history / edit

Artist

Shortcut Code: [a7297]
Data Quality Rating: Needs Vote
323 submissions pending
Add to List

Shopping

Search for this:
 eBay .uk
 Amazon .uk .de
X 4,207 For Sale

Jump To

Shamen

Profile:
Founded in Scotland by Colin Angus, Derek & Keith McKenzie as Alone Again Or. Later on changed their name to "The Shamen" and added member Will Sinnott in the 1980's, fusing guitar, sampled sounds and Hip-Hop beats.

Later progressing into Acid House in 1988, and then an international chart act come the early 1990's with Techno House and dance music sounds.

With releases going back to 1986, The Shamen were one of the early pioneers of 'indie' dance. 'Jesus Loves Amerika' (notice the spelling) was a politically-charged innovative and infectuous early release in 1988 which is now quite hard to get hold of and collectable.

The Shamen went on to have 15 hits in the British singles chart, 5 of which made the top 10. Who can forget the topical playfullness of 'Ebeneezer Goode' (No. 1) and the stomping greatness of 'Move Any Mountain - Progen' (No. 4)?
Sites:
Aliases:
Members:
Variations:
All | Shamen, The | Shamen
edit genres sort

Discography

Releases:
Something About You (12")   Moksha Recordings 1987
Jesus Loves Amerika (12")   Ediesta Records 1988
Transcendental (12")   Desire Records 1988
Phorward (Album) (2 versions)   Moksha Recordings 1989
You Me & Everything (7")   Moksha Recordings 1989
En-Tact (Album) (5 versions)   One Little Indian ... 1990
Hyperreal (Single, Maxi) (4 versions)   One Little Indian ... 1990
Make It Mine (Maxi) (4 versions)   One Little Indian ... 1990
Pro>gen (2 versions)   Rough Trade Germany ... 1990
Move Any Mountain - Progen 91 (CD, Single, MP)   COMA Records (DK) 1991
Progeny (3xLP, Comp, Smplr)   One Little Indian 1991
Boss Drum (12", Promo)   One Little Indian 1992
L.S.I. (Maxi) (4 versions)   COMA Records (DK) ... 1992
Phorever People (12")   Virgin France S.A. 1992
Comin' On - The Culture Beat Remixes (12", W/Lbl)   Roughmix 1993
S.O.S. EP (Maxi, EP) (2 versions)   One Little Indian 1993
Destination Eschaton (Single, Maxi) (2 versions)   One Little Indian ... 1995
Collection (CD, Comp)   Virgin Schallplatten GmbH, Virgin Schallplatten GmbH 1996
Move Any Mountain '96 (Maxi) (3 versions)   One Little Indian 1996
Remix Collection - Stars On 25 (Album) (2 versions)   One Little Indian ... 1996
Universal (Maxi) (2 versions)   Moksha Recordings 1998
Hystericool: The Best Of The Alternate Mixes (CD, Comp)   Music Club 2002
Remixes:
Essential Hardcore (CD, Comp) Possible Worlds Dino Entertainment 1991
The Greatest Trance Tracks Of All Times Vol. 2 (2xCD, Comp) Possible Worlds (Shame... interGROOVE 2000
Production:
Funky Alternatives Four (LP, Comp) You And Me And Everyth... Concrete Productions 1989
Indie Top 20 Vol VII (CD, Comp) You, Me & Everything Beechwood Music 1989
Indie Top 20 Vol VIII (2 versions) Omega Amigo Beechwood Music ... 1990
Give Peace A Dance: A CND Compilation (Comp) (2 versions) Hear Me Oh My People (... Beechwood Music 1991
Logic Trance (2xCD) Possible Worlds (Stick) Logic Records, BMG Ariola München GmbH 1992
Rave Anthems (2xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Dino Entertainment 1995
