Tuesday, February 28, 2017

The History of Techno Music

Techno has quite an enormous group of sub-genres and different styles. 1988 was the year techno was first used to describe the growing genre. The genre Electronic dance music in the late 1980’s was composed entirely of electronic instruments and was made popular.Trap music originated in the 90's and is known for it's ominous lyrics and high kick drums. Jungle is a genre that came from England in the 90's as part of Rave scenes.

Drum machines were invented in the 80’s such as the Roland TR-808 that really allowed the Techno beats to take off. It was used by artists such as Marvin Gaye and Afrika Bambaataa in their hits from the early 1980’s. Other Drum machines came after the TR-808 but it still is used for the old school sound along with newer drum sets. In the 1990’s there seems to have been more of a jazz influence in the techno genre as seen in the albums by UR and Model 500. 
 
Throughout the late 80’s techno was making a scene in Germany and the UK and new sub genres were emerging. In the UK a genre called Acid house was making a move and becoming quite popular amongst the British youth. While in Germany genres such as Gabber, Tresor and Trance music were occurring. The Genre was really making a name for itself among the rave scenes in Europe and artists like Groove connection and Jam and spoons. 

I am going to look at a couple popular songs from the 80's, 90's and early 2000's and try to see what about it is different from the rest. 

To begin with  I am going to look at a song that was popular in the 80's and used the famous TR-808 drum machine. Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing" released in 1982 with Columbia Records and was the hottest pop-culture song since "Physical" by Olivia Newton-John. One can definitely hear the drum machine in the background, it just sounds very electronic. It is not what I would usually think of with the techno genre, but considering it was using electronic instruments as it's base especially when that idea was new, it counts. The singer behind "Motown" really had another hit, because this song will still be played on the radio every once and a while even though it has been near 35 years.


Next I am going to look at a song from the English sub-genre Jungle, or old school jungle it is by Johnny Jungle and it is a mix from 1994. Johnny Jungle was a DJ in the streets of England during the 90's and early 2000's, and Wikipedia says that he was pioneer for the sub-genre.The title is "Johnny'94" and I believe the original mix. The song starts out very eerie but the the drum machines starts to pick up and there is a woman calling for Johnny.  The drum is fast and just picks up, it does seem like a song that adolescents under the influence would enjoy to dance to. Besides the creepy fact that somebody is calling out for Johnny to help her this song does have a nice rave feel. 


                                          

House music seems to be the largest sub-genre list, there are even sub-genres to the sub-genres. There is Acid house, Hip house, Witch house, Electro house with complextro and Bouncy house. Intrigued i picked a song from Witch house because that seemed one of the more different of the types. I picked a song by Balam Acab called "See Birds" released in 2010, around the time Witch house was emerging from Techno. The beginning of this song sounds like one is dancing and clanging in a once abandoned warehouse. As the song progresses eerie voices and the vibrations from the bass start to overpower the industrial undertone. The back voices create a scene similar to a horror movies seance scene to me. The beat never really picks up or changes once the initial scene is set, and creates a rhythmic trance that surrounds the listener. 

                                       

In all the Techno genre is diverse and mostly pleasant to listen to at times you want to get pumped, rave and some for just relaxing. It's history is still new and evolving as new genres are emerging with every new decade. The genre emerged out of the creation of voice synthesizing in the 60's for western popular music and became a much deeper experience. From small amounts of electronic instruments to the album being entirely composed using drum machines and similar machines.

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Blake Shelton's The Dreamer REVISED

I have lived in the rural area of South Carolina for my entire life and it was not always cool breezes and smooth talking country men.Townville, South Carolina (where I am from) had cow fields, chicken farms, a nearby lake can one can't throw a dead cat without hitting a church. The boys in school wore thick camo jackets, even in the summer, and they dipped in Mt. Dew bottles. The store parking lots were filled with trucks that had been modified to create more exhaust and sound louder than it needed to be. There were big green tractors, but I mostly just got stuck behind them on the way to school, not riding on them with an attractive county boy. I know not every southern town will be exactly the same, but when I have talked to other people about their "County life", it is pretty similar to mine. 

With Blake Shelton’s album The Dreamer from 2003 I was surprised that not every song was about the truck and girl who stole his heart. Each song had its own story, which is usually the appeal of country music. Although I usually feel as though they end up being about the same topic of either a southern girl, Christianity, or their truck on a dirt road. Blake Shelton is from Nashville, Tennessee(which is actually a pretty large town) where he might have had a different southern experience than I ever have. I am not saying that he is not southern because he is from a larger town, I mean he does have a pet turkey, that is pretty country in my eyes. 


                                                                               


One of his most famous songs, “The Baby”, is one of the typical story telling songs that so many people, including my high school drama teacher, loves. I may not have left home young and worked all across the country but I can relate with this song. My mom and I have a very close relationship, and as the youngest I truly am the baby of the family. The touching story of this song really brought me to tears, nearly.

Blake Shelton’s Album does not give me a false sense of what living in the south is like other songs I have heard. The songs do make one feel like they are partying in a barn or sitting on a southern porch in the heat of summer. I do also appreciate the fact that “My neck of the woods”, and a few others incorporate electric guitar and isn’t just the slow acoustic twang. I also like that song because it does remind me of the lake around my house, how sitting on the dock was pretty much a little piece of heaven.

This album is also a very good example of the accent that I have rarely heard from anybody down here in South Carolina. My accent is barely there, and that is what it usually is; barely there or closer to the super southern. Super southern is the accent that one will usually find in the low country areas of states, they are Blake Shelton's just without the refinement that allows the listener to understand what they are saying. I even thought to look up a video of a person speaking with Nashville accent and it does sound similar to what I have heard in my hometown. Even Shelton may have faked the accent a bit for the sake of non-southerners, it really does add a "country" mood to the songs that I actually appreciate.

Although this is a country album, there are also songs on the album that sway to other genres as well, such as "Georgia in a Jug", That song reminds me of Jimmy Buffet's  'Margaritaville', the beat, and instruments just give the feeling, but the lyrics are very country. "Mason jars on the dresser filled with quarters...and dollars.." that is a typical scene in a southern house. The combinations of different genres into the songs are great for attracting a variety of listeners to his art.

The Dreamer is an album that has a nice mixture of different country songs, a nice surprise for somebody who thought she would hate it. I guess my experience at with the boys from my school who liked the genre might have impacted my idea of it, considering the boys where not my kind of crowd. Now having actually listened to an album, I would recommend or even download this album. Mostly because the songs do not all sound the same, and every track has its very own story. There are slow steady beats that hang behind the lyrics and more dancing music that would make one want to wear cowboy boots at a Hoedown. As well as the story lines that range from being a mama's boy all the way to getting caught with his best friend in Mexico. This album was a nice way to have an introduction to the country genre, besides the overused songs from school dances.

Here is also a picture of Blake Shelton's pet turkey:
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