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Acid House
A faster, 'trippier' form of house...
Acid Jazz
Drawn from the 70s hybrid of funk...
Ambient
Ambient was coined by Brian Eno...
Country Rock
A fusion of traditional country music with
rock 'n' roll.
Disco
Despite pioneering hit 'rock your baby'
by George McCrae (1974)
Drum 'n' Bass/Jungle
Jungle grew from the British Hardcore rave
scene...
Dub
Dub began when producers in jamaica utilized
the...
Funk
The straightjacket of soul could only contain...
Fusion
Often tarred as musicianly meandering...
Gangsta Rap
The grand tradition of music clashes...
Glam Rock
When frumpy mods slade and hippie wannabe
Marc Bolan failed to set charts alight.
Grunge
No one much attention when Punk-crazed kids
like Melvins...
Heavy Metal
"I sure as hell don't think Metallica's
Metal...
Hip Hop
"Hip Hop", says Public Enemy's Chuck D...
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House
House came from nowhere to change everything...
Industrial
Rooted in the experimental violence of 60s/70s...
Mersey Beat
Early 60s Merseyside-based beat bands put
US R&B and early...
Progressive Rock
A Pompous extension of Psychedelia...
Punk
Punk should, by its very nature...
R&B
Once upon a time, R&B was Rhythm 'n'
Blues...
Rap
"Rap is skillz", says Ice Cube...
Reggae
Much as 'Rock' covers a multitude of sins...
Rock 'N' Roll
Though Back To The Future traces its origin
to 1955 and Michael J...
Soul
Although the term 'Soul' has gathered dust
since the catch-all...
Swing
When superproducers Jimmy Jam and Terry
Lewis...
Techno
In 1981, when Kraftwerk rebuilt pop with
a mechanical...
Trip Hop
Just as no one would voluntarily describe
themselves as...
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ACID
HOUSE
WHAT
A faster, 'trippier' form of house. The word 'acid'
refers to the distinctive squelches and burps
of the Roland TB-303 Synthesizer, used to create
basslines. American in Origin, the sound hit hardest
in London, forming the basis of the 90s dance
explosion.
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ACID
JAZZ
WHAT
Drawn from the 70s hybrid of funk, Soul and Jazz
of artists like Curtis Mayfield, Lou Donaldson
and Herbie Hancock. Later practitioners, such
as The James Taylor Quartet, The brand New Heavies,
Young Disciples, Jamiroquai, Incognito, D-influence,
Corduroy, Mother Earth and Galliano, added Hip
Hop elements and a pop sheen. Acid Jazz is also
a record label, founded by Scenemaker Gilles Peterson,
later head of competitor Talkin' Loud.
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AMBIENT
WHAT
Ambient was coined by Brian Eno. Eno intended
it to act as a 'tint' - altering or enhancing
moods rather than dictating them. The slowly evolving
textures synonymous with ambient characterized
Eno's- Music For Airports (1978), inspired by
a visit to Cologne airport in 1977, where he pondered
the kind of music he would like to hear in that
environment. Often scorned as mood Muzak, Ambient
finally gained acceptance in the late 80s, thanks
to acts like Aphex Twin. The Orb, System 7 and
Future Sound of London, who merged Eno - inspired
Ambient textures with House, Techno and Psychedelia.
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COUNTRY
ROCK
WHAT
A fusion of traditional Country Music with Rock
'n' Roll, combining elements of Bluegrass, Folk,
Blues, and Pop. Pioneers of a sound incorporating
pedal steel guitar and fiddle in to the traditional
drums, bass, rythmn and lead guitar line-up included
The Everly Brothers. These in turn influenced
The Byrds, Dillard & Clark, Poco and The Flying
Burrito Brothers. A less country more Rock second
wave was led by The Eagles, America, Brewer &
Shipley, Emmylou Harris, Linda Ronstadt and Loggins
& Messina as the 70s began. True practitioners
such as The Remmingtons, The Desert Rose Band,
The Cowboy Junkies, Jason & The Scorchers,
Restless Heart and Electric Range show from their
aptly selected names where their influences lie.Country
Rock- influenced contemporary bands include REM,
Teenage Fanclub and The Lemonheads.
