Folk-pop

Folk-pop is a music genre that falls into two categories. Either it is contemporary folk songs with large, sweeping pop arrangements, or pop songs with intimate, acoustic-based folk arrangements. Folk-pop developed during the 1960s folk music and folk rock boom. Folk-pop doesn't have ringing guitars and rougher edges of folk-rock; rather it's softer, gentler, and more pop-oriented.[1]


History

Folk pop is played in many regions such as America, Europe, Balkans and others. In America, Simon and Garfunkel, Seals & Crofts, Don McLean, Jim Croce, Lobo[2], England Dan & John Ford Coley[3] recorded folk pop songs.

In the Balkans region of Southeastern Europe, (Balkan) pop-folk is an umbrella term for genres of Balkan popular music that blend pop, folk and ethnic music. It's the modern counterpart of Balkan folk music, in which the dominant rhythms are influenced by oriental music, especially Arabic music and Romani folk music. Much of this music could be defined as a mix of traditional Balkan folk music and dance-pop. Balkan pop-folk music is a part of the ethnic pop-folk style which is spread at the junction area of Asia and Europe, which also includes genres like Arabesque from Turkey, Mizrahi music from Israel and Rabiz from Armenia. Balkan pop-folk genres include:

Artists

Some artists who have been described as performing folk pop music include:

gollark: If only you'd bought the GTech™ GPhone™.
gollark: We apologize for the inconvenience.
gollark: In any case, due to a minor accident during calibration of several infinite skew apeirohedra at Site 2-γ, your button probably only affects alternate-universe CubezDev™ storage areas.
gollark: I am perfectly capable of satire.
gollark: That sounds not working.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.