Da Capo Best Music Writing: The Year’s Finest Writing on Rock, Hip-hop, Jazz, Pop, Country and More (De Capo Best Music Writing)

Every now and then pop music undergoes a dramatic shift, and if you believe the people who influence what we listen to, we’re currently on the verge of just such a phase. Out, according to record labels, are the male guitar bands who have dominated Read more..

Our Little Corner of the World: Music From the Gilmore Girls
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I’m a Man of Constant Sorrow: Vintage Versions of Songs Made Popular in the Movie O Brother Where Art Thou and Other American Roots Music
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Approaches to Pop Music

Watch Pop music videos and create your own video playlist using Pop videos along with thousands more music videos. Read more..


Da Capo Best Music Writing: The Year’s Finest Writing on Rock, Hip-hop, Jazz, Pop, Country and More (De Capo Best Music Writing)

Fairytales Can Come True: UK Pop Psych from the Late 60s

Pop Ambient 2007
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Death Pop Romance
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Customer Review: neils review
This is their best effort to date. Velvet noise impressed me then confusion bay topped that and death pop romance as in turn topped that. Heavy as you like with lots of melodic breakdowns and the riffs are awesome. These guys get better by the album and can only get better with this masterpeice!

Top of the Pops 1989
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Top of the Pops 1967


Fairytales Can Come True: UK Pop Psych from the Late 60s
Customer Review: Brilliant compilation
This is one of the best compilations I have ever bought.If you like The Zombies Odessey & Oracle & Billy Nicholls Would you believe LP’s then you will love these songs. There are many standout tracks; after 2 or 3 plays they really get to you & you end up playing them again & again. They are just well thought out pop songs & a number of them should really have been big hits when they were originally released.

The best track on the CD? Without a doubt it is by a group called Promise-

“Nine to five”; two minutes eight seconds of sheer magic. It really should be released as a single now – its brilliant.

Discover all the other great tracks for yourself — BUY IT NOW!

Watermelon Wine: Remembering the Golden Years of Country Music


Watermelon Wine: Remembering the Golden Years of Country Music

Country Music Videos and Exclusive Video Clips with Country Music
Watch country music videos and GAC exclusive streaming video interviews with county stars like Taylor Swift, Garth Brooks, Keith Urban, Kellie Pickler, Kenny Chesney, Faith Hill

Approaches to Pop Music

Top of the Pops 1988
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Pop Jr TV Songs
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OCTOPUS IN LONDON: Fun and Educational Songs for Children CD; Made by Music Teacher; Pop & Funky
Visit www.Meditera.Co.Uk to listen & download free samples of “Octopus in London”. We (Meditera) are the direct sellers of this CD and we have it available as Instant MP3 Download as well. |-|-|-|-|-| ALBUM INFO |-|-|-|-|-| 10 tracks; Album length: 30 minutes; New and sealed, with a 4-page booklet in a jewel case; Dispatch within 24 hours (except weekends); 30 days full refund Guarantee; |-|-|-|-|-| ALBUM DESCRIPTION |-|-|-|-|-| Ten unique, motivational songs written by a music teacher. These songs have been successfully performed through many schools in London, and are 100% guaranteed to connect with your kids. Whether for an exciting birthday party, or in a need for a lullaby, or just music for listening and singing along – you’ll soon find that this CD contains usable songs for many occasions. But not only that. The most important is the spirit which comes out of music, isn’t it? And we want to make sure that our children do not encounter something which might project a wrong message. Rest assured, the fact that the composer is an active music teacher in a great International School in North London assumes that the educational element is invisibly imprinted. Even in the funniest songs. And last, but not least, the success of Octopus in London lays in the simple fact that Viktor (the author), loves children. And children intuitively recognise and respond to this love. By dancing and singing the songs, of course!

Ultimate 70s Pop Customer Review: Same old suspects but some welcome rarities !
For those of us who are trying to obtain the hits they enjoyed from the 70s on CD by purchasing most of the collections in order to obtain a few previously unobtainable tracks, this 3 CD set will satisfy you ! “Mandy”; “I Only Have Eyes For You” and “Annie’s Song” are most welcome big hits from the era not usually included on thse sets.

