Hey guys, "pop music" is short for "popular music". In it's original meaning, probably before you fellows were born, it literally referred to music that was popular. Your more narrow interpretation of the term reflects recent trends (at least in the UK or Europe), but not the true or original meaning of the term. Remember, years before you were born, there was pop music that sounded very different from the music you consider "pop music" today. Pop music isn't really a pure genre like you seem to think it is. Rather, it's a "catch-all" category that includes any musical work that achieves popular success.Ian B wrote:Thanks ArmadilloArmadillo wrote:Pop is a style in itself, just as rock, polka, techno and blues is. Therefore, Metallica is not pop, neither is U2, Eminem, Norah Jones, Beyoncee or Chemical Brothers, even though they have been no.1.that's exactly what I meant when I started this thread
![]()
I perhaps naively thought everyones definition of 'pop' music would be the same as mine.
Here's a few examples of pop music:
Sinatra's New York
Buddy Holly Peggy Sue
Elvis' Heartbreak Hotel
Sade's Smooth Operator
Julio Iglesias & Willie Nelson's To All the Girls I've Loved Before
Pink Floyd's Another Brick in The Wall (part 2)
Buster Poindexter and His Banshees Of Blue - Hot Hot Hot
Prince's 1999
The Cars' Magic
Sure, all of these can be pigeon-holed into various genres, but they are all pop music.
take care,
McLilith