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Music genre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 07/20/2006 01:23 AM

Music genre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A music genre is a category (or genre) of pieces of music that share a certain style or "basic musical language"
(van der Merwe 1989, p.3). Music may also be categorized by non-musical criteria such as geographical origin
though a single geographical category will often include a wide variety of sub-genres. It can also be said that a
music genre (or subgenre) is defined by the techniques, the styles, the context and the themes (content, spirit).

Contents
1 Categorization
1.1 Classical music
1.2 Gospel
1.3 Jazz
1.4 Latin American
1.5 Blues
1.6 Rhythm and blues
1.7 Funk
1.8 Rock
1.9 Pop
1.10 Country music
1.11 Electronic music
1.11.1 Electronic dance music
1.11.2 Electronica
1.12 Melodic music
1.13 Ska, Reggae, Dub, and related forms
1.14 Hip hop / Rap / Rapcore
1.15 Contemporary African music
2 Arguments
2.1 Subjectivity
2.2 Resistance
2.3 Advantages
3 References
4 See also

Categorization
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Music_genre&action=edit) .

Although there are many individual genres, it is possible to group them together into a number of overlapping
major groupings.

Classical music
The term classical music refers to a number of different, but related, genres. Without any qualification, the usual

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meaning of "classical music" in the English language is European classical music (an older usage describes
specifically the Western art music of the Classical music era). It can also refer to the classical music of non-
Western cultures such as Indian classical music or Chinese classical music.

In a Western context, classical music is generally a classification covering music composed and performed by
professionally trained artists. Classical music is a written tradition. It is composed and written using music
notation, and as a rule is performed faithfully to the score. In common usage, "classical music" often refers to
orchestral music in general, regardless of when it was composed or for what purpose (film scores and orchestral
arrangements on pop music recordings, example).

Gospel
Gospel is a musical genre characterised by dominant vocals (often with strong use of harmony) referencing lyrics
of a religious nature, particularly Christian. Subgenres include contemporary gospel and urban contemporary
gospel.

Jazz
Jazz is a musical form that grew out of a cross-fertilization of folk blues, ragtime, and European music,
particularly band music. It has been called the first native art form to develop in the United States.

The music has gone through a series of developments since its inception. In roughly chronological order they are:
Dixieland, swing/big band, bebop, hard bop, cool jazz, free jazz, jazz fusion and smooth jazz.

Jazz is primarily an instrumental form of music. The instrument most closely associated with jazz may be the
saxophone, followed closely by the trumpet. The trombone, piano, double bass, guitar and drums are also primary
jazz instruments. The clarinet and banjo were often used, especially in the earlier styles of jazz. Although there
have been many renowned jazz vocalists, and many of the most well-known jazz tunes have lyrics, the majority
of well-known and influential jazz musicians and composers have been instrumentalists. During the time of its
widest popularity, roughly 1920 to 1950, jazz and popular music had a very intimate connection. Popular songs
drew upon jazz influences, and many jazz hits were reworkings of popular songs, or lyrics were written for jazz
tunes in an attempt to create popular hits.

The single most distinguishing characteristic of jazz is improvisation. Jazz also tends to utilize complex chord
structures and an advanced sense of harmony. These characteristics in combination with the use of improvisation
require a high degree of technical skill and musical knowledge from the performers.

The art form today is a widely varied one, using influences from all of the past styles, although the root of
modern jazz is primarily bebop. Modern jazz can also incorporate elements of rock and roll, electronica, and hip-
hop.

Jazz was a direct influence on Rhythm and blues, and therefore a secondary influence on most later genres of
popular music. Modern American art music composers have often used elements of jazz in their compositions.

Latin American

Latin American Music, music of Mexico, Central America, South America, and the Caribbean (see West Indies).
The region of Latin America contains a rich variety of cultural and musical heritages, including those of lowland
Native Americans in the Amazon River area and parts of Central America; those of highland Native Americans in
Mexico, Guatemala, and the Andes; those of African Americans, especially in the Caribbean, Ecuador, Suriname,
Guyana, French Guiana, coastal Venezuela, Colombia, and northeastern Brazil; and those of people of Spanish
and Portuguese descent.

