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Cyberpunk Music

The term "cyberpunk music" can refer to two rather overlapping categories. First, it may denote the varied range of musical works which cyberpunk films use as soundtrack material. These works occur in genres from classical music and jazz--used, in Blade Runner and elsewhere, to evoke a film noir ambiance--to "noize" and "electronica". Typically, films draw upon electronica, electronic body music, industrial, noise, futurepop, alternative rock, goth rock, and IDM to create the proper "feel". That kind of music more than often produces powerful club hits ranked highly at numerous national alternative charts like the Deutsche (german) Alternative Charts or the Hellenic Alternative Charts. The same principles apply to computer and video games. Of course, while written works may not come with associated soundtracks as frequently as movies do, allusions to musical works are used for the same effect. For example, the graphic novel Kling Klang Klatch (1992), a dark fantasy about a world of living toys, features a hard-bitten teddy bear detective with a sugar habit and a predilection for jazz.

"Cyberpunk music" also describes the works associated with the fashion trend which emerged from the SF developments. The Detroit techno group Cybotron, which arose in the early 1980s, drew influences both from European synthesizer pioneers Kraftwerk and from Alvin Toffler's 'Future Shock, producing songs which evoke a distinctly dystopian mood. In the same era, Styx released the concept album Kilroy Was Here (1983), the story of a rock star living in a dark future where music has been outlawed. Kilroy and in particular its hit single "Mr. Roboto" may easily be "appropriated" into the cyberpunk genre, whether or not the term was applied at the time. The band, Sigue Sigue Sputnik, made 'Flaunt It' in 1987, which was an unique style of new wave music by layering vocals, yelps, guitar riffs, electronic sound effects, and short samples over pulsating synthesizer bass lines. Also the looks of the bandmembers, who wore punk-haircuts, with japanese hi-tech clothes where kinda cyberpunk. However, starting around the year 1990, popular culture began to include a movement in both music and fashion which called itself "cyberpunk", and which became particularly associated with the rave and techno subcultures. With the new millennium came a new movement of industrial bands making "laptop" music. Homeless traveling squatter punks armed themselves with digital equipment and fused technology into their street sounds- El-wire and the Vagabond Choir. The hacker subculture, documented in places like the Jargon File, regards this movement with mixed feelings, since self-proclaimed cyberpunks are often "trendoids" with affection for black leather and chrome who speak enthusiastically about technology instead of learning about it or becoming involved with it. ("Attitude is no substitute for competence," quips the File.) However, these self-proclaimed cyberpunks are at least "excited about the right things" and typically respect the people who actually work with it--those with "the hacker nature".
Certain music genres like drum'n'bass were directly influenced by cyberpunk, even generating a whole subgenre called neurofunk, where the bass lines, synths and beats try to give the listener the sensation of being inside a sprawl or crawling through cyberspace. Neurofunk was pioneered by artists like Ed Rush, Trace and Optical. In the words of the journalist Simon Reynolds:

Jungle's sound-world constitutes a sort of abstract social realism; when I listen to Techstep, the beats sound like collapsing buildings and the bass feels like the social fabric shredding ... The post-techstep style I call "neurofunk" (clinical and obsessively nuanced production, foreboding ambient drones, blips 'n blurts of electronic noise, and chugging, curiously inhibited two-step beats). Neurofunk is the fun-free culmination of jungle's strategy of "cultural resistance": the eroticization of anxiety. Immerse yourself in the phobic, and you make dread your element.

The metal/Industrial sound of the German band, Ramstein does also fit perfectly in the cyberpunk music scene. Ramstein also has an image on stage of cyberpunks, wearing dystopian clothes and the use of fire, among other things to give their audience the feeling of a post-war world. The German band, Atari Teenage Riot, made Digital Hardcore music (rave music with anarchistic/political lyrics) in the 90s, can also be considered a cyberpunk band. Their music is more oriented to the hard-streetpunk style of many cyberpunk novels. The Los Angeles band Orgy, while considered an alternative metal act, have also been described as industrial metal, synth rock, and self-described "electro-pop" and "death-pop." Their second album, Vapor Transmission from 2000, featured science-fiction style lyrics that, when combined with their music style, has been considered to be cyberpunk.

Arriving toward the tail end of both the inital cyberpunk boom and his own career, pop singer Billy Idol released an album called Cyberpunk, which included a song called "Neuromancer." The album was neither a critical nor commercial success.

External links

Original page/base data taken from Wikipedia.org, further add-ons, made by volunteers of CyberPunkReview


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