Synthpop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Synthpop
Stylistic origins: Electronic art music, Post punk, New Wave, Pop
Cultural origins: Late 1970s and early 1980s, United Kingdom
Typical instruments: Synthesizer - Drum machine - Tape loops - Drums - Guitar (in latter incarnations were added Sequencer - Keyboard - Sampler)
Mainstream popularity: Large, worldwide, especially in 1980s
Derivative forms: Electroclash, Bubblegum pop
Subgenres
Electropop - Electroclash
Fusion genres
Futurepop - Synthpunk

Synthpop is a style of popular music in which the synthesizer is the dominant musical instrument. It is most closely associated with an era between the end of the 1970s and early-to-mid 1980s when the synthesizer first became a practical and affordable instrument. The style developed as musicians such as Gary Numan, Landscape, Depeche Mode, Ultravox, and Devo embraced the synthesizer as a lead instrument, taking advantage of its unique sound and capabilities.

Contents

[edit] Characteristics

While most current popular music in the industrialized world is realized via electronic instruments, synthpop has its own stylistic tendencies which differentiate it from other music produced by the same means. These include the exploitation of artificiality (the synthesizers are not used to imitate acoustic instruments), the use of mechanical rhythms and "feel", the use of vocal arrangements as a counterpoint to the artificiality of the instruments, and the use of ostinato patterns as an effect. Synthpop song structures are generally the same as in "regular" pop music.

[edit] History

[edit] Influences

Composers such as Karlheinz Stockhausen influenced synthpop and to a bigger extent the industrial movement. Although synthesizers had been used in rock music in the 1960s, notably by The Beatles, the instruments were highly complex, temperamental, and expensive. Synthesizers became more widely used by progressive rock and jazz fusion groups such as Pink Floyd, Yes, Return to Forever, Emerson, Lake & Palmer, and Weather Report, and by the mid-1970s, electronic art music musicians such as Wendy Carlos, Jean-Michel Jarre, Vangelis, Landscape and the Krautrock-influenced German band Kraftwerk were among the artists who experimented with them. In the mid seventies, Suicide, a duo from New York, combined vocals and keyboard in a harsh, avantgarde and often very controversial form. Suicide would influence others in the 1980s, such as Soft Cell and the Pet Shop Boys. Producer Giorgio Moroder used them on records by disco artists, notably Donna Summer, giving rise to the subgenre terms "Eurodisco" and "Hi-NRG," further popularised in the early 1980s by Moroder and fellow German producers Jack White and Harold Faltermeyer, working with predominantly female artists, such as Irene Cara and Laura Branigan, Berlin and Stacey Q.

[edit] 1979 and early-to-mid 1980s

The synthpop genre began to surface in 1979 and continued to evolve and expand in the early 1980s. Albums like Replicas by Gary Numan and Tubeway Army, Numan's solo LP The Pleasure Principle, Vienna by Ultravox, From the Tearooms of Mars...to the Hellholes of Uranus by Landscape, Dare by the Human League, Soul Mining by The The,, Visage by Visage and Metamatic by John Foxx typified the early synthpop sound.

[edit] Late 1980s, onward

In the United States, a backlash against the predominant styles of commercial pop in general and synthesized music specifically drove the synthpop genre largely underground there. Few of the genre's 1980s acts and almost none which happened upon a modicum of novelty success there in the 1990s were able to thrive commercially during this period, many dropped from their record contracts as alternative rock rose to the forefront. A new generation of radio DJs, video jockeys and label reps dismissed synth-driven music as somehow less visceral or artistic than the emerging styles of grunge and hip-hop. However, in Europe (where the New Wave movement began), as well as South America, Australia, and Asia the synthpop genre remained more widely accepted, and artists from these regions (as well as American artists temporarily expatriated there) performing music with 1980s synthpop roots have spurred minor resurgences of the genre in the U.S. (Ace Of Base, Savage Garden, Tony Reed, and the Scandinavian-born teen pop phenomenon to name a few.)

In addition to the mainstream acts mentioned, a sub-culture of modern synthpop acts and labels (A Different Drum, Section 44, Ninthwave) have carried the torch of past synthpop styles into the future. Influenced by '80s synthesizer/sequencer programming, the newer acts prove that synthpop/new wave is alive and well in 2006.

[edit] Usage

Synthpop is sometimes confused with electropop, which is generally regarded to be a particular style of synthpop that incorporates the more robotic elements and feel of electro music. The term "synthpop" has also become increasingly used in goth and industrial circles to describe various alternative electronic artists who have used influences from synthpop, particularly those in the electronic body music and futurepop genres such as VNV Nation, Covenant, Mesh, And One, Melotron, S.P.O.C.K, Beborn Beton and Wolfsheim. It is otherwise generally used in its more classic sense, referring to early/mid 1980s synthesizer-driven pop acts (e.g., Depeche Mode, Erasure) and sometimes, less precisely, to a variety of New Romantic pop acts from the same era (e.g., Duran Duran, Ultravox, Visage, Japan, and Spandau Ballet).

[edit] Artists

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Synthpop
Electropop - Electroclash - Futurepop - Synthpunk
Other electronic music genres
Ambient | Breakbeat | Dance | Drum and bass | Electronica | Electronic art music | Hard dance | Hardcore | House | Industrial | Synthpop | Techno | Trance
Styles of pop music
Bubblegum pop - Country pop - Futurepop - Pop rock - Pop punk - Pop-rap - Power pop - Synthpop/Electropop- Indie pop - Teen pop - Traditional pop - Pop metal

By region: American pop - C-pop (Cantopop, Mandopop) - Europop (Austropop, Nederpop) - Indi-pop (Bhangra, Filmi) - J-pop - K-pop

Other topics
Boy band - Girl group - Popular music - Pop culture - Summer hit