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Acoustic Rock
Acoustic rock is a style of rock music built primarily around acoustic instruments—especially steel‑string acoustic guitars—while retaining rock’s song forms, rhythmic drive, and hook‑oriented choruses. Compared with folk or traditional singer‑songwriter material, acoustic rock tends to use stronger backbeats (often played with light drums or hand percussion), more prominent bass movement, and dynamic, chorus‑centric arrangements. The result is a warm, wood‑toned timbre with the energy and structures of rock, but without the distortion and heaviness typical of electric guitar‑led styles. The genre spans intimate solo performances to full‑band “unplugged” settings, often featuring strummed open chords, fingerstyle passages, vocal harmonies, and occasional alternate tunings or capo use to shape color and register.
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Alternative Pop
Alternative pop is a strand of pop music that keeps the melodic accessibility of mainstream pop while foregrounding unconventional songwriting, left‑field production, and an indie or art‑driven sensibility. It often blends acoustic and electronic timbres, juxtaposes intimate vocals with textural sound design, and favors mood, concept, and experimentation over radio‑formula structures. Hooks remain central, but they may sit within atypical forms, lo‑fi palettes, off‑kilter rhythms, or cinematic arrangements. Lyrically, alternative pop tends toward introspection, ambiguity, and subcultural reference points, addressing identity, technology, and contemporary alienation as frequently as classic pop themes like romance.
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Alternative Rock
Alternative rock is a broad umbrella for guitar-based rock that emerged from the independent and college-radio scenes as a counterpoint to mainstream, commercial rock. It blends the energy and ethos of punk with the textural and songwriting experiments of post-punk, new wave, jangle pop, and noise rock, often foregrounding introspective or socially aware lyrics. Across its many strains—from the melodic minimalism of college rock to the loud-quiet-loud dynamics of grunge and the artful experimentation of Radiohead-era modernism—alternative rock prioritizes authenticity, sonic individuality, and a do-it-yourself approach. Its sound ranges from chiming, chorus-laden clean guitars to abrasive distortion and feedback, supported by straightforward rock rhythms or off-kilter grooves, and production that can be either raw and live-sounding or polished yet unconventional.
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Ambient
Ambient is a form of electronic and electroacoustic music that prioritizes tone, atmosphere, and texture over conventional song structures and rhythmic drive. It typically features slow-moving harmonies, sustained drones, gentle timbral shifts, and extensive use of space and silence. Rather than drawing attention to itself through hooks or beats, ambient is designed to be as ignorable as it is interesting, rewarding both background listening and focused immersion. Artists often employ synthesizers, samplers, tape loops, field recordings, and subtle acoustic instruments, with reverb and delay creating a sense of place. Substyles range from luminous, consonant soundscapes to darker, more dissonant atmospheres.
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Americana
Americana is a contemporary umbrella term for U.S. roots music that blends folk, country, blues, bluegrass, gospel, and roots rock into a songwriter-centered, largely acoustic-leaning sound. Hallmarks include story-driven lyrics; warm, organic production; and traditional instrumentation such as acoustic guitar, mandolin, banjo, fiddle, harmonica, pedal steel, upright or electric bass, and restrained drums. Rhythms often draw on the train beat, shuffles, two-step, waltz time, and relaxed backbeats. Harmonically it favors diatonic progressions (I–IV–V, I–vi–IV–V), modal tinges (Mixolydian), and close vocal harmonies. Rather than a rigid style, Americana functions as a bridge among related roots traditions, emphasizing authenticity, regional imagery, and narrative songwriting over genre flashiness.
