(Redirected from Music style)
A 'music genre' is a
category (or
genre) of pieces of
music that share a certain
style or "basic musical language" (
Peter van der Merwe 1989, p.3). Music may also be categorised by non-musical criteria such as
geographical origin, though a single geographical category will normally include a wide variety of sub-genres. A music genre (or subgenre) could be defined by the
techniques, the styles, the context and the themes (content, spirit).
Categorisation
A list of genres of music (including subgengres) can be found at
List of music genres. However, there are a number of criteria with which one may classify musical genres, including:
★ The Art/Popular/Traditional distinction
★ Regional and national distinctions
★ Fusional origins
Art music
Main articles: Art music
Art music, also known as "serious music," primarily refers to classical music, including
European classical music,
Contemporary classical music, or others listed at
List of classical music styles (including non-European classical music). Art music also includes some forms of
Jazz,
Electronic art music, and
Experimental music (including
Minimalist music).
Popular music
Main articles: Popular music
Popular music (not to be confused with
Pop music) is
music belonging to any of a number of
musical styles that are accessible to the
general public and are disseminated by one or more of the
mass media.
Traditional music
Main articles: Traditional music
'Traditional music' is the modern name for what used to be called "Folk music", before the term "Folk music" was expanded to include a lot of non-traditional material. The defining characteristics of traditional music are:
★ '
Oral transmission': The music is passed down, or learned, through singing and listening and sometimes dancing
★ '
Cultural basis': The music derives from and is part of the traditions of a particular region or culture
Regional and national music
It is possible to categorise music geographically. For example, the term "Australian music" could include Australian rock music, Australian traditional music in the European style (eg. Waltzing Matilda), Aboriginal Australian music, Australian classical music, and Australian Jazz.
Fusional origins
In the West, nearly all music except
Traditional music has a fusional origin.
A '
fusion genre' is a music genre that combines two or more genres. For example,
rock and roll originally developed as a fusion of
blues,
gospel and
country music. The main characteristics of fusion genres are variations in tempo, rhythm and sometimes the use of long musical "journeys" that can be divided into smaller parts, each with their own dynamics, style and tempo.
Artists who work in fusion genres are often difficult to categorise within non-fusion styles. Most styles of fusion music are influenced by various musical genres. While there are many reasons for this, the main reason is that most genres evolved out of other genres. When the new genre finally identifies itself as separate, there is often a large gray area in which musicians are left. These artists generally consider themselves part of both genres. A musician who plays music that is dominantly blues, influenced by rock, is often labelled a blues-rock musician. The first genre is the one from which the new one evolved. The second genre is the newer and less-dominant genre in the artist's playing. An example of a blues-rock group would be
Stevie Ray Vaughan and
Double Trouble. Vaughan, a Texas blues guitarist, surrounded by a world in which rock was dominating music, used rock and blues together.
Arguments
Subjectivity
One of the problems with the grouping of music into genres is that it is a subjective process that has a lot to do with the individual's personal understanding and way of listening to music. This is especially true in sub-genres. One example is
Led Zeppelin, which could be called heavy metal, hard rock, classic rock, folk, or blues, depending on one's interpretation (and not helped by the fact that they made excursions into other genres such as
electric folk). Another difficulty with grouping artists into genres is that, for many, their style of music changes over time.
Some genre labels are quite vague. Many were originally contrived by marketing executives or music
critics;
post-rock, for example, is a term devised and defined by
Simon Reynolds. Another example of this is
video game music, which while defined by its media, can also represent its own style, as well as that of any other musical genre.
Resistance
Categorising music, especially into finer genres or sub genres, can be difficult for newly emerging styles or for pieces of music that incorporate features of multiple genres. Attempts to pigeonhole particular
musicians in a single genre are sometimes ill-founded as they may produce music in a variety of genres over time or even within a single piece. Some people feel that the categorisation of music into genres is based more on commercial and
marketing motives than musical criteria.
John Zorn, for example, a musician whose work has covered a wide range of genres, wrote in ''Arcana: Musicians on Music'' that genres are tools used to "commodify and commercialise an artist's complex personal vision".
References
See also
★
Musicology
★
Musical form
★
★
Genealogy of musical genres
★
List of music genres
★
List of musical topics