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Alternative Hip Hop
Alternative hip hop is a broad, eclectic wing of hip hop that prioritizes experimentation, left‑field aesthetics, and nonconformist subject matter over commercial formulas. It blends classic rap techniques with unconventional production, live instrumentation, genre cross‑pollination (jazz, funk, rock, electronic, reggae), and inventive songwriting. As a cultural stance, it often rejects narrow mainstream archetypes—embracing thoughtful lyricism, humor, Afrocentricity, social critique, and artistic playfulness—while keeping core elements of MCing, DJing, and sampling at the center.
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Battle Rap
Battle rap is a competitive branch of hip hop where two MCs face off to outperform each other with lyrics, delivery, and crowd control. The focus is on punchlines, intricate multisyllabic rhyme schemes, wordplay, name flips, personals (biographical attacks), angles (narrative frames against an opponent), and on-the-spot rebuttals. It exists in two main formats: freestyle battles over a beat (improvised or loosely prepped) and the modern a cappella league style, which features pre-written rounds with theatrical delivery and tightly structured setups and haymakers. Judges or audience reactions typically decide the winner, but cultural impact and quotability also matter. Tone ranges from aggressive and confrontational to humorous and ironic, with performance skills—projection, pacing, charisma, and stage presence—being as crucial as lyrical technique.
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Beat Music
Beat music (often called Merseybeat when centered on Liverpool) is a British style of early-to-mid 1960s guitar pop built on a strong, danceable backbeat, close vocal harmonies, and concise, hook-driven songwriting. It blends the rhythmic drive of American rock and roll and rhythm and blues with skiffle’s DIY energy and doo‑wop’s harmonies, typically delivered by two electric guitars, electric bass, and drums, with frequent handclaps and tambourine. Songs are short, catchy, and youthful in theme, favoring major keys, I–IV–V progressions, and memorable choruses that foreground melody over instrumental virtuosity.
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Chicano Rap
Chicano rap is a regional style of hip hop created by Mexican-American artists in the U.S. Southwest, especially Los Angeles and surrounding Southern California communities. It blends West Coast rap aesthetics with Latin musical references, bilingual (English/Spanish) lyrics, and vivid storytelling rooted in barrio life, lowrider culture, family, and identity. Musically, Chicano rap often rides mid-tempo, G‑funk-influenced grooves, rubbery basslines, and high-pitched synth leads, while sampling or replaying classic soul, doo‑wop, and funk “oldies.” Lyrically, it commonly uses Spanglish, neighborhood shout-outs, and narratives that range from street realities to romance and cruising anthems.
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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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Comedy Hip Hop
Comedy hip hop is a subgenre of hip hop that foregrounds humor, satire, and parody while using the core musical and lyrical tools of rap. Artists blend punchline-driven bars, exaggerated personas, and comedic skits with beats that range from old-school boom bap to contemporary trap and pop-rap. While comedy has been present in rap since the earliest party and novelty records, comedy hip hop treats laughter as the primary goal rather than an occasional flavor. The best examples balance clever wordplay, cultural references, and comedic timing with strong hooks and rhythmic flow, making songs both funny and musically engaging.
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Conscious Hip Hop
Conscious hip hop is a lyrical-driven branch of hip hop that foregrounds social commentary, political awareness, community uplift, and personal reflection. Rather than centering on party themes or braggadocio, it emphasizes messages about inequality, identity, justice, and everyday realities. Musically, the style tends to favor boom‑bap rhythms, soulful or jazz-inflected sampling, and stripped, head‑nod grooves that leave space for the words. While the sound palette can range from warm, sample-based beats to modern, cinematic production, the core value remains the same: clear, purposeful storytelling that aims to inform, provoke thought, and inspire change.
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Country Rap
Country rap (often called hick-hop) is a fusion of hip hop’s rhythmic delivery and production with the storytelling, instrumentation, and melodic sensibilities of country music. Typical arrangements pair 808s, trap-style hi-hats, and programmed drums with banjo or acoustic guitar strums, dobro slides, fiddle lines, and twangy vocal inflections. Lyrically, the genre spotlights rural life, working-class pride, small-town partying, back roads, pickup trucks, hunting and fishing, and family. The delivery ranges from straight rap verses to sing-rapped hooks that nod to country balladry. In the 2010s, online platforms helped the style coalesce into a distinct market, while high-profile crossover hits brought country rap into mainstream pop awareness.