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Art Pop
Art pop is a strand of pop music that treats the pop song as a canvas for high-concept ideas, experimental techniques, and cross-media aesthetics. It marries accessible melodies and hooks with the visual culture of art schools, the conceptual rigor of the avant-garde, and the studio-as-instrument ethos. Sonically, art pop favors eclectic instrumentation (synths, orchestral timbres, guitars, found sounds), unusual song forms, and sophisticated harmony. It often employs collage, musique concrète–like textures, and theatrical vocal delivery while still keeping a pop-facing surface. Beyond sound, art pop is deeply visual and conceptual: albums are framed as coherent artworks, stagecraft and video are integral, and lyrics tend toward intertextuality, character work, irony, and social commentary. The result is pop that is both immediate and idea-driven.
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Art Rock
Art rock is a branch of rock music that treats the studio and the album as spaces for artistic experimentation, emphasizing conceptual ideas, ambitious arrangements, and cross-pollination with modernist and avant-garde traditions. It typically favors extended song forms, thematic or conceptual unity, and non-standard instrumentation (strings, woodwinds, synthesizers) alongside rock’s core band setup. Lyrically, it leans toward literary, surreal, or philosophical subjects and often adopts theatrical presentation. Where mainstream rock centers on immediacy and hooks, art rock embraces risk: unusual time signatures, timbral exploration, complex harmony, tape and electronic manipulation, and interludes that draw from classical, jazz, minimalism, and experimental music.
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Avant-Garde
Avant-garde music is an umbrella term for boundary-pushing practices that challenge prevailing norms of harmony, rhythm, timbre, form, and performance. It privileges experimentation, conceptual rigor, and a willingness to reframe what counts as music at all. Historically tied to early 20th‑century artistic modernism, avant-garde music introduced atonality, the emancipation of noise, and new forms of notation and process. It embraces indeterminacy, extended techniques, electronics, spatialization, and multimedia performance, treating sound as material to be sculpted, questioned, and reinvented.
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Krautrock
Krautrock is an experimental form of rock that emerged in late-1960s West Germany, characterized by hypnotic repetition, long-form structures, and a forward-looking embrace of electronics and studio experimentation. It typically features a steady, driving 4/4 “motorik” beat, circular bass ostinatos, sparse harmonic movement, and textural layering that draws from minimalism, free improvisation, and avant-garde composition. Rather than virtuosic solos, the emphasis is on collective groove, trance-inducing momentum, and timbral exploration. The sound ranges from raw, percussive jams to spacious, cosmic electronics, often eschewing conventional Anglo-American blues forms in favor of a distinctly European modernist aesthetic.
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Blues
Blues is an African American musical tradition defined by expressive "blue notes," call-and-response phrasing, and a characteristic use of dominant-seventh harmony in cyclical song forms (most famously the 12‑bar blues). It is as much a feeling as a form, conveying sorrow, resilience, humor, and hard-won joy. Musically, blues commonly employs the I–IV–V progression, swung or shuffled rhythms, and the AAB lyric stanza. Melodies lean on the minor/major third ambiguity and the flattened fifth and seventh degrees. Core instruments include voice, guitar (acoustic or electric), harmonica, piano, bass, and drums, with slide guitar, bends, and vocal melismas as signature techniques. Over time the blues has diversified into regional and stylistic currents—Delta and Piedmont country blues, urban Chicago and Texas blues, West Coast jump and boogie-woogie—while profoundly shaping jazz, rhythm & blues, rock and roll, soul, funk, and much of modern popular music.
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Blues Rock
Blues rock is a guitar-driven style that fuses the raw feeling and 12‑bar structures of the blues with the power, volume, and rhythmic punch of rock. It emphasizes riff-based songs, pentatonic and blues-scale soloing, call‑and‑response between voice and guitar, and an expressive, often gritty vocal delivery. Typical ensembles are power trios (guitar, bass, drums) or quartet formats adding second guitar, keyboards, or harmonica, and performances commonly feature extended improvisation. Sonically, it favors overdriven tube-amp tones, sustained bends, vibrato, and dynamic contrasts, moving from shuffles and boogies to straight‑eighth rock grooves.
