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Waving Hands Records
France
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Ballad
A ballad is a narrative song form that tells a story in simple, singable stanzas, traditionally using quatrains in ballad meter (alternating lines of iambic tetrameter and trimeter with an ABCB rhyme scheme). Ballads typically recount dramatic events—love, betrayal, tragedy, murder, the supernatural—or notable historical incidents. Early ballads were often sung unaccompanied or with minimal accompaniment, carried by memorable, modal melodies and refrains that aided oral transmission. Over time, the term also came to describe slow, sentimental popular songs in the 20th century, but the core of the genre remains the storytelling focus and strophic, easily learned structure. Ballads are central to the English- and Scots-language folk traditions, migrated to North America where they flourished in Appalachian singing, and continue to be performed, adapted, and reinterpreted in contemporary folk and roots scenes.
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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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Minimal Synth
Minimal synth is a sparse, DIY strand of early electronic music built around a small palette of analog synthesizers, drum machines, and austere melodies. It favors economy: short, hook-like motifs; rigid, metronomic rhythms; and cool, detached vocals that sit in stark relief against the electronics. The sound is defined by dry drum machine patterns (often 2–4 bar loops), monophonic basslines, simple minor-key harmonies, and limited effects—typically delay and reverb used tastefully rather than lavishly. Emerging from post-punk and new wave’s experimental fringes, it captured a mood that was simultaneously intimate and mechanical, melancholic yet danceable. Originally circulated on cassettes and 7" singles via small independent labels, minimal synth has since become a collectors’ and archivists’ favorite, with a 2000s revival highlighting how its disciplined restraint and analog textures anticipated later retro-synth and underground electronic movements.
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Speech
Speech is a non-music recording category focused on intelligible spoken language rather than melody, harmony, or meter. It encompasses political addresses, public announcements, news bulletins, commemorations, and other forms of formal oratory captured as audio. Unlike spoken word poetry or stand-up comedy, the emphasis in speech recordings is on clear rhetoric, message delivery, and documentary value. The production prioritizes intelligibility, natural prosody, and sonic transparency, often avoiding musical accompaniment so that content remains archival, reference-grade, and contextually faithful. From wax cylinders and shellac discs to radio tape, cassettes, digital broadcast, and streaming archives, speech has been a core use-case of audio media, preserving moments of civic life, cultural change, and history in their original voices.
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Synth Punk
Synth punk is a raw, high‑energy fusion of punk’s velocity and attitude with the abrasive, synthetic timbres of analog keyboards, drum machines, and noise gear. Instead of guitar-driven riffs, synth punk typically foregrounds distorted monosynth bass lines, cheap combo organs, or primitive sequencers pounding out repetitive patterns at punk tempos. Vocals are often shouted, sneered, or delivered deadpan; lyrics skewer consumer culture, media saturation, technology, and urban alienation. Production values tend toward the minimal and DIY: overdriven inputs, tape saturation, room mics, and purposeful crudity. The result is a confrontational, mechanical churn—danceable yet hostile—that helped open a direct line between punk, early industrial, and later synth-oriented underground scenes.
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Your Planet Is Next
Bene Gesserit
Facit
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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.