Blues

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The blues is a vocal and instrumental music form which emerged in the African-American community of the
United States. Blues evolved from West African spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts and chants and has its
earliest stylistic roots in West Africa. This musical form has been a major influence on later American and
Western popular music, finding expression in ragtime, jazz, big bands, rhythm and blues, rock and roll and
country music, as well as conventional pop songs and even modern classical music. Due to its powerful influence
that spawned other major musical genres originating from America, blues can be regarded as the root of pop as
well as American music.

Rhythm and blues

Rhythm and blues is a name for black popular music tradition. When speaking strictly of "rhythm 'n' blues", the
term may refer to black pop-music from 1940s to 1960s that was not jazz nor blues but something more
lightweight. The term "R&B" often refers to any contemporary black pop music. Early-1950s R&B music became
popular with both black and white audiences, and popular records were often covered by white artists, leading to
the development of rock and roll.

A notable subgenre of rhythm 'n' blues was doo-wop, which put emphasis on polyphonic singing. In the early
1960s rhythm 'n' blues took influences from gospel and rock and roll and thus soul music was born. In the late
1960s, funk music started to evolve out of soul; by the 1970s funk had become its own subgenre that stressed
complex, "funky" rhythm patterns and monotonistic compositions based on a riff or two. In the early to mid
1970s, hip hop music (also known as "rap") grew out of funk and reggae (see below). Funk and soul music
evolved into contemporary R&B (no longer an acronym) in the 1980s, which cross-pollinated with hip-hop for
the rest of the 20th century and into the 21st century.

Funk

Rock
Rock, in its broadest sense, can refer to almost all popular music recorded since the early 1950s. Its main features
include an emphasis on rhythm, and the use of electric instruments like the guitar.

Its earliest form, rock and roll, arose from multiple genres in the late 1940s, most importantly jump blues. It was
first popularized by performers like Chuck Berry, Bill Haley, Buddy Holly, and Elvis Presley, who fused the
sound with country music, resulting in rockabilly. Rock soon became one of the most popular genres, with girl
groups, garage rock and surf rock most popular in the US.

Starting the mid-1960s, a group of British bands inspired on American blues and R&B became popular on both
sides of the Atlantic -- the British Invasion, a catchall term for multiple genres (including British blues, Mersey
beat, and mod). These groups, including The Beatles, fused the earlier sounds with Appalachian folk music,
forming folk rock, as well as a variety of less-popular genres, including the singer-songwriter tradition.

The British Invasion evolved into psychedelic music, which in turn gave birth to jam bands and the classically-
influenced progressive rock. Some British blues and mod bands like The Yardbirds and The Who evolved into
hard rock. In the early 1970s appeared a more glamorous version of hard rock called glam rock, and a darker
sound known as heavy metal. In the early to mid-1970s, singer-songwriters and pop musicians led the charts, as
well as southern rock and roots rock performers, which fused modern techniques with a more traditionalist sound.

The late 1970s saw the rise of punk rock (with bands like The Clash or the Sex Pistols), notable for its rebellious
attitude and "Do-it-yourself" philosophy.

In the 1980s, rock continued to evolve, with metal becoming popular and punk mutating into other forms (New
Wave, post-punk, alternative rock, and hardcore punk). The two encountered a fusion of sorts, creating grunge in
the early 1990s. Alternative rock became more popular, with subgenres like Britpop, gothic rock, and shoegazing.

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Pop

Main Article :Pop music

Pop music is an important genre of popular music distinguished from classical or art music and from folk music
[1]. The term indicates specific stylistic traits but the genre also includes artists working in many styles (rock, hip
hop, rhythm and blues (R&B), and country), and it is reasonable to say that "pop music" is a flexible category. It
may also be referred to as soft rock or pop/rock.