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Cabaret
Cabaret is an intimate form of stage entertainment centered on songs, witty monologues, satire, and character pieces, typically presented in small rooms with table seating and a master of ceremonies. Performers address the audience directly, and the atmosphere is conversational, risqué, and often politically or socially pointed. Musically, cabaret blends the French chanson tradition with Weimar-era “Kabarett” and, later, American torch-song and jazz idioms. Arrangements are usually piano-led with small ensembles (accordion, violin, clarinet, upright bass, light percussion), supporting nuanced storytelling and dramatic delivery. Vocal approaches range from parlando (speech-like) delivery to a smoky croon. Common grooves include waltz and musette-inflected 3/4, tango and habanera patterns, foxtrot, and slow blues; harmonies are tonal with chromatic color and expressive rubato. Lyrics favor irony, double entendre, longing, and social commentary.
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Coldwave
Coldwave is a European post-punk offshoot characterized by icy, minimalist arrangements, prominent basslines, sparse drum machines, and a detached vocal delivery. Emerging first in France (and neighboring Belgium) in the late 1970s and peaking through the mid-1980s, it blends punk’s austerity with the synthetic textures of early analog keyboards and stark, minor-key guitar figures. The mood is melancholic and introspective—often sung in French or English—favoring rigid rhythms, chorus-drenched guitars, and compact songwriting that foregrounds atmosphere over virtuosity. Its "cold" aesthetic refers as much to the emotional temperature of the music as to the gray-toned production: dry snares, steely bass, and reverb used not for lushness but for distance.
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Dark Wave
Dark wave is a moody, melancholic offshoot of post-punk and new wave that emphasizes minor-key harmonies, somber timbres, and introspective or romantic lyrical themes. It blends the icy textures of early synthesizers and drum machines with reverb-laden guitars and melodic, driving basslines. The style typically features baritone or ethereal vocals, atmospheric production with heavy use of chorus, delay, and reverb, and tempos that range from slow and brooding to mid-tempo and danceable. Dark wave spans both guitar-oriented and synth-forward approaches, and often overlaps with related movements such as coldwave, minimal wave, and ethereal wave.
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Downtempo
Downtempo is a mellow, groove-oriented branch of electronic music characterized by slower tempos, plush textures, and a focus on atmosphere over dancefloor intensity. Typical tempos range from about 60–110 BPM, with swung or laid-back rhythms, dub-informed basslines, and warm, jazz-tinged harmonies. Stylistically, it blends the spaciousness of ambient, the head-nodding rhythms of hip hop and breakbeat, and the cosmopolitan smoothness of lounge and acid jazz. Producers often use sampled drums, Rhodes or Wurlitzer electric pianos, guitar licks with delay, and field recordings to create intimate, cinematic soundscapes. The mood spans from soulful and romantic to introspective and dusk-lit, making it a staple of after-hours listening, cafes, and relaxed club back rooms.
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Dream Pop
Dream pop is a subgenre of alternative and indie rock that emphasizes atmosphere, texture, and mood over traditional rock dynamics. It is characterized by shimmering, reverb-laden guitars, soft and often breathy vocals, steady but subdued rhythms, and lush harmonic beds created with chorus, delay, and ambient-style processing. Rather than building around riffs or virtuosity, dream pop prioritizes hypnotic repetition, impressionistic lyrics, and a sense of weightless drift, frequently drawing on neo-psychedelia and ambient aesthetics. Its canonical sound coalesced in the mid-1980s (especially around the 4AD label), and later intersected with and helped seed shoegaze and many subsequent bedroom- and internet-era pop styles.
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Ebm
Electronic Body Music (EBM) is a hard-edged, dance‑oriented form of electronic music that fuses the mechanical textures of industrial with the propulsive simplicity of club rhythms. It is characterized by rigid 4/4 beats, sequenced and heavily compressed basslines, clipped synth stabs, and shouted, often slogan‑like vocals. Classic EBM favors minimal harmonic content and a stark, machine‑age aesthetic. Songs typically sit around 110–125 BPM, emphasize physical movement (the “body” in EBM), and use analog drum machines, step‑sequenced monosynths, and gritty samplers. Themes commonly address power, control, technology, futurism, and urban/industrial life.
