Archive for the ‘Genres and Music History’ Category
Rockabilly Musicians From The 1950′s Served As Guides For Future Rock and Rollers
It is hard to describe how influential pioneers of the early rockabilly musicians who came after them. These musicians are innovative new brand in the 1950′s and constitute the rules of rock and roll, as they went along. And although they almost forgotten by most fans of modern music – and even modern rock musicians – its influence can not be easily denied.
It is easy to spot Elvis Presley and emphasize its influence. It changed everything in pop music. He shook the country music and rhythm and blues. Read the rest of this entry »
The Growth of Jazz Music
At the turn of the century from about 1920, marks its numerous artists by playing in the discreet underground nightclubs Called “speakeasies,” the high class, “Blind Pig” underclass or “Smokeasy” for tobacco users were made. The United States banned the sale ounces of alcoholic beverages and smoking tobacco in clubs as a constitutional amendment. Typically, you might find subterranean night club from year to year the threshold, without notice, to show that there is such as build-up inside. The dives aussi a secret door, which is investigating as a passage or alley just in case the police had run-Cam. Arrest the police force in which everyone Had the situation is the fact that you broke the law of Being There Were attribute. Read the rest of this entry »
Pop Music
Pop music is a genre of popular music differs from classical or art music and folk music. The term refers to certain stylistic features, but also the genre of artists who in many different styles such as rock, hip hop, rhythm and blues (R & B), and the country, making it a flexible category. The term “pop music” can also be used to particular subgenres (within the genre of pop music), that in some cases are known as soft rock and pop / rock to call.
Properties as a subgenus
Pop “should appeal to everyone” and “not of a particular place or mark any special taste.” In musical terms it is essentially “conservative” because they tried to swing to a large segment of the target demographic rather than the boundaries of art. It is “from above made available (for the record companies, radio programmers and concert promoters) rather than made from the bottom …” (Frith 2001, p.95-96). But over time Pop went from “people in general” to “sort” musically described as sounding like rap, but with vocals. This is because radio stations to call it “pop stations” by the preference of some heavy sounds to throw other popular groups that do not fit in other categories such as noise or rock in the “alternative” label. Read the rest of this entry »