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  2. New wave music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_wave_music

    Common characteristics of new wave music include a humorous or quirky pop approach, the use of electronic sounds, and a distinctive visual style in music videos and fashion. [30] According to Simon Reynolds, new wave music had a twitchy, agitated feel. New wave musicians often played choppy rhythm guitars with fast tempos; keyboards, and stop ...

  3. New wave music - en.wikipedia.org

    en.wikipedia.org/.../page/mobile-html/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". [4] It was originally used as a catch-all for the various styles of music that emerged after punk rock.

  4. List of new wave artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_new_wave_artists

    The following is a list of artists and bands associated with the new wave music genre during the late 1970s and early-to-mid 1980s. The list does not include acts associated with the resurgences and revivals of the genre that have occurred from the 1990s onward.

  5. Wave music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave_music

    Wave is a genre of bass music and a visual art style that emerged in the early 2010s [8] in online communities. It is characterized by atmospheric melodies and harmonies, melodic and heavy bass such as reese, modern trap drums, chopped vocal samples processed with reverb and delay, and arpeggiators. [5]

  6. Synth-pop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synth-pop

    Despite synth-pop's origins in the late 1970s among new wave bands like Tubeway Army and Devo, British journalists and music critics largely abandoned the term "new wave" in the early 1980s. [76] This was in part due to the rise of new artists unaffiliated with the preceding punk/new wave era, as well as aesthetic changes associated with synth ...

  7. Synthwave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthwave

    Synthwave (also called outrun, retrowave, or futuresynth [5]) is an electronic music microgenre that is based predominantly on the music associated with action, science-fiction, and horror film soundtracks of the 1980s. [2] Other influences are drawn from the decade's art and video games. [3]

  8. New pop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Pop

    In the New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock (2001), "new wave" is described as a "virtually meaningless" term. [14] By the early 1980s, British journalists had largely abandoned "new wave" in favor of other terms such as "synthpop", [15] and in 1983, the term of choice for the US music industry had become "new music". [16]

  9. New Wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_wave

    Japanese New Wave, a group of loosely-connected Japanese filmmakers during the late 1950s and into the 1970s; New wave music, a broad rock/pop genre that originated in the 1970s; New wave of British heavy metal, originating in the late 1970s; Eurodisco, was referred as "New Wave" music by the Vietnamese-American communities.