Darkwave

align="center" bgcolor="silver" colspan="2"|Darkwave
lign="left" valign="top"|Birth: valign="top"|Germany Middle 1980s
lign="left" valign="top"|Stylistic Origins: valign="top"|Industrial, Dark ambient, Synthpop, Gothic Rock, EBM, Electronica, Classical, Experimental, New Wave, New Romantic
lign="left" valign="top"|Typical Instruments: valign="top"|Synthesizer - Drum machine - Tape loops - Drum - Guitar - Electronic Musical instruments
lign="left" valign="top"|Popularity: valign="top"|Low
lign="center" bgcolor="silver" align="left" colspan=2 valign="top"|Other topics
lign=center colspan="2" valign="top"|Notable artists
Darkwave is a relatively widely used term in the gothic-industrial subculture to describe a music genre, however it has no one single, agreed upon meaning. It's first usage appears to have been in the early 1990s, to describe a synthesizer-based variant of gothic rock developed largely in Germany. The two most commonly sited bands are Das Ich and Project Pitchfork. Shortly aftewards, in the United States the term "darkwave" became associated with music produced on the Projekt records label because it was used as the name of their printed catalog. The Projekt label carried bands such as Lycia, Black tape for a blue girl and Love Spirals Downwards, all characterized by slow, moody ethereal female vocals, with a strong Cocteau Twins influence (something like the later music of Dead Can Dance). This sense of the term darkwave would also apply to similar music from other labels carrying similar work (e.g. World Serpent and Middle Pillar). Still a third commonly used meaning is based on the assumption that "darkwave" is a contraction of "dark new wave", and hence refers to the dark/moody new wave bands such as Ultravox, Gary Numan or Orchestral Maneuvers in the Dark. One version of this usage takes this category as distinct from the early gothic rock bands (e.g. Bauhaus, Joy Division), another is to regard "darkwave" as a more inclusive umbrella term. It could be argued that there is still a fourth meaning of "darkwave" evolving, as current fans of the music attempt to both refine the meaning of the term and expand it's reach. Current self-identified fans of "darkwave" are inclined to include the works of artists such as Die Form, known for experimental recombination of elements of goth, classical and electronic music. A few other examples of bands included in this meaning of darkwave are The machine in the garden, and Android Lust. A common criticism of the term is that there's no clear distinction between "darkwave" and the more widely used terms "gothic" or "industrial". It's often suggested that the primary motivation for using the term "darkwave" is an attempt at gaining some distance from other categories that are regarded as too cliched, over-exposed, or passé.

Notable Darkwave Music Artists

See: List of darkwave music artists
align=center| {|
tyle="background:silver" align="center" |Electronic music | Genres
lign="center" style="font-size:90%;"|Ambient | Breakbeat | Electronica | Electronic art music | House | Techno | Trance | Industrial | Darkwave | Synth pop }

 

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