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Reiho Music
Japan
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Sludge Metal
Sludge metal is a hybrid of doom metal’s slow, downtuned weight and hardcore punk’s raw aggression. It emphasizes thick, overdriven guitar tones, throttling bass, and drums that lurch between trudging slow-motion grooves and ragged mid‑tempo blasts. Vocals are typically screamed, barked, or anguished, often buried slightly in the mix to feel abrasive and cathartic. The style took shape in the late 1980s United States—particularly the Pacific Northwest and the American South—where bands fused Sabbath‑like doom riffs with the DIY harshness of hardcore and the scabrous textures of noise rock. Lyrical themes commonly explore addiction, despair, social decay, and Southern Gothic imagery, delivered with an intentionally gritty, unvarnished production aesthetic.
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Japanese Folk Music
Japanese folk music (min'yō and related regional traditions) is the collective body of vernacular song and instrumental practices that arose among Japan’s rural and coastal communities. It includes work songs (rice-planting, fishing, sake-brewing), festival and dance songs (Bon-odori), travelers’ and boatmen’s songs, lullabies, and ritual/seasonal chants. Melodies commonly draw on pentatonic collections such as the yo and in scales, and are richly ornamented with kobushi (vocal turns) and flexible timing shaped by ma (intentional silence/space). Textures are largely monophonic or heterophonic, with unison singing doubled by instruments like shamisen, fue (transverse bamboo flutes), shakuhachi, and sometimes koto; taiko and local percussion support dance and procession contexts. Regional styles (e.g., Tsugaru in the north, Amami in the south, Okinawa and Ainu traditions) contribute distinctive timbres, rhythms, and repertories that together define the breadth of Japanese folk expression.
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Birushanah
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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.