variants
or less commonly shoegazing
: melodic rock music typically characterized by heavily processed electric guitar and indistinct often distant-sounding vocals
The centrality of the guitar to the generic characteristics of shoegaze is articulated through a textural approach to the instrument that eschews traditional rock virtuosity in favor of the foregrounding of timbral qualities.—Robert Strachan
Shoegaze is about capturing the … melancholia at the edge of existence, that too-stoned sense of being unmoored in the world.—Cat Zhang
Their unique blend of sleepy vocals and disorienting guitars connected to armies of effects pedals became known as shoegazing, a term that stemmed from watching performers look down at their pedals while singing.—Joseph Krebaum
… a dreamy, primarily instrumental piece that blurs late-eighties shoegazing with lo-fi electronica …—Mike McGrath Bryan
—often used before another nounFrontman Emil Nikolaisen's flamboyant version of shoegaze pop squanders his and his co-vocalist sister's promising melodies with songs that drone on interminably.—Mikael Wood
Released in the early '90s, the ShredMaster is a simple distortion pedal that packs a serious punch. It was also used by … My Bloody Valentine's Kevin Shields to help create the shoegaze band's massive wall of sound.—Scott Wilson
My Bloody Valentine's' 'Loveless' was the magnum opus of the shoegazing genre …—Clash Magazine (online)
shoegazer
noun
plural shoegazers
Thurston Moore influenced a generation of noise-heads, from grunge rockers to shoegazers.
—Rolling Stone
… a loose collection of mop-topped British and Irish musicians who explored guitar textures, converted noise into dreamy melody and experimented with hip-hop beats made some of the most compelling music of their era. The British media dubbed the groups "shoegazers" for their introverted live shows and bashful, glamorously depressed posture.
—Scott Timberg
a shoegazer band
shoegazer rock
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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