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Acid House
Acid house is a subgenre of house music defined by the squelching, resonant basslines of the Roland TB-303 and the stark, machine-driven grooves of classic drum machines like the TR-808 and TR-909. It typically runs around 120–130 BPM, features a four-on-the-floor kick, offbeat hi-hats, and minimal, hypnotic arrangements designed for extended club mixing. Emerging in mid-1980s Chicago, acid house became synonymous with underground warehouse culture and later the UK’s “Second Summer of Love” (1988–1989). Its iconic smiley imagery, trance-inducing filter sweeps, and endlessly evolving 16-step sequences established a sonic and visual language that reshaped dance music across Europe and beyond.
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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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Asmr
ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response) as a music/audio genre focuses on close‑miked, low‑intensity sounds designed to induce relaxation, tingling sensations, and sleep. It typically features whispered speech, soft tapping, brushing, fabric rustling, paper crinkles, page turning, and gentle environmental ambiences arranged with extreme intimacy and spatial detail. Production emphasizes very low noise floors, high gain, slow pacing, and extensive stereo or binaural imaging so that sounds feel physically "near" the listener. Unlike song‑based genres, ASMR is usually non‑metrical, largely aperiodic, and minimally harmonic, prioritizing texture, dynamics, and psychoacoustic immersion over melody and rhythm.
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Beach Music
Beach music (often called Carolina beach music) is a regional style centered on the dance-oriented rhythm-and-blues and soul records popular along the beaches of the Carolinas, Virginia, and Georgia. It emphasizes a smooth, mid-tempo groove suitable for the shag dance, with warm vocals, horn riffs, and feel-good lyrical themes. The sound draws heavily from 1950s–1960s African American R&B, doo-wop, early rock and roll, and later Motown-soul aesthetics. Although many of its classic songs were national releases, the scene curated a specific subset—songs with a relaxed swing or shuffle, romantic harmonies, and sun-soaked vibes—that became staples at beach pavilions, jukeboxes, and dance halls.
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Broken Transmission
Broken transmission is a vaporwave-adjacent microgenre built from fragmented, channel-surfing collages of analog broadcast ephemera. Producers splice together tiny shards of TV idents, news stingers, commercials, interstitial music, and dead air, emphasizing tape hiss, static, dropouts, and tuning noise as musical material. Often beatless or only loosely pulsed, tracks unfold like late-night flipping through channels: abrupt cuts, fleeting jingles, station sign‑offs, and half-heard voiceovers that dissolve into snow. The result is a liminal, hauntological mood—nostalgia filtered through the mechanical errors and material decay of VHS, cable boxes, and broadcast tape. Where classic vaporwave slows and loops pop smoothness, broken transmission foregrounds the texture of the medium itself. It treats errors, transitions, and broadcast artifacts as hooks, creating an uncanny documentary of mediated memory.
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Chillout
Chillout is a broad, downtempo-oriented style of electronic music designed for relaxation, decompression, and after-hours listening. It emphasizes spacious atmospheres, gentle grooves, and warm timbres over intensity or virtuosity. Emerging from the “chill-out rooms” of UK and Ibiza clubs, the sound blends ambient pads, soft 4/4 or broken-beat rhythms, and melodic fragments drawn from lounge, jazz, bossa nova, and Balearic traditions. Typical tempos range from about 70–110 BPM, with extended chords, subtle basslines, and abundant reverb and delay to create a sense of depth and calm. Though often used as an umbrella for related styles (ambient, downtempo, trip hop, lounge), chillout retains a distinct focus on mood: it privileges texture, space, and gentle momentum, making it a staple for late-night sets, beach bars, and home listening alike.
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Chillwave
Chillwave is a late-2000s microgenre of electronic pop characterized by hazy, retro-tinged synthesizers, lo‑fi textures, understated drum machines, and heavily processed, dreamlike vocals. Its sound evokes sun-faded nostalgia, often referencing 1980s synth-pop and soft rock atmospheres filtered through cassette hiss, chorus, and reverb. Built by bedroom producers during the blog era, chillwave prizes mood over virtuosity: gentle major-seventh harmonies, loop-friendly motifs, and sidechain‑pumped pads create a warm, gauzy drift. Visual and conceptual aesthetics—VHS artifacts, pastel palettes, palm trees, and memories of an endless summer—are integral to its identity.