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Electro
Electro is an early 1980s machine-funk style built around drum machines (especially the Roland TR-808), sequenced basslines, and a futuristic, robotic aesthetic. It emphasizes syncopated rhythms, sparse arrangements, and timbres drawn from analog and early digital synthesizers. Vocals, when present, are often delivered via vocoder or rap-style chants, reinforcing a sci‑fi, cyborg persona. Electro’s grooves powered breakdance culture, and its sonic palette—crisp 808 kicks, snappy snares, dry claps, cowbells, and squelchy bass—became foundational to later techno and bass music.
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Electronic
Electronic is a broad umbrella genre defined by the primary use of electronically generated or electronically processed sound. It encompasses music made with synthesizers, drum machines, samplers, computers, and studio/tape techniques, as well as electroacoustic manipulation of recorded or synthetic sources. The genre ranges from academic and experimental traditions to popular and dance-oriented forms. While its sonic palette is rooted in electricity and circuitry, its aesthetics span minimal and textural explorations, structured song forms, and beat-driven club permutations. Electronic emphasizes sound design, timbre, and studio-as-instrument practices as much as melody and harmony.
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Electropop
Electropop is a branch of pop music that foregrounds electronic instruments—especially synthesizers, drum machines, and sequencers—to deliver catchy, hook-driven songs. It preserves the verse–pre-chorus–chorus architecture and melodic immediacy of pop while replacing most traditional band instrumentation with programmed rhythms, synthetic bass lines, and glossy textures. The style emphasizes earworm toplines, precise rhythmic grids, and tightly produced arrangements that often highlight contrast between minimal, punchy verses and expansive, anthemic choruses. Timbres range from warm analog pads and arpeggiators reminiscent of the late 1970s/early 1980s to ultra-modern, hyper-detailed sound design, making electropop both retro-leaning and future-facing depending on the artist.
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Experimental
Experimental music is an umbrella term for practices that prioritize exploration, process, and discovery over adherence to established genre norms. It embraces new sound sources, nonstandard tuning systems, indeterminacy and chance operations, graphic and open-form scores, extended techniques, and technology-led sound design (tape, electronics, computers, and live processing). Rather than a single style, it is a methodology and ethos: testing hypotheses about sound, structure, and performance, often blurring boundaries between composition, improvisation, sound art, and performance art. Listeners can expect unfamiliar timbres, unusual forms, and an emphasis on how music is made as much as the resulting sound.
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Folk Pop
Folk pop is a commercially friendly blend of traditional folk sensibilities and modern pop songwriting. It preserves the acoustic instrumentation, close harmonies, and storytelling of folk while adopting pop structures, memorable hooks, and radio-ready production. The genre is marked by clear vocals, singalong choruses, and warm, organic textures built around acoustic guitar, light percussion, and sometimes banjo, mandolin, or strings. Lyrically it is personal and narrative-driven, often touching on love, memory, place, and everyday life in a direct and relatable way.
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Folk Rock
Folk rock is a fusion genre that blends the narrative lyricism, modal melodies, and acoustic timbres of traditional folk with the backbeat, amplification, and song structures of rock. It typically pairs acoustic or traditional instruments (acoustic guitar, mandolin, fiddle) with a rock rhythm section (electric guitar, bass, drums), often featuring chiming 12‑string guitar textures, close vocal harmonies, and socially conscious or storytelling lyrics. The result ranges from intimate, reflective ballads with a steady backbeat to more anthemic, roots‑driven rock. Emerging in the mid‑1960s through artists such as Bob Dylan and The Byrds, folk rock became a gateway for traditional and roots materials to enter mainstream popular music, and it seeded later movements from country rock and Americana to jangle pop and modern indie folk.
