Same Mother is the sixth album by American pianist and composer Jason Moran which was released on the Blue Note label in 2005.
53-420: The AllMusic review by Matt Collar said "Boundary-pushing pianist Jason Moran expands his sound yet again with a blend of modern electric and acoustic blues on Same Mother ... for fans of both forward-thinking jazz and roots music, Same Mother -- a conceptual nod to the unifying notion that we are all ultimately descended from one mother -- holds considerable surprises". All About Jazz stated, " Same Mother
106-633: A "slowcore collection [that] borders on ambient". Slowcore increased in popularity in the early 2020s, partly through social media trends. Songs like Duster's "Constellations" (from Stratosphere ) have been used to soundtrack viral videos to heighten the emotion. Similarly, televisions programs used slowcore to similar effect; the Netflix drama series 13 Reasons Why featured Codeine's cover of Joy Division 's " Atmosphere ". Together, this usage increased public interest in slowcore, and its newfound growth allowed both existing bands—like Duster—to receive
159-453: A "unique 'slowcore' sound". By The White Birch , their 1994 sophomore and ultimate album, Codeine had cemented themselves as a prominent band within the scene. Two years after Codeine's debut, Red House Painters, having formed in 1988, released their debut: Down Colorful Hill (1992). Similar to other bands on the 4AD label, this album consisted of a select handful of demos that had been polished before their official release. The album
212-553: A 2009 article in The Sunday Times listed April (2008) as an essential slowcore record. Like Sun Kil Moon, Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions comprised members of other bands. Hope Sandoval of Mazzy Star and Colm Ó Cíosóig of the shoegaze pioneering My Bloody Valentine formed this duo in 2001, and shortly after, released Bavarian Fruit Bread (2001). The album was reminiscent of dream pop, given
265-440: A band often considered monumental in the growth of the genre. In an interview with The Paper Crane podcast , Sparhawk said his friend had coined the term "slowcore" as a joke and that he had humorously mentioned it in one of his band's earliest shows ( c. 1993). He said that after he used it in an interview, the popularity of the phrase increased, as did Low's media attention. Journalists dubbed this genre "slowcore", much to
318-471: A database engineer, Vladimir Bogdanov , to design the All Music Guide framework, and recruited his nephew, writer Stephen Thomas Erlewine , to develop editorial content. In 1993, Chris Woodstra joined the staff as an engineer. A "record geek" who had written for alternative weeklies and fanzines, his main qualification was an "encyclopedic knowledge of music". 1,400 subgenres of music were created,
371-415: A descriptor she dislikes: speaking to The New Zealand Herald in 2023, she said "I hate the 'sad girl' label". Within music, the suffix " -core " infers a scene or style, originating with " hardcore ". The American Dialect Society describes it more generally as a "productive suffix for aesthetic trends". "Slow" refers to the pace of the music. For "sadcore", the same applies, except "sad" refers to
424-471: A feature that became central to the site's utility. In a 2016 article in Tedium , Ernie Smith wrote: "AllMusic may have been one of the most ambitious sites of the early-internet era—and it's one that is fundamental to our understanding of pop culture. Because, the thing is, it doesn't just track reviews or albums. It tracks styles, genres, and subgenres, along with the tone of the music and the platforms on which
477-405: A founding member of the renowned post-rock band Mogwai , said "You weren't going to play [slowcore] at parties, but it was beautiful: the lyrics bare and honest, the musicality sparing". Slowcore is occasionally referred to as "sadcore", and many journalists and scholars consider the neologisms to be synonymous. When distinguished, the differences are attributed to a heightened melancholy in
530-559: A musical style representative of traditional folk music but with modern—the 20th century and onwards—interpretations, ultimately spawning subgenres like folk rock and indie folk in the later stages of the century, both of which influenced slowcore to different extents. Alongside these core influences, artists often take influence from a variety of other musical genres, including alternative rock , Americana , dream pop , Midwest emo , post-rock , and shoegaze . Drone and ambient music are also cited as being similar. There
583-585: A series of publications about various music genres. It was followed by the Required Listening series, and Annual guides. Vladimir Bogdanov is the president and the main editor of the series. In August 2007, PC Magazine included AllMusic in its "Top 100 Classic Websites" list. Sadcore Slowcore , also known as sadcore , is a subgenre of indie rock characterised by its subdued tempos, somber vocal performances, and typically minimalist instrumentation. Slowcore traces its roots in
