Sinuous and mysterious as a plume of drifting smoke, a new sort of groove wafted two decades ago from Bristol, a bohemian university town in the west of England. Though its prime movers — Massive Attack, Tricky and Portishead — all loathe the term, the word “trip-hop” has become synonymous with the style created by Bristol bands like Massive Attack and Smith & Mighty. The sensuous groove fulfilled a timeless human need for a bass-heavy sound to touch the secret recesses of the imagination and lure our dreamworld onto the dance floor. Trip-hop was tailor-made for the moment — and it happens every night — when a bopper wants to get tender. Or when domestic listeners seek to wander within themselves.
—Vivien Goldman via Local Groove Does Good: The Story of Trip Hop’s Rise From Bristol
Photo: The Wild Bunch — soon-to-be Massive Attack — at the Dug Out Club in Bristol. By Beezer.
(via rosa--sparks)