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Breakfast at Night Records
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Pop
Pop is a broad, hook-driven style of popular music designed for wide appeal. It emphasizes memorable melodies, concise song structures, polished vocals, and production intended for radio, charts, and mass media. While pop continually absorbs elements from other styles, its core remains singable choruses, accessible harmonies, and rhythmic clarity. Typical forms include verse–pre-chorus–chorus, frequent use of bridges and middle-eights, and ear-catching intros and outros. Pop is not defined by a single instrumentation. It flexibly incorporates acoustic and electric instruments, drum machines, synthesizers, and increasingly digital production techniques, always in service of the song and the hook.
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Pop Punk
Pop punk blends the speed and attitude of punk rock with the melody, hooks, and songcraft of pop. It features bright, concise songs driven by crunchy power-chord guitars, punchy drums, and catchy vocal lines that often favor gang shouts and harmonies. Lyrically, pop punk tends to focus on adolescence, relationships, boredom, suburbia, and self-deprecating humor, delivered with a mix of earnestness and wit. Production ranges from raw and DIY to radio-ready polish, but the core is always immediacy: big choruses, tight structures, and energetic performances.
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Punk
Punk is a fast, abrasive, and minimalist form of rock music built around short songs, stripped-down instrumentation, and confrontational, anti-establishment lyrics. It emphasizes DIY ethics, raw energy, and immediacy over virtuosity, often featuring distorted guitars, shouted or sneered vocals, and simple, catchy melodies. Typical songs run 1–3 minutes, sit around 140–200 BPM, use power chords and basic progressions (often I–IV–V), and favor live, unpolished production. Beyond sound, punk is a cultural movement encompassing zines, independent labels, political activism, and a fashion vocabulary of ripped clothes, leather, and safety pins.
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Ska
Ska is a Jamaican popular music style characterized by a brisk 4/4 groove, off‑beat guitar or piano upstrokes (the “skank”), walking bass lines, and punchy horn riffs. Emerging in late‑1950s Kingston dancehalls, ska fused local mento and calypso with American rhythm & blues and jazz, creating a lively sound that celebrated independence‑era optimism and street culture. Across time, ska evolved through distinct waves: the original Jamaican ska of the early 1960s, the racially integrated and politically aware 2 Tone movement in late‑1970s Britain, and the third‑wave explosion in the 1990s that blended ska with punk energy around the world.
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Surf
Surf is a guitar-driven style of early 1960s popular music that evokes the sound and culture of ocean surfing. It is best known for its "wet" spring reverb, rapid tremolo-picked melodies, and bright single‑coil guitar tones that mimic the shimmer and surge of waves. The genre includes both instrumental surf (Dick Dale, The Ventures) and vocal surf (The Beach Boys, Jan & Dean), the latter often pairing lush harmonies with lyrics about surfing, cars, and Southern California youth life. Harmonically it tends to use simple I–IV–V progressions, minor‑key modes for dramatic instrumentals, and singable hooks for radio‑friendly songs. Beyond its beach imagery, surf's sonic signatures influenced film/TV "spy" cues and later rock subgenres, thanks to its distinctive timbre, energetic rhythms, and memorable riffs.
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Bubblegum
Bubblegum is a bright, hook-saturated strain of late-1960s pop built for instant sing‑along appeal and teen/preteen audiences. Songs are short, cheerful, and shamelessly catchy, with bouncy 4/4 beats, simple major‑key chord cycles, handclaps, tambourines, and chantable or nonsense‑syllable refrains. Often created by producer-led studio projects and marketed via TV, cartoons, and colorful branding, bubblegum privileges irresistible choruses and uncomplicated lyrics about crushes, dancing, and schoolyard romance. It’s radio-first pop: uncomplicated, upbeat, and engineered for maximum earworm effect.
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Acoustic Punk
Acoustic punk is a stripped‑down, unplugged expression of punk attitude and songwriting. It keeps punk’s fast tempos, direct lyrics, and DIY ethos, but performs them on primarily acoustic instruments—most often steel‑string guitar, voice, and minimal percussion. Rather than smoothing punk’s edges, acoustic punk often emphasizes rawness: percussive down‑strokes, shouted or chest‑voice singing, gang vocals, and foot‑stomp/clap rhythms that translate well to house shows, busking spots, and intimate venues. Lyrically it spans political protest, working‑class storytelling, confessional themes, and dark humor. Compared with folk‑punk, acoustic punk tends to strip away overt folk ornamentation and traditional instrumentation, keeping the core “punk song” intact while simply removing the amplifier.
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Ramonescore
Ramonescore is a minimalist, high-tempo strain of pop-punk that explicitly models its sound, songcraft, and attitude on the blueprint set by the Ramones. It favors short, hook-stuffed songs built from all-downstroke power-chord strumming, four-on-the-floor drumming, and sing-along choruses with "whoa-oh" gang vocals. Musically, it relies on major-key I–IV–V (and occasional vi) progressions, brisk 160–200 BPM tempos, count-off intros, and compact arrangements with little to no guitar soloing. Lyrically, it leans toward everyday romance, heartbreak, teen obsessions, B‑movies, summer, pizza, and pop-culture references—delivered with deadpan humor and bubblegum-melodic charm. Rather than inventing a new aesthetic, Ramonescore codifies a purist interpretation of 1970s Ramones-style punk, and spreads it globally through DIY labels, split EPs, and tight-knit scenes.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
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