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Ambient
Ambient is a form of electronic and electroacoustic music that prioritizes tone, atmosphere, and texture over conventional song structures and rhythmic drive. It typically features slow-moving harmonies, sustained drones, gentle timbral shifts, and extensive use of space and silence. Rather than drawing attention to itself through hooks or beats, ambient is designed to be as ignorable as it is interesting, rewarding both background listening and focused immersion. Artists often employ synthesizers, samplers, tape loops, field recordings, and subtle acoustic instruments, with reverb and delay creating a sense of place. Substyles range from luminous, consonant soundscapes to darker, more dissonant atmospheres.
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Art Pop
Art pop is a strand of pop music that treats the pop song as a canvas for high-concept ideas, experimental techniques, and cross-media aesthetics. It marries accessible melodies and hooks with the visual culture of art schools, the conceptual rigor of the avant-garde, and the studio-as-instrument ethos. Sonically, art pop favors eclectic instrumentation (synths, orchestral timbres, guitars, found sounds), unusual song forms, and sophisticated harmony. It often employs collage, musique concrète–like textures, and theatrical vocal delivery while still keeping a pop-facing surface. Beyond sound, art pop is deeply visual and conceptual: albums are framed as coherent artworks, stagecraft and video are integral, and lyrics tend toward intertextuality, character work, irony, and social commentary. The result is pop that is both immediate and idea-driven.
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Balearic Beat
Balearic beat is a sun‑drenched, eclectic form of dance music and DJ practice that emerged from Ibiza’s open‑air clubs in the mid‑to‑late 1980s. Rather than being a tightly codified sound, it is defined by a warm, Mediterranean feel, a relaxed but insistent four‑on‑the‑floor pulse, and an anything‑goes approach to selection that blends house, italo‑disco, synth‑pop, new wave, Latin, funk, reggae, dub, and soft rock into a seamless, euphoric flow. On the dancefloor it tends to sit around 100–122 BPM, leaning on congas and hand percussion, jangly or nylon‑string guitars, spacious pads and reverb, and basslines that are groovy more than aggressive. The result is a transportive vibe associated with sunset sets, terraces, and outdoor nights—music chosen for feeling and context as much as for genre.
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Berlin School
Berlin School is a strand of German electronic music built around long, hypnotic sequences, evolving textures, and exploratory improvisation. It foregrounds analog synthesizers, step‑sequencers, and tape delays to create spacious, slowly shifting soundscapes. Emerging from the early 1970s Berlin underground, the style favors extended forms over song structures, minimal harmonic movement anchored by pedal points, and modal or scalar lead lines that weave over pulsing arpeggiations. The result balances mechanistic momentum with cosmic ambience, inviting deep listening and trance-like immersion.
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Jungle
Jungle is a UK-born electronic music style defined by rapid, chopped breakbeats, heavy sub‑bass, and a deep dialogue with Jamaican sound‑system culture. Typical tempos sit around 155–170 BPM, with intensely syncopated drum programming that flips funk and jazz breaks (especially the Amen, Think, and Apache breaks) into kinetic, polyrhythmic mosaics. Its sound palette blends dub’s bass weight and echo, reggae and dancehall vocal toasting, hip‑hop sampling aesthetics, and the rave/hardcore continuum’s rave stabs and euphoria. In contemporary usage, jungle is often grouped under the broader umbrella of drum and bass; historically it directly preceded and seeded mid‑1990s drum and bass and is frequently treated as an early substyle of DnB.
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Breakbeat
Breakbeat is an electronic dance music style built around syncopated, sampled drum "breaks" rather than a straight four-on-the-floor kick. Producers chop, loop, and rearrange classic drum breaks (such as the Amen, Apache, and Think breaks) to create swung, shuffling rhythms with strong backbeat accents. Emerging from the UK rave continuum, breakbeat draws heavily on hip hop’s sampling culture and electro’s machine-funk, while adopting house/acid-house sound design and club-focused arrangements. Tempos most commonly sit between 125–140 BPM (though broader ranges occur), featuring heavy sub-bass, crunchy snares, and edits/fills that propel dancefloors without relying on a 4/4 kick. As a scene, "breaks" spans everything from big-room, party-leaning grooves to techy, nu skool textures and regional variants like Florida breaks. It also functions as a foundational rhythmic vocabulary that informed jungle and drum and bass, and it underpins much of modern bass music.
