the most famous bossa nova song is call the Girl from Ipomema and is most famous for being sung by a woman who spoke no English.. in the original version, which everyoen has heard.. it is often called elevator music. lol
Anyways it was a fusion between jazz and samba music done down in Brazil .. most of the songs were sung in Portuguese .
Please put in someone else for Disco. Ohio Players would be good, as would Earth Wind & Fire. While the Beegees may have sold a ton of records, they are parasites.
Your opinion Balty. Personally I think Earth Wind Fire suck the big one. (And whose ever heard of those other ones?) I'm not a big fan of the BeeGees either... But you know... it's your opinion - fine. Other people have different opinions. As Aretha would say - R E S P E C T
I've seen them at an airport once. Had to ask the guys asking for autographs who they were. Didn't quite dare marching in front of them asking "hey guys? are you famous for something?".
I'm not a huge fan of the Bee Gees either, but there's no doubting their extraordinary talent. They were not only responsible for their own considerable number of hits, but they wrote many of the hits recorded by other people at the time as well. And just look at the roll call of artists who have covered their songs - David Bowie, Brian Wilson, Faith No More, Madonna, Elton John, The Flaming Lips, Elvis, Pet Shop Boys, Janis Joplin, Paul Simon.....
Ohio Players and Earth Wind and Fire are more R&B/ funk than disco. Thelma Houston, Donna Summer, Boney M are more disco. And Bee Gees are both pop (first half of their career) and disco (second half).
There would be no disco music without the BeeGees (and Donna Summer). Think of Saturday Night Fever and tell me which other group could be identified with Disco.
There are a lot stronger opinions here about disco than I would have ever imagined. I didn't realize people still had opinions about it. Thought it was just sort of a thing that happened and the world moved on like Crocodile Dundee or the Crystal Pepsi.
yeah, I thought so too, but about the Village People. They don't even have what makes disco sound disco in their music. The BeeGees are a good example, but should have someone a bit more influential as the second example, like Earth Wind and Fire or Gloria Gaynor or someone. Even KC and the Sunshine Band would be better.
And to be perfectly honest, the lack of pre-20th century musicians here is striking, given that there is more variation between modern classical and Baroque, say, than any given pair of 20th century genres.
by accepting that Beethoven is Classical you agree that Michael Jackson is just Disco, Iron maiden is Rock and so on. Just put Mozart there so Old Ludwig can rest in peace again.
New Wave would be a great addition! I’d expect Depeche Mode to be the first clue, with perhaps New Order, Duran Duran, the Cure, or Tears for Fears filling in for the other?
While I’m in suggestion mode, here’s a few more ideas:
Ska (Mighty Mighty Bosstones, The Specials, Madness, No Doubt)
Industrial (Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Front 242, Skinny Puppy) – Yeah, I know this list is a bit dated, but does “Industrial” even exist as a genre anymore? I also realize I covered a few subgenres, but an answer like “Industrial Dance” or “Industrial Metal” would just be too obscure.
Celtic (The Chieftains, The Corrs, Clannad, or if you wanted to go nuts and include a Celtic Punk clue, The Pogues or the Dropkick Murphys)
Opera (Luciano Pavarotti, Maria Callas, Plácido Domingo, Jessye Norman)
Comedy / Novelty / Parody (Weird Al Yankovic, Tim Minchin, They Might Be Giants)
Easy Listening / Adult Contemporary (Barry Manilow, The Carpenters, Neil Diamond)
Ska yes, industrial maybe though you can make it fall under other genres, celtic could be seen as folk (though I do make the distinction myself, but usually say irish music) opera yes, comedy what? that is not a genre, then lovesongs would be a genre too...., easy listening I can't comment on, I guess it means something different than I thought.
No, they are not really related. They both traditionally feature more brass than other common genres, but from a musical standpoint, they don't have a lot in common. Jazz is really its own thing.
Thousands of bizarre mini genres I never heard of (wtf is "Ragtime", "Bluegrass", "K-Pop" or "Bossa Nova"?) but only "Heavy Metal"... What about Thrash, Death, Black, Viking, Doom... ?
Black metal is typically very atmospheric (especially the more ambient/folky side of the genre such as Moonsorrow and Myrkur) with harsh vocals; doom metal is slower, more melodic, and somewhat bluesy (Black Sabbath are often classed as doom metal); and death metal is harsher and often more technical.
K-Pop is Korean pop, which has a distinct sound and has recently become very popular in the West. Bluegrass, Ragtime, and Bossa Nova are well-established and distinct sounds that have been around for quite a long time. Bossa nova has kind of a coffee shop feel, but it can be very good when done well. Bluegrass is pretty unique to the southeastern US and it's not that interesting, but it's fun to sit in and play because it's so simple. Ragtime was huge in the early 20th century, but no one listens to it now. Scott Joplin (named in the clue) is far and away the most famous ragtime player. You've heard his song "The Entertainer" ten million times. I guarantee it. It's the song that ice cream men play from their trucks and it is the soundtrack to a lot of old silent films and cartoons. Google and give it a listen. You'll recognize it right away.
Bluegrass is not unique to the (southeast) of the Us, though its roots lie there. Every country that has blues bands and bluesfestival also has bluegrass. And I find it very interesting actually. It can really express primal moods and feelings. In contrast to most popsongs. Just strip all fakery and dance barefoot to the sound of a fiddle haha.
I like it. I tried "electronic," "electronica," "electrodance," "dance," "techno," etc., for about two minutes before I finally stumbled on the correct answer. I honestly don't know the subtle differences between these styles. It's just funny that the most simple answer was the correct one after all of that.
The Rolling Stones are an RnB band. Of course that term meant something different in the 60s. The Who were are a rock n roll band back in the 60s, then they became 'rock'. The genre became white.
Anyways it was a fusion between jazz and samba music done down in Brazil .. most of the songs were sung in Portuguese .
(Admittedly, mostly for their other, non-disco stuff though... 😆)
It seems the word "Classical" is used in vague way to describe everything before XX century.
While I’m in suggestion mode, here’s a few more ideas:
Ska (Mighty Mighty Bosstones, The Specials, Madness, No Doubt)Industrial (Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, Front 242, Skinny Puppy) – Yeah, I know this list is a bit dated, but does “Industrial” even exist as a genre anymore? I also realize I covered a few subgenres, but an answer like “Industrial Dance” or “Industrial Metal” would just be too obscure.
Celtic (The Chieftains, The Corrs, Clannad, or if you wanted to go nuts and include a Celtic Punk clue, The Pogues or the Dropkick Murphys)
Opera (Luciano Pavarotti, Maria Callas, Plácido Domingo, Jessye Norman)
Comedy / Novelty / Parody (Weird Al Yankovic, Tim Minchin, They Might Be Giants)
Easy Listening / Adult Contemporary (Barry Manilow, The Carpenters, Neil Diamond)