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Garage Psych
Garage psych is a fuzz-drenched fusion of raw, do-it-yourself garage rock with the kaleidoscopic textures and mind-bending aesthetics of psychedelic rock. It favors simple, pounding rhythms; primitive, overdriven guitars; and swirling organs or tape-delayed vocals, all delivered with a lo-fi, room-mic immediacy. Lyrically and sonically, it blends teenage angst and street-level grit with surreal imagery, reverb-heavy atmospheres, and exploratory effects, bridging the gap between bar-band energy and psychedelic experimentation.
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Hard Rock
Hard rock is a loud, riff-driven style of rock music built around heavily amplified electric guitars, a powerful rhythm section, and assertive vocals. Songs typically center on memorable, blues-based guitar riffs, strong backbeats, and energetic, often shouted or belted choruses. The genre emphasizes power, groove, and visceral impact over intricate harmony or extended improvisation. Distortion, power chords, pentatonic melodies, and call‑and‑response between vocals and guitar are core traits, while lyrical themes often explore rebellion, lust, swagger, escape, and cathartic release.
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Heavy Psych
Heavy psych is a louder, denser offshoot of late‑1960s psychedelic rock characterized by fuzz‑soaked guitar tones, wah‑drenched solos, thunderous drums, and a visceral low‑end. It takes the exploratory jams and mind‑bending studio tricks of psychedelia and pushes them toward proto‑metal weight and volume. Musically, it leans on blues‑based riffs, pentatonic and modal improvisation (especially Dorian and Mixolydian), droning vamps, and feedback‑saturated climaxes. Production often favors analog saturation, tape echo, phasing, and other period effects that magnify a sense of heady, cosmic intensity. The result is a sound that bridges psychedelic freedom and hard rock punch—music that feels both trippy and physically overwhelming, laying essential groundwork for heavy metal, stoner rock/metal, doom, and space rock.
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House
House is a dance music genre that emerged in Chicago in the early 1980s, defined by a steady four-on-the-floor kick drum, off-beat hi-hats, soulful or hypnotic vocals, and groove-centric basslines. Typical tempos range from 118–130 BPM, and tracks are structured in DJ-friendly 16–32 bar phrases designed for seamless mixing. Drawing on disco’s celebratory spirit, electro-funk’s drum-machine rigor, and Italo/Hi-NRG’s synth-led sheen, house prioritizes repetition, tension-and-release, and communal energy on the dancefloor. Its sound palette often includes 808/909 drums, sampled or replayed disco/funk elements, filtered loops, piano/organ stabs, and warm, jazzy chords. Over time, house diversified into many substyles—deep house, acid house, French house, tech house, progressive house, and more—yet it remains a global foundation of club culture, known for emphasizing groove, inclusivity, and euphoria.
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Indie Pop
Indie pop is a melodic, DIY-rooted branch of alternative music that blends the immediacy of pop songwriting with the independence and aesthetics of underground scenes. It typically features jangly, clean-toned guitars, tuneful bass lines, compact song structures, and intimate, literate lyrics that balance sweetness with subtle melancholy. The sound often leans toward bright chord progressions, earworm choruses, and understated production, favoring charm and personality over gloss. Culturally, indie pop is tied to small labels, fanzines, and community radio, with influential scenes and imprints such as Postcard, Sarah, and Creation laying the groundwork for its global diffusion.
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Indie Rock
Indie rock is a guitar-centered rock music movement defined as much by its independent production and DIY ethos as by specific sonic traits. Early practitioners worked outside major-label systems, distributing music via small labels, college radio, and fanzines, which fostered a culture of experimentation and community. Sonically, indie rock ranges from jangly, melodic songs to abrasive noise-leaning textures, from lo-fi home recordings to meticulously arranged studio works. Hallmarks include inventive song structures, literate or introspective lyrics, and a willingness to blend elements of punk, post-punk, folk rock, and psychedelia. Over time, the term has come to describe both an approach to making music and the broad cluster of styles that grew from the independent rock underground.
