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The Herbaliser - Blow Your Headphones - Ninja Tune - Trip Hop

The Herbaliser - Blow Your Headphones - Ninja Tune - Trip Hop
Price £6.00

Track Listing

1 Opening Credits (1:29)
2 The Blend (4:46)
3 Another Mother (6:47)
4 Excuse Me (1:11)
5 Ginger Jumps The Fence (5:01)
6 Put It On Tape (3:42)
7 New + Improved (3:58)
8 Mr. Chombee Has The Flaw (4:17)
9 Intermission (1:01)
10 Saturday Night (5:06)
11 Shocker Zulu (5:15)
12 Hardcore (4:30)
13 Shortys' Judgement (5:45)
14 More Styles (1:40)
15 A Mother (For Your Mind) (6:37)
16 Bring It (3:59)
17 Theme From Control Centre (Reprise) (4:40)
18 End Credits (2:15)


Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Sleeve Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Artist The Herbaliser
Title Blow Your Headphones
Label Ninja Tune
Catalogue zen cd28
Format CD Album
Released 1997
Genre Trip Hop

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Other Titles by The Herbaliser

The Missing Suitcase (Remixed)The Real Killer / Blowin' It


Some Other Artists in the Trip Hop Genre

Massive AttackBedlam Ago GoDJ CamQ-TeeSparky LightbourneQ-Burns Abstract MessageDepth ChargeAgent ProvocateurLionrockNaked FunkJhelisaSukiaRae & ChristianBeat ButchersPressure DropHarry K.IntastellaClusterfunkRae&ChristianRedboyRunawaysGabrielleDobieDHS & DJ SlipStereo MC'sTrickyThe Dysfunctional Psychedelic WaltonsBrilliantSneaker PimpsChildren Of JudahDust JunkysWaterlilliesBeth HirschCraig ArmstrongStarving SoulsToscaGodhead & TriadArthurShriftDrive

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Some Other Artists on the Ninja Tune Label

ColdcutOne SelfT LoveNW1 & Born 2 BRootsChocolate WeaselSlugabedDJ VadimThe Illuminati Of HedfukLotek Hi-Fi & BlockheadUp, Bustle & OutApple & Marvin SpringerAirborn AudioThe Qemists & Jenna GibbonsHexstaticDriveAppleFunki PorciniMr. ScruffLondon Funk AllstarsMr ScruffDJ FoodSuperchargerUp, Bustle & Out & Richard EgüesIrresistible Force, TheClusterfunkCinematic Orchestra, TheDynamic SyncopationHerbaliser, TheGideonKentaroDJ ToolzThe Herbaliser & What? What?Bogus OrderJade9 Lazy 9Poets Of Rhythm, TheSixtooAmon TobinBlockhead

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Information on the Trip Hop Genre

Trip-hop is a music genre also known as the Bristol sound. The trip-hop description was applied to the musical trend in the mid-1990s of downtempo electronic music that grew out of England's hip hop and house scenes. It has been described as "Europe's alternative of choice in the second half of the '90s", and a one-up fusion "of Hip-Hop and Electronica until neither genre is recognizable." It is thus categorized as a fairly experimental genre, and sometimes with elements of Dance.

The style is characterized by the reliance on breakbeats and a sample-heavy, often moody sound pioneered by Coldcut's remix of Eric B. & Rakim's Paid in Full. Trip hop gained notice via popular artists such as Massive Attack, Portishead, Tricky, Björk, Goldfrapp, Moloko, Thievery Corporation, Amon Tobin, and rock-influenced sound groups such as Ruby, Bristol's band Ilya, California's DJ Shadow, Cut Chemist, Unkle, and the UK's Gorillaz, Howie B., Morcheeba, originating from Hythe in Kent, Londoners Glideascope, New York's Bowery Electric, and Seattle's Anomie Belle are also often associated with this sound. Massive Attack's debut album Blue Lines, is seen as the "blueprint" for the genre. Various American hip hop artists and albums have been influenced by trip hop. Examples include the Deltron 3030 (album), artists Cannibal Ox, Mos Def, DJ Two14, Kanye West, Kid Cudi, and producers Dan The Automator and Madlib.

Trip hop originated in the mid '90s in Bristol, England, during a time when American hip hop started to gain increasing popularity in Europe along with the then well established House music and dance scene.[citation needed] British DJs decided to put a local spin on the international phenomenon and developed hip hop into a different style, marking the birth of trip hop. The name is meant to suggest the spacey, down-tempo feeling of trip hop music. Originators in Bristol modified hip hop by adding a laid-back beat ("down tempo") – Bristol's signature sound in hip hop (trip hop's predecessor) was characterized by its emphasis on slow and heavy drum beats and a sound drawing heavily on acid jazz, Jamaican and dub music. Trip hop took root in Bristol partly because of its deeply rooted sound system culture and its relationship with a black identity. It is important to note that, as an important slave-trading centre in the 18th century, Bristol's black community has influenced black British identity for centuries. Under the influence of American hip hop from the 1980s both black and white British youth became consumers of hip hop. Hip hop in the UK was immediately fused with black soul and elements of dancehall.

The term "Trip hop" was coined by music journalist Andy Pemberton in the June 1994 issue of UK magazine Mixmag to describe the hip hop instrumental "In/Flux", a 1993 single by DJ Shadow, and other similar tracks released on the Mo' Wax label and being played in London clubs at the time. "In/Flux", with its mixed up bpms, spoken word samples, strings, melodies, bizarre noises, prominent bass, and slow beats, gave the listener the impression they were on a musical trip, according to Pemberton. James Brendall termed the experience of trip-hop with the combination of "computers and dope".

Massive Attack's first album Blue Lines in 1991, is often seen as the first manifestation of the "Bristol hip hop movement" (known as the "First Coming of Bristol Sound"). 1994 and '95 saw trip hop near the peak of its popularity. Massive Attack released their second album entitled Protection. Those years also marked the rise of Portishead, Tricky and Red Snapper (although from London). Portishead's female lead singer Beth Gibbons' sullen voice was mixed with samples of music from the '60s and '70s, as well as sound effects from LPs, giving the group a distinctive style. Tricky's style was characterized by murmuring and low-pitched singing. Artists and groups like Portishead and Tricky led the second wave of the Bristol Movement. This second wave produced music that was dreamy and atmospheric, and sometimes deep and gloomy.

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