Machine Soul: An Odyssey Into Electronic Dance Music (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (I.R... Rhino Records (2) 2000
The Greatest Trance Tracks Of All Times Vol. 2 (2xCD, Comp) Possible Worlds (Shame... interGROOVE 2000
Back To The Old Skool (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain Ministry Of Sound 2001
Played In Full : The 90s - The Definitive 12" Collection (3xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Resist Music 2006
101 Club Anthems (5xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Virgin, Virgin 2007
Appears On:
Funky Alternatives Four (LP, Comp) You And Me And Everyth... Concrete Productions 1989
Indie Top 20 Vol VII (CD, Comp) You, Me & Everything Beechwood Music 1989
Deep Heat 8 - The Hand Of Fate (2xCD, Comp) Make It Mine Telstar 1990
Greatest Hits Volume Two (2xLP) Progen One Little Indian 1990
Indie Top 20 Vol VIII (2 versions) Omega Amigo Beechwood Music ... 1990
Indie Top 20 Vol. X (2xLP) Make It Mine Beechwood Music 1990
Deep Heat 10 - The Awakening (2xCD, Comp) Hyperreal Telstar 1991
Essential Hardcore (CD, Comp) Possible Worlds Dino Entertainment 1991
Give Peace A Dance: A CND Compilation (Comp) (2 versions) Hear Me Oh My People (... Beechwood Music 1991
Hardcore Ecstasy (Cass) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Dino Entertainment 1991
The Unity Mix (1991 Megamix) (CD, Maxi, Mixed) Move Any Mountain International Dance Music 1991
Logic Trance (2xCD) Possible Worlds (Stick) Logic Records, BMG Ariola München GmbH 1992
Rave:1 (CD, Comp) Hyperreal Orbit Delabel 1992
Trancemaster 2 - The Goa Gap (CD, Comp) LSI (Frank De Wulf Mix) Eurovision Soundcarriers 1992
Best Of Rave Volume 2 (CD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (666... Low Price Music 1993
Rave Anthems (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Dino Entertainment 1995
Machine Soul: An Odyssey Into Electronic Dance Music (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (I.R... Rhino Records (2) 2000
The Greatest Trance Tracks Of All Times Vol. 2 (2xCD, Comp) Possible Worlds (Shame... interGROOVE 2000
Back To The Old Skool (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain Ministry Of Sound 2001
Played In Full : The 90s - The Definitive 12" Collection (3xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Resist Music 2006
The Ultimate Rave Techno Party (CD, Comp) Move Any Mountain CD Music  
Tracks Appear On:
A Pox Upon The Poll Tax (12", Comp) Darkness In Zion Peasant’s Revolt Records 1989
Funky Alternatives Four (LP, Comp) You And Me And Everyth... Concrete Productions 1989
Indie Top 20 Vol VII (CD, Comp) You, Me & Everything Beechwood Music 1989
Indie Top 20 Vol. VI - Pride Of Independents (CD, Comp) Transcendental Beechwood Music 1989
Deep Heat 8 - The Hand Of Fate (2xCD, Comp) Make It Mine Telstar 1990
Greatest Hits Volume Two (2xLP) Progen One Little Indian 1990
Indie Top 20 Vol VIII (2 versions) Omega Amigo Beechwood Music ... 1990
Indie Top 20 Vol. X (2xLP) Make It Mine Beechwood Music 1990
December 91 - Three (12") Progen DMC 1991
Deep Heat 10 - The Awakening (2xCD, Comp) Hyperreal Telstar 1991
