Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores Neo-Psychedelic Folk as an evolving practice of editing the sensory experience—where traditional acoustic forms are recontextualized through studio manipulation, ambient layering, and experimental perception. Rooted in the legacy of folk traditions yet shaped by contemporary production, the genre transforms intimacy into abstraction. We trace its lineage through artists such as Devendra Banhart and Animal Collective, whose work integrates acoustic instrumentation with tape effects, looping, and textural processing. Melody remains central, but is often fragmented, echoed, or submerged within evolving sonic environments. Historically, Neo-Psychedelic Folk reflects a broader shift toward hybridization—where analog warmth meets digital editing, and personal songwriting intersects with experimental sound design. Recording becomes compositional tool: microphones, effects, and layering reshape the perception of space, memory, and presence. This episode analyzes the genre as perceptual editing—where time is stretched, textures overlap, and listening becomes immersive rather than linear. Through history, technology, and aesthetics, we explore how Neo-Psychedelic Folk redefines the boundaries of folk music, transforming it into a fluid and introspective sonic architecture. 【Related Column】Neo-Psychedelic Folk https://monumental-movement.jp/en/column-neo-psychedelic-folk/
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