10 results found for: “New_Wave_Music”.

Request time (Page generated in 0.4168 seconds.)

New wave music

New wave is a music genre that encompasses pop-oriented styles from the 1970s through the 1980s. It is considered a lighter and more melodic "broadening...

Last Update: 2024-04-20T19:10:20Z Word Count : 6514

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

No wave

No wave was an avant-garde music genre and visual art scene which emerged in the late 1970s in Downtown New York City. The term was a pun based on the...

Last Update: 2024-03-07T17:12:18Z Word Count : 3032

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

Cold wave (music)

Cold wave is a loosely defined music genre that emerged in Europe the late 1970s, characterized by its detached lyrical tone, use of early electronic...

Last Update: 2024-04-27T23:04:14Z Word Count : 1010

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

Dark wave

Dark wave (also typeset as darkwave) is a music genre that emerged from the new wave and post-punk movement of the late 1970s. Dark wave compositions...

Last Update: 2024-04-27T23:20:14Z Word Count : 2029

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

Wave music

Wave is a genre of bass music and a visual art style that emerged in the early 2010s in online communities. It is characterized by atmospheric melodies...

Last Update: 2024-04-16T04:20:07Z Word Count : 1528

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

New wave music in Yugoslavia

New wave in Yugoslavia (Serbian: Нови талас, Novi talas; Croatian: Novi val; Slovene: Novi val; Macedonian: Нов бран) was the new wave music scene of the...

Last Update: 2024-04-18T20:57:05Z Word Count : 1430

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

New wave of new wave

The new wave of new wave (NWONW) was a term coined by music journalists to describe a subgenre of the British alternative rock scene in the early 1990s...

Last Update: 2024-02-24T16:00:56Z Word Count : 356

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

Two-tone (music genre)

popular music of the late 1970s and early 1980s that fused traditional Jamaican ska, rocksteady, and reggae music with elements of punk rock and new wave music...

Last Update: 2024-03-11T01:23:33Z Word Count : 730

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

New Wave

New Wave in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. New Wave may refer to: New Wave (movement), various artistic movements in film and music French New Wave...

Last Update: 2024-04-15T01:58:42Z Word Count : 312

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

New wave of British heavy metal

decline and the dominance of new wave music. Although encompassing diverse styles inherited from rock music, the music of the NWOBHM is best remembered...

Last Update: 2024-04-22T19:17:31Z Word Count : 11705

View Rich Text Page View Plain Text Page

Main result

New wave music

New wave is a music genre that encompasses pop-oriented styles from the 1970s through the 1980s. It is considered a lighter and more melodic "broadening of punk culture". It was originally used as a catch-all for the various styles of music that emerged after punk rock. Later, critical consensus favored "new wave" as an umbrella term involving many contemporary popular music styles, including synth-pop, alternative dance and post-punk. The main new wave movement coincided with late 1970s punk and continued into the early 1980s. The common characteristics of new wave music include a humorous or quirky pop approach, angular guitar riffs, jerky rhythms, the use of electronics, and a distinctive visual style in fashion. In the early 1980s, virtually every new pop and rock act – and particularly those that employed synthesizers – were tagged as "new wave" in the United States. Although new wave shares punk's do-it-yourself philosophy, the musicians were more influenced by the styles of the 1950s along with the lighter strains of 1960s pop and were opposed to the generally abrasive, political bents of punk rock, as well as what was considered to be creatively stagnant "corporate rock". New wave commercially peaked from the late 1970s into the early 1980s with numerous major musicians and an abundance of one-hit wonders. MTV, which was launched in 1981, heavily promoted new-wave acts, boosting the genre's popularity in the United States. In the UK, new wave faded at the beginning of the 1980s with the emergence of the New Romantic movement. In the US, new wave continued into the mid-1980s but declined with the popularity of the New Romantic, new pop, and new music genres. Since the 1990s, new wave resurged several times with the growing nostalgia for several new-wave-influenced musicians.


© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search