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Classical
Classical music is the notated art-music tradition of Europe and its global descendants, characterized by durable forms, carefully codified harmony and counterpoint, and a literate score-based practice. The term “classical” can refer broadly to the entire Western art-music lineage from the Medieval era to today, not just the Classical period (c. 1750s–1820s). It privileges long-form structures (such as symphonies, sonatas, concertos, masses, and operas), functional or modal harmony, thematic development, and timbral nuance across ensembles ranging from solo instruments to full orchestras and choirs. Across centuries, the style evolved from chant and modal polyphony to tonal harmony, and later to post-tonal idioms, while maintaining a shared emphasis on written notation, performance practice, and craft.
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Contemporary Classical
Contemporary classical is the broad field of Western art music created after World War II. It embraces an array of aesthetics—from serialism and indeterminacy to minimalism, spectralism, electroacoustic practices, and post‑tonal lyricism—while retaining a concern for notated composition and timbral innovation. Unlike the unified styles of earlier eras, contemporary classical is pluralistic. Composers freely mix acoustic and electronic sound, expand instrumental techniques, adopt non‑Western tuning and rhythm, and explore new forms, from process-based structures to open and graphic scores. The result is a music that can be rigorously complex or radically simple, technologically experimental or intimately acoustic, yet consistently focused on extending how musical time, timbre, and form can be shaped.
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Experimental
Experimental music is an umbrella term for practices that prioritize exploration, process, and discovery over adherence to established genre norms. It embraces new sound sources, nonstandard tuning systems, indeterminacy and chance operations, graphic and open-form scores, extended techniques, and technology-led sound design (tape, electronics, computers, and live processing). Rather than a single style, it is a methodology and ethos: testing hypotheses about sound, structure, and performance, often blurring boundaries between composition, improvisation, sound art, and performance art. Listeners can expect unfamiliar timbres, unusual forms, and an emphasis on how music is made as much as the resulting sound.
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Indie Pop
Indie pop is a melodic, DIY-rooted branch of alternative music that blends the immediacy of pop songwriting with the independence and aesthetics of underground scenes. It typically features jangly, clean-toned guitars, tuneful bass lines, compact song structures, and intimate, literate lyrics that balance sweetness with subtle melancholy. The sound often leans toward bright chord progressions, earworm choruses, and understated production, favoring charm and personality over gloss. Culturally, indie pop is tied to small labels, fanzines, and community radio, with influential scenes and imprints such as Postcard, Sarah, and Creation laying the groundwork for its global diffusion.
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Musique Concrète
Musique concrète is an electroacoustic approach to composition that uses recorded real‑world sounds (objets sonores) as primary material rather than traditional instruments or notation. Composers edit, splice, loop, reverse, time‑stretch, filter, and otherwise transform these recordings to create works designed for loudspeakers. Emerging in late‑1940s France, it introduced acousmatic listening—focusing on the sound itself, detached from its source—along with a morphology‑based vocabulary of gesture, texture, and timbre. Historically realized on tape and now on digital audio workstations, musique concrète privileges montage and transformation over conventional harmony and meter, inviting listeners into a rich, tactile world of sonic phenomena.
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Experimental Pop
Experimental pop is a boundary-pushing approach to pop music that blends memorable hooks and songcraft with unconventional sounds, structures, and production techniques. It draws on avant-garde ideas, studio experimentation, and cross-genre hybridization while retaining some of pop’s accessibility. Artists often reconfigure verse–chorus forms, manipulate timbre and texture, and use the studio as an instrument, resulting in music that can feel both familiar and radically new.
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Wandelweiser
Wandelweiser refers both to a composer collective (Edition Wandelweiser, founded in 1992) and a recognizable aesthetic that emphasizes silence, extreme quietness, long duration, and a heightened attention to sonic detail. Its music often unfolds at the threshold of audibility, inviting listeners to attend to room tone, the decay of sounds, and environmental ambience as part of the work. Scores frequently use open or flexible forms, proportional or time‑based notation, and spare materials. Rather than dramatic development, Wandelweiser pieces privilege presence, patience, and the poetics of space—where silences are treated as active, structural components rather than mere rests. While rooted in contemporary classical practice, the aesthetic intersects with experimental, electroacoustic, and ambient sensibilities, and has influenced quiet improvisation, microsound, and other reductionist currents across scenes in Europe, North America, and Japan.
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Artists
Dalibert, Melaine
di Domenico, Giovanni
Carlson, Erik
Shichijo, Keiko
Frey, Jürg
Pisaro‐Liu, Michael
Quatuor Bozzini
Olsen, Lance
Duplant, Bruno
Asís, Clara de
Demoč, Adrián
Voutchkova, Biliana
Holterbach, Manu
Houdt, Reinier van
Sansón, Gil
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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.