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Japan
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Kayōkyoku
Kayōkyoku is a broad umbrella of Japanese popular song that dominated the nation’s mainstream from the prewar era through the 1980s, before the term J‑pop became prevalent. It blends Western popular idioms—such as jazz, swing, tango, and later rock and roll—with Japanese melodic sensibilities and lyric themes. Stylistically, kayōkyoku favors clear, memorable melodies, polished vocal delivery, and orchestral or big‑band arrangements. Its songs often use Western song forms (AABA or verse–chorus), while retaining a distinctly Japanese emotional tone rooted in nostalgia, romance, and everyday urban life.
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City Pop
City pop is a sleek, cosmopolitan strain of Japanese popular music that emerged in the late 1970s and flourished throughout the 1980s. It fuses the polish of Western AOR and soft rock with funk, disco, jazz fusion, and boogie grooves, wrapping them in sophisticated harmonies and studio gloss. Built for car stereos, FM radio, and neon-lit nightlife, the style favors tight rhythm sections, lush keyboards (Rhodes, FM synths), clean chorus-laden guitars, and sax or synth leads. Lyrics often paint aspirational urban scenes—coastal highways, midnight drives, summer romance—balancing breezy optimism with a bittersweet, nostalgic hue. After a period of relative dormancy in the 1990s, city pop enjoyed a global revival in the 2010s via YouTube algorithms, online crate-digging, and sample-based microgenres, turning once-domestic hits into worldwide cult classics.
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Idol Kayō
Idol kayō is a strand of Japanese popular song (kayōkyoku) centered on manufactured "idol" singers who present a wholesome, approachable image alongside catchy, highly arranged pop tunes. It emphasizes bright melodies, simple romantic or seasonal themes, and choreography-ready hooks that translate well to television variety shows and live fan events. Sonically it sits between classic kayōkyoku and later J-pop, often blending disco rhythms, string and brass arrangements, and early synth-pop colors, with key changes and memorable refrains designed for mass appeal.
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J-Pop
J-pop (Japanese pop) is a broad umbrella for mainstream Japanese popular music that blends Western pop/rock, dance, and R&B with distinctly Japanese songwriting, vocal delivery, and industry practices. It is characterized by strong hooks, polished production, bright synths and guitars, frequent key changes and modulatory bridges, and chorus-first or chorus-centric structures. J-pop spans idol groups, singer-songwriters, band-oriented pop-rock, electronic dance-pop, and R&B ballads, while remaining closely tied to television, advertising, video games, and anime tie-ins (anisong).
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Artists
Various Artists
Gillespie, Dizzy
Rypdal, Terje
Marley, Bob & The Wailers
Di Meola, Al
Ukadan
Prism
Kohiruimaki, Kahoru
Agata, Morio
Miyake, Jun
Kurozumi, Kengo
Vitouš, Miroslav
Lagrène, Biréli
Coryell, Larry
Shīna, Megumi
Hanzawa, Norio
Gurtu, Trilok
Noguchi, Goro
Ito, Yukari
Takahashi, Tatsuya and Tokyo Union
BREAD & BUTTER
Kubota, Makoto & Sunset Gang, The
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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.