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Beaconsfield
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Country
Country is a roots-based popular music from the rural American South that blends Anglo-Celtic ballad traditions with African American blues, gospel, and string-band dance music. It is characterized by narrative songwriting, plainspoken vocals with regional twang, and a palette of acoustic and electric instruments such as acoustic guitar, fiddle, banjo, pedal steel, and telecaster guitar. Rhythmically it favors two-step feels, train beats, shuffles, and waltzes, while harmony is largely diatonic (I–IV–V) with occasional country chromaticism and secondary dominants. Across a century, country has evolved through substyles like honky-tonk, the Nashville and Bakersfield sounds, outlaw country, neotraditionalist revivals, pop-country, and country-rap hybrids, but it consistently prioritizes storytelling about everyday life, love, work, faith, place, and identity.
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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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Rock And Roll
Rock and roll is a high-energy, dance-oriented popular music style that emerged in the United States in the early-to-mid 1950s. It fuses the 12‑bar blues and boogie‑woogie with the backbeat and instrumentation of rhythm & blues, the twang and storytelling of country, and the fervor of gospel. Its hallmark sound centers on a strong backbeat (accented on beats 2 and 4), driving rhythm sections, electric guitar riffs, prominent piano or saxophone leads, and catchy, chorus-forward songwriting. Typical harmonies revolve around I–IV–V progressions, often in 12-bar form, with swung or shuffle feels and punchy turnarounds. Culturally, rock and roll catalyzed a youth movement linked to dancing, teen identity, and social change. It bridged racial audiences by popularizing Black American musical traditions for mainstream listeners, and it laid the foundation for subsequent rock styles and much of modern pop.
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Yé-Yé
Yé-yé is a Francophone teen-pop movement of the early-to-mid 1960s that fused the brisk rhythms and guitar-driven verve of Anglo-American rock & roll and beat music with the melodic charm and lyrical sensibilities of French chanson. Characterized by bright melodies, succinct verse–chorus forms, handclaps and tambourines, and breathy, close-miked vocals, yé-yé celebrated youth culture, fashion, and flirtatious romance. Arrangements often blended twangy guitars and Farfisa/Vox organs with string or brass sweetening, while playful onomatopoeia and nonsense syllables (the titular “yé-yé”) emphasized its carefree, danceable spirit. The style flourished through radio and television, particularly around the Salut les copains scene, and produced enduring hits that remain touchstones of European pop history.
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Artists
Various Artists
Sinners, Les
Reno, Ginette
Pary, Chantal
Martel, Renée
Louvain, Michel
Bolduc, La
Gignac, Fernand
Lecor, Tex
Julien, Pauline
César et les Romains
Gélinas, Marc
Lalonde, Pierre
L’Heureux, Jean-Paul
Rabble, The
Castel, France
Deyglun, Serge
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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.