Of course the usual suspects are there – “Blockbuster”; “Tiger Feet”; “All The Young Dudes”, “School’s Out”, but, amazingly for a 70s compliation, no “Make Me Smile” !! Also, tellingly, no Gary Glitter tracks appear on these sets anymore, so we are left with the ubiquitous “Angel Face” (face of an angel!!).

The collection will also suffice as a first time buy for anyone looking to hold a 70s party !

Nice to see “Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep” taking its rightful place for once. Ludicrous although it may be, it has “70s” written all the way through it for me and I’m sure for many others. Also, check out its superb bass line ! Chicago’s “If You Leave Me Now” is a welcome inclusion, as is The Osmonds’ “Love Me For A Reason”.

Overall, a worthy effort.

However, why is “Daydream Believer” included ? Everyone knows it is a 60s song ! Bizarre !!
Customer Review: Fifty UK pop hits of the seventies
The seventies were a decade of contrasts when it came to pop music. There is plenty of variety here with soul, disco, reggae, easy listening, country and hard rock together with plenty of lightweight pop music. Now, I have very eclectic tastes in music but even I won’t pretend to like everything here. However I’ve seen plenty of compilations of seventies pop music and I’ve yet to see one that I like all the way through. I suspect that you feel the same, though your pet hates may be different from mine.

Of the fifty tracks here, about thirty made number one in the UK charts and most of the others made the UK top ten, so on that basis alone each track justifies is selection except Daydream believer. The compiler made a mistake by including a Monkees track – they didn’t have a UK hit in the seventies at all. Daydream believer was a UK hit for them in 1967 (and for Anne Murray in 1980) but doesn’t belong here. Other than that, the biggest surprise to me (and very nice to see it) is the inclusion of Annie’s song, because it is rare for a John Denver track to appear on a various artists compilation.

Many big names are here including Abba, Elton John, Dawn, Cliff Richard, Hot Chocolate, 10cc, Mud, ELO, Dr Hook, Barry Manilow, Leo Sayer, Showaddywaddy, Tammy Wynette, Art Garfunkel, the Bay City Rollers, Chicago, Sweet, David Essex, the New Seekers, Bread, Carly Simon, the Osmonds, the Three Degrees and Elvis Presley, but their greatest hits are available individually and they aren’t all represented by the most obvious hit here. This is good – it means that if you already have other various artists compilations, there will be less duplication.

A compilation like this allows you to get big hits by artists that only had a few hits (perhaps only one), some of which are hard to find or unavailable outside compilations of this type. Among these songs, my favorites are January (Pilot), Barbados (Typically Tropical), Seasons in the sun (Terry Jacks), Rock the boat (Hues Corporation), Love grows (Edison Lighthouse), In the summertime (Mungo Jerry), Band of gold (Freda Payne) and Yellow River (Christie).

If you are looking for a representative collection of big UK hits of the seventies, this is certainly one of the strongest I’ve seen. It’s not perfect but it’s as near perfect as I expect of such a compilation.

Pop Music
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Urban Dictionary: pop music
pop music – 32 definitions – The sound a dying mongoose makes from its anus as it dies 1. pop music The sound a dying mongoose makes from its anus as it dies BOB – “Shit, is

Approaches to Pop Music

Pop & Rock Sheet Music: Piano/Vocal/Chords (Playlist)

Music
The new millennium saw a change in Madonna as, ever at the forefront of popular music trends, she took the earth mother vibes of Ray Of Light and transposed them to the heart of the dancefloor. The end product, Music, is a wondrous mixture of the familiar and the audaciously new–tracks like “Amazing” and “Runaway Lover” would have slotted nicely into the more uptempo sections of Ray Of Light, whereas tracks like “Impressive Instant” and the title track “Music” take Madonna closer to the sound of the dancefloor underground. William Orbit, the man responsible for producing the Ray Of Light album, has a hand in proceedings again, but the majority of tracks are produced by French whizzkid Mirwais, who brings a distinctive Gallic House feel to the proceedings, taking Madonna’s voice and putting it through a vocoder until it sounds more like an instrument rather than a vocal line. Whereas Ray Of Light was her album of the joys of motherhood, Music is clearly the sound of a woman in love, for hard evidence look no further than the ballad “I Deserve It”, with its opening line “This guy was meant for me”, clearly dedicated to the father of her second child, Guy Ritchie. With a well-balanced mix of downtempo and uptempo numbers, all stamped with her innovative style, Music is further proof that Madonna is still way ahead of the pack. –Helen Marquis
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Chant: Music for Paradise
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Da Capo Best Music Writing: The Year’s Finest Writing on Rock, Pop, Jazz, Country and More: v. 4 (Da Capo Best Music Writing)


