
Part of its sonic makeup is the heavily processed sound achieved by using many layers of distortion, reverb and other effects. Here’s an exhaustive playlist of some shoegaze from across the year, including some more modern stuff too. Many of the first wave of bands such as The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive and Ride have also released new material within the last few years. However shoegazing has come full circle, and it’s a badge of honor to be enshrined in the same auditory category as the luminaries who created it.Īfter a brief decline around the mid-nineties, the genre has had a resurgence with bands such as M83, Ulrich Schnauss, A Sunny Day In Glasgow, Pinkshinyultrablast, Amusement Parks on Fire and Deerhunter developing the idiom with modern production techniques and electronics. Largely based in Oxford, Reading, and London this small scene of indie bands rejected the label, not wanting to be compartmentalised by idle and apathetic print media. Taking inspiration from the washy dream pop of Cocteau Twins and the new-wave Goth sensibilities of The Cure, along with the psychedelic, hypnotic noise jams of Sonic Youth, somehow shoegaze came to be. It encompasses the likes of My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Seefeel, The Jesus & Mary Chain and Ride. Coined by an NME journalist as a derogatory reference to the guitarists’ motionless performance gazing at their pedalboards (or shoes). Shoegaze is the maligned term for a sub-genre of guitar music that started in the British Isles around the late eighties and culminated in the early nineties. As with other well-read posts on this site, I’m trying to revisit some to tidy up some of the writing and audio and generally make them a little more professional. This article was originally published back in 2015.