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Chiptune
Chiptune (also called chip music or 8-bit music) is a style of electronic music created with, or emulating, the programmable sound generator (PSG) and FM chips found in vintage game consoles and home computers such as the NES/Famicom, Game Boy, Commodore 64 (SID), Amiga, Atari ST, and others. The sound palette is defined by simple waveforms (square/pulse, triangle, saw, noise), rapid arpeggios that imply chords on limited channels, pitch bends, duty-cycle modulation, and crunchy noise percussion. These constraints lend chiptune its bright, percussive, and highly melodic character, often evoking early video-game aesthetics. While originally utilitarian—music for games and computer demos—the approach evolved into a standalone art form. Contemporary chiptune spans pure hardware-authentic tracks and hybrid productions that blend chip timbres with modern synthesis, drums, vocals, and mixing techniques.
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City Pop
City pop is a sleek, cosmopolitan strain of Japanese popular music that emerged in the late 1970s and flourished throughout the 1980s. It fuses the polish of Western AOR and soft rock with funk, disco, jazz fusion, and boogie grooves, wrapping them in sophisticated harmonies and studio gloss. Built for car stereos, FM radio, and neon-lit nightlife, the style favors tight rhythm sections, lush keyboards (Rhodes, FM synths), clean chorus-laden guitars, and sax or synth leads. Lyrics often paint aspirational urban scenes—coastal highways, midnight drives, summer romance—balancing breezy optimism with a bittersweet, nostalgic hue. After a period of relative dormancy in the 1990s, city pop enjoyed a global revival in the 2010s via YouTube algorithms, online crate-digging, and sample-based microgenres, turning once-domestic hits into worldwide cult classics.
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Cloud Rap
Cloud rap is a hip hop microgenre defined by ethereal, reverb‑drenched textures, soft pads, and minimal drum programming that creates a floating, dreamlike atmosphere. Beats tend to be sparse and space-conscious, with airy synths, distant vocal samples, and gentle 808s supporting raps that are often introspective, deadpan, or emotionally detached. The sound crystallized online in the early 2010s through platforms like DatPiff, Tumblr, and SoundCloud, pairing Southern rap rhythms with ambient and chillwave aesthetics. Rather than virtuosic density, cloud rap prizes mood, negative space, and a sense of weightlessness, translating internet-era solitude and nostalgia into hazy, pastel-toned hip hop.
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Cyberpunk
Cyberpunk is an electronically driven music style that evokes neon-lit, high-tech dystopias through gritty sound design, machine-like grooves, and noir atmospheres. It blends elements of industrial, EBM, synth-pop, darkwave, and techno to create a futurist, urban mood grounded in rhythm and texture. Typical palettes include distorted drum machines, FM and wavetable synths, granular and glitch processing, metallic percussion, vocoders, and brooding pads, often punctuated by sampled city noise or radio chatter. Tempos commonly range from 100–140 BPM, alternating between four-on-the-floor EBM propulsion and broken, breakbeat-based momentum. Lyrically and conceptually, cyberpunk deals with surveillance, megacorporations, hacking, bio-modification, urban decay, and resistance—placing human emotion against cold, mechanized backdrops.
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Dance
Dance (as a broad, mainstream club- and radio-oriented style) is pop-leaning music designed primarily for dancing, characterized by steady, driving beats, catchy hooks, and production that translates well to nightclubs and large sound systems. It emerged after disco, blending four-on-the-floor rhythms with electronic instrumentation and pop songwriting, and it continually absorbs elements from house, techno, Hi-NRG, synth-pop, and later EDM. Tempos commonly fall between 110–130 BPM, vocals often emphasize memorable choruses, and arrangements are structured for both club mixing and mass appeal.
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Dark Ambient
Dark ambient is a subgenre of ambient music that emphasizes ominous, brooding atmospheres, sub-bass rumbles, and textural noise over melody and rhythm. It often evokes feelings of isolation, cosmic dread, sanctified ritual, or post-industrial decay, prioritizing mood and immersion above traditional song structure. Typical sound design includes layered drones, heavily processed field recordings, metallic resonances, dissonant tone clusters, and cavernous reverbs. The music tends to evolve slowly over long durations, with subtle timbral shifts and spectral motion substituting for harmonic progression or beat-driven momentum.