Pop & Rock Sheet Music: Piano/Vocal/Chords (Playlist)

In the Fascist Bathroom: Punk in Pop Music, 1977-92

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A Glass Menagerie – Pop, Psych, Pye Collectables 1967-1969


In the Fascist Bathroom: Punk in Pop Music, 1977-92
Customer Review: FUN AND INFORMATIVE
A collection on punk and related matters from 1977 through 1992, including what was left out of Marcus’ earlier book Lipstick Traces. In the author’s own words, it’s about “records, performances, twists of the radio dial.” It moves from the Sex Pistols’ “Anarchy” to Nirvana’s “Nevermind” in this illumined golden thread. Marcus writes about what moved, scared and disgusted him and what made him feel so privileged to be part of the punk audience. His views of punk encompassed a wide horizon, to include the likes of Bruce Springsteen, early Prince, Laurie Anderson and David Lynch’s film Blue Velvet. His point is that punk made wonderful things like Anderson’s “Superman” possible even though Superman itself isn’t punk. In other words, punk’s liberating effect caused sea changes in the perception of pop. A major weakness of the book is that it ignores the entire New York scene, because, as he puts it, “most [New York] punks seemed to be auditioning for careers as something else.” So no Patti Smith, no Richard Hell, a cursory mention of Talking Heads, but you WILL find Blondie here. Fascist Bathroom follows many avenues (The Clash, Sex Pistols, Elvis Costello) but maybe its most precious contribution is rescuing from obscurity some lower-profile such as Laura Logic, The Mekons, Marianne Faithfull. It’s a joy to read, chronologically arranged and ending with Nirvana and grunge in the 90s. The text swarms with relevant quotes from rock lyrics and references to other rock journalists like Lester Bangs. For anyone with a passionate interest in rock/pop music and youth culture, it’s required reading.

Customer Review: The secret history of a time that has passed
To find that no one has yet reviewed this book surprised and excited me. Surprise because I find it incredible that such a definitive, poetic and unique document could pass the world by unnoticed. Excitement because the pleasure, dare I say honour, of having my name next to the first review is genuine.

Let me put my cards on the table: this is my favourite book. One may have read a work that is the most enjoyable they have experienced, or another which seems the most accomplished and towering, but these criteria shouldn’t, I think, define such a judgement. What it rest on is less the distant appreciation of greatness than the ability of the work to both excite and persist in exciting, years after one has put it down. Just to think of the best passages in this book excites me: their sense of possibility, of the value of creativity, of the politics that go hand in hand with creation and the burden of those who take them on.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. What is this book about? A collection of pieces about punk? Certainly, but more than that: a mirror held up to a life lived with rock music as a constant companion. A view of a cultural earthquake by a man who, by the time the Sex Pistols were provoking tabloid hysteria, was past the age when many would consider an obsession with pop comprehendible.

Thus, the first piece in the book is not about punk at all, at least not in the spittle-fuelled generic sense. Writing for Rolling Stone Magazine in 1969, the author blends his review of The Rolling Stones’ Let It Bleed with his thoughts on a coffee-table thome of David Bailey portraits. Out of this seemingly bizarre scramble Marcus pulls a remarkably prescient picture of a decade fizzling away – a time when dreams are turning sour as people struggle to remember how alive with possibility those very dreams seemed a few short years ago, a time when aspirations of change and fulfilment turn into mere hopes for survival. In Bailey’s portraits of Christine Keeler and The Stones Marcus finds a wistful nostalgia for a time that has yet to fully pass, while in the longing cries of Gimme Shelter he hears men confused about where they have reached, wondering what ever got them there, what ever set them on the journey, but knowing that the journey is all they have, that they can never go back now.

