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Ozric Tentacles

 
Artist: Ozric Tentacles
Ozric Tentacles

Group Members:

Steve Everett, Rad, Paul Hankin, Gavin Griffiths, Zia, Ed Wynne, Merv Pepler, Nick Van Gelder, John Egan, Joie Hinton, Marcus Carcus, Seaweed, Roly Wynne

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Ed Wynne, John Egan

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1983
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Erpland", "Vitamin Enhanced", "Jurassic Shift
  • Representative Songs: "Eternal Wheel", "White Rhino Tea", "Og-Ha-Be

Biography

A band from another time, Ozric Tentacles served as the bridge from '70s cosmic rock to the organic dance and festival culture which came back into fashion during the '90s. Formed in 1983 with a debt to jazz fusion as well as space rock, the band originally included guitarist Ed Wynne, drummer Nick Van Gelder, keyboard player Joie Hinton, bassist Roly Wynne and second guitarist Gavin Griffiths (though Griffiths left in 1984). The Ozrics played in clubs around London, meanwhile releasing six cassette-only albums beginning with 1984's Erpsongs. (All six were later collected on the Vitamin Enhanced box set, despite a threatened lawsuit from the Kellogg's cereal company for questionable artwork.) In 1987, Merv Pepler replaced Van Gelder, and synthesizer player Steve Everett was also added.

Ozric Tentacles' first major release, the 1990 album Erpland, foreshadowed the crusty movement, a British parallel to America's hippy movement of the '60s. Crusties borrowed the hippies' organic dress plus the cosmic thinking of new agers, and spent most of their time traveling around England to various festivals and outdoor gatherings. The movement fit in perfectly with bands like Ozric Tentacles and the Levellers, and the Ozrics' 1991 album Strangeitude became their biggest seller yet, occasioning a U.S. contract with Capitol. After the British-only Afterswish and Live Underslunky, 1993's Jurassic Shift hit number 11 on the British charts -- quite a feat for a self-produced album released on the Ozrics' own Dovetail label. The album was released in America by I.R.S. Records, as was 1994's Arborescence. Neither album translated well with American audiences -- despite the band's first U.S. tour in 1994 -- and Ozric Tentacles returned to its Dovetail label for 1995's Become the Other. Waterfall Cities closed out the decade in 1999, and the following summer the group resurfaced with Swirly Termination. Hinton and Pepler also perform in the trance-techno outfit Eat Static, and have released several albums on Planet Dog Records. Ozric Tentacles surfaced in 2000 to release Hidden Step, followed by the EP Pyramidion. In 2002, Live at the Pongmasters Ball came out on both CD and DVD, making it their first venture into the latter. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Discography: Ozric Tentacles
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Spice Doubt

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Spice Doubt

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Live at the Pongmasters Ball

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Pongmasters Ball

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Hidden Step

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Hidden Step

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Live at the Pongmasters Ball [DVD]

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Floating Seeds Remixed

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Vitamin Enhanced

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Pyramidion/Floating Seeds Remixed

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Wikipedia: Ozric Tentacles
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Ozric Tentacles

The Ozrics live in Zagreb, 2004.
Background information
Origin England
Genres Psychedelic rock
Space rock
Progressive rock
Jazz fusion
Instrumental rock
Electronic rock
Dub music
Years active 1984 - present
Associated acts Eat Static, Nodens Ictus, Dubblehead, Moksha, Dream Machine, Here & Now
Website http://www.ozrics.com/
Members
Ed Wynne (guitar and synth)
Ollie Seagle (percussion)
Vinny Shillito (bass)
Brandi Wynne (synths)

Ozric Tentacles (commonly known as the Ozrics) are an instrumental rock band from Somerset, England, whose music can loosely be described as psychedelic or space rock. Formed in 1984, the band has released 28 albums as of 2009, and become a cottage industry selling over a million albums worldwide[citation needed] despite never having major label backing.

Contents

History

The original lineup met on June 21, 1984, at the Stonehenge Free Festival and its name arose from discussions of hypothetical cereal brands (Malcolm Segments, Desmond Whisps, and Gordon Lumps are among the names that were considered). In the 1980s the band built a fanbase on the festival circuit, becoming particularly associated with the Glastonbury Festival, and made a series of cassette releases, sold at gigs and via a fan club.