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DISCO
WHAT
Despite pioneering hit 'Rock Your Baby' by George
Mccrae (1974), Disco `s roots were in soul: the
lover-man raps of Isaac Hayes and Barry White
and the sweeping strings of Gamble & Huffs
'Philly Sound' productions. Grown from club novelty
to galactic phenomenon, it joined Punk in challenging
Dinosaur Rock's domination: hence the 25- million-selling
- Saturday Night Fever (1977) and attendant gems
like Yvonne Elliman's, 'If I Can't Have You' and
The Trammp's 'Disco Inferno'. Italian producer
Giorgio Moroder pioneered a more electronic variant
whose early highlight -I feel love- by Donna Summer
-was a landmark on the road to House. Eroded by
over-exposure and the emergence of Hip Hop, Disco's
legacy is both ironic and inspirational.
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DRUM
'N' BASS / JUNGLE
WHAT
Jungle grew from the British Hardcore Rave scene,
mixing Dub, Reggae and Hip Hop samples in to a
hybrid of furious beats and prolapse-inducing
sub-bass. The aggressive sound of pioneers General
Levy, Fabio and Groove Rider was given an epic
twist by Goldie and his Metal Headz stable of
early 90s artists, including Hotek and Dillinja,
LTJ Bukem, long-time exponent A Guy called Gerald
and Mercury Prize-Winner, Roni Size added Prettier
Jazz elements, with the style gaining alternative
Monikers Intelligent and finally Drum'n'Bass.
It once looked like the future, but when David
Bowie and even Eric Clapton went Drum 'n' Bass
the style lost some of its underground appeal.
Drum 'n' Bass has yet to make much of an impact
state side, where artists like Goldie were absorbed
in to the Trip Hop/Electronica bubble.
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DUB
WHAT
Dub began when producers in Jamaica utilized the
instrumental track of a vocal record for a B-side
to save money, calling them 'Versions'. Talking
artists such as U-Roy used them as their own backing
tracks, then producers such as Lynford Anderson
and Lee 'Scratch' Perry went a step further, adding
spacey effects and echo-strewn songs such as Perry's
'Clint Eastwood' (1969). Electronics Engineer
King Tubby became champion of the genre in the
mid-70s, making the classic- King Tubby Meets
Rockers Uptown (1977) with Melodica Maestro Augustus
Pablo. Although Dub fell from favour in 80s Jamaica,
UK producers such as Mad Professor and Jah Shaka
kept it alive, and it had a huge influence on
Techno. Dubs Reggae renaissance came in the 90s
via the British New Roots movement and engineer
Bobby Digital in Jamaica.
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FUNK
WHAT
The straight jacket of soul could only contain
James Brown for so long. In 1967, his boundary
bombing extended beyond exhilarating live shows
to heart-stopping hits like 'Cold Sweat'. Heart
felt harmonies were toppled by bass- driven hence
1970s key classic 'Get Up'. George Clinton and
Sly Stone added psychedelic lunacy to the stew:
the flamboyant counterpart to R&B in 70s black
music. Their legacy lives on in innumerable Hip
Hop samples and impressionable white boys like
Red Hot Chili Peppers and The Brand New Heavies.
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FUSION
WHAT
Often tarred as musicianly meandering, Fusion
started off as a form which referred to a blend
of Rock and Jazz. Miles Davis led the way, followed
by John McLaughlin, Billy Cobham and Chick Corea,
blasting off in to sometimes exhilarating, sometimes
interminable 'explorations'.
Today,
Fusion is the name given not only to jazz/rock
combinations, but to all kinds of world music
that combine to form new and exciting forms. For
example, we can find pure elements of Flamenco
in Arabian Ud, Regge in western pop. Blues comes
originally from Africa, not to mention Hindustani
khayal which itself is a synthesis from the Moghul
times. Shomyo singing from Japan has its roots
in Indian Buddhistic texts and the fusion can
clearly be seen on the accompaning instrument
the Biva.