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#1732802543976636-514: A sort of music that "new-trend-every-week folk are calling slowcore". Nearing the end of the decade, Duster released Stratosphere (1998). By this point, the band had already released a few EPs but had failed to garner a notable reputation. The album was reviewed by Pitchfork and other zines, and the band would release one final album, Contemporary Movement (2000), before disbanding until 2018. Despite this, Duster's initial cult following and later resurgence would ultimately make them one of
689-481: A year after Ida's debut, in 1995. Also in 1995, Spain and Cat Power released their debut albums: The Blue Moods of Spain and Dear Sir , respectively. The For Carnation released their debut EP, Fight Songs the same year. Two years later, Radar Bros. 's self-titled debut album was released. These latter four bands were mentioned by Stevie Chick as examples of the way slowcore evolved after Low in an article for The Guardian . She writes, in respect of
742-418: A year later by You Should Be at Home Here (2001). These albums were then succeeded in 2002 by Songs About Leaving , the band's final album. This lattermost release was their most notable with respect to slowcore. Despite this, Carissa's Wierd remained obscure throughout their existence, disbanding in 2003. While albums archetypical of the mid-to-late-1990s slowcore sound were still being released during
795-457: Is a re-examination of the blues, not so much of its formal or harmonic elements, but rather its emotional and aesthetic constituents ... Ever since his arrival on the scene in the mid-1990s, Jason Moran has been a unique voice. He brings a wide-ranging, very contemporary perspective to even the oldest materials, including the blues. Same Mother is a triumph". In The Guardian , John Fordham wrote "This fierce but idiomatically familiar set augments
848-516: Is bleak in both lyrics and composition; Down Colorful Hill , alongside their following albums Rollercoaster (1993) and Bridge (1993), have been described as instilling feelings of "desperation, regret, and general darkness". Earles contended that Red House Painters was the saddest band within slowcore in the early 1990s. Another early band was Bedhead , which formed in 1991 and released their debut WhatFunLifeWas in 1994. This album consisted of soft vocals and dynamic instrumentation, and
901-399: Is no definitive characterisation of the genre, however it is typically defined by slow tempos and a sombre and atmospheric approach to both the songwriting and composition. Backing instrumentation is sparse, contrasting with the genres from which slowcore is derived. Slowcore uses simple melodies over a prolonged period to evoke saddening emotions; Andrea Swensson of Pitchfork wrote that
954-416: Is that sometimes you fall asleep by the third song". Lyrics within slowcore are often melancholic, with the vocal performances subdued. For example, Swedish singer Stina Nordenstam has been described as slowcore because of "her sadly beautiful little-girl whisper" style of singing. Emotion is a core component of slowcore, and the sparse instrumentation emphasises the singer's voice. Stuart Braithwaite ,
1007-430: The 1990s. These include Codeine , Red House Painters , and Mazzy Star . While many of the bands that influenced the concept of slowcore existed before the 1990s, this decade is often cited as being when the genre began, as well as being its heyday. Throughout this period, the amount of bands and albums associated with the genre grew greatly, establishing its fundamental sound and style. In these early years,
1060-541: The 2000s—such as those by Carissa's Wierd and Low—some bands were experimenting with introducing slowcore elements to other genres. For example, in 2002, several Red House Painters members formed Sun Kil Moon . Early on, pundits noted that this band departed from the slowcore sound present in Red House Painters releases to instead opt for folk-inspired song construction. Despite this, others continued to find similarities between Sun Kil Moon's music and slowcore:
1113-602: The Canadian Cowboy Junkies , who were creating minimalist country and blues , and would come to define aspects of slowcore. Within the same period of time, Galaxie 500 formed in Cambridge , Massachusetts and began releasing dream pop albums. Their sophomore album, On Fire (1989), strongly influenced the genre, as did the rest of their discography, although their dream pop style was not entirely indicative of how slowcore would develop. Regardless,
