Acid house's core electronic squelch sounds were developed by mid-1980s DJs from Chicago who experimented with the Roland TB-303 electronic synthesizer-sequencer. Acid house spread to the United Kingdom, Australia, and continental Europe, where it was played by DJs in the early rave scene. By the late 1980s, copycat tracks and acid house remixes brought the style into the mainstream, where it had some influence on pop and dance styles.
On October 19, the tabloid ran with the headline "Evils of Ecstasy," linking the Acid House scene with the new and relatively unknown drug. The resultant panic incited by the tabloids eventually led to a crackdown on clubs and venues that played Acid House and had a profound negative impact on the scene.
Sources differ on whether it was Phuture or Sherman who chose the title; Phuture's DJ Pierre says the group did because the song was already known by that title, but Sherman says he chose the title because the song reminded him of acid rock. Hillegonda C Rietveld (1998) This Is Our House: House Music, Cultural Spaces and Technologies Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-85742-242-9 Regardless, after the release of Phuture's song, the term Acid House came into common parlance.
Sean Bidder (2001) Pump Up the Volume , Channel Four - see also the first episode of the accompanying television series Philippe Renaud, a journalist for La Presse in Montreal, states that the term Acid house was "Coined in Chicago in 1987 to describe the sound of the Roland 303 bass machine." Renaud states that acid house music "made its first significant recording appearance on Phuture's Acid Trax (DJ Pierre) in that year." Philippe Renaud: Look it up in the dictionaryAn alphabetical guide to electronic music Electronic music historian Dan Sicko also advances this theory in his book Techno Rebels , stating acid house is "named for its psychedelic sounds," particularly that of the Roland TB-303.
The theory that acid was a derogatory reference towards the use of samples in acid house music was repeated in the press and in the British House of Commons.
The more press he did, the more grandiose and absurd the claims. Once the term acid house became more widely used, participants at acid house-themed events in the UK and Ibiza made the psychedelic drug connotations a reality by using club drugs such as ecstasy. DeRogatis, Jim (December 1, 2003).
Source: Wikipedia > Acid House
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