Country music
Country music is usually used to refer to honky tonk today. Emerging in the 1930s in the United States, honky
tonk country was strongly influenced by the blues, as well as jug bands (which cannot be properly called honky
tonk). In the 1950s, country achieved great mainstream success by adding elements of rock and roll; this was
called rockabilly. In addition, from Swing and bluegrass emerged as a largely underground phenomenon. Later in
the decade, the Nashville sound, a highly polished form of country music, became very popular. In reaction to
this, harder-edged, gritty musicians sprung up in Bakersfield, California, inventing the Bakersfield sound. Merle
Haggard and similar artists brought the Bakersfield sound to mainstream audiences in the 1960s, while Nashville
started churning out countrypolitan. During the 1970s, the most popular genre was outlaw country, a heavily
rock-influenced style. The late 1980s saw the Urban Cowboys bring about an influx of pop-oriented stars during
the 1990s. Modern bluegrass music has remained mostly traditional, though progressive bluegrass and close
harmony groups do exist, and the sound is the primary basis for jam bands like the Grateful Dead.

Electronic music

Electronic music started long before the invention of the synthesizer with the use of tape loops and analogue
electronics in the 1950s and 1960s. All electronic music owes its historical existence to early pioneers of tape
experiments known as musique concrète, such as John Cage, Pierre Schaeffer and Karlheinz Stockhausen, as well
as early synthesists like Wendy Carlos, Jean-Michel Jarre, and Morton Subotnick. (See electronic art music).

Well known examples include the theme music to the TV series Doctor Who, recorded in 1963 by Delia
Derbyshire, and the catch-all "electronica," which can sometimes include all of the above electronic sub-genres,
but usually refers to electronic music without lyrics.

One of the first people to popularize the synthesizer was Wendy Carlos who performed classical music on the
synthesizer on the recording Switched-On Bach. Space music was popularized by the group Tangerine Dream,
among others, as a precursor to new age music. New age music served to support and perpetuate the values of the
new age movement.

Though there is some overlap between the various sub-genres of electronic music, Brian Eno, the creator of
ambient music, claimed that ambient had a bit of "evil" in it, whereas new age music did not. Eno's creation was
less values-driven than new age; his goal was to create music like wallpaper, insofar as the listener could listen to
or easily ignore the music.

Electronic dance music

Electronic dance music as we know it today really emerged in 1977 with Giorgio Moroder's From Here to
Eternity album.

There are now many subgenres of electronic dance music, these include: techno (mechanical sounding dance
music featuring little melody and more noise), trance (with a distinct style of instrumentation focused on complex,
uplifting chord progressions and melodies), Goa trance (spawning from industrial music and tribal dance, focusing
on creating psychedelic sound effects within the songs), house music (fully electronic disco music), big beat
(using older drum loops and more melodic elements sampled and looped), the formerly called jungle, now drum

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and bass (an offshoot of hardcore and Jamaican dancehall, that was named utilizing quick tempos with sampled
break beats, most notably the amen break and the funky drummer), Gabber (a Dutch development on techno,
which features extremely high tempos and lots of overdrive and distortion on the music, especially the bass drum
being distorted into a square wave tone), happy hardcore (a less confronting take on Gabber, fusing elements of
drum and bass as well and often including sped up vocals from 70s pop music), synthpop (features strong pop
songwriting/melodies with roots in 1980's dance music), and electro. Of these subgenres, trance and house are
probably the most widespread.

Electronic dance music is often composed to fit easily into a live DJ set.

Electronica

"Electronica" is a loosely defined genre that does not fall into the new age, techno or dance categories; it is often
referred to as "left-field". Styles of electronica include downtempo, illbient and trip-hop (among countless others,
see list of electronic music genres), which are all related in that they usually rely more on their atmospheric
qualities than electronic dance music, and make use of slower, more subtle tempos, sometimes excluding rhythm
completely.

IDM (an abbreviation for intelligent dance music) is an elusive and confusing genre classification that can only be
truly defined by flagbearers and flagburners like Aphex Twin and Autechre.

