Industrial rock | |
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Stylistic origins: | Alternative rock, Industrial metal, Industrial music |
Cultural origins: | Early 1990s, United States, United Kingdom |
Typical instruments: | Electric guitar - Synthesizer - Drum machine - Drums - Sequencer - Keyboard - Sampler) |
Mainstream popularity: | Small |
Derivative forms: | Nu metal |
Industrial rock is a musical genre which is a fusion of industrial music and rock music. Industrial rock augments the guitar-based music and songwriting structure of rock with the electronic instruments and noisy production techniques of industrial. Though superficially abrasive and often aggressive, industrial rock is generally more listener-friendly than traditional industrial.
Industrial rock is similar to industrial metal. By convention, all industrial metal artists may be more vaguely described as industrial rock, but not all industrial rock artists are properly described as industrial metal.
Typical instrumentation for industrial rock bands centers on heavily-distorted or otherwise-effected guitars and synthesizers. Bass guitars and drums may be played live, or they may be replaced by sequencers and drum machines. Many groups also make extensive use of samplers.
The archetypal industrial rock band is Nine Inch Nails (NIN). Melding the influences of rock stars like David Bowie, Queen, and Kiss; industrial groups like Skinny Puppy and Coil; and industrial metal acts like Ministry; NIN produced "industrial-flavored" music that enjoyed wide mainstream success. Indeed, industrial rock's general popularity came largely in the wake of Nine Inch Nails' multi-platinum The Downward Spiral (1994), as record companies promoted bands with similar aesthetics. These included NIN-protégé Marilyn Manson, Filter, Stabbing Westward, and Gravity Kills. David Bowie even flirted with the genre, releasing the industrial-tinged Outside and touring with NIN in 1995.
The term "industrial rock" most likely had its genesis in the mid-1990s as a reaction to such crossover bands being referred to as simply "industrial." The industrial rock designation called attention to the fundamental similarities with rock, as opposed to industrial. However, casual listeners still often use "industrial" to refer to the more accessible industrial rock style.
As the 1990s drew to a close, industrial rock's mainstream popularity waned. The genre still remains alive, however, with groups like Pigface and Sister Machine Gun maintaining considerable grassroots followings. The influence of industrial rock has been acknowledged in the popularization of nu-metal.
Artists
16 Volt 51 Peg Acumen Nation American Head Charge Anal Kitties Android Lust Apartment 26 Arockalypse Bile Celldweller Chemlab Crossbreed Cubanate Cyanotic Die Warzau |
dope Econoline Crush Error Filter Foetus Genitorturers God Lives Underwater Godhead Gravity Kills Hanzel und gretyl Hate Dept. Hula Interrogation |
Jakalope KMFDM Kidneythieves Machines of Loving Grace Marilyn Manson MDFMK Megaherz Mortiis Nine Inch Nails Oomph! Out Out Pailhead |
Pigface Pitchshifter Prick Rammstein Rx The Shizit Sister Machine Gun Skillet Skold Spahn Ranch Spineshank Stabbing Westward Seraphim Shock Tool Zeromancer |
Labels
Cleopatra Records
Invisible Records
Metropolis Records
Nothing Records
Slipdisc Records
Wax Trax! Records
Industrial |
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Aggrotech - Coldwave - Dark electro - Electronic body music - Futurepop - Industrial metal - Industrial rock - Industrial techno - Noise - Power noise |
Other electronic music genres |
Ambient | Breakbeat | Drum and bass | Electronica | Electronic art music | Hard dance | Hardcore | House | Techno | Trance | Industrial | Synthpop |
Alternative rock |
Alternative metal - Britpop - C86 - College rock - Dream pop - Gothic rock - Grebo - Grunge - Indie pop/Indie rock - Industrial rock - Lo-fi - Madchester - Math rock - Noise pop - Paisley Underground - Post-punk revival - Post-rock - Riot Grrrl - Sadcore - Shoegazing - Space rock - Twee pop |
Other topics |
History - Indie (music) |