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Acoustic Blues
Acoustic blues is a family of blues styles performed on non-amplified instruments, most commonly solo voice with acoustic guitar and, at times, harmonica. It emphasizes raw, intimate timbres; elastic vocal phrasing; and guitar techniques such as fingerpicking, alternating-bass patterns, and bottleneck slide. Rooted in African American folk traditions of the U.S. South, acoustic blues typically favors small-scale, conversational performance practice—call-and-response between voice and guitar, expressive "blue notes," and lyrics in the AAB stanza form. Substyles include Delta blues (driving, slide-heavy), Piedmont blues (ragtime-influenced fingerpicking), and Texas blues (looser, narrative-driven playing).
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Bluegrass Gospel
Bluegrass gospel is the sacred branch of bluegrass that marries the idiomatic, high‑energy string‑band sound with Christian devotional lyrics. It features close, “high lonesome” harmonies; acoustic instruments such as banjo, fiddle, mandolin, guitar, upright bass (often dobro as well); and arrangements that alternate verses with instrumental breaks. Choruses often spotlight three‑ or four‑part harmony, sometimes a cappella, with lead, tenor, baritone, and bass parts in stacked voicings. The style draws from Appalachian folk hymnody, shape‑note singing, southern gospel quartet traditions, spirituals, and old‑time and country repertoire, while retaining bluegrass’s drive, off‑beat mandolin “chop,” Scruggs‑style banjo rolls, and fiddle kick‑offs. Typical harmonic language centers on I–IV–V with plagal “Amen” cadences, occasional secondary dominants, and modulations up a whole step to heighten emotion. Lyrical themes emphasize salvation, grace, heaven, testimony, and perseverance through hardship, delivered with earnest, unembellished sincerity.
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Blues
Blues is an African American musical tradition defined by expressive "blue notes," call-and-response phrasing, and a characteristic use of dominant-seventh harmony in cyclical song forms (most famously the 12‑bar blues). It is as much a feeling as a form, conveying sorrow, resilience, humor, and hard-won joy. Musically, blues commonly employs the I–IV–V progression, swung or shuffled rhythms, and the AAB lyric stanza. Melodies lean on the minor/major third ambiguity and the flattened fifth and seventh degrees. Core instruments include voice, guitar (acoustic or electric), harmonica, piano, bass, and drums, with slide guitar, bends, and vocal melismas as signature techniques. Over time the blues has diversified into regional and stylistic currents—Delta and Piedmont country blues, urban Chicago and Texas blues, West Coast jump and boogie-woogie—while profoundly shaping jazz, rhythm & blues, rock and roll, soul, funk, and much of modern popular music.
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Blues Rock
Blues rock is a guitar-driven style that fuses the raw feeling and 12‑bar structures of the blues with the power, volume, and rhythmic punch of rock. It emphasizes riff-based songs, pentatonic and blues-scale soloing, call‑and‑response between voice and guitar, and an expressive, often gritty vocal delivery. Typical ensembles are power trios (guitar, bass, drums) or quartet formats adding second guitar, keyboards, or harmonica, and performances commonly feature extended improvisation. Sonically, it favors overdriven tube-amp tones, sustained bends, vibrato, and dynamic contrasts, moving from shuffles and boogies to straight‑eighth rock grooves.
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Christmas Music
Christmas music is a body of sacred and secular repertoire associated with the celebration of Christmas and the winter season. It spans medieval carols, liturgical hymns, and oratorios through to 20th‑century Tin Pan Alley standards, crooner ballads, jazz‑swing arrangements, pop hits, gospel renditions, and contemporary acoustic or R&B interpretations. Stylistically it is diverse but often shares warm, nostalgic melodies, memorable choruses, and lyrics that reference the Nativity story, peace and goodwill, family gatherings, winter imagery, and figures like Santa Claus. Sleigh bells, choirs, strings, brass, and glockenspiel/celesta are common coloristic touches, while harmony ranges from simple I–IV–V progressions to richer jazz voicings. Its seasonal recurrence has made it a cultural tradition that reappears annually across radio, streaming, film, advertising, and public spaces.