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Disco
Disco is a dance-focused style of popular music that emerged in early-1970s urban nightlife, especially in New York City and Philadelphia. It is defined by a steady four-on-the-floor kick drum, syncopated hi-hats and handclaps, octave-jumping basslines, lush string and horn arrangements, and a glamorous, celebratory sensibility. Built for DJs and clubs, disco favored extended 12-inch mixes with breakdowns and build-ups that kept dancefloors moving. The sound drew from soul, funk, and Latin music, embraced orchestral textures, and became a cultural movement associated with Black, Latino, and LGBTQ+ communities before crossing over to mainstream pop by the late 1970s.
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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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Dreampunk
Dreampunk is a vaporwave-adjacent strain of ambient music that evokes rain-slicked, neon-lit cityscapes and late-night solitude. It favors widescreen pads, lingering reverb, and soft-focus textures that feel cinematic yet intimate, as if overheard from an apartment window above an endless metropolis. The style often incorporates field recordings—rain, traffic, station announcements—alongside subdued downtempo rhythms or entirely beatless passages. Harmonies tend to be lush but restrained, leaning on suspended tones and minor 7th colorings that drift rather than resolve. The result is a dreamlike, nocturnal mood that sits between ambient, vaporwave, and cyberpunk film score aesthetics.
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Drone
Drone is a minimalist music genre defined by sustained tones, long durations, and extremely gradual change. Harmony is often static or centered on a single fundamental with subtle overtone shifts, while rhythm tends toward stasis or very slow pulses. Sound sources range from acoustic instruments (e.g., strings, organ, bagpipes, shruti box, tambura) to electronics (sine waves, oscillators, feedback, tape loops, and later digital synthesis and processing). Many composers favor just intonation or other alternative tuning systems to emphasize beating patterns, psychoacoustic effects, and the internal life of sound. Although drone as a sonic principle is ancient and global, the modern experimental genre cohered in the 1960s through the New York minimalists and related avant‑garde circles, then spread into ambient, experimental, and heavy music scenes. The focus is less on melody and more on timbre, resonance, and the phenomenology of listening.
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Dungeon Synth
Dungeon synth is a dark, fantasy-focused branch of ambient music that grew out of the early 1990s black metal underground. It typically uses inexpensive or vintage-sounding synthesizers to evoke medieval, folkloric, and high-fantasy worlds—dungeons, castles, forests, and forgotten realms—through simple modal melodies, drones, and processional harmonies. The style is intentionally lo‑fi and atmospheric: orchestral pads, choirs, pipe organs, harps, flutes, and bell tones are layered with tape-like hiss, room reverb, and steady pedal notes. Percussion is sparse or absent; when used, it tends toward martial snare patterns or timpani rolls rather than driving drum kits. Albums often function as worldbuilding artifacts with narrative track sequences, thematic leitmotifs, and evocative artwork.
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Eccojams
Eccojams is a microgenre built from extremely short, looped fragments of 1980s and 1990s pop, R&B, soft rock, and smooth jazz recordings that are slowed down, pitch-shifted, and drenched in echo and reverb. The aim is to induce a hypnotic, memory-haunted mood through minimal alteration and obsessive repetition. Rather than full remixes, eccojams isolate a few seconds that feel emotionally resonant—often a single vocal melisma, chord change, or sax flourish—and stretch it into a drifting, sentimental vignette. The texture typically includes VHS-like degradation, tape hiss, and retro consumer‑media aesthetics, emphasizing nostalgia, melancholy, and the uncanny. The term and template come from Chuck Person’s Eccojams Vol. 1 (2010), a seminal release that served as a primary blueprint for early vaporwave and its many satellite styles.
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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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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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Field Recording
Field recording is the practice and genre of capturing sounds in situ—outside the studio—using portable recording equipment. It centers on documenting environments, human activities, wildlife, weather, machinery, rituals, and music as they actually occur, often with minimal intervention. As a listening genre, field recording foregrounds place and presence. Releases may present unprocessed, extended takes (e.g., a shoreline at dawn), or carefully edited sequences that map a soundwalk, a village festival, or a factory floor. The results range from documentary-style fidelity to abstract, immersive soundscapes that emphasize texture, spatiality, and the ecology of sound.