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GANGSTA
RAP
WHAT
The grand tradition of music clashes reached a
lethal low in the mid- 90s. Rival Rap label bosses
Suge knight and Sean 'Puffy' combs got irate,
then figureheads Tupac shakur and The Notorious
BIG got dead. Simmering resentment between Puffy`s
New York and knights California was gleefully
reported as an East v. West Coast war-the flames
fanned by releases like Ice Cubes battle crazed-
WestSide Connection (1996). It was a messy end
to Gangsta`s first decade, in which the genre
progressed from cause celebre, through chart champ,
to cliché. Though the music evolved from hard-
as- nails Hip Hop and George Clinton -Esque G-funk
to radio- friendly R&B, the themes remained
unchanged- Gangsta`s guns, drugs and sex being
essentials of the 'playa' lifestyle espoused by
platinum - sellers Foxy Brown, Jay-Z and Master
P.
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GLAM
ROCK
WHAT
When frumpy mods slade and hippie wannabe Marc
Bolan failed to set charts alight, they followed
David Bowies lead: dabbing on glitter, pulling
on platform boots and promptly plundering the
hearts and wallets of a generation of teenyboppers.
Glam`s hallmarks were lyrical ludicrousness, musical
unsophistication and visual excess, epitomised
by Gary Glitter, satirized by David Bowies 'Rebel
Rebel' and appropriated by Kiss. The genre died
at the feet of punk, although a mid-80s revival
under the Heavy Metal umbrella spawned poison,
Guns 'N' Roses and, to their subsequent embarrassment,
Pantera.
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GRUNGE
WHAT
No one paid much attention when punk- crazed kids
like Melvins, Dinosaur Jr and Mudhoney fused adolescent
inspirations Neil Young, Black Sabbath, Husker
Du and Black Flag to create Grunge. However, when
soundgarden, Nirvana and Pearl Jam added radio-
friendly melodies and choruses, a globe-gobbling
phenomenon was spawned. Overnight, plaid shirts,
split ends, lyrical angst and monstrous riffing
were jostling Michael Jackson at chart peaks.
Though Grunge trampled in to Indie and Pop, its
most cataclysmic impact was on Heavy Metal: Glam
poodles like Motley Crue were supplanted by Ersatz
Grungers like Stone Temple Pilots. It also shot
a new breed of girl groups to the top of the pile:
Hole, L7, Babes In Toy land and - in the 'Riot
grrrl' uprising - Bikini kill and Huggy Bear.
The death of Kurt Cobain ended Grunge`s glory,
but it lives on, to the dismay of purists, with
Mega-sellers offspring and Bush.
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HEAVY
METAL
WHAT
"I sure as hell don't think Metallica`s Metal,
or Guns 'N' Roses or kiss it just doesn't deal
with the ground opening up and little dwarves
coming out riding dragons. Though wary of the
tag, Gene Simmons and his band kiss embody many
Metal hallmarks - blood and thunder shows, loud
guitars, critical disdain and huge popularity.
Traced to author William Burroughs, the term was
popularized by Steppenwolf`s 'Born To Be Wild'.
"Heavy Metal Thunder" evoked the Harleys of- Easy
Rider (1969), on whose sound track it appeared,
but described a genre initiated by Riffmeisters
link Wray and The kinks, develop by Jimi Hendrix
and The Yard Birds and taken to the top by Black
Sabbath. Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple kept the
flag flying, followed Stateside by Aerosmith and
kiss. In 1977 Van Halen stormed in, their legacy
mid- 80s bands like Poison. When radio resistance
crumbled, even the uncompromising Guns 'n' Roses
ascended the platinum pile. Metals broad church
now welcomes Pantera and Prodigy, Nine Inch Nails
and No Doubt. No longer defined by Satanism and
Sex, it retains the world `s biggest, most loyal
audience.
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HIP
HOP
WHAT
"Hip Hop", Says Public Enemy's Chuck D, "is the
culture of whatever black people create." Before
Rap, that included black parties ruled by DJs
like Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash, graffiti,
scratching and breakdancing. From Hip Hop came
'Electro'-electronic dance music owing as much
to James Brown. However, when Flash dropped the
groundbreaking 'reality rap' single 'The Message'
in 1982, Hip Hop 'b- boys' switched from party
to protest and Rap swiftly swamped the genre.
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HOUSE
WHAT
House came from nowhere to change everything.