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#17328025439761166-489: The Fire (2001) and Trust , and Jason Molina , with Songs: Ohia (later called Magnolia Electric Co.), releasing Ghost Tropic (2000), Didn't It Rain (2002), and The Magnolia Electric Co. (2003). Alongside these, new bands began venturing into the genre. Carissa's Wierd , having formed in 1995, did not release anything until the turn of the century, when they put out Ugly But Honest: 1996-1999 (2000), followed
1219-470: The band is frequently cited as one of slowcore's leading antecedents. Andrew Earles, in his 2014 book Gimme Indie Rock: 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996 , described them as slowcore's "progenitor". Robert Rubsam, writing for Bandcamp Daily , called Galaxie 500 the "fountainhead for all that would come". There were other early bands that formed in the 1980s that would help define slowcore, however many would not release anything until
1272-481: The band would release two further studio albums, Beheaded (1996) and Transaction de Novo (1998), which maintained the same slow sound as their debut but deviated in technique. After this, the band disbanded and fell out of public discourse. A year after Bedhead's formation, Idaho , another prominent band in these preliminary years, formed, and began releasing music in 1993 after signing with Caroline Records . Like Bedhead, they released slowcore albums throughout
1325-476: The database was first made available on the Internet in 1994. AllMusic is owned by RhythmOne . AllMusic was launched as All-Music Guide by Michael Erlewine , a "compulsive archivist, noted astrologer, Buddhist scholar and musician". He became interested in using computers for his astrological work in the mid-1970s and founded a software company, Matrix, in 1977. In the early 1990s, as CDs replaced LPs as
1378-584: The decade—their debut being Year After Year (1993); however, Idaho persisted into the next century. The mid-1990s were an experimental period in music throughout North America and Europe, with new microgenres rapidly appearing. Other bands, such as Acetone , Slint , and Swans were producing slow songs that, on the outset, appeared to relate to slowcore but were better categorised under these other emerging genres. These elements resulted in slowcore being an unclearly defined and confusing genre. Low , hailing from Duluth , Minnesota, would ultimately create
1431-508: The dominant format for recorded music, Erlewine purchased what he thought was a CD of early recordings by Little Richard . After buying it, he discovered it was a "flaccid latter-day rehash". Frustrated with the labeling, he researched using metadata to create a music guide. In 1990, in Big Rapids, Michigan , he founded All Music Guide with a goal to create an open-access database that included every recording "since Enrico Caruso gave
1484-478: The early 1990s. Scholars and bands alike have shown ambivalence towards the name, with some deeming it pejorative. Slowcore prominently incorporates stylings and traits from indie rock and contemporary folk music . Indie rock is a broad subgenre of rock music that emerged in the 1980s and encapsulates music released independently or through low-budget record labels that typically fails to appeal to mainstream audiences. Similarly, contemporary folk refers to
1537-413: The early years of slowcore did not have a defined scene or any geographic hotspots. American Music Club , hailing from San Francisco , California, are considered an early slowcore band. Releasing their debut The Restless Stranger in 1985, the band's music was slow and with characteristics akin to genres like folk and singer-songwriter . This style was echoed by other bands at the time, such as
1590-544: The emotion of the lyrics. There is no definitive origin of the label "slowcore" outside of the agreement between scholars that its use began in the 1990s. The first instance of "slowcore" cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1991: Chuck Eddy 's book Stairway to Hell: The 500 Best Heavy Metal Albums in the Universe . Another claim to the origin of the term is from Alan Sparhawk of Low,
1643-640: The first three: "the genre grew to encompass the blue lullabies of Spain; the hypnotic intimacy of the For Carnation [...]; [and] the whispered confessions of early Cat Power". She also cites Rex , which included Codeine's Doug Scharin , as another influential band. By the years surrounding 1996, "slowcore" was no longer solely an esoteric phrase; an article in The Sydney Morning Herald in May jested that Spain, among others, were playing
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1696-448: The genre "gently pulls [the listener] out of linear time". While the songs can implement choruses , they often lack intense changes in instrumentation. Chris Brokaw of Codeine facetiously remarked that he could "play a snare hit, go get a drink and be back at the drumkit before the next beat". In 1998, SF Weekly wrote that "The best thing about slowcore [...] is that they demand the listener pay attention. The worst thing about them