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Chillwave
Chillwave is a late-2000s microgenre of electronic pop characterized by hazy, retro-tinged synthesizers, lo‑fi textures, understated drum machines, and heavily processed, dreamlike vocals. Its sound evokes sun-faded nostalgia, often referencing 1980s synth-pop and soft rock atmospheres filtered through cassette hiss, chorus, and reverb. Built by bedroom producers during the blog era, chillwave prizes mood over virtuosity: gentle major-seventh harmonies, loop-friendly motifs, and sidechain‑pumped pads create a warm, gauzy drift. Visual and conceptual aesthetics—VHS artifacts, pastel palettes, palm trees, and memories of an endless summer—are integral to its identity.
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Chiptune
Chiptune (also called chip music or 8-bit music) is a style of electronic music created with, or emulating, the programmable sound generator (PSG) and FM chips found in vintage game consoles and home computers such as the NES/Famicom, Game Boy, Commodore 64 (SID), Amiga, Atari ST, and others. The sound palette is defined by simple waveforms (square/pulse, triangle, saw, noise), rapid arpeggios that imply chords on limited channels, pitch bends, duty-cycle modulation, and crunchy noise percussion. These constraints lend chiptune its bright, percussive, and highly melodic character, often evoking early video-game aesthetics. While originally utilitarian—music for games and computer demos—the approach evolved into a standalone art form. Contemporary chiptune spans pure hardware-authentic tracks and hybrid productions that blend chip timbres with modern synthesis, drums, vocals, and mixing techniques.
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Dark Wave
Dark wave is a moody, melancholic offshoot of post-punk and new wave that emphasizes minor-key harmonies, somber timbres, and introspective or romantic lyrical themes. It blends the icy textures of early synthesizers and drum machines with reverb-laden guitars and melodic, driving basslines. The style typically features baritone or ethereal vocals, atmospheric production with heavy use of chorus, delay, and reverb, and tempos that range from slow and brooding to mid-tempo and danceable. Dark wave spans both guitar-oriented and synth-forward approaches, and often overlaps with related movements such as coldwave, minimal wave, and ethereal wave.
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Dream Pop
Dream pop is a subgenre of alternative and indie rock that emphasizes atmosphere, texture, and mood over traditional rock dynamics. It is characterized by shimmering, reverb-laden guitars, soft and often breathy vocals, steady but subdued rhythms, and lush harmonic beds created with chorus, delay, and ambient-style processing. Rather than building around riffs or virtuosity, dream pop prioritizes hypnotic repetition, impressionistic lyrics, and a sense of weightless drift, frequently drawing on neo-psychedelia and ambient aesthetics. Its canonical sound coalesced in the mid-1980s (especially around the 4AD label), and later intersected with and helped seed shoegaze and many subsequent bedroom- and internet-era pop styles.
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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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Electronica
Electronica is a broad, largely 1990s umbrella term for a spectrum of electronic music crafted as much for immersive, album‑oriented listening as for clubs and raves. It gathers elements from techno, house, ambient, breakbeat, IDM, and hip hop production, emphasizing synthesizers, drum machines, samplers, and studio experimentation. The sound can range from downtempo and atmospheric to hard‑hitting and breakbeat‑driven, but it typically foregrounds sound design, texture, and mood over strict dance‑floor utility. In the mid‑to‑late 1990s the term was used by labels and press—especially in the United States—to market and introduce diverse electronic acts to mainstream rock and pop audiences.
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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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Futurepop
Futurepop is a strand of electronic dance music that fuses the melodic focus of synth-pop with the muscular rhythms and worldview of EBM, set to trance- and techno-derived club frameworks. Often anthemic yet introspective, it emphasizes shimmering leads, arpeggiated sequences, and tight four-on-the-floor beats, while retaining EBM’s dystopian/apocalyptic themes and vocal delivery. The result is sleek, emotive songs designed for dark alternative dance floors, balancing uplifting, trance-like euphoria with noir-tinged lyrical content.
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Glitch
Glitch is an experimental electronic music genre that foregrounds the sounds of technological error—digital clicks, pops, clipping, buffer underruns, CD skipping, software crashes, and bit‑reduction. Rather than hiding artifacts, producers use them as primary musical material, often arranged through extreme micro‑editing and non‑linear sequencing. Texturally, glitch spans austere minimalism to warm, hazy ambience. Rhythms tend to be fragmented and asymmetrical, with sudden cuts, stutters, and silences that create tension and negative space. The palette commonly includes sine‑tone grains, granular clouds, filtered noise, and hyper‑detailed percussive fragments, sometimes sitting over subdued drones or dub‑inflected low end. The style emerged in the late 1990s around labels such as Mille Plateaux, influenced by IDM, minimal techno, and the aesthetics of failure in digital media. It later permeated pop and beat‑driven styles through sound‑design techniques that evoke imperfection and transience.
