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Panik Oxygen
Greece
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Laiko
Laïko (laïkó tragoudi) is modern Greek popular music that crystallized in the post–World War II era as rebetiko’s urban sound moved into the mainstream. It blends the expressive bouzouki-led melodies and modal color of earlier Greek urban and folk traditions with verse–chorus songcraft and production values suited to radio, records, and the nightclub culture of the “bouzoukia.” Typical laïko ranges from intensely emotive laments about love, exile, and hardship to celebratory dance numbers, all delivered with ornamented vocals, dramatic vibrato, and prominent instrumental intros (often a taximi improvisation on bouzouki).
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Modern Laiko
Modern laïko (σύγχρονο λαϊκό) is the mainstream, pop-oriented evolution of Greek laïko, fusing the bouzouki-led sound and modal melodies of traditional laïko and rebetiko with contemporary pop production, drum kits, electric bass, keyboards, and synthesizers. It is song-driven, emotive, and nightlife-oriented, balancing dance-floor anthems (often in 4/4 or tsifteteli feel) with big-chorus ballads that showcase expressive vocals and melismatic ornamentation. Harmonically it favors minor keys and modal colors (notably phrygian dominant/Hijaz), while arrangements blend live instruments (bouzouki, guitar, violin) with sleek, radio-ready textures. Lyrically it centers on love, heartbreak, longing, and the urban night scene (clubs/bouzoukia), delivered in Greek with clear diction and dramatic phrasing. Modern laïko dominates Greek popular music charts and club culture, acting as a cultural bridge between folk roots and global pop aesthetics.
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Neo-Acoustic
Neo-acoustic (often nicknamed "neo-aco" in Japan) is a gentle, guitar-forward strain of indie pop that emphasizes clean acoustic textures, jangly strums, and intimate, soft-spoken vocals. It trades the brashness of rock for nuanced chord color, light percussion, and melodic bass lines. The style draws heavily on British indie and the C86/twee movement, while folding in bossa nova’s relaxed syncopation and jazz-influenced chords. In Japan, the term came to denote a distinct indie sensibility—bookish, urbane, and romantic—that later fed into Shibuya-kei and various bedroom-pop and lo-fi currents. Typical arrangements favor acoustic guitars, brushy drums, tambourine or hand percussion, subtle keyboards, and occasional strings or winds. Lyrics tend toward everyday romance, small-town or city nostalgia, and quietly reflective storytelling.
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Old-Time
Old-time is a North American string-band tradition rooted in the rural South and Appalachia, where fiddles and banjos lead dance tunes, ballads, and breakdowns. It emphasizes a steady, trance-like groove for social dancing, ensemble playing over solos, and strong melodic riffs supported by drones and rhythmic ostinati. The sound blends British Isles balladry and fiddle repertory with African American banjo technique and rhythmic sensibilities. Tunes are commonly modal (Dorian, Mixolydian, Aeolian), arranged in two repeated strains (AABB), and played for extended durations to serve square and contra dancing. Vocals, when present, are often old ballads or topical songs delivered with a plain, direct style.
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Artists
Various Artists
Arvanitaki, Eleftheria
Kotsiras, Yiannis
Babali, Andriana
Vitali, Eleni
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