Essential Hardcore (CD, Comp) Possible Worlds Dino Entertainment 1991
Give Peace A Dance: A CND Compilation (Comp) (2 versions) Hear Me Oh My People (... Beechwood Music 1991
Hardcore Ecstasy (Cass) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Dino Entertainment 1991
The Unity Mix (1991 Megamix) (CD, Maxi, Mixed) Move Any Mountain International Dance Music 1991
Top Dance (LP, Comp) Move Any Mountain Indisc 1991
Art Of Compilation CD 10 (CD, Comp, Promo) Make It Mine (Hilltop ... Art Of Mix 1992
Commercial Collection 8/92 (12") In The Mix, Progen (Mo... DMC 1992
Logic Trance (2xCD) Possible Worlds (Stick) Logic Records, BMG Ariola München GmbH 1992
Metropolis 00.11 (2x12", Comp, Whi) LSI (Love, Sex, Intell... Metropolis (3) 1992
Party People 2 (CD, Comp) L.S.I. (Beat Edit) Ultrapop 1992
Rave:1 (Comp) (2 versions) Hyperreal Orbit Delabel 1992
Trancemaster 2 - The Goa Gap (Comp) (2 versions) LSI (Frank De Wulf Mix) Eurovision Soundcarriers 1992
Best Of Rave Volume 2 (CD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (666... Low Price Music 1993
CD Collection 120 (CD) The Shamanic Experienc... DMC 1993
COMA - The Album 4 (2xLP, Comp) Phorever People (Beatm... COMA Records (DK) 1993
Commercial Collection 11/93 (12") Boss Drum DMC 1993
Commercial Collection 11/93 (12") Boss Drum DMC 1993
Dance Collection 6 (CD, Comp) Comin' On Mega Records 1993
Disc Drive Version 1.6 (2x12") Phorever People (Lolee... Disc Drive Records 1993
Future Mix 2 (12", Comp, Promo, Cle) Shamen Medley Future Mix 1993
Gridlock CD-10 (CD, Comp) Phorever People (Digit... Razormaid Records 1993
Mr Music Hits 11/93 (CD, Comp) Comin' On Mr Music (Sweden) 1993
Neo Diso Hits - Original Maxi Versions (CD, Comp) Comin' On (Culture Mix) Roughmix 1993
Rave:2 (CD, Comp) Boss Drum (Justin Robe... Delabel 1993
The Full Unity Megamix (Cass, Mixed) LSI (Love Sex Intellig... Indisc 1993
Pinacle Cassette Upfront 0004 (Cass, Comp, Promo) Untitled Pinnacle Independent News 1994
Songs From The Tee P (Comp) (2 versions) L.S.I. (Beat Edit) One Little Indian ... 1994
The Ultimate Dance Sensation Volume 3 (CD, Comp) Comin' On (Culture Mix) Roughmix 1994
BBC Radio 1 Interactive CD (10xFile, MP2) Conquistador Not On Label 1995
Dance Now! 4 (CD, Comp) Destination Eschaton Dance Pool, Sony Music Entertainment (Finland) Oy 1995
Rave Anthems (2xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode, Move ... Dino Entertainment 1995
This Is The Best Of Old Skool (6xCD, Comp, P/Mixed, Box) Move Any Mountain Beechwood Music 1996
This Is... Techno (2xCD, Comp + CD, Mixed, Comp + Box) Boss Drum Beechwood Music 1996
Best Dance 97 (CD, Comp, Mixed) Move Any Mountain '96 ... EMI (Hong Kong) Limited 1997
Jungle Jazz Vol. 2 (CD, Comp) Transamazonia (LTJ Buk... Irma 1997
The History Of Techno Vol. 2 (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Bea... ZYX Music 1997
Essential Selection (Summer 1998) (3xCD, Comp, Ltd, Mixed) Move Any Mountain (Pro... FFRR, FFRR 1998
Machine Soul: An Odyssey Into Electronic Dance Music (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (I.R... Rhino Records (2) 2000
The Greatest Trance Tracks Of All Times Vol. 2 (2xCD, Comp) Possible Worlds (Shame... interGROOVE 2000