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Industrial
Industrial is an experimental electronic music tradition that uses abrasive timbres, mechanical rhythms, and transgressive aesthetics. Its sound palette often includes distorted drum machines, tape loops, metallic percussion, feedback, and found-object recordings alongside synthesizers and samplers. Emerging from late-1970s UK underground art and performance scenes, industrial foregrounds themes of dehumanization, technology, surveillance, and power. Releases frequently embrace anti-commercial presentation, stark graphic design, and confrontational performance art, treating the studio as a laboratory for sonic manipulation rather than a vehicle for conventional songcraft. While early industrial emphasized noise, tape processing, and avant-garde collage, later waves fused the style with dancefloor precision (EBM), rock and metal heft, and club-oriented production, giving rise to a broad post-industrial family that remains influential in experimental, electronic, and popular music.
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Noise
Noise is an experimental music genre that uses non-traditional sound sources, distortion, feedback, and extreme dynamics as primary musical materials. Instead of emphasizing melody, harmony, or conventional rhythm, it focuses on texture, density, timbre, and the physical presence of sound. Practitioners sculpt saturated walls of sound, piercing feedback, metallic clatter, contact-mic scrapes, tape hiss, and electronic interference into works that can be confrontational or meditative. Performances often highlight process and immediacy—improvisation, body movement, and site-specific acoustics—while recordings can range from lo-fi cassette overload to meticulously layered studio constructions. Though rooted in early avant-garde ideas, the genre coalesced as a distinct practice in the late 1970s and 1980s, especially through Japan’s ‘Japanoise’ scene, and subsequently influenced numerous styles across industrial, punk-adjacent, and experimental electronic music.
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Pop
Pop is a broad, hook-driven style of popular music designed for wide appeal. It emphasizes memorable melodies, concise song structures, polished vocals, and production intended for radio, charts, and mass media. While pop continually absorbs elements from other styles, its core remains singable choruses, accessible harmonies, and rhythmic clarity. Typical forms include verse–pre-chorus–chorus, frequent use of bridges and middle-eights, and ear-catching intros and outros. Pop is not defined by a single instrumentation. It flexibly incorporates acoustic and electric instruments, drum machines, synthesizers, and increasingly digital production techniques, always in service of the song and the hook.
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Post-Punk
Post-punk is a broadly experimental strain of rock that emerged in the late 1970s as artists sought to push beyond the speed, simplicity, and orthodoxy of first-wave punk. It typically features angular, bass-forward grooves; jagged or minimal guitar lines; stark, spacious production; and an openness to dub, funk, electronic, and avant-garde ideas. Lyrics often examine alienation, urban decay, politics, and the inner life with artful or abstract delivery. A studio-as-instrument approach, emphasis on rhythm section interplay, and an appetite for non-rock textures (tape effects, drum machines, found sound, synths) distinguish the style. The result can be danceable yet tense, cerebral yet visceral, and emotionally restrained yet intensely expressive.
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Psychedelic
Psychedelic is an umbrella term for music that seeks to evoke, emulate, or accompany altered states of consciousness through sound, arrangement, and studio technique. It emphasizes timbral color, drones, modal harmony, surreal or mystical lyrics, and immersive production, often using tape manipulation, extended effects, and non‑Western instruments (notably from Indian classical traditions). The result ranges from delicate, dreamlike textures to dense, kaleidoscopic soundscapes intended to expand perception and dissolve conventional song form.
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Psychedelic Pop
Psychedelic pop is a 1960s-born fusion that marries the hook-driven immediacy of pop with the timbral color, studio experimentation, and altered-perception aesthetics of psychedelic music. It favors concise song forms and memorable melodies while introducing unusual sounds (sitar, Mellotron, harpsichord), tape effects (backmasking, varispeed, flanging), and surreal or whimsical imagery. Compared to psychedelic rock, it is brighter, more tuneful, and radio-friendly, often wrapping adventurous production techniques in singable choruses and lush vocal harmonies.