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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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Detroit Trap
Detroit trap is a gritty, minimalist branch of trap that developed in Detroit’s street-rap ecosystem during the mid-to-late 2010s. It is defined by stark, piano-led or bell-like loops, heavy 808s, dry mixes, and a loose, talky delivery that often rides slightly ahead of or behind the beat. Compared with Southern mainstream trap, Detroit trap tends to be faster, colder, and more skeletal. Beats commonly sit around 88–102 BPM, snares/claps cut sharply on the 2 and 4, and hi-hats are sparse. Lyrics center on hustling, street economics, local culture, and deadpan boasts, delivered with the region’s signature off-beat phrasing and frequent punch‑ins.
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Dungeon Rap
Dungeon rap is a dark, internet-born microgenre that fuses the gloomy, medieval-fantasy atmospheres of dungeon synth with the rhythms, vocal cadences, and low‑end of underground trap and Memphis-influenced rap. Its sound is defined by lo-fi, reverb-soaked synth pads, organ or choir timbres, modal or minor-key melodies reminiscent of dungeon synth, and skeletal 808-driven drum patterns. Vocals (when present) are typically pitched-down, whispered, or deadpan, often dealing with occult, fantasy, and horror imagery. Producers frequently sample retro RPG soundtracks, black metal-adjacent ambient passages, or cassette-era dungeon synth, then anchor them with trunk-rattling subs and crispy hi-hat rolls. The genre coalesced online at the turn of the 2020s through Bandcamp/YouTube scenes and boutique labels, crystallizing a distinct aesthetic that feels equal parts crypt-ambient and street-level rap.
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East Coast Hip Hop
East Coast hip hop is a regional style of hip hop that emerged in New York City and the surrounding Northeastern United States. It is characterized by complex lyricism, dense rhyme schemes, gritty urban storytelling, and sample-heavy production that draws from funk, soul, and jazz records. Rhythmically, the sound is often associated with "boom-bap" drum patterns—hard-hitting kicks and crisp snares at moderate tempos—alongside chopped breakbeats, basslines, and DJ techniques such as scratching. The approach places the MC’s voice, cadence, and wordplay at the center, while the producer crafts a textured, crate-dug backdrop. Culturally, East Coast hip hop foregrounds authenticity, social commentary, and competitive MCing, while its crews and collectives (from Juice Crew to Native Tongues and Wu-Tang Clan) helped define hip hop’s golden age and set standards for lyrical excellence and sample-based beatmaking.
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Experimental Hip Hop
Experimental hip hop (often called avant-rap or left-field hip hop) pushes rap beyond conventional song forms, sound palettes, and production techniques. It hybridizes boom‑bap and contemporary hip hop rhythms with ideas from industrial, noise, IDM, electroacoustic music, and free jazz, favoring timbral risk‑taking, collage, and abstraction over radio‑oriented polish. Producers and MCs in this style disrupt expectations with unusual meters, asymmetric loops, microtiming, extreme dynamics, and heavy sound design (distortion, granular and spectral processing, tape manipulation). Vocals may range from conventional rapping to spoken word, chant, screams, or heavily processed deliveries. The result foregrounds texture, mood, and concept as much as groove and lyrical content.
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Festival Trap
Festival trap is a high‑energy, mainstage‑oriented branch of EDM trap that translates hip‑hop‑rooted 808 rhythms into oversized, stadium‑scale drops. It pairs halftime drum patterns at 70/140 BPM with big‑room buildups, supersaw and brass stabs, sirens/air‑horns, and chantable vocal chops engineered for crowd participation. Compared with classic hip‑hop trap it is brighter, louder, and more bombastic; compared with big room house or dubstep it retains a halftime groove with rolling hi‑hats and sub‑heavy 808s. Typical drops use dramatic snare rolls and risers into a silence‑then‑impact hit, followed by call‑and‑response riffs designed to move festival crowds.
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Freestyle
Freestyle (often called Latin freestyle) is a vocal-driven form of dance-pop that emerged in the mid-1980s in the United States, blending electro drum programming, boogie/post-disco grooves, and bright synth-pop textures with emotive, often bilingual (English/Spanish) lyrics. Typical tracks run around 110–125 BPM and feature TR-808/909-style drums, syncopated basslines, gated-reverb claps/snares, and catchy synth stabs or arpeggios. The songs frequently center on themes of love, heartbreak, and longing set against club-ready beats—creating a bittersweet, dancefloor-friendly mood. Stylistically, freestyle sits between electro and pop: it retains electro’s machine funk and edit tricks, but foregrounds big choruses, melismatic vocal hooks, and dramatic bridges that made it a staple of urban radio and club culture across New York, Miami, and beyond.