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Glitch Pop
Glitch pop is a strain of pop music that foregrounds digital errors and micro-edits as expressive hooks, fusing the tuneful structures of mainstream pop with the textural play of experimental electronica. Producers chop, stutter, and time-stretch vocals; sprinkle in clicks, cuts, and buffer-skip artifacts; and use bit-crushing or granular resynthesis alongside bright synths and catchy choruses. Despite its love of sonic fragmentation, the genre remains song-first: verses and choruses are clearly defined, melodies are memorable, and harmonies tend to be consonant. The friction between pristine songwriting and intentionally broken sound design creates a delicate, intimate, and often melancholic shimmer that feels both futuristic and warmly human.
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Hypnagogic Pop
Hypnagogic pop is a late‑2000s microgenre of lo‑fi pop that evokes the hazy, half‑awake feeling between sleep and consciousness. Artists fold fragments of 1970s–1990s mass‑media memory—VHS textures, TV idents, soft rock hooks, and mall‑era synths—into dreamy songs obscured by tape hiss, reverb, and analog wobble. The style blends retro synth-pop, yacht/soft rock, new age pads, and ambient drift with indie pop songcraft. Its mood is nostalgic and melancholic yet warmly intimate, as if hearing familiar pop refracted through worn cassettes and fading broadcast signals.
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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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Instrumental
Instrumental is music created and performed without sung lyrics, placing the expressive weight on melody, rhythm, harmony, and timbre produced by instruments. As an umbrella practice it appears in many cultures, but its modern identity cohered in Baroque-era Europe when purely instrumental forms such as the sonata, concerto, and dance suites began to flourish. Since then, instrumental thinking—developing motives, structuring form without text, and showcasing timbral contrast—has informed everything from orchestral music and solo piano repertoire to post-rock, film scores, and beat-driven electronic styles. Instrumental works can be intimate (solo or chamber) or expansive (full orchestra), narrative (programmatic) or abstract (absolute music). The absence of lyrics invites listeners to project imagery and emotion, making the style a natural fit for cinema, games, and contemplative listening.
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New Age
New age is a largely instrumental, mood-driven genre that emphasizes calm, spacious textures and a sense of spiritual or contemplative uplift. It blends gentle electronic timbres, acoustic instruments, and global/folk influences to create immersive soundscapes intended for relaxation, meditation, and introspection. Hallmarks include slow tempos or free time, long sustaining pads, modal and consonant harmonies, nature field recordings, and unobtrusive rhythms. The music often avoids dramatic tension in favor of openness and continuity, conveying themes of inner peace, nature, and the transcendent.
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New Jack Swing
New jack swing is a late‑1980s fusion of contemporary R&B vocal harmony and melodies with hip‑hop’s drum programming, sampling aesthetics, and street attitude. It is defined by swung, hard‑hitting drum‑machine grooves (often with gated snares), bright synth stabs and bass, and a slick, dance‑oriented production style. Producers and vocal groups combined rap verses or talk‑style ad‑libs with smooth, hook‑forward choruses, making the sound equally suited for radio and choreography‑heavy performances. The style dominated U.S. pop and R&B charts from the late 1980s into the early 1990s, influencing mainstream pop as well as the first waves of K‑pop and shaping the trajectory of 1990s contemporary R&B.
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Noise
Noise is an experimental music genre that uses non-traditional sound sources, distortion, feedback, and extreme dynamics as primary musical materials. Instead of emphasizing melody, harmony, or conventional rhythm, it focuses on texture, density, timbre, and the physical presence of sound. Practitioners sculpt saturated walls of sound, piercing feedback, metallic clatter, contact-mic scrapes, tape hiss, and electronic interference into works that can be confrontational or meditative. Performances often highlight process and immediacy—improvisation, body movement, and site-specific acoustics—while recordings can range from lo-fi cassette overload to meticulously layered studio constructions. Though rooted in early avant-garde ideas, the genre coalesced as a distinct practice in the late 1970s and 1980s, especially through Japan’s ‘Japanoise’ scene, and subsequently influenced numerous styles across industrial, punk-adjacent, and experimental electronic music.