Melodic music

Melodic music is a term that covers various genres of non-classical music which are primarily characterised by
the dominance of a single strong melody line. Rhythm, tempo and beat are subordinate to the melody line or tune,
which is generally easily memorable, and followed without great difficulty. Melodic music is found in all parts of
the world, overlapping many genres, and may be performed by a singer or orchestra, or a combination of the two.

In the west, melodic music has developed largely from folk song sources, and been heavily influenced by
classical music in its development and orchestration. In many areas the border line between classical and melodic
popular music is imprecise. Opera is generally considered to be a classical form. The lighter operetta is
considered borderline, whilst stage and film musicals and musical comedy are firmly placed in the popular
melodic category. The reasons for much of this are largely historical.

Other major categories of melodic music include music hall and vaudeville, which, along with the ballad, grew
out of European folk music. Orchestral dance music developed from localised forms such as the jig, polka and
waltz, but with the admixture of Latin American, negro blues and ragtime influences, it diversified into countless
sub-genres such as big band, cabaret and Swing. More specialised forms of melodic music include military music,
religious music. Also video game music is often melodic.

Traditional pop music overlaps a number of these categories: big band music and musical comedy, for example,
are closely allied to traditional pop.

Ska, Reggae, Dub, and related forms

In Jamaica during the 1950s, American R&B was most popular, though mento (a form of folk music) was more
common in rural areas. A fusion of the two styles, along with soca and other genres, formed ska, an extremely
popular form of music intended for dancing. In the 1960s, reggae and dub emerged from ska and American rock
and roll.

Starting the late 1960s, a rock-influenced form of music began developing -- this was called rocksteady. With
some folk influences (both Jamaican and American), and the growing urban popularity of the Rastafari
movement, rocksteady evolved into what is now known as roots reggae.

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In the 1970s, a style called Lovers rock became popular primarily in the United Kingdom by British performers of
ballad-oriented reggae music. The 1970s also saw the emergence of Two Tone in Coventry, England, with bands
fusing ska and punk, as well as covering original ska tracks. Punk band The Clash also used Dub and reggae
elements.

Dub emerged in Jamaica when sound system DJs began taking away the vocals from songs so that people could
dance to the beat alone. Soon, pioneers like King Tubby and Lee Scratch Perry began adding new vocals over the
old beats; the lyrics were rhythmic and rhyme-heavy. After the popularity of reggae died down in the early 1980s,
derivatives of dub dominated the Jamaican charts. These included ragga and dancehall, both of which remained
popular in Jamaica alone until the mainstream breakthrough of American gangsta rap (which evolved out of dub
musicians like DJ Kool Herc moving to American cities). Ragga especially now has many devoted followers
throughout the world.

Reggaeton is a fusion of reggae and rap, popular in Latin America, but gradually appearing in the mainstream
charts.

Hip hop / Rap / Rapcore

Hip hop music can be seen as a subgenre of R&B tradition (see above). Hip hop culture, the movement from
which the music came, began in inner cities in the US in the 1970s. The earliest recordings, from the late-1970s
and early 1980s, are now referred to as old school hip hop. In the later part of the decade, regional styles
developed. East Coast hip hop, based out of New York City, was by far the most popular as hip hop began to
break into the mainstream. West Coast hip hop, based out of Los Angeles, was by far less popular until 1992,
when Dr. Dre's The Chronic revolutionized the West Coast sound, using slow, stoned, lazy beats in what came to
be called G Funk. Soon after, a host of other regional styles became popular, most notably Southern rap, based
out of Atlanta and New Orleans, primarily. Atlanta-based performers like OutKast and Goodie Mob and Ludacris
soon developed their own distinct sound, which came to be known as Dirty South. As hip hop became more
popular in the mid-1990s, alternative hip hop gained in popularity among critics and long-time fans of the music.

