Psychedelic rock (English: Psychedelic rock) is a rock music genre that originates from psychedelic culture and sudden changes in thinking caused by the use of psychedelic drugs. Psychedelic rock emerged in Britain and the United States in the 1960s, belonging to the same period as garage rock and folk rock bands. Psychedelic rock is a transitional period between early blues-based rock music and progressive rock, art rock, experimental rock, hard rock, and even heavy metal. Psychedelic rock also incorporates non-Western musical elements, such as ragas and sitars of Indian music.
Psychedelic rock refers to rock music inspired by the hallucinatory experience caused by drug abuse, and can usually be used interchangeably with the term "Psychedelic Rock". In 1966, "Thirteenth Floor Elevators" The group released its first album in Austin, followed closely by San Francisco's JEFFERSON AIRPLANE, and Count Five's "Psychotic Reaction" entered It reached the top 5 of the charts. Singers were encouraged by the heavy promotion of this type of music by radio DJs and flooded themselves with fuzzed-out electric guitars, feedback noise, electronic synthesizers, and just plain high-decibel noise. works to simulate the various indulgent psychedelic feelings imagined by marijuana and lysergic acid diacetate (LSD).
It was popular in the mid-to-late 1960s and was one of the products of the hippie movement. 1. Its music is characterized by deafening strong rhythms and sharp and loud electric guitar solo or duo performances. Unlike heavy metal rock, psychedelic rock does not have a certain form, and has many improvisational elements, and its melodyless tones are varied. , often full of wonderful performances. The word "acid" is a slang term for the psychedelic drug LSD. Acid rock has its name because of its fanatical psychedelic music characteristics. The representative musicians and bands include: Jimi. Fans of Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, the beatles, the Doors, the Greatful Dead, Pink Floyd, etc. all have long hair, colorful clothes, and anti-secular attitudes. This external performance is as important as the music. . Genre origin: blues rock, folk rock, concrete music, raga, garage rock, art rock. Cultural origin. In the mid-1960s, typical American and British instruments: electric guitar, bass guitar, drums, percussion, electronic keyboard, sitar. , electronic synthesizer, theremin, etc. reached their peak in popularity in the late 1960s and extended the genre to progressive rock, neo-psychedelic rock, improvisational band, German rock, new age, punk rock, pre-punk, garage punk, noise rock , hard rock,
Gothic rock, heavy metal, phantom dance, Manchester mania, headbang, dream pop, symphonic rock