Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › No_waveNo wave - Wikipedia

    The term "no wave" might have been inspired by the French New Wave pioneer Claude Chabrol, with his remark "There are no waves, only the ocean". Etymology. There are different theories about how the term was coined. Some suggest Lydia Lunch coined the term in an interview with Roy Trakin in New York Rocker.

  2. Jan 14, 2008 · In the late 1970s, a loose collective of New York bands created a radical reaction to New Wave and Punk that came to be known as No Wave.

  3. Nov 9, 2019 · No wave” is defined as a short-lived movement that took place in the late ’70s and early ’80s, almost exclusively in New York, more specifically the Lower East Side of downtown. The movement is different in that the members of the original no wave movement were incredibly resistant to it being defined as such, with people like James ...

    • GM@www.WECB.FM
  4. The record was titled No New York, a name taken from a song by James Chance & the Contortions that was subsequently distilled to ‘no wave’ and adapted for use in the scene of which it was spotlighting. It should be pointed out that the title has also been attributed to Lydia Lunch who, when asked in an interview if her music was new wave ...

  5. People also ask

  6. Mar 1, 2024 · One of the few prominent no wave artists to hail from Europe, as opposed to the American underground scene, Lizzy Mercier Descloux is among the greatest exports of the era. An archetypal figure within the Parisian punk scene, Descloux moved to New York in the late 1970s alongside her then-partner Michel Esteban, who then established ZE Records.

  7. Feb 6, 2023 · The termno wave” was first used as a tongue-in-cheek pun on the then-popular “New Wave” movement, but it quickly came to symbolize a form of resistance against being pigeonholed or categorized, allowing musicians and artists and filmmakers to have a greater freedom of expression.

  8. Jun 12, 2008 · Centered on a handful of late-1970s downtown groups like Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, DNA and James Chance’s Contortions, it was a cacophonous, confrontational subgenre of punk rock, Dadaist in...

  1. People also search for