De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising (1989) was perhaps the first "alternative hip hop" blockbuster, and helped
develop a specific style called jazz rap, characterized by the use of live instrumentation and/or jazz samples.
Other less popular forms of hip hop include various non-American varieties; Japan, Britain, Mexico, Sweden,
Finland, France, Germany, Italy and Turkey have vibrant hip hop communities. In Puerto Rico, a style called
reggaeton is popular. Electro hip hop was invented in the 1980s, but is distinctly different from most old school
hip hop (as is go go, another old style). Some other genres have been created by fusing hip hop with techno (trip
hop) and heavy metal (rapcore). In the late 1980s, Miami's hip hop scene was characterized by bass-heavy
grooves designed for dancing -- Miami bass music. Horrorcore, or Acid Rap is mainly credited to Detroit and the
Midwest. There are also rappers with Christian themes in the lyrics -- this is Christian hip hop.

Perhaps the most recent development in hip hop is the Backpacker sub-genre. Characterized by a renewed focus
on poetry and Hip hop culture, it includes artists such as Sage Francis, Atmosphere, and Eyedea and Abilities.

Contemporary African music


Since the 1960s, most African popular music incorporates traditional local vocal, instrumental, and percussive
styles, but also draws heavily on rock, reggae, and/or hip hop. For example raï, which originated in Algeria and
spread throughout North Africa and to the North African diaspora, especially in France, began with topical songs
based in the local traditional music, but, starting around 1980, began to incorporate elements of hip hop.

Other notable contemporary African genres include Zulu jive (South Africa), Highlife (Ghana, Nigeria), Zouk
(Cape Verde), Soukous (Zaire, Congo) and in Nigeria jùjú music (now nearly a century old, and constantly
evolving) and Afrobeat. Many African countries have also developed their own versions of reggae and hip hop.

Arguments
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Subjectivity

One of the problems with the grouping of music into genres is that it is a subjective process that has a lot to do
with the individual's personal understanding and way of listening to music. This is especially true in sub-genres.
One example is Led Zeppelin, which could be called heavy metal, hard rock, or blues, depending on one's
interpretation. Another difficulty with grouping artists into genres is that, for many, their style of music changes
over time.

Some genre labels are quite vague, and may be contrived by critics; post-rock, for example, is a term devised and
defined by Simon Reynolds. Another example of this is video game music, which while defined by its media, can
also represent its own style, as well as that of any other musical genre.

Resistance
Categorizing music, especially into finer genres or sub genres, can be difficult for newly emerging styles or for
pieces of music that incorporate features of multiple genres. Attempts to pigeonhole particular musicians in a
single genre are sometimes ill-founded as they may produce music in a variety of genres over time or even within
a single piece. Some people feel that the categorization of music into genres is based more on commercial and
marketing motives than musical criteria. John Zorn, for example, a musician whose work has covered a wide
range of genres, wrote in Arcana: Musicians on Music that genres are tools used to "commodify and
commercialize an artist's complex personal vision".

Advantages
Categorizing music by genre does make it easier to trace threads through music history, and makes it easier for
individuals to find artists that they enjoy. Moreover, the use of genre labels may actually drive the development of
new music (especially in a commercial context) insofar as it helps cultivate the interest and participation of a
target audience in the early and middle stages of a musical trend. Most new genre labels are aimed at the youth
market, who typically desire to contrast the mainstream, yet conform to their peer group... resulting in readily
marketed fads of all kinds, including music genres. Swing, Rock, New-Wave, Rap, and Grunge are all examples
of music genres in which millions of young people enjoyed being different... in unison. This disproportionate
commercial targeting of genres towards the youth market may diminish as young people increasingly shift from
being music "buyers"... to being music "down loaders", with or without a purchase involved.

References
van der Merwe, Peter (1989). Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular
Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0193161214.

See also
Category:Music genres
Genealogy of musical genres
Ishkur's Guide to Electronic Music
List of music genres

Music genres
Genres of music : A-F · G-M · N-R · S-Z · Classical · Popular · Local sounds · Regional and cultural
Blues · Country · Electronic · Folk · Hip hop · Heavy metal · Industrial · Jazz · Punk · Reggae · Pop · Rock
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Categories: Incomplete lists | Genres | Music genres

This page was last modified 13:10, 19 July 2006.


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