Its first label release was Pungent Effulgent in 1989, which was also re-released in the early 2000s, packaged with Strangeitude. This was followed by Erpland (1990), an album dedicated to the Pongmaster, a character which appears on many of the band's album artworks. 1991 saw the Strangeitude LP. The track "Sploosh!" was used by BMW in an advertising campaign and became the band's only single. By 1993 the band had grossed over three million dollars, and its Jurassic Shift album reached the Top 20 of the UK Albums Chart.[1]

The Ozrics live in Newcastle, 2005.

The band has gone through myriad line-up changes, with Ed Wynne (guitar, keyboards) being the only constant presence since the beginning. Many members left to pursue more electronic music spin-off acts, such as Eat Static, Transglobal Underground, Nodens Ictus, Dubblehead and Moksha. Even Nick Van Gelder (aka Tig), drummer for Jamiroquai during the Emergency on Planet Earth era was once part of the Ozric Tentacles line up, contributing drums and songwriting on the original cassettes Tantric Obstacles and Erpsongs. Nevertheless, the band maintained its identity and continued with this prolific rate of albums throughout the 1990s, and into the new millennium. It also continued to tour extensively, releasing a live DVD in 2002 entitled "Live at the Pongmaster's Ball".

The band is famous for its live performances, fronted for years by "Jumping Jon" Egan, who used to dance around the stage in a trance-like manner while playing a variety of flutes. Ozric Tentacles has long taken an audio-visual approach to live performance, with an integrated lighting and projections crew. As of February 2009, the lineup featured Ed Wynne (guitar, synths), Ed's wife Brandi Wynne (synths), Oliver Seagle (drums, percussion) and Vinny Shillito (bass). (Vinny toured the UK in 1990 as stand-in bass player when Roly Wynne was ill and remained friends with the band after forming his own band Grooveweird with his brother Dominic.)

Musicology

Its music is a highly psychedelic mixture of thumping basslines, sound effects and keyboard and guitar work, with a sound influenced by Steve Hillage and Gong.[citation needed] Many of the Ozrics' songs are in unusual time signatures and/or unusual Eastern-influenced modes. Furthermore, the band often features complex arrangements which change time signature, key signature and tempo frequently in the course of a track, a well-known element present in Progressive rock. In places, this is deliberately confusing; however, there are also moments of straightforward funk-influenced grooves and a strong influence from jazz fusion.

These features are mixed with electronic elements, including densely layered psytrance- and techno-influenced arpeggiated synthesisers, pads, synth basslines, effects and programmed drumbeats. It also has a strong influence from dub and ambient music, with many quiet relaxed tracks that balance the frenetic, intense material.

The Ozrics also use a wide range of instruments in their performances. Electric and acoustic guitars, flutes, recorders, xylophones and even sounds of digitally tweaked human voices appear throughout.

Discography

Cassettes

  • Erpsongs (1984/5)
  • Tantric Obstacles (1985/6)
  • There Is Nothing (1986)
  • Live Ethereal Cereal (1986/7)
  • Sliding Gliding Worlds (1988)
  • Wonderful Sploshy Things (1988/9)
  • The Bits Between the Bits (1989)

Albums

  • Erpsongs (1985) DOVE OT1
  • Tantric Obstacles (1985) DOVE OT2
  • Live Ethereal Cereal (1986) DOVE OT3
  • There is Nothing (1986) DOVE OT4
  • Sliding Gliding Worlds (1988) DOVE OT5
  • The Bits Between the Bits (1989) DOVE OT6
The first six albums were released as a CD box set called Vitamin Enhanced Ozric Tentacles
Erpland and Pungent Effulgent are both shown as being released in 1990 on Discogs.org

Former members

Jon Egan parted company with the band in 2005 and is now playing with space rock outfit Dream Machine (along with ex-Ozric Joie Hinton, among others). He has also played with ex-Ozric Zia Geelani's dance and electronica band (ZubZub), as well as his own band Champignon, playing eclectic, spacey world music with Alex Pym (Dream Machine) and Mindflux (Dream Machine). Jon also recently contributed to the lesser known band 'JC's Flatline Junkies' (www.myspace.com/jcsflatlinejunkies) and their first album Brass Ladies and Butterflies (2007), playing flutes on the three songs, "Crawling off the Sliproads", "Flatline" and "Passing Song".

References

  1. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 413. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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