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Gangsta Rap
Gangsta rap is a subgenre of hip hop defined by its gritty, street-level storytelling, first‑person narration, and unflinching depictions of crime, policing, poverty, and survival. It foregrounds a hard-hitting vocal delivery over sparse, heavy drum programming and sample-based grooves. Musically, it draws from the foundational elements of hip hop—looped breaks, funk basslines, and turntable aesthetics—while emphasizing menace, swagger, and cinematic detail. Lyrically, it alternates between reportage, braggadocio, social commentary, and personal testimony, often sparking controversy for its explicit content and political provocations. From mid‑1980s origins through the 1990s mainstream, gangsta rap reshaped both the sound and business of hip hop, influencing fashion, language, and global perceptions of urban America.
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Graphical Sound
Graphical sound is an early electroacoustic technique and aesthetic in which audio is generated from drawings, stencils, or photographed shapes placed on optical film soundtracks. Instead of recording a vibrating source with a microphone, composers directly designed waveforms and spectra, then scanned them with optical readers to produce sound. Emerging in the Soviet Union and Germany, practitioners treated sound as visible geometry: curves set the waveform, patterns set the spectrum, and motion through time created phrasing and rhythm. The result ranges from pure tones and microtonal glissandi to dense, noise-like textures—predating and foreshadowing later tape, electronic, and spectral practices.
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Hard Trap
Hard trap is a high-octane branch of trap that fuses the halftime bounce and 808-centric weight of hip hop with the sound-design aggression and build–drop architecture of festival EDM. Typically sitting around 145–160 BPM (often 150 BPM in halftime), it features seismic, often distorted 808 subs, razor-edged screech leads borrowed from hardstyle, and explosive, big-room drops. Arrangements emphasize tension-and-release with cinematic risers, snare rolls, and crowd-commanding vocal chops or hype shouts. The result is trap’s swagger scaled up for main stages: mosh-pit energy, punchy drums, and maximalist synth work designed to hit hard on large sound systems.
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Hardcore Hip Hop
Hardcore hip hop is a confrontational, uncompromising strain of rap defined by aggressive vocal delivery, hard-hitting drum programming, and stark, sample-driven production. It prioritizes intensity over gloss, often minimizing melody in favor of dense drum breaks, sirens, noise textures, and dissonant stabs. Lyrically, it spans street reportage, social realism, political critique, and battle-ready braggadocio. The aesthetic foregrounds rawness—distorted drums, clipped samples, shouted hooks, and posse energy—while drawing deeply from funk and soul breakbeats, DJ techniques, and the boom-bap tradition.
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Heaven Trap
Heaven trap is a melodic, emotive branch of festival trap that blends half‑time 808 drum programming with euphoric, trance‑ and progressive‑house‑style chord stacks and leads. It emphasizes soaring supersaws, lush pads, cinematic builds, and cathartic drops while retaining the snap and swing of trap hi‑hats, snares, and sub‑bass. Emerging in the mid‑2010s, the sound was popularized by artists who sought to fuse bass‑music impact with heartfelt, uplifting songwriting and pop‑leaning vocals. The result is a style equally at home on big stages and in headphones: sparkling, reverberant, and emotionally climactic, yet grounded by modern trap rhythm and sound design.
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Highlife
Highlife is a popular music genre that originated in coastal Ghana and spread across West Africa. It blends indigenous Akan and Ga rhythms with Western brass-band harmony, Afro‑Cuban dance grooves, and jazz phrasing. Two classic strains developed: dance‑band highlife with horn sections, lush arrangements, and ballroom tempos; and guitar‑band highlife centered on interlocking guitar riffs, percussion, and call‑and‑response vocals. In both, a buoyant 4/4 pulse, syncopated bell patterns, and diatonic I–IV–V progressions drive songs designed for social dancing and celebration. Highlife is sung in local languages (such as Akan, Ga, Ewe, and Igbo) as well as English and pidgin, often using proverbs and storytelling. From independence‑era dance halls to modern fusions, its upbeat feel and lilting guitars remain emblematic of West African urban life.