It first soundtrack gay discos in Chicago, blending
Euphoric Soul with mechanized beats. DJs Frankie
knuckles, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, Steve 'Silk'
Hurley and Marshall Jefferson battled to patent
the sound. Farley was first on to record with
'Love Can't Turn Around'. Jefferson was first
to hit with 'Move Your Body', Hurleys 'Jack Your
Body' was first to hit no 1. All but ignored in
the USA, House found a home in Europe. In Britain,
its effect was as revolutionary as Punk, as krush,
Coldcut, Bomb The Bass and S- Express stormed
charts. On the continent, Italo-house gave rise
to classics like Black Box `s 'Ride On Time'.
House also rocked Rock: The Beloved, kLF, Primal
Scream and Happy Mondays were just some of those
who crashed the party. Even U2 hitched aboard,
with the pulsating likes of 'Lemon'. Meanwhile,
House spawned Garage, Handbag, Progressive, Euro
House/Euro-Cheese. See? It changed everything.
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INDUSTRIAL
WHAT
Rooted in the experimental violence of 60s/70s
German Progressive Rock,' Industrial' was first
coined in1976 by British noise anarchists Throbbing
Gristle. Industrial began as 'anti music', mixing
electronics with found sounds, often originating
from machinery. Musical and visual extremity remained
a central theme - Gristle's grinding assault was
accompanied by films of pornography, fascism and
death. Post-Punk practitioners Cabaret Voltaire,
Foetus and Einsturzende Neubauten emphasized electronics
and atonality. The former heavily influenced later
technological industrialists like Skinny Puppy
and Front 242. The most commercial industrial
artists are Ministry and Nine Inch Nails, who
edged the style closer to Metal, while elements
of the genre popped up in Depeche Mode.
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MERSEYBEAT
WHAT
Early 60s Merseyside-based beat bands put US R&B
and Early Rock 'N' Roll through a chirpy Pop filter
to create Merseybeat - led by hitmakers like The
Beatles, Gerry & The Peacemakers, Billy J.
kramer & The Dakotas, The Searchers, Swinging
Blue Jeans. The Fourmost and The Merseybeats,
but also including lesser-known bands like The
Big Three, Farn Flamingos, Howie Casey & The
Seniors and Freddie Starr & The Midnighters.
By 1965, the basic Merseybeat sound, which had
helped to changed the face of pop music, became
unfashionable: groups disassociated themselves
from it and the term was mothballed.
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PROGRESSIVE
ROCK
WHAT
A pompous extension of Psychedelia, Progressive
Rock could be characterized by the expensive experimentalism
of 'krautrock' groups like Can and Faust, or by
ugly men with long hair, interminable musicianly
noodling and 'amaaazing' productions, man. King
Crimson's- In The Court Of The Crimson king (1969)
was an early peak, but Crimson bassist Grey Lake's
Emerson Lake & Palmer took instrumental exploration
to yawnsome extremes. While Prog's theatrical
side was demonstrated brilliantly by Genesis,
Rick Wakeman`s- The Muths And Legends Of king
Arthur And The knights Of The Round Table (1975)
provoked few complimentary first-night reviews.
Save for stubborn types like Hawkwind and Gong,
Prog was taken aback by Punk in1977. But it still
haunts the Earth in the stadium-filling likes
of Pink Floyd, the wilful misery of Radiohead
and the youthful widdling of Mogwai.
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PUNK
WHAT
Punk should, by its very nature, be uncategorizable:
a volatile, indefinable thing. However, its origins
can be traced to America's mid- 60s garage bands,
who made incompetent but enthusiastic stabs at
post- stones R&B. The Seeds fuzzy classic
'Pushin' 'Too Hard' was the bench- mark until
MC5, The Stooges and The New York Dolls added
jaded lyrics to the agenda in the Early 70s. From
there it was a short step to the Sex Pistols seething
malice and slashing guitar- a DIY destruction
of traditional tunesmithery without which Rock
would have sunk in musical virtuosity and lyrical
vagueness. State side, it became New Wave-a catch-
all term for acts as diverse as Television, Patti
Smith and The knack, united only by their youthful
dissimilarity to the Eagles or any other contemporary
mega-seller. Punk's legacy is best measured not
by the success of chirpy revivalists like Green
Day and Rancid, but the world-shaking impact of
The Specials, Joy Division and Metallica - groups
who approached Reggae, Rock and Metal in new ways
that might have gone ignored had Punk not destroyed
so many conventions.