Back To The Old Skool (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain Ministry Of Sound 2001
Pump Up The Volume (2xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Universal Music TV 2001
Rave Anthems (2xCD, Comp) L.S.I. Virgin 2001
Unbelievable (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain, L.S.I. Circa Records Ltd., Virgin 2001
Pop Goes The 90s (CD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Crimson 2002
Sorted! 40 Madchester Baggy Anthems (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Bea... Ministry Of Sound 2002
De Pre Historie 91 Volume 2 (CD, Comp) Move Any Mountain EVA Belgium 2003
The Ultimate Old Skool Album (6xCD, Comp, Unm) Ebeneezer Goode (Beat ... Decadance Recordings 2003
The Very Best Club Anthems Ever! (2xCDr, Album, Promo) Move Any Mountain Virgin 2003
Wild Gold Volume 2 (3xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode (Beat ... Central Station 2003
The Ultimate Chillout Ibiza Album (6xCD, Comp) Phorever People (The B... Decadance Recordings 2004
Back In The Day (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountin Virgin 2006
Bez's Madchester Anthems (2xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain Warner Music TV, V2TV 2006
Played In Full : The 90s - The Definitive 12" Collection (3xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Resist Music 2006
The No. 1 Rave Album (4xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode (Beat ... Decadance Recordings 2006
101 Club Anthems (5xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Virgin, Virgin 2007
Anthems 1991-2008 (3xCD) Ebeneezer Goode Ministry Of Sound 2007
Floorfillers Anthems (3xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goods Universal Music TV 2007
Greatest Hits & Remixes (Comp) (2 versions) Progen 91 (I.R.P. In T... New State Recordings 2007
In The Mix: Rave Revival (3xCD) Move Any Mountain (Lan... Virgin, EMI Records 2007
100 Hits Dance Anthems (Box + 5xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Demon Music Group 2008
100 Hits Dance Mix (5xCD, Comp, Box) LSI Demon Music Group 2008
101 90s Hits (5xCD, Comp) Ebeneezer Goode Virgin, EMI Records, Sony BMG Music Entertainment (UK) Ltd. 2008
The Very Best Of Euphoric Dance Breakdown 2009 (3xCD, Comp) Move Any Mountain (Bea... Ministry Of Sound 2009
Monsterjam 2 (CD, P/Mixed, Comp, RP) Boss Drum, Phorever Pe... DMC  
Unofficial Releases:
Deep Dance 23 (CD, Mixed) Phorever People Deep Dance 1993
Top Hits '93 Vol. 3 - Techno Pop (Cass, Comp) Phorever People Takt Music 1993
1000% The Best Of The Best Music Collection - Techno Dance Vol. 4 (CD, Comp, Ltd) Move Any Mountain Deconstruction (2) 2003
1000% The Best Of The Best Music Collection - Techno Dance Vol. 6 (CD, Comp, Ltd) Ebeneezer Goode Deconstruction (2) 2003
Ebeneezer Goode (Jakob Carrison Rmx) (12", S/Sided)   Winx (White), Not On Label (Jakob Carrison Remix Series) 2006
Afro Trance - Vol. 2 (LP) Pro-Gen Cosmic Communications  
DJ Maxi Single 146 (12", Comp, Ltd, Maxi, Promo) L.S.I. D.J. Mix Club  
DJ Maxi Single 172 (12", Comp, Ltd, Maxi, Promo) Boss Drum D.J. Mix Club  
Top Hits Formel Eins Vol. 1 (Cass, Comp) Comin' On Audio Max  
edit