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Orchestral
Orchestral music refers to compositions written for an orchestra—a large ensemble typically built around a string section (violins, violas, cellos, double basses), complemented by woodwinds, brass, percussion, and often harp, keyboard, or other auxiliary instruments. A conductor coordinates the ensemble, shaping balance, phrasing, and expression. The style emphasizes coloristic timbre combinations, dynamic range from the softest pianissimo to explosive tuttis, and textures that can shift seamlessly between transparent chamber-like writing and monumental masses of sound. Orchestral writing underpins concert genres such as symphonies, overtures, and tone poems, as well as opera, ballet, and modern film and game scores. While orchestral writing evolved across centuries, its core craft centers on melody, counterpoint, harmony, register, and orchestration—the art of assigning musical ideas to instruments to achieve clarity, contrast, and narrative impact.
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Plunderphonics
Plunderphonics is a sample-based music practice in which new compositions are made entirely or predominantly from pre‑existing recordings. Rather than using short, unrecognizable snippets as texture, plunderphonic works foreground recognizable materials—pop hits, classical excerpts, commercials, voice-overs—and transform them through juxtaposition, layering, pitch-shifting, time-stretching, and collage. Coined by Canadian composer John Oswald in the mid‑1980s, the term names both a technique and a critical stance that questions authorship, originality, and ownership in the age of reproducible media. Plunderphonics often functions as cultural commentary or satire, drawing attention to how meaning changes when familiar sounds are recontextualized. Stylistically, it ranges from dense cut‑up cacophony to groove-oriented rearrangements that remain danceable and accessible.
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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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Post-Industrial
Post-industrial is an umbrella term for the diverse musical currents that evolved out of first‑wave industrial music in the early 1980s. Rather than a single sound, it describes a methodology: the recontextualization of noise, tape collage, found sound, non‑traditional percussion, and transgressive or esoteric themes into new hybrids. It commonly emphasizes textural experimentation over conventional song form, drawing on ambient drones, harsh electronics, ritualistic rhythms, and performance-art strategies. The scene grew through DIY cassette culture, mail‑art networks, and small independent labels, fostering substyles like power electronics, dark ambient, neofolk, martial industrial, and illbient. Aesthetically, post‑industrial retains industrial’s confrontational stance but disperses it into atmospheric, political, mystical, and avant‑garde directions, making it as much a way of working with sound and media as a genre label.
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Progressive Electronic
Progressive electronic is a 1970s-born branch of electronic music that applies the exploratory ethos of progressive rock to synthesizers, sequencers, and studio-as-instrument techniques. It favors long-form structures, evolving textures, and thematic development over verse–chorus song forms. Hallmarks include analog synth timbres (Moog, ARP), step-sequenced ostinatos, spacious tape and plate reverbs, and gradual modulation of filters and envelopes. The music often embraces minimalistic repetition, cosmic and cinematic atmospheres, and a sense of narrative journey, connecting it to krautrock’s experimentalism and early ambient’s focus on tone and space.
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Psychedelic
Psychedelic is an umbrella term for music that seeks to evoke, emulate, or accompany altered states of consciousness through sound, arrangement, and studio technique. It emphasizes timbral color, drones, modal harmony, surreal or mystical lyrics, and immersive production, often using tape manipulation, extended effects, and non‑Western instruments (notably from Indian classical traditions). The result ranges from delicate, dreamlike textures to dense, kaleidoscopic soundscapes intended to expand perception and dissolve conventional song form.
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Shoegaze
Shoegaze is a subgenre of alternative rock characterized by dense, immersive walls of guitar sound, heavily layered effects, and vocals that blend into the mix as another texture rather than a focal point. Typically mid-tempo and enveloping, it emphasizes timbre, atmosphere, and harmonic color over riff-driven hooks. Reverb, delay, chorus, tremolo, fuzz, and pitch-bending create a blurred, dreamlike quality—often described as a "wash"—while bass and drums provide a steady, understated foundation. The style emerged in the United Kingdom in the late 1980s; the term "shoegaze" was coined by the British press, referencing performers’ tendency to look down at their pedalboards during live shows.