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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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Country Blues
Country blues—also called rural blues or folk blues—is the earliest widely documented form of the blues, rooted in the everyday music-making of African Americans in the rural American South. It typically features a solo singer accompanying themselves on acoustic guitar, with flexible time, expressive vocal delivery, and abundant use of blue notes. While 12‑bar structures are common, country blues often stretches or compresses measures to fit the lyric, making phrasing elastic and conversational. Regional flavors emerged—Delta (driving, droning thumb bass and slide), Piedmont (ragtime‑inflected fingerpicking), and Texas (looser phrasing and single‑string leads)—but all share storytelling lyrics about work, travel, love, hardship, and spiritual longing.
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Delta Blues
Delta blues is a raw, emotionally direct style of country blues that emerged in the Mississippi Delta—an alluvial plain stretching from Memphis to Vicksburg. It is typically performed by a solo singer accompanying themselves on acoustic guitar, often with bottleneck slide. Hallmarks include expressive, speech-like vocals; flexible, rubato timing; insistent thumb-driven bass patterns; syncopated treble figures; and frequent use of open tunings. Lyrics are vivid and personal, touching on hardship, migration, love, work, spirituality, and folklore. Though commonly framed by 12‑bar and 8‑bar blues forms, Delta blues thrives on elastic phrasing, blue notes, and call-and-response between voice and guitar. Its sound is earthy, gritty, and intimate—music for porches, juke joints, and field gatherings—yet it became one of the most influential sources for electric urban blues and rock.
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Electric Blues
Electric blues is a postwar evolution of the blues that centers on amplified instruments and a compact, urban band sound. It emerged when rural blues musicians brought their music to industrial cities and adopted electric guitar, amplified harmonica, bass, drums, and piano to cut through noisy clubs. Musically, electric blues relies on 12‑bar and 8‑bar forms, dominant‑7th harmony, and a swung shuffle or boogie groove. Guitarists use string bends, wide vibrato, double‑stops, turnarounds, and call‑and‑response with vocals and harmonica. Amplified harmonica (often through a bullet mic and small tube amp) acts like a lead horn, trading riffs with the guitar. The sound is thick, gritty, and vocal, with tube‑amp breakup, subtle reverb, and sometimes tremolo. Lyrically, themes cover migration, love and betrayal, work and hardship, and the pulse of city life. Regionally, Chicago became the emblem of the style, but strong variants also blossomed in Memphis, Detroit, and Texas.
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Hill Country Blues
Hill country blues is a North Mississippi style of country blues built on hypnotic, groove-forward vamps rather than frequent chord changes. The music favors droning riffs, modal inflections, and trance-like repetition over the 12-bar harmony typical of Delta blues. Guitars are often in open tunings with percussive right-hand patterns, slides, and call-and-response vocals. The rhythm is deeply influenced by local fife-and-drum traditions, producing interlocking, danceable patterns that can feel both raw and mesmerizing. Performances historically thrived in house parties and juke joints, where the music’s looping energy kept dancers moving for extended, improvisatory stretches.
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Jazz
Jazz is an improvisation-centered music tradition that emerged from African American communities in the early 20th century. It blends blues feeling, ragtime syncopation, European harmonic practice, and brass band instrumentation into a flexible, conversational art. Defining features include swing rhythm (a triplet-based pulse), call-and-response phrasing, blue notes, and extended harmonies built on 7ths, 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths. Jazz is as much a way of making music—spontaneous interaction, variation, and personal sound—as it is a set of forms and tunes. Across its history, jazz has continually hybridized, from New Orleans ensembles and big-band swing to bebop, cool and hard bop, modal and free jazz, fusion, and contemporary cross-genre experiments. Its influence permeates global popular and art music.