YouTube Videos

The Shamen - Destination Eschaton
▸ show all 6 reviews

Reviews & Discussion

Review by chischis Jun 26, 2009
I must be a glutton for punishment, comparing The Shamen to The Beatles. Oh yes, bring it on all ye Angry Internet Men (or what I prefer to call "wankers") with your elitist opinions. Well bring it on if you must! We are all dancing about architecture anyway.

The Shamen certainly never had the cultural impact of the fab four, hounded as they were at the time by the UK press for the infamous Ebeneezer Goode with THAT chorus and along with the general rave culture backlash, The Shamen never stood a chance. So lets forget that aspect and talk music. First, some elimination:

Kraftwerk were hugely influential, but not comparable. They stuck firmly to their stately, gothic electro-pop and rarely deviated. No diversity, and only the merest hints of dance genres.

The Orb may have been diverse, but only within their distinctly ambient sphere, despite bringing in elements of reggae, dub, techno, house and only much later on, pop. With mixed results.

The Prodigy were hardcore through and through. They explored many aspects of the genre, but rarely sought to bring a pop side to it, until their dodgy newer singles in the noughties. So not them either.

The Beloved, perhaps, but too short-lived. New Order? New Wave, rock and pop, but they were never really "techno". Bjork? Well there might be something there, but she is one individual.

No, it is The Shamen that took all these modern electronic genres - done before by others, just as rock and pop had been done by others before the Beatles - and married them consistently to pop. What is Prince Of Popocatapetl if not ambient pop? It only has two vocal lines, but it is still a pop hook in what is otherwise an ambient song. I Do switches between big-beat and techno as Colin and Victoria sing about Shamanising, to yet more glorious pop hooks. Human NRG is a pop song set to a breaksy/big-beat (in 1990!) type rhythm. Transamazonia and Destination Eschaton are their takes on trance, set to pop vocal hooks. Obviously their main strides were in techno and rave, but they really were diverse.

They have numerous outstanding instrumental achievements as well, as far back as the experimental techno (for the time) piece Evil Is Eden, its lilting, shuffled rhythm predating Schaffel by a decade! Steve Hillage lent support on two beautiful ambient gliss pieces, Scientas and Agua Azul, but crucially they were not pure ambient, they had very memorable little hooks, flute and guitar on Scientas, and Agua Azul awash with a billion synths.

And Hempton Manor? How did Colin Angus and Richard West manage to compose such utterly beautiful, truly unique and unmatched melodic techno, house, trance, drum & bass, breaks and ambient all on the same album? There were other groups in the 90s that would dare to be as diverse (FSOL come to mind), but this much? And nowadays? Nope, it is all niches and subgenres, all the way.

I think it is also worth mentioning the massive "culture" of remixes that came about around these guys. Every single is worth picking up, because many producers brought their own talents to Shamen songs and created some superb alternate versions. Including names such as Richie Hawtin, Moby, LTJ Bukem, Frank De Wulf, even Graham Massey! I do not believe any band had been so remixed before, on such a huge scale.

So yeah, The Beatles for rock and pop, The Shamen for techno, house, electronica and pop. Not too hard to understand that this is a comparison worth making. What matters is that, musically, they had a distinct identity but did not pigeonhole themselves to one genre. They were pop, but they were many modern dance genres as well, and whenever they WANTED to be.

And that takes talent. So, no wonder dance music sucks now, eh?
Review by Crijevo Jun 22, 2007 (edited over 2 years ago)
In terms of commercial success, it's fair enough to say The Shamen released two fine techno-albums of their time - 'En-Tact' and 'Boss Drum'. Sadly, in favour of Mr. C's irritating raps, this thing basically repeats itself from that (turning) point on. However, many aren't aware of the group's early strengths based on socio-political issues and hard psychedelic fusion of rock and electronics (with samples all over).

The Shamen's 'phase one' counts one hell of a subversive collection; albums 'Drop' (1986), 'Strange Day Dreams' (1988), 'In Gorbachev We Trust' plus remixed effort called 'Phorward' (both 1989)... When it comes to religion and its questioning in terms of propaganda destroying much of its spiritual dignity, The Shamen (besides Depeche Mode's 'Blasphemous Rumours') recorded one of the most dangerous pop-songs ever - 'Jesus Loves Amerika' has a killer refrain, it spits out to the ears of hypocrits and with all of its anthemic power.