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Synthwave
Synthwave is a retro-futurist electronic genre that revives and reimagines the sound, texture, and visual culture of 1980s film scores, television themes, arcade games, and synth-pop. Characterized by analog-style synthesizers, arpeggiated basslines, neon-soaked melodies, and gated-reverb drums, it blends nostalgia with cinematic drama. Substyles include the uplifting, driving "outrun" sound, the softer and romantic "dreamwave/chillsynth," and the heavier, horror-tinged "darksynth." Typical sound palettes reference instruments like the Roland Juno series, Yamaha DX7, Oberheim and Prophet polysynths, with drum machines such as the LinnDrum, TR-707, and 909 (or their modern emulations).
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Utopian Virtual
Utopian virtual is an online-born microgenre that recreates the glossy optimism of late‑20th‑century futurism and corporate media. Instead of relying on chopped samples like much vaporwave, producers write original cues that sound like in‑house ‘90s corporate BGM, software demos, tech‑expo reels, and promotional VHS soundtracks. The palette leans deliberately "tacky": General MIDI and ROMpler presets, glassy digital bells, airy synth brass, smooth-jazz pads, and bright slap or fretless bass. The result is a clean, hyper-synthetic sheen that suggests a frictionless corporate future—equal parts sincere nostalgia and gently uncanny pastiche.
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Vaporwave
Vaporwave is an internet-born microgenre and visual aesthetic that repurposes late‑20th‑century commercial sound—mu zak, smooth jazz, soft rock, synth‑pop, city pop, and corporate training tapes—into hazy, slowed, and looped collages. Its sound foregrounds pitched‑down samples, heavy reverb, tape hiss, vinyl crackle, and dreamy pads to evoke a mood between satire and sincere nostalgia. Beyond music, vaporwave is inseparable from its graphic language: Greco‑Roman busts, Japanese text, retro operating systems, chrome logos, palm trees, neon gradients, and “mall culture” architecture. The result feels like a haunted shopping mall: part critique of consumer capitalism, part wistful memory of media and retail spaces from the 1980s–2000s. Tempos are typically slow (roughly 60–90 BPM), harmonies tend toward lush seventh and extended chords, and rhythms range from barely perceptible loops to minimal, gated drum programming. Many tracks are short, vignette‑like studies in texture and mood.
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Soundtrack
Soundtrack is music created to accompany and enhance visual media such as film, television, and video games. It includes original scores (instrumental or vocal music composed specifically for the picture) and, at times, curated compilations of pre-existing songs. Stylistically, soundtrack is a meta-genre that can encompass orchestral symphonic writing, jazz, electronic and synth-driven textures, choral forces, popular song, and experimental sound design. Its defining trait is functional storytelling: themes, motifs, harmony, rhythm, and timbre are shaped by narrative needs, character psychology, pacing, and editing. Common features include leitmotifs for characters or ideas, modular cues that can be edited to picture, dynamic orchestration for dramatic range, and production approaches that sit well under dialogue and sound effects. Because it must synchronize to picture, soundtrack often uses clear dramatic arcs, tempo maps, and hit points.
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Vapor
Vapor is an internet-born microgenre of atmospheric, half-time electronic trap that emphasizes space, texture, and emotive melody over aggression or technical flash. Its sonic palette leans on airy pads, crystalline bell and pluck leads, misty reverb tails, and round, subby 808s. Drums typically follow a modern trap grid at halftime, with sparse, syncopated hats and gentle percussion instead of hard-edged snares. Vocals, if present at all, are usually textural—chopped phrases, distant calls, or heavily processed one-shots—serving ambience rather than lyrical narrative. The result is a dreamy, nocturnal mood that sits between cloud rap, vaporwave aesthetics, and the UK-led "wave" scene: cinematic yet minimal, melancholic yet weightless, and designed as much for headphones as for late-night club systems.
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Alternative
Alternative is an umbrella term for non-mainstream popular music that grew out of independent and college-radio scenes. It emphasizes artistic autonomy, eclectic influences, and a willingness to subvert commercial formulas. Sonically, alternative often blends the raw immediacy of punk with the mood and texture of post-punk and new wave, adding elements from folk, noise, garage, and experimental rock. While guitars, bass, and drums are typical, production ranges from lo-fi to stadium-ready, and lyrics tend toward introspection, social critique, or surreal storytelling. Over time, “alternative” became both a cultural stance and a market category, spawning numerous substyles (alternative rock, alternative hip hop, alternative pop, etc.) and moving from underground circuits to mainstream prominence in the 1990s.
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Artists
Various Artists
Mason, Dan
death’s dynamic shroud
R23X
Vaperror
Equip
ESPRITE
Windows96
FM Skyline
Frost Children
TV Girl
Vitesse X
Pictureplane
Small Black
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
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