The most comprehensive list of pop music genres available on the Internet

The Music Genres List site covers many of the most popular styles of pop music, we hope this becomes the definitive list of pop music genres on the Internet, send an email to add @ musicgenreslist dot com if you feel any pop music genres are missing and we’ll add to complete the music list.

Pop

  • Adult Contemporary
  • Arab Pop
  • Baroque
  • Britpop
  • Bubblegum Pop (thx Haug & John Maher)
  • Chamber Pop (thx Haug)
  • Chanson
  • Christian Pop
  • Classical Crossover
  • Europop
  • Dance Pop
  • Dream Pop (thx Haug)
  • Electro Pop (thx Haug)
  • Iranian Pop
  • Jangle Pop
  • Latin Ballad
  • Levenslied
  • Louisiana Swamp Pop
  • Mexican Pop
  • Motorpop
  • New Romanticism
  • Orchestral Pop (thx Haug)
  • Pop Rap
  • Popera
  • Pop/Rock
  • Pop Punk (thx Makenzie)
  • Power Pop (thx Haug)
  • Psychedelic Pop
  • Schlager
  • Soft Rock
  • Sophisti-Pop
  • Space Age Pop
  • Sunshine Pop
  • Surf Pop
  • Synthpop (thx Haug)
  • Teen Pop
  • Traditional Pop Music
  • Turkish Pop
  • Vispop
  • Wonky Pop
  • Post-Disco
  • Progressive Pop

History from – www.types-of-music.net

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The term “pop song” is first recorded as being used in 1926, in the sense of a piece of music “having popular appeal”. Hatch and Millward indicate that many events in the history of recording in the 1920s can be seen as the birth of the modern pop music industry, including in country, blues and hillbilly music.

Pop is short for popular, and it’s remained the defining term for the ever-changing music favoured by the public. Although not specifically applied until the middle of the 20th century, pop music as such can be traced by a few decades before that.

Things changed with the advent of recording, early in the 20th century. With that, music had the chance to be much more widely disseminated. Records, played at 78 rpm on wind-up gramophones, were relatively cheap.In America, that led to a breed of professional songwriters in New York who wrote pieces intended to be recorded and sell well – Tin Pan Alley. They were largely hacks, but did produce some beautiful material.

The first major pop stars as such were the crooners of the 1930s and ’40s. Bing Crosby sold millions of records, as did Frank Sinatra (arguably the first modern pop star, with screaming teenage female fans – the bobbysoxers), and in Britain, Al Bowly.

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Curiously, pop music charts as such didn’t exist until 1952, when the first Top Twenty was recorded. It came at an interesting time, as “teenagers” really came into being. Historically there’d been no transitional period between childhood and adulthood. Now, after World War II, that seemed to begin, imported from America, and in skiffle, an interpretation of American folk music (personified by Lonnie Donegan), teens found their music.

Rock’n’roll brought much more of that, and Elvis Presley became a global star, the biggest of the late 1950s and early 1960s. But he would find himself supplanted by the Beatles, who revolutionised pop by writing their own material, instigating a fashion that remains undiminished.

The Beatles set the standard for pop music, and it remains undiminished – Beatlesque has become a standard descriptive adjective. From 1962 until their break up in 1970 they dominated the charts in Britain and America.

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The Beatles influenced a generation – more than one, really – with their melodies and harmonies, and that was apparent in the 1970s, when pop careened through several styles, from the Glam Rock of T. Rex to the raw fire of punk. But the biggest pop star to emerge from the period was a singer and pianist, Elton John, whose popularity has remained constant.

The idea of artists writing their own material remained in the wake of the Fab Four, although professional songwriters stayed in demand for those unable to pen a tune. From the early days of rock there had been “manufactured” stars – people taken on board for a pretty face rather than any innate talent, and made into stars by producers. It had happened to Adam Faith, Alvin Stardust and many others, most of whom only enjoyed short careers.

The 1980s proved a moribund decade for pop. Styles came and went, but it was an era short on memorable music. Only Wham! (and later George Michael) emerged as true pop stars.

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The 1990s was the time of boy bands, perhaps the ultimate in manufactured acts. A group of young male singers was assembled for their looks, given catchy songs and arrangements and pushed to fame. It happened to East 17 and, most memorably, Take That. America saw how it worked and gave the world the Backstreet Boys and ‘N Sync, and for a few years it worked very well, selling millions of records. But like any fashion, it passed. A female version, the Spice Girls, was briefly huge. Notably, the only ones to come out of this and sustain a solo career was Robbie Williams from Take That and Justin Timberlake from ‘N Sync.

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America tried a similar tactic with female pop stars, and both Mariah Carey and Britney Spears became massive manufactured stars, followed, to a lesser degree, by Christina Aguilera.

Since the year 2000 there’s been a dearth of major new stars, relying mostly on established talent. Several younger artists have come and gone, and new styles have briefly emerged, but nothing appears to have gained a major foothold besides modern R&B, which owes little to its soulful predecessor, but a lot to hip-hop – which itself has become a pop style.

 

History of pop music timeline

1956 – Elvis Presley emerges as one of the world’s first rock stars
1957 – John Lennon meets Paul McCartney
1957 – The first official Quarry Men performance
1958 – Paul McCartney invited George Harrison to watch the Quarry Men
Late 1950s: The English rock music group ‘Beatles’ was formed
1960 – The Quarry Men become The Silver Beats
1960 – Pete Best joins the Beatles
1961- The American country singer ‘Patsy Cline’ becomes a mainstream pop music hit
1972 – Michael Jackson’s first solo hit “Ben” reaches No. 1
1974 – Michael Jackson introduces “The Robot”
1983 – Red Hot Chili Peppers are formed
1985 – Britney Spears emerges as a star of the music world
1990s – Various famous groups made pop music more popular.
1993 – Radiohead releases first studio album, “Pablo Honey”
1998 – “Coldplay” formed
2002 – Increased impact of television shows
2009 – Death of Michael Jackson
2 Responses
  • mouspeed
    December 15, 2020

    Dream pop isn’t subgenre of pop music, Dream pop is subgenre of rock.

  • gabby
    April 6, 2021

    gabby lewis 68376

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