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Funk
Funk is a rhythm-forward African American popular music style that centers on groove, syncopation, and interlocking parts. Rather than emphasizing complex chord progressions, funk builds tight, repetitive vamps that highlight the rhythm section and create an irresistible dance feel. The genre is marked by syncopated drum patterns, melodic yet percussive bass lines, choppy guitar "chanks," punchy horn stabs, call‑and‑response vocals, and a strong backbeat. Funk’s stripped-down harmony, prominent use of the one (accenting the downbeat), and polyrhythmic layering draw deeply from soul, rhythm and blues, jazz, gospel, and African rhythmic traditions. From James Brown’s late-1960s innovations through the expansive P-Funk universe and the slicker sounds of the 1970s and 1980s, funk has continually evolved while seeding countless other genres, from disco and hip hop to house and modern R&B.
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Future Bass
Future bass is a melodic, drop-focused style of electronic dance music built around lush, detuned saw-tooth chords, dramatic swells, and emotive, pop- and R&B-leaning progressions. It typically runs at 70–90 BPM (or 140–180 BPM in double-time), uses trap-inspired drums (808 kicks, crisp snares on the third beat, syncopated hi-hats), and features heavy sidechain compression for a breathing, "pumping" feel. Producers often layer shimmering supersaws, pitch-automated leads, and chopped/pitched vocal snippets to create euphoric, weightless drops that contrast with airy verses and cinematic builds. A hallmark is its glossy, future-leaning sound design—gliding chords, LFO modulation, wide stereo images—paired with catchy, sentimental melodies that make it equally club-ready and radio-friendly.
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Future Funk
Future funk is an internet-born dance microgenre that fuses the sample-heavy ethos of vaporwave with the upbeat grooves of disco, funk, and Japanese city pop. Producers typically chop and pitch up catchy hooks from late-1970s and 1980s records, loop them over four-on-the-floor drums, and apply filter sweeps and sidechain compression in the spirit of French house. The result is a sparkling, high-energy sound that feels both retro and forward-looking. Visually and culturally, the scene leans into neon-soaked, anime-tinged aesthetics and nostalgic party energy, turning classic pop and boogie flavors into compact, danceable edits tailored for the web era.
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Glitch
Glitch is an experimental electronic music genre that foregrounds the sounds of technological error—digital clicks, pops, clipping, buffer underruns, CD skipping, software crashes, and bit‑reduction. Rather than hiding artifacts, producers use them as primary musical material, often arranged through extreme micro‑editing and non‑linear sequencing. Texturally, glitch spans austere minimalism to warm, hazy ambience. Rhythms tend to be fragmented and asymmetrical, with sudden cuts, stutters, and silences that create tension and negative space. The palette commonly includes sine‑tone grains, granular clouds, filtered noise, and hyper‑detailed percussive fragments, sometimes sitting over subdued drones or dub‑inflected low end. The style emerged in the late 1990s around labels such as Mille Plateaux, influenced by IDM, minimal techno, and the aesthetics of failure in digital media. It later permeated pop and beat‑driven styles through sound‑design techniques that evoke imperfection and transience.
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Hauntology
Hauntology is a retro-futurist strain of experimental electronic music that evokes the "ghosts" of lost cultural futures. Emerging in the United Kingdom in the mid‑2000s, it draws on half-remembered media—library music, public information films, children’s TV idents, and Radiophonic textures—to produce an atmosphere of eerie nostalgia and cultural memory. Sonically, the style favors degraded media and analogue patina: vinyl crackle, tape hiss, wow and flutter, and dusty archival samples. It often pairs subdued drones and detuned synths with looped fragments, sparse percussion, and unresolved harmonies to create a feeling that is at once comforting and unsettling. The term originates in Jacques Derrida’s philosophy and was popularized in a musical context by critics such as Mark Fisher and Simon Reynolds. In music, it names both a sound palette and a way of listening that foregrounds memory, media archaeology, and the uncanny persistence of the past within the present.
