Lounge emerged in the late 1980s as a label of endearment by younger fans whose parents had listened to such music in the 1960s. It has enjoyed resurgences in popularity in the 1980s and 1990s, led initially by figures such as
Buster Poindexter and
Jaymz Bee. In Japan, producer
Yasuharu Konishi became popular for his work with
Pizzicato Five, and is often considered "the Godfather of Shibuya-kei|," a genre mostly derived from 1960s lounge music. In the early 1990s the lounge revival was in full swing and included such groups as
Combustible Edison,
Love Jones,
The Coctails,
Pink Martini,
the High Llamas, Don Tiki, and
Nightcaps. The multinational group
the Gentle People, signed to the UK label
Rephlex Records, attracted an international following and appeared on various lounge and exotica compilations. Alternative band
Stereolab demonstrated the influence of lounge with releases like their 1993 EP
Space Age Bachelor Pad Music and their 1997 album
Dots and Loops, and in 1996 Capitol Records began issuing the
Ultra-Lounge series of lounge music albums. The lounge style was starkly in contrast to the
grunge music that dominated the period. These groups wore suits and played music inspired by earlier works of
Antônio Carlos Jobim,
Juan García Esquivel,
Louis Prima and many others. In 2004, the Parisian band
Nouvelle Vague released a
self-titled album in which they covered songs from the '80s post-punk and new wave genres in the style of bossa nova. Other artists have taken lounge music to new heights by recombining rock with pop, such as
Jon Brion,
The Bird and the Bee,
Triangle Sun,
Pink Martini, the
Buddha-Lounge series, and the surrounding regulars of
Café Largo. The movie
The Rise and Fall of Black Velvet Flag (2003) is a documentary about three older punk rockers who created a lounge-punk band. In 2018, British
rock band
Arctic Monkeys released their sixth studio album,
Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino. The album, which was a shift in style for the band after 2013's
AM, has a more lounge pop sound rather than their previous alternative rock sound. The album is a
concept album about a hotel on the Moon (
Tranquility Base is the site of the 1969
Apollo 11 Moon landing) and also reflects on modern society and technology, and its effect on the human mind, with frontman
Alex Turner taking inspiration from both old
science-fiction films and Neil Postman's 1985 book,
Amusing Ourselves to Death. Their seventh studio album,
The Car, also has a laid-back lounge pop sound, continuing their shift in sound to a lounge pop and
baroque pop style. ==In film==