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Psychedelic Rock
Psychedelic rock is a style of rock music that seeks to evoke, simulate, or amplify altered states of consciousness. It emphasizes timbral color, textural layering, and extended forms over traditional verse–chorus efficiency. Hallmarks include droning or modal harmonies, jangling or heavily fuzzed guitars, swirling organs or synthesizers, and extensive use of studio effects such as tape delay, reverse tape, phasing, flanging, and Leslie-speaker rotation. Rhythms often loosen into hypnotic vamps and long improvisations, while lyrics tend toward surreal imagery, cosmic themes, and introspection. The sound draws from Indian classical drones and scales, blues and R&B roots, folk lyricism, free-jazz openness, and the burgeoning studio experimentalism of the mid‑1960s. It became a cultural emblem of the counterculture era.
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Punk
Punk is a fast, abrasive, and minimalist form of rock music built around short songs, stripped-down instrumentation, and confrontational, anti-establishment lyrics. It emphasizes DIY ethics, raw energy, and immediacy over virtuosity, often featuring distorted guitars, shouted or sneered vocals, and simple, catchy melodies. Typical songs run 1–3 minutes, sit around 140–200 BPM, use power chords and basic progressions (often I–IV–V), and favor live, unpolished production. Beyond sound, punk is a cultural movement encompassing zines, independent labels, political activism, and a fashion vocabulary of ripped clothes, leather, and safety pins.
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Rock
Rock is a broad family of popular music centered on amplified instruments, a strong backbeat, and song forms that foreground riffs, choruses, and anthemic hooks. Emerging from mid‑20th‑century American styles like rhythm & blues, country, and gospel-inflected rock and roll, rock quickly expanded in scope—absorbing folk, blues, and psychedelic ideas—while shaping global youth culture. Core sonic markers include electric guitar (often overdriven), electric bass, drum kit emphasizing beats 2 and 4, and emotive lead vocals. Rock songs commonly use verse–chorus structures, blues-derived harmony, and memorable melodic motifs, ranging from intimate ballads to high‑energy, stadium‑sized performances.
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Shoegaze
Shoegaze is a subgenre of alternative rock characterized by dense, immersive walls of guitar sound, heavily layered effects, and vocals that blend into the mix as another texture rather than a focal point. Typically mid-tempo and enveloping, it emphasizes timbre, atmosphere, and harmonic color over riff-driven hooks. Reverb, delay, chorus, tremolo, fuzz, and pitch-bending create a blurred, dreamlike quality—often described as a "wash"—while bass and drums provide a steady, understated foundation. The style emerged in the United Kingdom in the late 1980s; the term "shoegaze" was coined by the British press, referencing performers’ tendency to look down at their pedalboards during live shows.
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Singer-Songwriter
Singer-songwriter is a song-focused style in which the same person writes, composes, and performs their own material, often accompanying themselves on acoustic guitar or piano. It emphasizes personal voice, lyrical intimacy, and storytelling over elaborate production. Arrangements are typically sparse, allowing the melody, words, and performance nuance to carry the song’s emotional weight. While rooted in folk and blues traditions, singer-songwriter embraces pop and rock songcraft, producing works that can range from quiet confessional ballads to subtly orchestrated, radio-ready pieces.
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Synthwave
Synthwave is a retro-futurist electronic genre that revives and reimagines the sound, texture, and visual culture of 1980s film scores, television themes, arcade games, and synth-pop. Characterized by analog-style synthesizers, arpeggiated basslines, neon-soaked melodies, and gated-reverb drums, it blends nostalgia with cinematic drama. Substyles include the uplifting, driving "outrun" sound, the softer and romantic "dreamwave/chillsynth," and the heavier, horror-tinged "darksynth." Typical sound palettes reference instruments like the Roland Juno series, Yamaha DX7, Oberheim and Prophet polysynths, with drum machines such as the LinnDrum, TR-707, and 909 (or their modern emulations).
