Skip to content

Dancecult

ISSN 1947-5403

8 papers in the library · 31 citations · publishing 2004-2023

Papers

DJ Goa Gil: Kalifornian Exile, Dark Yogi and Dreaded Anomaly

Dancecult January 1, 2011 Graham St John 10 citations

Goa Gil is a central figure in psychedelic trance music, blending roles as a DJ, producer, and spiritual leader across decades and continents. His 2007 compilation "Worldbridger" reflects his aim to connect physical, spiritual, and cultural worlds through "trance dance rituals" that appropriate sacred sites and tribal icons. Gil's career spans from 1960s Haight-Ashbury to Goa, India, and the evolution of Goa trance and darkpsy. He is both celebrated and criticized as a controversial "techno-shaman" who embodies ambivalence within global psychedelic scenes. This article examines his anomalous status in DJ culture.

The Vibe of the Exiles: Aliens, Afropsychedelia and Psyculture

Dancecult January 1, 2013 Graham St John 8 citations

Psychedelic electronic music culture, from Goatrance to psytrance, cultivates a socio-sonic aesthetic infused with the sensibility of exile and expatriate compatriotism. Participants adopt the figure of the alien in transpersonal and utopian projects, repurposing cosmic liminality, space exploration, and abduction narratives from science fiction. This posthumanist pretension resembles Afrofuturist sensibilities, which are identified with, appropriated, and reassembled. The article explores the interface of psyculture and Afrofuturism, focusing on Israeli psychedelic artists and the dance floor as an orgiastic domain where mutant utopias are propagated and alien identities danced into being.

Full Penetration: The Integration of Psychedelic Electronic Dance Music and Culture into the Israeli Mainstream

Dancecult January 1, 2012 Joshua I. Schmidt 8 citations

In Israel, psychedelic electronic dance music culture has become unusually prominent in the mainstream. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, the article compares how secular and orthodox Jewish youth use trance-dance parties to serve their respective community needs. These contrasting uses reflect the distinct socio-cultural circumstances and conditions of each group.

Seasoned exodus: the exile mosaic of psyculture

Dancecult April 20, 2012 G. John 5 citations

Psychedelic trance music and culture (psyculture) emerged from a seasonal dance party scene in Goa, India, during the 1970s and 1980s, shaped by a diverse, heterogeneous exile sensibility. Rather than fitting a single formula, Goa trance and its later forms are internally diverse, influenced by expatriates and bohemians from many countries who brought experiences from cosmopolitan urban centers. The DJ-led trance dance culture in Goa absorbed innovations in electronic dance music production, performance, and aesthetics throughout the 1980s, leading to the Goa sound and festival culture in the mid-1990s. Rooted in an experimental freak community, psyculture inherits this diverse exile experience, blending conscious self-realization with ecstatic self-abandonment.

Other Kinds of Mind There

Dancecult November 23, 2023 Trace Reddell

Psychedelic experience makes cognition in extended brain-body music systems especially agile, requiring a sonic rhetoric that emphasizes transformative agency. Drawing on the recursive listening spaces of dub, three forms of psychedelic electronica—ambient house, trip-hop, and glitch—foster an echological sensibility unique to records assembled from bits of other recordings. Longform albums in these genres serve as sonic pharmakomedia, pharmacologically activated non-human agencies that sustain psychedelic mind-machine systems. Managing set and setting through music selection is common in psychedelic research, therapy, and personal practice. The article puts indigenous shamanic practices in conversation with neuropsychopharmacology, sound studies, and music production to offer a diagnostic inventory of the sonic substance's effects.

The Voice of the Apocalypse

Dancecult November 23, 2023 Graham St John

The acid house rave scene of the early nineties found an unlikely champion in Terence McKenna, a counterculture figure whose recorded speech under the influence of psychoactive tryptamines produced an alien-sounding “elf chatter.” Producers of psychedelic electronica have since mined McKenna’s “unEnglishable” vocalizations as a precious sonic resource. Over three decades, McKenna has become likely the most sampled individual in electronic music history, with artists adopting his voice as a template for the unknown. This practice, termed mckennasploitation, evokes the “apocalypse” of self and culture central to ecstatic dance movements and echoes McKenna’s prophesied “Eschaton” in an era of accelerating crisis.

The Varieties of Ecstasy Experience (Sean Leneghan)

Dancecult January 1, 2004 Daniel Paul Schnee

This book, written by a longtime insider of the international underground electronic music scene, resists the process of historification, which the author compares to museification and death. The author, a DJ, label owner, composer, novelist, and performer, offers a firsthand account of the scene's culture and ethos, aiming to preserve its living spirit rather than reduce it to a historical artifact.

Global Tribe: Technology, Spirituality and Psytrance (Graham St John)

Dancecult January 1, 2004 Tobias C. van Veen

A book by Riccardo Balli, a longtime insider of the international underground electronic music scene, aims to resist the process of historification, which the author compares to museification and death. Balli, a DJ, label owner, composer, novelist, and live performer, offers a firsthand account rather than a critical or historical analysis, seeking to preserve the scene's living, experimental spirit rather than allowing it to become a static, commodified artifact.