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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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Hip Hop Soul
Hip hop soul fuses the vocal traditions of soul and contemporary R&B with the production aesthetics and rhythms of hip hop. It typically features emotive, melismatic singing over boom‑bap or sample-driven beats, with frequent rap features and remix culture bridging R&B hooks and MC verses. Compared with new jack swing’s brighter, digitized swingbeat, hip hop soul adopts grittier drum textures, deeper bass, and loop-based arrangements drawn from crate-digging or programmed on samplers. Lyrically it centers on love, heartbreak, resilience, and urban life, often delivered with an assertive, streetwise attitude that mirrors hip hop’s aesthetics. The style reached mainstream prominence in the 1990s through artists like Mary J. Blige, Aaliyah, TLC, and Faith Evans, and set the template for much of late-1990s and 2000s R&B.
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Hip House
Hip house is a hybrid dance style that fuses the four-on-the-floor pulse and synthesizer-driven textures of house music with the rhythmic vocal delivery and party-centric lyricism of hip hop. Emerging in the late 1980s, especially in Chicago and quickly spreading to New York and the UK, hip house pairs drum machine grooves, piano/organ stabs, and catchy house hooks with MC-led verses and crowd-rousing chants. The result is music that is relentlessly club-focused, upbeat, and designed for rap-led call-and-response over pumping house beats. While often minimal in harmony, hip house is maximal in energy—characterized by brisk tempos, prominent kicks on every beat, and charismatic, sometimes humorous lyrics that celebrate the dancefloor and DJ culture.
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Hiplife
Hiplife is a Ghanaian fusion of classic highlife rhythms and melodies with hip hop’s rapped delivery, drum programming, and sampling aesthetics. Built around mid‑tempo grooves, hiplife typically marries syncopated, guitar-led highlife riffs and horn stabs with hip hop drum patterns, dancehall energy, and catchy R&B‑style hooks. Artists rap predominantly in Ghanaian languages (Twi, Ga, Ewe) and Ghanaian Pidgin English, foregrounding local idioms, humor, social commentary, and storytelling. The result is a vibrant, dance‑forward urban pop sound that remains unmistakably Ghanaian while being fully conversant with global rap and Caribbean diasporic styles.
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Industrial Hip Hop
Industrial hip hop is a fusion genre that threads the rhythmic backbone of hip hop with the abrasive textures, mechanical timbres, and confrontational aesthetics of industrial music. It typically features heavy, distorted percussion, metallic hits, harsh noise layers, and sample collage techniques, while retaining MC-driven vocals or spoken-word cadences. The style leans into sonic extremity: detuned or bitcrushed drums, re-amped breaks, atonal drones, and saturated bass coexist with turntablism, dub-informed space, and politically charged lyricism. Tempos often sit in the 80–110 BPM range, but feel lurching and monolithic due to swung grooves, halting gates, and heavy compression. Lyrically and thematically, industrial hip hop embraces dystopian urban imagery, media critique, and social protest, mirroring its rugged sound design with stark, incisive narratives.
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Instrumental Hip Hop
Instrumental hip hop is a producer-driven form of hip hop that foregrounds beats, textures, and sampling rather than rapping. It typically centers on loop-based drum patterns, chopped samples from soul, jazz, funk, and library records, and a head‑nodding groove designed for deep listening as much as for DJs and MCs. The style emphasizes rhythm, timbre, and mood—swinging drums, dusty vinyl crackle, and melodic fragments treated as musical motifs. While rooted in classic boom bap aesthetics, instrumental hip hop ranges from minimal and meditative to densely collaged and psychedelic, reflecting both crate-digging traditions and studio experimentation.
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Jazz Rap
Jazz rap is a hip hop subgenre that fuses the rhythmic delivery and sampling aesthetics of rap with the harmonies, timbres, and improvisational spirit of jazz. Producers typically build beats from jazz records—especially 1950s–1970s hard bop, soul jazz, cool jazz, and jazz-funk—chopping horn stabs, upright bass lines, brushed drums, and electric piano loops into laid‑back, head‑nod grooves. Lyrically, jazz rap often leans toward socially conscious themes, storytelling, and playful wordplay, delivered with a cool, conversational flow. The result is a warm, swing‑inflected sound that sits between boom bap hip hop and jazz tradition: sample‑centric but musical, relaxed yet deeply groove‑driven, and frequently enriched by live instrumentation.
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Jerk Rap
Jerk rap is a West Coast party-rap microgenre that emerged from the late‑2000s Los Angeles “Jerkin’” dance movement. It pairs minimal, high‑energy beats with chantable hooks and instructional lyrics tailored to specific dance moves like the jerk, reject, and pin drop. Production emphasizes crisp claps, stuttering snares, thin but punchy 808 bass, and bright, simple synth leads. Tempos often sit in the 140–150 BPM range (or around 90–100 BPM with a double‑time feel), giving dancers room for quick footwork while keeping verses light and bouncy. The aesthetic—skinny jeans, neon colors, skate and street influences—was as integral as the music itself, spreading through MySpace and YouTube and briefly crossing into mainstream charts in 2009–2011.