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Indie
Indie (short for “independent”) began as music made and released outside the major-label system, where a DIY ethos shaped everything from songwriting and recording to artwork and touring. As a sound, indie is eclectic but often features jangly or overdriven guitars, intimate or understated vocals, melodic basslines, and unvarnished production that foregrounds authenticity over gloss. It spans rock, pop, and folk while welcoming electronic textures and lo‑fi aesthetics. Lyrics typically focus on personal observation, small details, and wry self-awareness rather than overt virtuosity or spectacle. Beyond style, indie describes a culture: small labels and stores, college/alternative radio, fanzines/blogs, community venues, and scenes that value experimentation, individuality, and artistic control.
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Alternative
Alternative is an umbrella term for non-mainstream popular music that grew out of independent and college-radio scenes. It emphasizes artistic autonomy, eclectic influences, and a willingness to subvert commercial formulas. Sonically, alternative often blends the raw immediacy of punk with the mood and texture of post-punk and new wave, adding elements from folk, noise, garage, and experimental rock. While guitars, bass, and drums are typical, production ranges from lo-fi to stadium-ready, and lyrics tend toward introspection, social critique, or surreal storytelling. Over time, “alternative” became both a cultural stance and a market category, spawning numerous substyles (alternative rock, alternative hip hop, alternative pop, etc.) and moving from underground circuits to mainstream prominence in the 1990s.
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Proto-Metal
Proto-metal is the late-1960s hard, heavy strain of rock that crystallized the sonic vocabulary later codified as heavy metal. It bridges blues-rock, garage rock, and psychedelic rock with louder amplification, thicker distortion, and riff‑centric songwriting. Musically, proto-metal emphasizes power-trio or organ/guitar lineups, pentatonic/blues-derived riffs, power chords, and aggressive, often fuzz-saturated tones. Vocals can range from soulful shouts to theatrical wails, and rhythms often push straight 4/4 grooves at mid-to-up tempo with a palpable sense of weight and drive. Historically, it includes bands whose heaviest work predated metal as a named genre, as well as early albums by future metal standard-bearers. Its sound laid the groundwork for the timbre, riff language, and attitude of heavy metal and, by extension, numerous metal subgenres.
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Experimental Pop
Experimental pop is a boundary-pushing approach to pop music that blends memorable hooks and songcraft with unconventional sounds, structures, and production techniques. It draws on avant-garde ideas, studio experimentation, and cross-genre hybridization while retaining some of pop’s accessibility. Artists often reconfigure verse–chorus forms, manipulate timbre and texture, and use the studio as an instrument, resulting in music that can feel both familiar and radically new.
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Garage Pop
Garage pop blends the raw, energetic attack of garage rock with bright, ear‑catching pop melodies. It favors short, hook‑heavy songs, jangly or fuzz‑kissed guitars, tambourine and handclaps, and sing‑along choruses. While the sonics are gritty and often lo‑fi, the songwriting is unabashedly tuneful—drawing on 1960s girl‑group harmonies, surf rhythms, and Brill Building craft. Lyrics tend to be direct and youthful (love, longing, summer ennui), and vocals are frequently drenched in reverb for a hazy, sun‑bleached glow.
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Dark Pop
Dark pop is a moody, minor‑key strain of pop that blends the hooks and structure of mainstream pop with the shadowy timbres of dark wave, trip hop, and alternative electronic music. It favors intimate, close‑mic vocals, cinematic ambience, and lyrics that explore vulnerability, power, and the unsettling edges of modern life. Production often leans on sub‑bass, sparse trap‑influenced drums, and glossy yet ominous synths, creating a high‑contrast sound that feels both confessional and theatrical. While radio‑friendly in form, dark pop emphasizes tension over euphoria: melodies linger in lower registers, harmonies use modal mixture, and textures deploy reverb, distortion, and sound‑design flourishes to evoke unease and melancholy.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.