1749-556: The genre was defined by bands that had a style of minimalist and prolonged instrumentation with melancholic vocal performances. Codeine, having formed in 1989, released Frigid Stars LP in 1990, which incorporated "tortured lyrics and tired vocal melodies". Codeine's music received attention over the following years, and after the release of the Barely Real extended play in 1992, the Toronto Star described them as having
1802-620: The genre's archetypical sound. Formed in 1993 by Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker, the band started by experimenting with slow and quiet rock music and in December 1994, released their debut album I Could Live in Hope . This album was different from its predecessors: while it maintained stylistic similarities with other bands' sparse instrumentation, it was more difficult to categorise into the other associated genres, like dream pop or shoegaze. Due to this unique sound, Low are heralded as pioneers of
1855-464: The genre's confines. Because of slowcore's broad interpretation, observers have described several other musicians and bands as slowcore. The term "slowcore" derives from "slow", referring to the tempo and energy of the music, and "-core", which refers to a scene, style, or musical subgenre . "Sadcore" imitates similar etymology, and the names are used interchangeably. The term itself has an unclear origin, though sources suggest "slowcore"'s use started in
1908-404: The genre; in their review of Trust (2002), Brad Haywood of Pitchfork proclaimed I Could Live in Hope and Long Division (1995) "drew the blueprint for slowcore as we know it today". Low would continue to release slowcore albums throughout the rest of the decade and the early 2000s, after which they transitioned towards other genres. Following Low, several bands emerged. Among them
1961-640: The industry its first big boost". The first All Music Guide , published in 1992, was a 1,200-page reference book, packaged with a CD-ROM, titled All Music Guide: The Best CDs, Albums & Tapes: The Expert's Guide to the Best Releases from Thousands of Artists in All Types of Music . Its first online version, in 1994, was a text-based Gopher site. It moved to the World Wide Web as web browsers became more user-friendly. Erlewine hired
2014-434: The late-1980s, with several bands forming in reaction to the abrasive sounds of grunge . Slow rock music, with a pensive style inspired by genres such as singer-songwriter and folk , laid the groundwork for the genre in the early years and until the mid 1990s, where Low played a pivotal role in establishing slowcore as one of the era's microgenres ; however, despite their retrospective acclamation as slowcore pioneers, Low
2067-743: The lyrics of sadcore songs. The sadcore categorisation saw considerable use in the early 2000s. Mentions include The Washington Post calling Mark Eitzel , the lead singer of American Music Club , the "reluctant king of sadcore" in 2002 and LA Weekly calling Charlyn Marshall (stage name Cat Power ) the "Queen of Sadcore" in 2003. Reviewers also used it in passing for albums such as Red House Painters ' Rollercoaster (1993), Shearwater 's Everybody Makes Mistakes (2002), and Low 's box set A Lifetime of Temporary Relief (2004). Since then, Lana Del Rey self-described her music as "Hollywood sadcore" in an interview with Vogue in 2011. Phoebe Bridgers 's music has also been called sadcore,
2120-521: The material is classical music, hip-hop or blues, the trick, Moran implies, is to recognize the family resemblance between jazz and its musical relative without mistaking them for identical twins". All compositions by Jason Moran except where noted AllMusic AllMusic (previously known as All-Music Guide and AMG ) is an American online music database . It catalogs more than three million album entries and 30 million tracks, as well as information on musicians and bands . Initiated in 1991,
2173-536: The members' past work with other bands, but was still recognisable as slowcore. This trend continued with their second album, Through the Devil Softly (2009). This dream pop sound was revisited by Cigarettes After Sex in 2012, with their single "Nothing's Gonna Hurt You Baby". The song would go relatively unnoticed until it went viral several years later, following which the band released their self-titled debut album in 2017, described by Pitchfork as
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2226-449: The most influential bands within slowcore. Whereas subcultures like emo and NYHC became ever-more constricting over time, [slowcore] began with a specific set of goals and expanded outward. Perhaps because slowcore was always more about a feeling and less a particular set of sonic parameters, it was always more open to interpretation than some of its fellow spawn of the underground. Robert Rubsam, Bandcamp Daily Through