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Jersey Club Rap
Jersey club rap is a high-energy fusion of New Jersey’s jersey club dance sound with contemporary rap flows and song structures. It typically runs at 135–150 BPM, featuring the signature triplet kick patterns, chopped vocal chants, handclaps, and iconic “bed squeak” samples that define jersey club, while foregrounding punchy, hype-focused rap verses and hooks. Where classic jersey club was largely DJ- and dancer-led, jersey club rap centers rappers and collaborative producer-rapper dynamics. The result is a party-ready style built for dance challenges, call-and-response crowd moments, and short-form virality, but it also carries forward the gritty, DIY spirit of Newark’s club scene.
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Lo-Fi Hip Hop
Lo-fi hip hop is a mellow, sample-driven offshoot of hip hop that emphasizes warm, imperfect textures, simple loops, and relaxed grooves over virtuosic rapping or dense production. Producers often foreground tape hiss, vinyl crackle, and bit-depth artifacts to evoke a cozy, worn-in feeling that complements the genre’s minimal, repetitive structures. Built from boom-bap drum programming, jazzy chord progressions, and short melodic motifs, lo-fi hip hop typically functions as instrumental background music for reading, studying, or unwinding. Its aesthetics are closely tied to internet culture—especially 24/7 livestreams and anime-inspired visuals—making it one of the most recognizable “ambient hip hop” sounds of the streaming era.
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Memphis Rap
Memphis rap is a dark, lo‑fi branch of Southern hip hop that emerged in Memphis, Tennessee, built on ominous minor‑key melodies, 808 sub‑bass, and relentlessly simple but heavy drum programming. It is known for horrorcore-leaning imagery, chant-like hooks, and a raw cassette-mixtape aesthetic: hiss, distortion, and minimal mixing are part of the sound rather than flaws. The style emphasizes eerie synths (organs, choirs, strings, bells), pitched or layered vocals, and sticky, repetitive patterns that create a hypnotic, menacing groove.
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New Orleans R&b
New Orleans R&B is a piano-driven, horn-rich strain of rhythm and blues that emerged in the late 1940s and flourished through the 1950s. It blends blues harmony with the lilt of Caribbean rhythms, the swing of jazz, and gospel’s vocal inflections, creating an irresistibly rolling groove. The style is marked by triplet-based piano patterns, parade-inspired backbeats, syncopated horn riffs, and relaxed yet danceable shuffles. Its sound was defined by the city’s storied studio scene (notably Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studio), visionary bandleaders and producers like Dave Bartholomew and Allen Toussaint, and charismatic singer-pianists such as Fats Domino and Professor Longhair. Lyrically, New Orleans R&B favors good-time party themes, romance, and streetwise vignettes. Its warm, unhurried feel and rhythmic cross-pollination would prove foundational to rock and roll, soul, funk, ska, and swamp pop.
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New Wave
New wave is a post-punk, pop-forward movement that blends the immediacy of punk with glossy pop hooks, danceable rhythms, and an art-school sensibility. Defined by crisp, often chorused guitars, prominent bass, steady four-on-the-floor or disco-inflected drums, and increasing use of synthesizers and drum machines, it channels irony and modernist themes into tight, radio-ready songs. Vocals tend to be cool or arch, lyrics frequently explore urban life, technology, alienation, and romance, and production is bright, spacious, and stylized. While stylistically diverse—from guitar-jangle and power-pop sheen to synth-driven minimalism—new wave is unified by its emphasis on craft, melody, and a sleek, contemporary aesthetic that helped bridge punk’s DIY energy with mainstream pop and dance culture.
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New York Drill
New York drill is a regional evolution of drill rap that fuses the cold, sliding-808 aesthetic and syncopated drum programming of UK drill with the cadence, slang, and swagger of New York street rap. Its sound is defined by menacing minor-key melodies, heavy sub-bass glides, tightly chopped vocal ad-libs, and aggressive, staccato flows. Lyrically it is confrontational and direct, often centering on neighborhood rivalries, status, and survival, while also spawning signature dances and crowd-call moments that translate to clubs and social media virality. The style first coalesced in Brooklyn in the late 2010s and quickly spread to the Bronx, where a faster, sample-driven “club” twist accelerated the scene’s crossover to mainstream audiences.
