"No Wave" refers to an offshoot of
punk rock centered in
New York City of the late
1970s and early
1980s that was as much a subgenre of
rock music as it was art. It is a tongue-in-cheek term (defying any categorization as "new wave") used to describe bands, like
Mars,
The Swans and
The Static[?], who experimented with excessively loud, droning, and atonal music that was frequently characterized by repetitive drumbeats and explicitly nihilistic lyrics.
No Wave had an important impact on noise and industrial bands who formed after, like Big Black[?], Helmet, and Live Skull[?]. Sonic Youth emerged from this scene by creating music-as-art that eventually reached mass audiences and critical acclaim.
Brian Eno produced No New York album is the best example of this genre, featuring songs by Mars, Teenage Jesus and the Jerks[?] and James Chance[?] among others.
See Also
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