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Outsider MusicOutsider music is music performed either by social outsiders, who have no or few associates in the mainstream music business, or by musicians who choose to live and work in seclusion, often due to compromising behavioral or psychological conditions. Outside music reflects these conditions in various ways. Lyrics are often bizarre or emotionally stark and songs show a great ignorance or disregard for structural conventions or popular trends in mainstream music. Also, outsider musicians frequently have no formal training and/or significant music skills in the traditional sense. The end result is music that is much stranger and more abrasive than more popular musical styles. Outsider music is a form of outsider art. By definition, outsider music has very few outlets and most outsider musicians (save those such as Syd Barrett and Skip Spence who became popular before becoming recluses) come to be semi-well known through word of mouth, usually among communities of obsessive music collectors. Only a few, including Tiny Tim and Wesley Willis, have achieved much renown outside of a small coterie of devotees. Outsider music is frequently praised by musicians with experimental leanings, such as avant-garde jazz saxophonist John Zorn and Kurt Cobain—a fan of outsider Daniel Johnston, Cobain famously wore a shirt designed by Johnston. Some outsider musicians are famously awful and most of their audience considers them to be a surreal comedy act, something most of these performers realize and embrace. Examples include Florence Foster Jenkins, a American soprano who sang ear-splitting renditions of compositions far outsider her range and Eilert Pilarm, a Swedish Elvis impersonator known for his utter lack of resemblance to Elvis Presley. However, a majority of outsider artists are honestly appreciated for their unique and uncompromising styles of music. The definitive guide to outsider music is Songs in the Key of Z: The Curious Universe of Outsider Music (2000) by music journalist and radio personality Irwin Chusid. The book profiles several relatively well known outsider musicians and gives a definition to the term. The book inspired two companion compilation CDs, sold separately. Some examples of outsider musicians: - Jandek, a singer/songwriter who gives no concerts or interviews and releases albums pseudonymously and prolifically.
- The Shaggs, a 1960s rock band of sisters with no musical skills whatsoever, whose awfulness became semi-legend.
- Roky Erikson, the reclusive and eccentric former leader of the Thirteenth Floor Elevators and onetime mental patient.
- Harry Partch, a composer who built his own instruments according to his own system of musical scales.
- Wesley Willis, a 350 lb. roaring, schizophrenic from Chicago who sang simplistic songs about fast food, public transportation and his favorite bands, among other subjects.
- Skip Spence, former Jefferson Airplane member who produced one cult classic album of stark, strange folk music.
- Daniel Johnston, a Texas singer/songwriter known for recording music on his radio boom box.
See also list of outsider musicians. Further Reading - Songs in the Key of Z: The Curious Universe of Outsider Music by Irwin Chusid ISBN 1556523726
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