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Old School Hip Hop
Old school hip hop is the earliest commercially recorded era of hip hop, emerging from Bronx block parties in the late 1970s and reaching its peak in the early to mid‑1980s. It centers on DJs isolating and extending the "break" of funk and disco records while MCs deliver party-rocking rhymes, crowd call‑and‑response, and braggadocio over steady 4/4 grooves. The sound is rhythm-first: looped breakbeats, handclaps, simple bass ostinatos, and—by the early 1980s—Roland TR‑808 patterns and rudimentary synthesizer lines, especially on electro-influenced tracks. Lyrically, it ranges from playful party chants to early social commentary. Culturally, it’s inseparable from the four elements—DJing, MCing, b‑boying, and graffiti—and from the DIY energy of park jams and sound-system culture.
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Philly Club Rap
Philly club rap is a high-energy party-rap style from Philadelphia that fuses the city's homegrown club music with contemporary hip hop flows. It typically runs at 135–145 BPM and foregrounds stomping, syncopated kick patterns, chopped vocal shouts, and sparse, percussive arrangements designed for dance. Compared with closely related Jersey club rap, the Philly variant is often rougher and more percussion-led, leaving open space for dancers and crowd call-and-response. Hooks tend to be shouted, chant-like refrains built around local dance moves (the Shake, the Rock, the Bop), while verses switch between clipped, staccato bars and breathless hype-man cadences.
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Pop Rap
Pop rap blends the rhythmic vocal delivery and beat-centric production of hip hop with the catchy hooks, polished structures, and radio-friendly sensibilities of pop music. It typically features melodic choruses (often sung), accessible themes, and mid-tempo grooves designed for mass appeal. Production prioritizes clean, bright sonics, simple harmonic progressions, and memorable top-line melodies, while verses keep to clear, punchy flows that are easy for broad audiences to follow. Because it sits between two commercial powerhouses—pop and hip hop—pop rap has frequently served as a gateway for mainstream listeners to explore rap, while giving hip hop artists a framework to cross over to pop charts.
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Production Music
Production music (also called library or stock music) is music created specifically for licensing in film, television, radio, advertising, games, and online media rather than for retail release. It is organized in catalogues by mood, style, tempo, and usage, making it quick for editors and producers to find suitable cues. Stylistically, production music is highly diverse. It spans orchestral and light music traditions, jazz, lounge, rock, funk, and contemporary electronic idioms, but is unified by functional design: clear edit points, modular structure, alternate mixes, and versions tailored to typical broadcast durations. Successful cues balance memorability with unobtrusiveness so they can support narrative, voice-over, and sound design without distracting from them.
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Rap Metal
Rap metal fuses the rhythmic vocal delivery and sampling culture of hip hop with the high-gain guitars, driving bass, and aggressive drums of metal. Typical tracks feature rapped verses, shouted or sung hooks, syncopated, groove-heavy riffs, and punchy backbeats that prioritize head-nodding momentum as much as mosh-friendly impact. Down-tuned guitars, palm-muted chugs, and start–stop rhythms are common, often paired with DJ cuts, samples, or electronics. Lyrically, the style ranges from social and political commentary to braggadocio and cathartic personal themes. The genre overlaps with rap rock and nu metal, but it leans more toward metal riffing and heaviness than rap rock, and centers rap as a primary vocal approach rather than a secondary color.
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Rap Rock
Rap rock is a fusion genre that combines hip hop’s rhythmic, percussive vocal delivery and DJ/sampling techniques with the timbre, riffs, and energy of rock guitar, bass, and drums. Typical tracks feature rapped verses over a strong backbeat and groove, then explode into sung or shouted rock choruses with big, anthemic hooks. Guitar parts often use distorted power‑chord riffs or funk‑inflected patterns, while drums lock into hip hop–style kick–snare placements. The result ranges from swaggering, groove‑heavy cuts to aggressive, mosh‑ready anthems that remain catchy and radio‑friendly.
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Rapcore
Rapcore is a fusion style that combines hip hop’s rapped vocals, sampling, and DJ techniques with the high-gain guitars, driving bass, and mosh-ready drums of hardcore punk and alternative metal. The result is groove-forward, riff-centric music: verses are typically rapped over tight, syncopated patterns, while choruses erupt into shouted hooks, gang vocals, or anthemic sing-alongs. Lyrically, rapcore often tackles street-level realities, social and political critique, and personal struggle, delivered with the urgency and physicality of hardcore. Production frequently blends live band energy with hip hop elements such as scratching, cut-up samples, and break-inspired drum feels.
