enjoyed during these gatherings.

The History of Psytrance

These parties were called trance parties or Goa parties, and they started around 1985. The original psychedelic electronic music was inspired by Western bands like The Grateful Dead, Pink Floyd, and Jefferson Airplane as well as Indian artists like Ravi Shankar. Psytrance is often associated with the hippie movement of the 1960s, but it’s important to remember that it wasn’t created until nearly 20 years later.

As it became more popular in Goa, psychedelic electronic music gained a worldwide audience through stories about the wild parties in India. After this initial period of growth, psytrance began to evolve into different subgenres such as

Psychedelic Adventure is a blog dedicated to electronic psychedelic music, the history of this music and its artists. If you are interested in knowing more about this style of music, then come on in! You will find our articles very informative.

A lot of people will tell you psychedelic electronic music is purely a product of the hippie era, but that would be wrong. The first true electronic sounds were actually created in the early 20th century by a Russian inventor named Leon Theremin. He developed an electronic instrument which would simply be called “The Theremin.” The sound it made was completely unique and very eerie. It was used in the theme music for several 1950s science fiction films and television shows, including “The Day The Earth Stood Still,” “The Twilight Zone,” and “Queen of Outer Space.”

In 1964, Robert Moog invented the first commercially available analog synthesizer. It was used by many popular recording artists throughout the 1960s and 1970s, including The Beatles. One of their songs, “Revolution 9,” was entirely created with Moog synthesizers.

Since then, others have come along and improved on the original ideas of Leon Theremin and Robert Moog. In fact, there are now entire genres of psychedelic electronic music that came about from this innovation. Genres like ambient, trance, house, techno, dubstep and so on all originated from psychedelic electronic music.

Psychedelic electronic music is a new type of electronic music that combines elements of psychedelia, ambient, and electronica. The genre emerged in the early 2010s, with artists such as Ariel Pink and Oneohtrix Point Never. Psychedelic electronic music is an umbrella term for various similar genres that are generally characterized by their utilization of abstract or surreal sounds and samples, often taken from other genres or forms of media, such as jazz, folk, or classical records. Psychedelic electronic music can be divided into two styles: psychedelic pop (aka hypnagogic pop) and experimental-ambient (aka microhouse).

Psychedelic pop is generally characterized by its use of vintage samples and synthesizers, while experimental-ambient is generally more focused on drone-like drones and textures. Both styles are often associated with the psychedelic movement of the 1960s. It is not uncommon for psychedelic electronic music to feature elements of experimental rock, hip hop, or even post-rock.

Psychedelic music is a genre of music that has been developed, since the early 1960s, from the use of psychedelics to induce certain mental states. The term psychedelic, derived from the Greek word “psyche”, meaning mind and “delos”, meaning manifest, translates to “manifesting the mind”. Psychedelic music is intended to enhance the effects of psychedelic drugs by inducing a trance-like state.

Psychedelic music may also aim to enhance the experience of using these drugs. Psychedelic music emerged during the 1960s among folk and rock bands in the United States and the United Kingdom, creating the subgenres of psychedelic folk, psychedelic rock, acid rock, and psychedelic pop before declining in popularity. It enjoyed a resurgence in popularity in the 1990s among indie rock bands and electronic dance music genres such as goa trance, psytrance and psychedelic trance.

Psychedelic rock is inspired or influenced by psychedelic culture and attempts to replicate and enhance the mind-altering experiences of hallucinogenic drugs. It often uses new recording techniques and effects and draws on non-Western sources such as the ragas and drones of Indian music.


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