2279-566: The music is sold. It then connects that data together, in a way that can intelligently tell you about an entire type of music, whether a massive genre like classical, or a tiny one like sadcore ." In 1996, seeking to further develop its web-based businesses, Alliance Entertainment Corp. bought All Music from Erlewine for a reported $ 3.5 million. He left the company after its sale. Alliance filed for bankruptcy in 1999, and its assets were acquired by Ron Burkle 's Yucaipa Equity Fund. In 1999, All Music relocated from Big Rapids to Ann Arbor , where
2332-423: The musicians' chagrin. "It was an insult," says Bedhead's Matt Kadane. "We never saw slowness as the essence of what we were doing." Stevie Chick, The Guardian The "slowcore" label has been criticised by scholars and bands, who have called it pejorative. Matt Kadane of Bedhead called it an "insult" and Jim Putnam of Radar Bros. resisted the term and continuously told music critics that his band
2385-455: The rapid growth of louder rock genres, especially grunge . Grunge fused elements of punk rock and heavy metal to create a scene which Bruce Pavitt , co-founder of the record label Sub Pop , described as "gritty vocals, roaring Marshall amps, ultra-loose grunge that destroyed the morals of a generation". Grunge, in the form that it came to be known, emerged during the mid-1980s in and around Seattle , Washington, though unlike grunge,
2438-413: The reach of the genre, and by the 2000s, slowcore had an obvious sound, even without clear categorisation. Artists like Carissa's Wierd , Jason Molina , and Duster incorporated its archetypical sound in their music throughout the introductory years of the 21st century, while others, including Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions , Grouper , and Sun Kil Moon , were more experimental but remained within
2491-532: The sale, and as Rovi from 2009 until 2016). In 2012, AllMusic removed all of Bryan Adams ' info from the site per a request from the artist. In 2015, AllMusic was purchased by BlinkX, later known as RhythmOne . The AllMusic database is powered by a combination of MySQL and MongoDB . The All Media Network produced the All Music Guide: The Definitive Guide (at first released as The Experts' Guide ), which includes
2544-407: The staff expanded from 12 to 100 people. By February of that year, 350,000 albums and two million tracks had been cataloged. All Music had published biographies of 30,000 artists, 120,000 record reviews and 300 essays written by "a hybrid of historians, critics and passionate collectors". In late 2007, AllMusic was purchased for $ 72 million by TiVo Corporation (known as Macrovision at the time of
2597-482: The success of several bands in the mid-to-late 1990s, the slowcore sound had been conceptually established by the commencement of the 2000s. Through this, the genre continued to grow with releases from both existing and new artists. This era also saw bands experiment by amalgamating the slowcore sound with other genres. The first few years of the century saw multiple bands release staple slowcore albums, including Duster's Contemporary Movement , Low's Things We Lost in
2650-497: The superb trio Moran has run since the late 1990s (bassist Tarus Mateen and drummer Nasheet Waits) with guitarist Marvin Sewell, on a repertoire that ransacks the retro and reforges it in the furnace of Moran's imagination". In JazzTimes , Geoffrey Himes noted "Moran has once again demonstrated how jazz can reinvigorate itself by reaching beyond the usual show tunes and hard-bop rewrites to find new material for improvisation. Whether
2703-468: Was Ida , composed of Elizabeth Mitchell and Daniel Littleton, who released their debut, Tales of Brave Ida in 1994. This was followed by I Know About You in 1996, which Rubsam considered a slowcore "classic". Ida continued to release music throughout the 1990s and into the late 2000s, with Heart Like a River from 2005 also often highlighted as an exemplary slowcore album. Bluetile Lounge , an Australian band, released their debut ( Lowercase )
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#17328025439762756-478: Was "not slowcore". Similarly, members of Low disliked the label: in 1998, Sparhawk called it "cheesy". Regardless, the term grew in popularity and in an interview with Vice in 2018, Sparhawk recognised his band as being influential in slowcore's growth and success. The sound that would become known as "slowcore" began emerging in the United States in the late 1980s and early 1990s as a counterpoint to
2809-486: Was not the first band to produce slowcore. Codeine , Red House Painters , and Bedhead all released influential albums earlier that decade, while American Music Club —widely considered to be the genre's first act—formed in 1982. Regardless, the mellow and restrained sound of Low's debut, I Could Live in Hope (1994), and their albums that followed over the next several years, came to define slowcore. Spain , Duster , and Ida , among others, all followed Low and furthered
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