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Ratchet Music
Ratchet music is a minimalist, club-focused strain of West Coast hip hop that coalesced in the early 2010s, most closely associated with Los Angeles producer DJ Mustard. It emphasizes sparse drum programming built from 808 kicks, handclaps, crisp hi‑hats, and simple percussive fills; bouncy tempos around 95–105 BPM; short, catchy synth or piano stabs; and a weighty sub‑bass that leaves ample space for vocals. Culturally and lyrically, it channels “ratchet” party culture and slang—rooted in Louisiana (notably Shreveport’s nickname “Ratchet City”) and amplified by the L.A. party scene—favoring braggadocio, nightlife, flirtation, and chant‑able hooks over dense lyricism. The result is a stripped‑down, hook‑driven sound engineered for dance floors and radio rotation.
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Southern Hip Hop
Southern hip hop is a regional style of hip hop that arose across the American South and is defined by heavy 808 bass, syncopated drum programming, and a distinctive Southern drawl and slang. It blends club-ready rhythms with storytelling about regional pride, street realities, and everyday hustle. Sonically, it ranges from the minimalist, chant-driven energy of New Orleans bounce to the eerie, lo-fi darkness of early Memphis tapes and the syrupy, slowed textures of Houston’s chopped-and-screwed technique. In Atlanta, it incubated trap’s rolling hi-hats and sub-bass, while Miami pushed party-forward, bass-saturated tracks. The genre emphasizes powerful low end, catchy hooks, and call-and-response energy, and it fostered a strong independent label culture (No Limit, Cash Money) that shaped the modern rap business.
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Tape Music
Tape music is a form of early electronic and electroacoustic composition that uses recorded sounds on magnetic tape as the primary material. Composers assemble, cut, splice, loop, reverse, and vary the speed of tape to sculpt timbre, rhythm, and form, often transforming everyday noises into abstract musical structures. Emerging from post–World War II studio experimentation, it blurred the line between composition and sound design. Works are typically fixed-media pieces intended for loudspeaker playback rather than traditional performance, privileging timbral exploration, spatial projection, and montage over conventional harmony and meter.
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Trap
Trap is a subgenre of hip hop that emerged from the Southern United States, defined by half-time grooves, ominous minor-key melodies, and the heavy use of 808 sub-bass. The style is characterized by rapid, syncopated hi-hat rolls, crisp rimshot/clap on the backbeat, and cinematic textures that convey tension and grit. Lyrically, it centers on street economies, survival, ambition, and introspection, with ad-libs used as percussive punctuation. Production is typically minimal but hard-hitting: layered 808s, sparse piano or bell motifs, dark pads, and occasional orchestral or choir samples. Vocals range from gravelly, staccato deliveries to melodic, Auto-Tuned flows, often using triplet cadences.
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Trap Latino
Trap latino (Latin trap) is a Spanish-language offshoot of Southern U.S. trap that fuses the dark, bass-heavy aesthetics of trap with the rhythmic DNA and songwriting sensibilities of the Latin urbano spectrum (reggaeton, dembow, Latin hip hop). Beats typically sit around 70–75 BPM (or 140–150 BPM double-time), driven by sliding 808 bass lines, skittering hi-hat rolls, and crisp snares/claps. Vocals range from gritty rap to heavily Auto-Tuned, melodic hooks, often delivered in Spanish or Spanglish. Lyrical themes oscillate between street realism, romance, hedonism, and introspection, with production palettes favoring minor keys, eerie pads, bell/pluck motifs, and space that lets low-end energy shine. Born in Puerto Rico mid-2010s, the style quickly crossed into the broader Latin urbano market and global pop, reshaping the sound of contemporary Latin music and catalyzing crossovers with regional Mexican, pop, and reggaeton scenes.
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Trap Shaabi
Trap shaabi is an Egyptian fusion style that blends the street-party energy and timbres of shaabi/mahraganat with the half-time bounce, 808 weight, and ad‑libbed swagger of trap. It foregrounds Egyptian Arabic slang, bold hooks, and hyper-saturated sound design while retaining regional melodic colors and percussion. Producers stitch together distorted mizmar and arghul riffs, darbuka and sagat patterns, and microtonal melodies using maqam flavors (Bayati, Hijaz, Nahawand), then anchor them with booming sub‑bass, skittering hi‑hats, and clap-heavy drums. The result is a gritty, dance‑primed urban sound that feels equally at home in Cairo side streets and global streaming playlists.
