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Rattle
New Zealand
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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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Avant-Garde
Avant-garde music is an umbrella term for boundary-pushing practices that challenge prevailing norms of harmony, rhythm, timbre, form, and performance. It privileges experimentation, conceptual rigor, and a willingness to reframe what counts as music at all. Historically tied to early 20th‑century artistic modernism, avant-garde music introduced atonality, the emancipation of noise, and new forms of notation and process. It embraces indeterminacy, extended techniques, electronics, spatialization, and multimedia performance, treating sound as material to be sculpted, questioned, and reinvented.
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Electroacoustic
Electroacoustic music is a broad art-music tradition that integrates recorded acoustic sound and electronically generated or processed sound into coherent musical works. It privileges timbre, gesture, texture, and spatialization over conventional melody-and-harmony song forms, often employing tape manipulation, synthesis, live electronics, and computer-based signal processing. Works are frequently composed for fixed media (stereo or multichannel loudspeakers) and may also involve live performers who are transformed in real time. Concert presentation typically emphasizes spatial diffusion and immersive listening, and the repertoire spans concert works, radio pieces, installations, and soundscape compositions.
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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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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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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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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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World
World music is a broad, industry-coined umbrella for traditional, folk, and contemporary popular styles from around the globe that fall outside the Anglo-American pop mainstream. The label emerged in the 1980s as a retail and marketing category to group diverse regional musics for international distribution. Musically, it spans acoustic and electric instrumentation; modal, pentatonic, and microtonal pitch systems; and rhythms ranging from cyclical grooves and polyrhythms to asymmetrical meters. While the term can obscure local specificity, it also facilitated cross-cultural collaboration, festivals, and recordings that brought regional genres to wider audiences.
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Jazz Piano
Jazz piano is the art of performing jazz on the piano, combining syncopated rhythms, blues-inflected melodies, and advanced harmony with improvisation. It grew from ragtime and early New Orleans styles into stride, swing, bebop, post-bop, and beyond, developing a vast vocabulary of voicings, comping approaches, left-hand textures, and soloing concepts. The genre spans intimate solo performances to interactive trio settings and orchestral jazz contexts, while remaining rooted in groove, storytelling, and spontaneous creation.
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Jazz Quartet
A jazz quartet is a small-ensemble format featuring four musicians, most commonly a horn (saxophone or trumpet), piano or guitar, double bass, and drums. The format emphasizes conversational interaction, spontaneous improvisation, and dynamic balance between soloist and rhythm section. Quartets carry forward swing and bebop language—walking bass lines, ride-cymbal swing, ii–V–I harmony—while allowing the space and agility to explore modal vamps, blues forms, odd meters, and freer textures. Repertoires typically combine standards, blues, original tunes, and contrafacts, presented in the classic head–solos–trades–head arc. Because four voices are lean yet complete, the jazz quartet became a core vehicle for postwar jazz innovation, from melodic cool-jazz lyricism and hard-bop drive to avant-garde exploration and contemporary hybrid styles.
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Acoustic Music
Acoustic music is music that relies solely or primarily on instruments that produce sound through acoustic means (e.g., vibrating strings, air columns, membranes), rather than via electricity or electronics. Common instruments include acoustic guitar, piano, violin, double bass, woodwinds, hand percussion, and voice. The term “acoustic music” is a retronym that became useful only after the widespread adoption of electric and electronic instruments in the mid‑20th century. It distinguishes non‑amplified or minimally amplified performance from amplified rock, pop, and later electronic styles. Acoustic instrumentation has long been central to folk, classical, and traditional musics, and in popular music it often signals intimacy, lyric clarity, and organic timbre—standing in contrast to big band spectacle in the pre‑rock era and to electric or synthesized textures in the rock and post‑rock eras.
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Artists
Various Artists
Thorne, Rob
Nunns, Richard
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra
David Rothenberg
Zagni, Ivan
Fraser, Al
Lockett, Mark
Nunn
Long, David
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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.