Glam rock
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Glam Rock | |
|---|---|
| Stylistic origins: | rock and roll, garage rock, folk rock |
| Cultural origins: | 1970s England. Detroit and New York in the United States |
| Typical instruments: | Guitar - Bass - Drums - Saxophones - Synthesizers - Strings |
| Mainstream popularity: | Largely popular in the UK during the 70s and to a lesser the Unites States.
<tr><th align="left" valign="top">Derivative forms:</th><td valign="top">Punk rock, Gothic rock, New wave, Pub rock, Schaffel</td></tr><tr><th align="center" bgcolor="crimson" colspan=2 valign="top">Fusion genres</th></tr><tr><td align=center colspan="2" valign="top">Glam metal, Glam punk</td></tr><tr><th align="center" bgcolor="crimson" colspan=2 valign="top">Other topics</th></tr><tr><td align=center colspan="2" valign="top">Protopunk</td></tr> |
Glam rock (also known as glitter rock), was a style of rock and roll music popularised in the early 1970s. It was mostly an English phenomenon, at its peak between the years of 1971 and 1973, made famous by acts such as Slade, David Bowie, Gary Glitter and T. Rex and had influence on groups such as Queen and KISS. In the USA, Glam made less of an impression and was largely confined to selected music fans in the cities of New York and Detroit.
Glam was distinguished by the glittery, sparkly costumes of the performers, perceived as glamourous by fans, and its bouncy rock n‘ roll songs. Lyrical emphasis was often on "teenage revolution" (such as in T. Rex's "Children of the Revolution" and Sweet’s "Teenage Rampage") as well as sexuality, decadence and fame.
Glam performers often dressed androgynously in make up and glittery, florid costumes not dissimilar to costumes that Liberace or Elvis Presley wore when performing in cabaret. An example would be David Bowie during his Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane phases. Sexual ambiguity was briefly in vogue: some bands took to playing in drag outfits for a while and Bowie told the press he was bisexual, although he later denied it, whilst the late Jobriath was among rock's first openly gay stars.
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[edit] Progenitors
Credit for starting the Glam genre is often given to Marc Bolan of T. Rex or, inaccurately David Bowie (whose Ziggy Stardust persona wasn't created until T. Rex had become a successful "glam" act). Proponents included Slade, Mud, Gary Glitter, Sweet, Mott The Hoople and early Roxy Music including Brian Eno.
In America, glam rock was most prominently represented by the proto-punk New York Dolls, whose Rolling Stones-influenced rawk-n-roll was matched by the feminine look of the band.
During the late 1960's and early 1970's, Another key American influence to the development of the glam rock genre was Iggy Pop who came out of the Detroit and Southeast Michigan rock scene. However, Alice Cooper, also from the Detroit rock scene, had arguably sketched the first hints of glam rock when they used a transvestite look and an overtly sexual attitude as part of their image.
In Italy, Renato Zero had already (and probably independently from abroad tendencies) used disguisements, androgine appearance and heavy make-up in the late 1960s, but with little success. After he became popular in the late-1970s, he was criticized as having borrowed the look from Bowie and Cooper.
[edit] Glam rock in theatre and cinema
Theatre and Cinema played an important role in the Glam rock movement.
The stars of Andy Warhol's stage play Pork are considered influential on the movement. Wayne County was in particular an influence on David Bowie. Another Andy Warhol Superstar, Jackie Curtis, was influential on the look and dress of glam rock.
Some examples of movies that reflect Glam Rock include:
- Brian DePalma's Phantom of the Paradise;
- The Rocky Horror Picture Show;
- T. Rex's documentary Born To Boogie;
- David Bowie's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust;
- Alice Cooper's Good to See You Again;
- Gary Glitter's Remember Me This Way;
- Slade's Flame;
- Robert Fuest's Final Programme (1973);
- Todd Haynes's Velvet Goldmine (1998);
- John Cameron Mitchell's film version of Hedwig and the Angry Inch;
- Neil Jordan's Breakfast on Pluto(2005).
[edit] Subsequent influence
Glam rock was a major influence upon the late 1970s UK punk rock movement, such as the Sex Pistols and The Damned (the latter of which took Marc Bolan on tour around 1977).
Much of the movements that followed punk rock in Great Britain during the late 70s through the 1980s, took heavy influence from Glam rock. The Gothic rock movement, particularly the bands who played at the Batcave in London, such as Specimen took cues from glam, in particular Roxy Music and David Bowie. As did another movement from around the same time dubbed the "New Romantics" and included the likes of Adam and the Ants, Culture Club, Dead Or Alive and Soft Cell.
The glam rock movement even made the shores of Japan at the turn of the 1970s, with local bands the Sadistic Mika Band and Vodka Collins having successful glam recordings on EMI records.
A trend amongst some Glam rock groups was releasing a Christmas single, examples of this are Slade's "Merry Christmas Everybody", Wizzard’s "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" and Gary Glitter's "Another Rock N' Roll Christmas". These tracks receive heavy rotation in the United Kingdom every Christmas.
Today traditional glam rock is not very largely represented, though there are a few examples, such as Robin Black. However, there are young Electro and Techno producers taking the core rythmn of Glam rock and creating a new genre Schaffel. Pop Levi's (bassist for Ladytron)Blue Honey EP has been compared to the glam stylings of T. Rex.
[edit] Glam rock acts
[edit] External links
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