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Hip Hop
Hip hop is a cultural and musical movement that emerged from Black, Latino, and Caribbean communities, centering around rapping (MCing), DJing/turntablism, sampling-based production, and rhythmic speech over beats. It prioritizes groove, wordplay, and storytelling, often reflecting the social realities of urban life. Musically, hip hop is built on drum-centric rhythms (from breakbeats to 808 patterns), looped samples, and bass-forward mixes. Lyrically, it ranges from party anthems and braggadocio to political commentary and intricate poetic forms, with flow, cadence, and rhyme density as core expressive tools. Beyond music, hip hop encompasses a broader culture, historically intertwined with graffiti, b-boying/b-girling (breakdance), fashion, and street entrepreneurship, making it both an art form and a global social language.
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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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Hypnagogic Pop
Hypnagogic pop is a late‑2000s microgenre of lo‑fi pop that evokes the hazy, half‑awake feeling between sleep and consciousness. Artists fold fragments of 1970s–1990s mass‑media memory—VHS textures, TV idents, soft rock hooks, and mall‑era synths—into dreamy songs obscured by tape hiss, reverb, and analog wobble. The style blends retro synth-pop, yacht/soft rock, new age pads, and ambient drift with indie pop songcraft. Its mood is nostalgic and melancholic yet warmly intimate, as if hearing familiar pop refracted through worn cassettes and fading broadcast signals.
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Lo-Fi
Lo-fi is a music aesthetic and genre defined by an embrace of audible imperfections—tape hiss, clipping, room noise, distorted transients, and uneven performance—that would be treated as errors in high-fidelity recording. Emerging from the DIY ethos of American indie and punk scenes, lo-fi turns budget constraints and home-recording limitations into a signature sound. Songs are often intimate, direct, and unvarnished, prioritizing immediacy and personality over polish. Typical lo-fi recordings use 4-track cassette or similarly modest setups, simple chord progressions, and understated vocals, spanning rock, folk, pop, and experimental approaches while retaining a homemade warmth and nostalgic patina.
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Lounge
Lounge is a mid-20th-century style of easy listening that blends jazz harmony, light orchestral arranging, and Latin/exotica rhythms into suave, unobtrusive music designed for relaxation and sophisticated ambience. Typically associated with cocktail lounges, tiki bars, and the hi‑fi/stereo boom, it emphasizes lush strings, vibraphone and marimba timbres, brushed drums, gentle horns, and occasional wordless vocals or whistling. Melodies are memorable yet restrained, arrangements are polished, and production often highlights spacious reverbs and playful stereo effects. A 1990s revival reframed lounge as retro‑chic, intersecting with downtempo, chillout, and nu‑jazz while preserving its trademark mood: warm, cosmopolitan, and stylishly relaxed.
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Mallsoft
Mallsoft is a subgenre of vaporwave that magnifies the sound and ambience of shopping malls, corporate lobbies, food courts, and retail soundtracks. It often loops, slows, and filters archival easy listening, smooth jazz, or library music to simulate the dreamlike experience of wandering an empty mall. The style foregrounds spatial illusion and consumer nostalgia: wide reverbs, distant PA announcements, and fountain or escalator noise create a glossy yet uncanny, hyper-commercial environment. Rather than rhythmic drive, mallsoft prioritizes mood, texture, and the sensation of endless browsing in a perpetually pristine retail space.
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Minimalism
Minimalism is a style of Western art music that emerged in the United States during the 1960s, characterized by the use of very limited musical materials, steady pulse, and extensive repetition. Composers often build pieces from short cells or motifs that are repeated and slowly transformed through additive or subtractive processes, phase shifting, and gradual changes in harmony, texture, or register. Harmony is typically consonant (often modal or diatonic), though just intonation and extended drones are also common. The result is music that foregrounds process, clarity, audibility of structure, and a hypnotic sense of stasis and flow. Typical ensembles include keyboards, mallet percussion, strings, winds, voices, and electronics or tape. Minimalism influenced a wide array of later styles, from ambient and new age to post-minimalism and minimal techno.
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New Age
New age is a largely instrumental, mood-driven genre that emphasizes calm, spacious textures and a sense of spiritual or contemplative uplift. It blends gentle electronic timbres, acoustic instruments, and global/folk influences to create immersive soundscapes intended for relaxation, meditation, and introspection. Hallmarks include slow tempos or free time, long sustaining pads, modal and consonant harmonies, nature field recordings, and unobtrusive rhythms. The music often avoids dramatic tension in favor of openness and continuity, conveying themes of inner peace, nature, and the transcendent.