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R&B
WHAT
Once upon a time, R&B was Rhythm 'n' Blues-a
descendant of the raunchy elements of Jazz and
jauntier bits of Blues. When black musicians diverted
in to Doo Wop and Soul in the 50s, the genre -
exemplified by cuts like Elmore James' 'Dust My
Broom' - was appropriated by white acts, notably
The Rolling Stones and Peter Green's Fleetwood
Mac. Beyond these impeccable limitations, R&B
died a slow death.only to resurface as a catch-all-term
for the early 90s mishmash of Swing. Soul and
Hip Hop, whose only connection with Rhythm 'n'
Blues is that its principal practitioners are
black. But amid the pleasantly poppy work of Babyface
and Puff Daddy, a new generation of artist added
authenticity to the genre notably the sultry,
jazz-tinged Blues of Erykah Badu.
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RAP
WHAT
"Rap is skillz", says Ice Cube, "Everybody Wanna
flex they skillz. Everybody wanna say they rhyme
to have all the other rappers say, 'damn, I woulda
never thought of that,'" Rap sprang from the political
poetry of Gil Scott-Heron and The Last Poets and
the self- aggrandizing DJs at Hip Hop block parties.
It assumed the form we recognize today in 1982
with Grandmaster Flash & Melle Mel `s monumental
'The Message', a lyrical snapshot of America's
underbelly with a seductively stark backbeat.
Run DMC added arrogance, turned up the drums and
set a sonic revolution in motion that led to the
nerve-shredding noise of public enemy. When Gangsta
and G-Funk swept Rap, politics and sonic innovation
took a back seat, but the complex wordplay and
sparse production of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Wu-Tang
Clan and Mobb Deep kept rap's original values
alive amid Puff Daddy `s poppier onslaught.
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REGGAE
WHAT
Much as 'rock' covers a multitude of sins, Raggae
became generic name for all Jamaican music. It
emerged in 1968 when the slow beat of Rock Steady
gave way to the faster, more jagged groove of
Raggae. The first record to use the term was The
Maytals' 'Do The Reggay' though the first singles
to use the beat were Larry & Alvin`s 'Nanny
Goat' and Bop & The Belltones' 'No More Heartaches'.
The word is reputed to be a corruption of 'streggae',
Jamaican slang for a woman of easy virtue. Raggae
became popular with the UK skinhead movement,
which embraced the mad instrumentals of Jamaican
producers like Lee 'scratch' Perry and Harry Johnson,
and Trojans- Tighten Up compilations. Raggae changed
again in 1970 with the arrival of DJs, the dominance
of Rastafarian themes and the arrival of slowed-
down skank around 1971, Raggae has since seen
periodic amendments like Dub, Lovers Rock, Rockers,
Steppers and Flyers, Dancehall, Raggae and New
Roots, yet somehow retained its original title.
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ROCK
'N' ROLL
WHAT
Though -Back To The Future traces its origin to
1955 and Michael J. Fox `s proto- chuck Berry
stage antics, the Rock 'N' Roll story is an Old
Testament- style epic, which began when African
music was transplanted to America in the 18th
century by slaves. There, it incorporated elements
of European music but retained driving rhythm.
Call-and-response shouts and scales with dissonant
notes, known as 'blue notes'. Having acquired
the name 'rocking and reeling', it filtered in
to American culture, mixing with the Scottish
and Irish Folk of European settlers. In the 20th
century, black church singing mutated in to Gospel
and vocal harmony groups. Rural Bluesmen made
it to the cities and discovered electric guitars
and Boogie Woogie, while bandleaders like count
basie added horns, solos, and volumes - the origins
of Jazz. Blues and Jazz fused in the 40s with
the rougher 'Jump Blues' style of prototype Rockers
like Lionel Hampton's 'Flying home' (1942). But
in a society founded on racial segregation, it
inevitably took a white man to turn this experimentation
in to a commercial phenomenon. DJ Alan Freed played
black Doo Wop R&B to mainly white audiences
and called it 'Rock 'n' Roll. He later tried to
copyright the term, although The Boswell Sisters
had recorded a song called Rock 'n' Roll in 1934
and it had been a Blues Euphemism for sex since
the 40s. In 1954, The Crew- Cuts whitened up The
Chords' 'Sh-boom' and country bumpkin Bill Haley,
having recorded the pioneering 'Rocket 88' in
1951, hit with 'Rock Around The Clock'. In 1956,
Elvis Presley `s 'Heartbreak Hotel' smashed the
chart and nothing was ever the same again.
