The 13th Floor Elevators
The 13th Floor Elevators were a band from Austin, Texas, who served as one of the Trope Codifiers and the Trope Namer for the genre of Psychedelic Rock back in The Sixties.
The band was formed in 1966, centered around guitarist/vocalist Roky Erickson, guitarist Stacy Sutherland and electric jug player Tommy Hall (both of whom performed backing vocals), with a variety of drummers and bassists coming and going for the duration of their short career.
The band were fervently dedicated to the idea of psychedelia and expanding the boundaries of the mind, religiously advocating use of hallucinogenics in their lyrics and sleeve notes, and becoming (probably) the first band to release an album with "psychedelic" in the title. According to legend, Hall's jug was tuned by the amount of marijuana stored in it.
They released two albums in close succession, The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators and Easter Everywhere. The first one yielded their only successful single and arguable Signature Song, "You're Gonna Miss Me". However, the band disintegrated after they got busted by the Texas authorities for possession of drugs - Stacy went to prison, while Roky misguidedly pleaded insanity and landed in a state hospital for the criminally insane until 1973, and has struggled with mental issues ever since.
They've been really influential on the Psychedelic Rock and Alternative Rock movement.
- The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators (1966)
- Easter Everywhere (1967)
- Live (1968) - actually an album of studio outtakes with overdubbed applause and crowd noise, put out by their record label for some quick cash
- Bull of the Woods (1969) - released after the band's collapse
For singles, box sets and compilations, see their discography on The Other Wiki.
- Bedlam House: The hospital Roky landed in and got treated with electroshock therapy.
- Break Up Song: "You're Gonna Miss Me"
- Careful with That Axe + Metal Scream: Roky gained fame largely because of his distinctive wild screaming.
- Cover Version: "You Don't Know How Young You Are" by Powell St. John, "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" by Bob Dylan, "Before You Accuse Me" by Bo Diddley, "I'm Gonna Love You Too" by Buddy Holly and "Everybody Needs Somebody to Love" by Solomon Burke.
- On the other hand, there've been quite a few covers of their songs by Alternative Rock bands influenced by them. For example: "Reverberation (Doubt)" was covered by The Jesus and Mary Chain, "Slip Inside This House" was covered (or Covered Up?) by Primal Scream, "Rollercoaster" got a Spacemen 3 version, Television used to play "Fire Engine" live, and so on.
- Epic Rocking: "Slip Inside This House"
- Watch It Stoned: Their entire philosophy.
- Psychedelic Rock
- Surprisingly Gentle Song: For a band who made their reputation for riff-driven freakouts like "You're Gonna Miss Me", "Splash 1 (Now I'm Home)" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" (to name just two) can come as a surprise.
- Title-Only Chorus: "You're Gonna Miss Me", "Reverberation (Doubt)", "(I've Got) Levitation".
- Trope Namer: Tommy Hall actually coined the term "Psychedelic Rock".