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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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Plunderphonics
Plunderphonics is a sample-based music practice in which new compositions are made entirely or predominantly from pre‑existing recordings. Rather than using short, unrecognizable snippets as texture, plunderphonic works foreground recognizable materials—pop hits, classical excerpts, commercials, voice-overs—and transform them through juxtaposition, layering, pitch-shifting, time-stretching, and collage. Coined by Canadian composer John Oswald in the mid‑1980s, the term names both a technique and a critical stance that questions authorship, originality, and ownership in the age of reproducible media. Plunderphonics often functions as cultural commentary or satire, drawing attention to how meaning changes when familiar sounds are recontextualized. Stylistically, it ranges from dense cut‑up cacophony to groove-oriented rearrangements that remain danceable and accessible.
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Progressive House
Progressive house is a melodic, long-form strain of house music known for gradual builds, evolving textures, and a strong sense of tension and release. It favors hypnotic grooves, lush pads, and emotive chord progressions over abrupt drops. Typically sitting around 122–128 BPM in 4/4 time, tracks unfold over six to nine minutes, introducing small changes every few bars to keep momentum. The sound balances club-focused punch with cinematic atmosphere, making it equally at home in late-night dancefloors and long-form DJ sets.
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Seapunk
Seapunk is an early-2010s internet-born microgenre and multimedia aesthetic that fuses retro-rave sonics with Y2K-era, ocean-themed visuals. Its sound blends 1990s house and trance riffs, chopped-and-screwed and vaporwave-adjacent sampling, splashy 808/909 drums, and glossy, “watery” synth textures. The visual world is as important as the music: turquoise/teal palettes, 3D chrome dolphins, coral gradients, pixel seas, and GIF-era net art. Together, these define a playful, nostalgic, and cyber-aquatic identity that celebrates both rave euphoria and web-native DIY culture.
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Slushwave
Slushwave is a vaporwave-derived microgenre that stretches samples and synth textures into foggy, glacial soundscapes. Tracks are typically very slow, drenched in reverb and delay, and layered with tape hiss, vinyl crackle, and other lo‑fi artifacts to create an enveloping, dreamlike ambience. Rather than the chopped, ironic collage associated with early vaporwave, slushwave favors long pads, smeared chords, and minimal or absent percussion. When drums appear, they are subdued and distant. The genre often draws from new age, city pop, smooth jazz, and soft adult‑contemporary sources, pitching them down and elongating them into warm, melancholic drones that evoke late‑night memory, urban solitude, and liminal spaces.
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Smooth Jazz
Smooth jazz is a radio-friendly offshoot of jazz that blends the harmonic vocabulary and improvisational flavor of jazz with the gentle grooves of R&B, pop, and easy listening. It emphasizes melody, polished production, and laid‑back rhythms over extended improvisation or complex swing feels. Typically mid‑tempo and sleek, smooth jazz favors clean electric guitar, soprano or alto saxophone leads, warm electric piano (Rhodes) and synth pads, and a tight, understated rhythm section. The result is music designed for relaxed listening—romantic, urbane, and sophisticated—yet still rooted in jazz harmony and phrasing.
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Soul
Soul is a genre of popular music that blends the spiritual fervor and vocal techniques of African‑American gospel with the grooves and song forms of rhythm & blues and the harmonic palette of jazz and blues. It is defined by impassioned, melismatic lead vocals; call‑and‑response with backing singers; handclaps and a strong backbeat; syncopated bass lines; and memorable horn or string riffs. Typical instrumentation includes drum kit, electric bass, electric guitar, piano or Hammond organ, horns (trumpet, saxophone, trombone), and sometimes orchestral strings. Lyrically, soul ranges from love and heartbreak to pride, social commentary, and spiritual yearning. Regionally distinct scenes—such as Detroit’s Motown, Memphis/Stax, Muscle Shoals, Chicago, New Orleans, and Philadelphia—shaped different flavors of soul, while the style’s emotional directness and rhythmic drive made it a cornerstone of later funk, disco, contemporary R&B, and hip hop.
