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  1. Find British Psychedelia Albums, Artists and Songs, and Hand-Picked Top British Psychedelia Music on AllMusic.

    • Songs

      Songs - British Psychedelia Music Style Overview | AllMusic

    • Albums

      Albums - British Psychedelia Music Style Overview | AllMusic

    • Artists

      Artists - British Psychedelia Music Style Overview |...

    • 2 min
    • A distrust of technology. Tomorrow's World: Home Computer Terminal 20 September 1967 - BBC. 3rd party content may contain ads - see our FAQs for more info.
    • A rejection of America. The staple of British beat music before 1965 was American blues. The psychedelic bands looked to British culture for inspiration, including The Beatles.
    • Classical music. In the film, Jim McCarty from The Yardbirds says: "We used to listen to classical music - Stravinsky, all sorts of stuff - and then when we got in the studio we were experimenting with it."
    • Jazz. Jazz was also a huge influence, especially on groups like Cream (above) who had a jazz drummer in Ginger Baker and smashed the conventions of the three-minute pop song by going on extended, spontaneous jams, like bebop artists had before them.
  2. Top 50 British Psychedelic Singles. A list by neo6666. [List740172] | +8. Despite England's long-lasting contributions to the world of psychedelia, few groups were given the opportunity to record a proper album. And given the fleeting nature of the late 60s, the timeframe to do so only lasted a few years prog and hard rock took over.

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  4. Neo-psychedelia (or "acid punk") is a diverse style of music that originated in the 1970s as an outgrowth of the British post-punk scene. Its practitioners drew from the unusual sounds of 1960s psychedelic music, either updating or copying the approaches from that era.

  5. Feb 12, 2024 · From The Beatles and Pink Floyd as a British exposé of psychedelia to Jimi Hendrix and The Grateful Dead as American figures, the influence of psychedelics has permeated the music industry without rest since the ‘60s. Surviving, if not further potentiated by the war on drugs, and maintaining a strong place in today's musical scenes worldwide.

  6. Originating in the mid-1960s among British and American musicians, the sound of psychedelic rock invokes three core effects of LSD: depersonalization, dechronicization (the bending of time), and dynamization (when fixed, ordinary objects dissolve into moving, dancing structures), all of which detach the user from everyday reality.

  7. Psychedelia isn’t a destination; it’s all about the journey, man. As 6 Music launches into a week of psychedelic programming - including current bands covering 60s classics, like Mystery Jets...

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