One side of this early phase of the band is as interestingly poppy on acid rock while the other side remains confusingly EBM-ish in its fundamental recognition. Brilliant early years these were...
Review by blim Mar 17, 2006 (edited over 3 years ago)
Ah, the Shamen. Made a bold move for a guitar-based band by (slowly) casting off their 60s-influenced psychedelic pop in favour of a more clubland feel, years before Primal Scream et al jumped aboard the bandwagon. Then tragedy struck when Will Sinnott drowned, and their music began to lose its depth as they chased the pop dream. For a while this seemed to work, but the mainstream audience is fickle and when they no longer had the hits, they'd already alienated their more undergound fans and disintegrated rapidly. I suspect that if Sinnott hadn't died, although they would still have had the hits (they were filming the video for "Progen 91" when he died), the Shamen might have kept a better balance between making truly psychedelic and tribal music (as was their stated aim) and simply talking about it while they churned out 3-minute pop songs. Anyone listening to Sinnott's tracks on En-Tact ("Lightspan" and "Evil is Even") can't fail to notice that they're among the best tracks the band ever did.
Review by BomberOne Jul 28, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)
Before becoming a successful - and then cheesy - and then forgetable - rave band, The Shamen were a indie electronic act with political points of views. Forget about the politics (how naive and misinformed we were then!), but what they did on the musical side was rather interesting, in fact much more than the rest of their career, IMO.
Of course, "Move any Moutain" truly fitted the spirit of 1990, but their previous semi-hit "Trancendental" (a collaboration with acid House pionneer Bam Bam) was better, in fact, and an EP like "Phorward" was really innovative.

With En-tact, things got a bit too cheesy, but some track were still interesting. But with their Boss Drum Lp, The Shamen became really a hit-machine, with fee strikes of creativity ; a kind of KLF without the cynical humor. Lots of production tricks, dull lyrics and top of the pop attitude, it was sad to see them sinking when other acts like Orbital, departing from similar 1990 roots, managed to remain innovative for a whole decade. Not to mentions groundbreaking people like Lfo or AFX, for example.

In fact you can draw a parallel with some others industrial and pre-techno acts that got taken by the techno turmoil, like Greater Than One for instance. But while Lee Newman (RIP) and Michael Wells, at least, remained creative and fun, The Shamen seemed to got "corrupted", and lost it on the way. Maybe it has to do with the death of their first leaded, replaced by Mr C, around that same time ? Maybe it was the ecstasy-goa-gaïa-consciousness bullshit ?
Maybe it was simply bad luck.
Anyway, their remain the records : Phorward Ep and En-tact are still quite soulful and enjoyable, and, in a way still hold the "naive" spirit of the era.
Review by Ashley_Pomeroy Jul 28, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)
Unfortunately for The Shamen, their early history as a credible indie-rave band and their apparently sincere belief in the transformative power of dance music was utterly obliterated by their short reign as Britain's most infamous chart rave band. After the success of 'Move any Mountain' and 'LSI', both of which were used a lot on television football, the group had a four-week stay at number one with 'Ebeneezer Goode', which became a tabloid sensation when it was pointed out to journalists that the chorus - 'eezer goode, eezer goode, he's Ebeneezer Goode' - was about ecstacy, the popular rave drug. From that point onwards the group were synonymous with naffness, and along with all the other dances acts of the period they faded away to nothing, with a little comeback in 1995 with 'Destination Eschaton'.

Just goes to show that if you're on a sinking ship in the freezing waters of the Atlantic, you're going to drown even if you barge your way to the front of the lifeboat. Might as well go down with dignity. Mr C's vocal delivery was very different to that of the late Will Sinott; the latter was low-key and sincere, whereas Mr C was brash and cock-er-nee. Nothing wrong with that, but it didn't seem right for a band which emphasised the contemplative, spiritual side of dance music. He is now a successful DJ, which is nice to know.

'Boss Drum' remains a decent summary of the state of popular dance music in Britain in 1992, and 'Phorever People' is a lovely ballad. 'En-Tact' sounds quite spartan, but it has a nice remix of 'Hear Me' by Orbital, which has a similar vocal effect to their later 'Halcyon'.
Review by LiNX Dec 08, 2003
I first heard The Shamen back in 2000 when they had already "disappeared into cyberspace" two years ago they completely changed my mind about music. Since that I'm a fan for life!. They played lots of quality electronic stuff in lots of different styles and if you are looking for something REAL good, take a look at their discography.
Recommended 100%!!!

Lists