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SOUL
WHAT
Although the term 'Soul' has gathered dust since
the catch-all R&B rose to power, the music
remains sweet relief from the hard noise of Rock
and Dance. From the rapturous roots of Gospel,
it assumed a recognizable from in the mid- 50s
when James Brown and Ray Charles added the earthy
lust church music lacked. Soul historian Peter
Guralnick pinpoints its blossoming to "the 1961
success of Solomon Burke`s 'Just Out Of Reach"-
a pioneering smash for Souls flagship label Atlantic.
Wilson Pickett, Percy Sledge, Otis Redding and
Aretha Franklin followed Burke's lead, while rival
label Motown added Poppier elements. In the late
60s, mavericks like Sly Stone and Motown producer
Norman Whitfield added Rock to the mix and by
the end of the 70s - despite the success of Marvin
Gaye, Stevie Wonder and producers Gamble &
Huffs 'Philly sound' - soul had split in to Funk
and Disco. However, it lives on in the sweet harmonies
of acts like Brownstone, Sounds of Blackness and
Kirk Franklin.
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SWING
WHAT
When super producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
abandoned the sumptuous Soul of the SOS Band for
the harder beats of Janet Jackson, two new teams
followed their lead. LA& Babyface scored with
their smooth Sunset Sound, epitomized by Karyn
White. But New York producer Teddy Riley hit harder,
popularizing New Jack swing with smashes like
Keith Sweat's 1987 hit 'I Want Her' and his own
group Guy. It blew up Bobby Brown`s 'Don't Be
Cruel', making the style the first challenger
to super -sellers Heavy Metal and Country. When
Michael Jackson hired Riley to toughen up 'Dangerous'
(1991), every Pop act in the world took notice,
hence Take That's loping 'Sure' (1994). Even Jam
& Lewis got in on the act, with Janet Jackson's
swinging Janet (1993). Along the way, New Jack
Swing - poppy, radio friendly Funk -evolved in
to Swingbeat, now known as Swing if you don't
want to sound like a geriatric. Though it encompasses
moist- eyed ballads and dirty dealings of the
carnal variety. Swings key element is its head-
nodding tempo- a beat perfectly suited to the
laid - back Rap of the 90s. A platinum- certified
phenomenon, the crossover is characterized by
the work of Riley's new supergroup BLACKstreet
with Rap stars like Dr Dre and Foxy Brown.
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TECHNO
WHAT
In 1981,when Kraftwerk rebuilt Pop with a mechanical
and electronic brain, the effect was seismic.
Europe fell to Synth Pop. In the USA, Derrick
May Kevin 'Inner City' Saunderson and Jaun 'Cybotron/Model
500' Atkins heard it and saw a future where the
bleeps and blurps of synthesizers replaced the
primitive guitar. A future called Techno! With
junk store equipment, they DJed around Detriot
producing there own mechanized Dance Music. Ignored
at home, their influence crossed to England, where
Nightmares On Wax, The Black Dog, A Guy Called
Gerald, Aphex Twin, David Holmes, LFO, Orbital,
808State, Dave Angel, Underworld, The Chemical
Brothers and Prodigy mangled the clean lines of
the original blueprint. Elsewhere, Belgium's R&S
label became Techno heaven, releasing the Detriot
masters' tunes and inspiring England's ultra-
adventurous warp label. While Saunderson`s Inner
City hit the UK chart, Techno mutated in to speed-
crazed Hardcore, German- led Trance, Techno Popsters
and Electronica.
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TRIP
HOP
WHAT:
Just as on one would voluntarily describe themselves
as 'Goth', so the banner- carriers for the Trip
Hop would rather bury the term. "Anyone here like
Trip Hop? Enquired Tricky of one audience. "Well,
f*** off, then." However, Tricky was just as much
to blame for the phenomenon, given his links with
England` s wild bunch posse. When they evolved
in to Massive Attack and made Stoned Soul a critical
and commercial sensation, the stage was set for
Portishead and Tricky to score too with scratchy
samples, jazzy ambience and drawled vocals. When
wannabes like Morcheeba and Sneaker Pimps stopped
in, Trip Hop promptly seemed more like marketing
than musical term.
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