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Space Ambient
Space ambient is a substyle of ambient music devoted to evoking cosmic scale, interstellar travel, and the vastness of outer space. It emphasizes expansive soundscapes, slow-evolving drones, and a strong sense of spatial depth created by long reverbs, delays, and careful stereo imaging. The music typically avoids overt rhythm and melody in favor of sustained pads, subtly shifting harmonies, and quiet textural details. Analog and digital synthesizers, modular systems, and granular processing are common tools, often complemented by found sounds, radio/space transmissions, and gentle field recordings. The result is immersive, contemplative listening that suggests weightlessness, distance, and awe.
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Techno
Techno is a four-on-the-floor, machine-driven form of electronic dance music that emerged in mid-to-late 1980s Detroit. It is characterized by steady 4/4 kick drums, repetitive and hypnotic rhythmic patterns, synthetic timbres, and an emphasis on texture, groove, and forward momentum over elaborate harmony. Producers typically use drum machines, sequencers, and synthesizers to build layered percussion, pulsing basslines, and evolving motifs. While often dark and minimalistic, techno spans a wide spectrum—from soulful, futuristic Detroit aesthetics to hard, industrially tinged European strains—yet it consistently prioritizes kinetic energy for dancefloors and a sense of machine futurism.
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Utopian Virtual
Utopian virtual is an online-born microgenre that recreates the glossy optimism of late‑20th‑century futurism and corporate media. Instead of relying on chopped samples like much vaporwave, producers write original cues that sound like in‑house ‘90s corporate BGM, software demos, tech‑expo reels, and promotional VHS soundtracks. The palette leans deliberately "tacky": General MIDI and ROMpler presets, glassy digital bells, airy synth brass, smooth-jazz pads, and bright slap or fretless bass. The result is a clean, hyper-synthetic sheen that suggests a frictionless corporate future—equal parts sincere nostalgia and gently uncanny pastiche.
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Vapornoise
Vapornoise is a hybrid of vaporwave’s sample-based nostalgia and the abrasive, textural extremes of noise music. It distorts and overwhelms the corporate muzak, smooth jazz, library cues, and TV commercial fragments associated with classic vaporwave, pushing them into blown-out, clipping, and static-saturated soundscapes. Where vaporwave often evokes hazy malls and VHS memories, vapornoise corrodes those memories: loops are crushed by harsh noise wall techniques, drowned in tape hiss, overcompression, bitcrushing, and feedback. The result is a surreal collage that is at once nostalgic and confrontational—ambient pads and sentimental melodies are present, but they are obscured by signal failure, artifacting, and deliberate sonic decay. The style grew online through netlabels and Bandcamp/DIY cassette culture, favoring anonymous or multi-aliased projects, limited runs, and glitchy, corporate-parody visual aesthetics.
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Vaportrap
Vaportrap is a hybrid microgenre that blends the hazy, sample-based aesthetics of vaporwave with the rhythmic language and sound design of modern trap and cloud-rap instrumentals. It typically features half-time 808 grooves, shimmering pads, pitched-down or time-stretched samples from 1980s–1990s media (commercials, corporate music, smooth jazz, R&B), and a lo‑fi, nostalgic atmosphere. Compared to straight vaporwave, vaportrap is more beat-driven and club-aware; compared to mainstream trap, it is more ambient, textural, and dreamlike.
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Vaporwave
Vaporwave is an internet-born microgenre and visual aesthetic that repurposes late‑20th‑century commercial sound—mu zak, smooth jazz, soft rock, synth‑pop, city pop, and corporate training tapes—into hazy, slowed, and looped collages. Its sound foregrounds pitched‑down samples, heavy reverb, tape hiss, vinyl crackle, and dreamy pads to evoke a mood between satire and sincere nostalgia. Beyond music, vaporwave is inseparable from its graphic language: Greco‑Roman busts, Japanese text, retro operating systems, chrome logos, palm trees, neon gradients, and “mall culture” architecture. The result feels like a haunted shopping mall: part critique of consumer capitalism, part wistful memory of media and retail spaces from the 1980s–2000s. Tempos are typically slow (roughly 60–90 BPM), harmonies tend toward lush seventh and extended chords, and rhythms range from barely perceptible loops to minimal, gated drum programming. Many tracks are short, vignette‑like studies in texture and mood.