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Trap Soul
Trap soul is a fusion of contemporary R&B singing and songwriting with the sonic palette and rhythmic feel of trap. It features moody, minor‑key harmonies; airy pads and Rhodes/piano textures; deep 808 sub‑bass with glides; and skittering hi‑hat rolls and halftime drum patterns. Vocals often blend crooning and rapping, with intimate, confessional lyrics about love, heartbreak, desire, ambition, and late‑night introspection. The production is typically spacious and minimal, prioritizing atmosphere and groove over density. Subtle Auto‑Tune, layered ad‑libs, and lush reverbs/delays are common, giving tracks a nocturnal, cinematic feel.
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Trapfunk
Trapfunk is a Brazilian hybrid that fuses the drum programming, 808 bass, and hi‑hat articulations of trap with the syncopated tamborzão grooves, vocal cadences, and party‑ready attitude of funk carioca (baile funk). Tracks typically balance sparse, hard‑hitting trap frameworks with driving Brazilian funk percussion at 130–150 BPM, sliding 808s, and vocal deliveries that alternate between melodic hooks and rapid-fire chants. Lyrically, it draws on the street storytelling, ostentation, and party culture of the baile while adopting the darker textures and sound design of contemporary trap. The result is a club-optimized, bass-forward style that feels equally at home in the baile, on streaming playlists, and across social platforms, linking Brazil’s local funk scenes to global trap aesthetics.
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Underground Hip Hop
Underground hip hop is a loosely defined movement within hip hop culture that prioritizes artistic integrity, lyrical depth, and experimental or non-commercial production over mainstream trends. It is often associated with independent labels, DIY distribution, and regional scenes that cultivate distinctive aesthetics and voices. Musically, underground hip hop favors sample-rich, boom-bap or off-kilter drum programming, gritty textures, and unconventional song structures. Lyrically, it emphasizes complex wordplay, social commentary, personal storytelling, and abstract or avant-garde imagery. Culturally, it values community, crate-digging, and innovation, maintaining a skeptical stance toward commercial pressures.
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West Coast Hip Hop
West Coast hip hop is a regional style of hip hop that arose on the U.S. West Coast, especially in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area. It is known for its heavy funk-influenced grooves, prominent synthesizer leads, deep bass, and a laid-back but confident delivery. While the early scene mixed electro and old-school rap aesthetics, the late 1980s ushered in hard-edged street narratives associated with gangsta rap. In the early 1990s, Dr. Dre and peers popularized G-funk, a sleek, bass-heavy update that sampled and reinterpreted P-Funk. Later waves—from Bay Area mobb music and hyphy to Los Angeles “jerkin’” and ratchet—continued the region’s emphasis on catchy hooks, swagger, and club- and car-ready beats. Lyrically, West Coast hip hop ranges from party anthems and cruising music to vivid depictions of street life, social realities, and personal introspection, all delivered with distinctive regional slang and cadence.
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Rap
Rap is a vocal music style built on the rhythmic, rhymed, and often improvised spoken delivery of lyrics over a beat. It emphasizes flow, cadence, wordplay, and narrative, and is commonly performed over sampled or programmed drum patterns and loops. Emerging from block parties and sound-system culture in the Bronx, New York City, rap became the core vocal expression of hip hop culture alongside DJing, breakdancing, and graffiti. While it is closely linked to hip hop, rap as a technique and genre has also crossed into pop, rock, electronic, and global regional scenes. Musically, rap favors strong drum grooves (breakbeats, 808 patterns), sparse harmony, and loop-based structures that foreground the MC’s voice. Lyrically, it spans party chants and battle brags to intricate internal rhymes, social commentary, reportage, and autobiography.
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New Music
New music (German: Neue Musik) denotes the 20th- and 21st‑century modernist stream of Western art music that decisively broke with common‑practice tonality and traditional forms. It foregrounds innovation in pitch organization, rhythm, timbre, space, and notation, often embracing atonality, serial procedures, chance, microtonality, noise, and electronics. The term crystallized around the Second Viennese School and, after World War II, the postwar European avant‑garde centered on festivals and institutions that promoted aesthetically radical work. New music is not a single technique but an umbrella for divergent approaches—integral serialism, experimental and indeterminate practices, spectral and timbral thinking, extended techniques, and electroacoustic integration—united by a commitment to redefining what composed music can be.
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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.