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Musical
Musical (musical theatre) is a narrative stage form that integrates songs, spoken dialogue, acting, and dance to tell a story. Its core aim is dramatic storytelling in which music advances plot, deepens character, and shapes emotional arcs, often through recurring motives and reprises. Developed primarily on Broadway (New York) and later the West End (London), the genre blends operetta’s melodic lyricism, vaudeville’s variety entertainment, revue’s song-driven showcase, and Tin Pan Alley’s popular songcraft. Musicals range from intimate chamber pieces to large-scale "megamusicals," and from traditional book musicals to rock, hip‑hop, and concept-driven works. The musical’s songbook has fed the Great American Songbook and popular music at large, while the stage craft has influenced film, television, and concert performance.
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Romantic Classical
Romantic classical (Romantic-era) music is the 19th‑century phase of Western art music in which expression, individuality, and imagination came to the fore. Composers expanded the orchestra, embraced chromatic harmony and bold modulations, and favored long‑breathed, emotive melodies. Aligned with the wider Romantic movement in literature and the arts, it prized the subjective—love, nature, the supernatural, nationalism, and the sublime—often through programmatic narratives. New and transformed genres (the symphonic poem, grand opera, the art song/Lied, concert overtures) coexisted with reimagined Classical forms (symphony, sonata, concerto) that grew in scale and harmonic daring. From ca. 1800 through the early 20th century, Romantic music stretched from Beethoven’s heroic style and Schubert’s lyricism to Wagner’s leitmotivic dramas and Tchaikovsky’s symphonic ballet-infused language, culminating in late-Romantic gigantism and post-Romantic continuations.
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Soul Blues
Soul blues is a hybrid of electric blues and Southern soul that foregrounds gospel-inflected vocals, horn-driven arrangements, and blues-based song forms. It typically features gritty, emotive singing over mid-tempo grooves, with Hammond organ, punchy horn stabs, and guitar fills weaving around I–IV–V progressions broadened by rich 7ths, 9ths, and 13ths. Lyrically, it focuses on love, heartbreak, resilience, and real-life struggles, delivered with the testifying fervor of the church and the storytelling directness of the blues.
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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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Artists
Various Artists
Szell, George
Schumann
Beethoven, Ludwig van
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Wagner, Richard
Gershwin, George
Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square, The
Philadelphia Orchestra, The
Stern, Isaac
Bernstein, Leonard
Williams, John
Ravel
Ormandy, Eugene
Saint‐Saëns, Camille
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Glass, Philip
Orff, Carl
Dietrich, Marlene
Haydn, Joseph
Puccini, Giacomo
Orchestre de Paris
Streisand, Barbra
English Chamber Orchestra
McFerrin, Bobby
Domingo, Plácido
Janáček
Childs, Billy
Wiseman, Debbie
Barber
Berlioz, Hector
Lerner
Loewe
Kostelanetz, André and Orchestra, His
Walter, Bruno
Walton
Dupré
Widor, Charles‐Marie
Franck, César
Farrell, Eileen
Duruflé
Barenboim, Daniel
Tucker, Richard
Ma, Yo‐Yo
Labèque, Katia & Marielle
Zukerman, Pinchas
Carreras, José
Hyman, Dick
Galway, James
Kenny, Yvonne
Moncayo
Górecki
Pierné
SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden‐Baden und Freiburg
Vierne, Louis
Kollo
Pavarotti, Luciano
Revueltas, Silvestre
Carlos, Wendy
Coward, Noël
Chávez, Carlos
Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México
Ropartz, Guy
Russell, Anna
Strouse, Charles
Smith Quartet, The
Boëllmann, Léon
Gigout
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Borge, Victor
Eder, Linda
Williams, Tony
Idenstam
Watson, Bobby
Somi
Suitner, Otmar
Diemecke, Enrique Arturo
Bailey, Philip
Tognetti, Richard
Grigoryan, Slava
Klassische Philharmonie Bonn
Hargrove, Roy
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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.