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Soundtrack
Soundtrack is music created to accompany and enhance visual media such as film, television, and video games. It includes original scores (instrumental or vocal music composed specifically for the picture) and, at times, curated compilations of pre-existing songs. Stylistically, soundtrack is a meta-genre that can encompass orchestral symphonic writing, jazz, electronic and synth-driven textures, choral forces, popular song, and experimental sound design. Its defining trait is functional storytelling: themes, motifs, harmony, rhythm, and timbre are shaped by narrative needs, character psychology, pacing, and editing. Common features include leitmotifs for characters or ideas, modular cues that can be edited to picture, dynamic orchestration for dramatic range, and production approaches that sit well under dialogue and sound effects. Because it must synchronize to picture, soundtrack often uses clear dramatic arcs, tempo maps, and hit points.
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Space Music
Space music is an ambient-leaning form of electronic and acoustic soundscaping designed to evoke vastness, weightlessness, and the mystery of the cosmos. It favors long, slowly evolving textures, deep drones, and luminous harmonies over conventional song structure, rhythm, or melody. The style grew around sustained synthesizer pads, sequencer patterns, and expansive reverberation, often integrating field recordings or processed acoustic instruments. Whether contemplative or awe‑struck, its intent is to transport the listener into a spacious, imaginal soundfield—akin to drifting through celestial environments and deep time.
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World
World music is a broad, industry-coined umbrella for traditional, folk, and contemporary popular styles from around the globe that fall outside the Anglo-American pop mainstream. The label emerged in the 1980s as a retail and marketing category to group diverse regional musics for international distribution. Musically, it spans acoustic and electric instrumentation; modal, pentatonic, and microtonal pitch systems; and rhythms ranging from cyclical grooves and polyrhythms to asymmetrical meters. While the term can obscure local specificity, it also facilitated cross-cultural collaboration, festivals, and recordings that brought regional genres to wider audiences.
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Fourth World
Fourth World is a term coined by trumpeter-composer Jon Hassell to describe a "unified primitive/futuristic sound" that blends ambient minimalism, non-Western traditional musics, and studio electronics into an imagined global music. The style is characterized by modal drones, cyclical hand percussion, and timbral experimentation (often through harmonizers, delays, and pitch-shifting) applied to acoustic instruments—famously Hassell’s processed trumpet—alongside sampled or evoked elements of African, Indian, Southeast Asian, and other traditions. Rather than ethnographic authenticity, Fourth World proposes an imaginative, post-geographic sound world where the studio acts as a cultural crossroads. Musically it favors slow to mid tempos, layered polyrhythms, pentatonic or raga-like modality, microtonal color, spacious reverbs, and textural foregrounding. The result is meditative and sensuous, at once ancient-sounding and hyper-modern.
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Tropical
Tropical (often called música tropical) is a broad Latin American dance‑music umbrella that grew from Afro‑Caribbean styles and big‑band arrangements. It emphasizes lively, percussion‑driven grooves, syncopated horn lines, piano montunos, tumbao bass patterns, and call‑and‑response vocals. The feel ranges from elegant ballroom danzón and bolero to the high‑energy drive of mambo, cha‑cha‑chá, salsa, cumbia, and merengue. While repertoire and instrumentation vary by substyle and country, a shared rhythmic DNA—rooted in the clave and Afro‑diasporic percussion—unites Tropical music across the Caribbean and the Americas.
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Artists
Various Artists
Cosmic Cycler
VirtualRealityDeluxe
M4
EPSON
desert sand feels warm at night
Gateway
MindSpring Memories
Glaciology
Mystery Twilight
AVION
PJS
days of blue
MIDI
рмнчитто
TWIN_PINES_MALL
Lazuli_yellow
BOSEBY
Vivi Vulture
teph co. 愛
直子coed
過去の瞬間
Six, Tim
zhurnal mod
Soul▲Craft
from tokyo to honolulu
nothing
LIFE2979hikari
secretflowers
Soarer
Fibonacci
KeepSleep
EXSHA
Kagoshima Tangerine
Channel of Dreams
VANITAS命死
Tower of the Sun
your discovery
s h e e p
eccodroid
Dooby Douglas
Face Dancer 顔ダンサー
P U D E R P O L L I
aero
FalseGardenTáng
World Switcher
Second Sight
Cyber Surfer 3D
送信機
電話での会話の芸術
Vi0let Lightb0dy
PHILIPS94
lucid beach85'
Yoake wo Nokosu
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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.