His view of the decade is perfectly, poetically expressed in another, much later piece, as he pulls Oliver Stone’s film of The Doors from the critical dustbin:

“[it contains] a vision of the Sixties as a time that, even as it came forth, people sensed they could never really inhabit, and also never really leave.”

That sense of displacement, of people fighting to find meaning in the dreams they have created, of the danger of those dreams, for them and maybe for us, is the transcendent quality that informs his work and takes it far beyond the level of an ascetic treatise or even a cultural history.

To punk then. The opening salvo is delivered from the heart of the arena just as the theatre burns down- the Sex Pistols last concert in San Francisco. I have never read any piece of writing, let alone any this short, that describes a scene of anger, violence, confusion and confrontation so vividly. His description of Rotten’s stage manner is followed by an almost wistful sign off.

“His teeth were ground down to points… he held his microphone like a man leaning into a wind tunnel… [at the end of the concert] he gathered up the debris around him, took one final look and was gone, and we may never see his like again.”

Perhaps the Pistols had punched the hole, but many others would flood through the breach. As this writing moves through the late Seventies and in to the Eighties in becomes a parallel story of the way ‘real life’ – politics both personal and public – inform creativity and shape its reception, of how these politics can often seem to define the borders of what is relevant in pop and how sometimes, just sometimes, that equation can seem reversed.

Inevitably the cold, hard gloom of Thatcher and Reagan becomes the backdrop and, though they are rarely mentioned explicitly, the transformation in public discourse they unleashed becomes the all-consuming concern. In this climate Marcus makes the most free-wheeling of connections seem not merely plausible, but vital. In the book’s most moving passage the murder of John Lennon seems like a logical coda to the election of Ronald Reagan, and a dollar comic book seems to truly seal the shame of the age. Some of the figures he writes of move within this new climate, others kick and scream, some dig themselves in and are fated to become cranks, fighting lost battles.

Ending with the improbable resurgence of punk in the form of Nirvana et al, and finally bookending the volume with further thoughts on the shadow that the Sixties can still often cast over us, this writing resurrects years now as distant in memory as the other more celebrated eras of pop.

As for the artists, perhaps their final question becomes: how does one find meaning in a world that has been transformed into everything one once set face against? Therein lies the dilemma posed by the title, but you’ll have to read this wonderful book yourself to understand that conundrum.

Top of the Pops 1990

Billboard Top Pop Hits: 1968
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Customer Review: What? You don’t remember Deep Purple as a “pop” group?
I really think that whoever put together the playlist for “Billboard Top Pop Hits: 1968″ has a wicked sense of humor. I mean, this is an album that has two of the more unforgettable instrumental pieces from the Sixties, Mason Williams’ “Classical Gas” and “Love Is Blue” by Paul Maruiat,” and two seeks heavily ladden with pathos in Bobby Goldsboro’s “Honey” and Dion’s “Abraham, Martin & John” (albeit for decidedly different reasons), and even tosses in a little bit of country with Jeannie C. Riley’s “Harper Valley P.T.A.” Then you get to the last track on this collection of “Pop” songs and you find “Hush” by Deep Purple. I do not think this song was covered for the opening of the film “I Know What You Did Last Summer” because Deep Purple was one of the great “pop” groups of the Sixties. Besides, “Billboard Top Rock & Roll Hits: 1968″ has “Yummy, Yummy, Yummy” by the Ohio Express and it never dawned on anybody to just switch the albums these songs were on? So I think there is either an outright conspiracy or someone at Billboard has a wacky sense of humor. Conspiracy theories aside, this is a solid collection of Sixties hits, one for which you should be able to find the requisite five hits to add to your music library that warrant picking this one up

Zoom Karaoke – Pop Pack 4 – Double CD+G Set
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Customer Review: 30 Classic Pop Tracks – Double CD+G
Here’s the tracklisting: Disc 1 01 – 2 HEARTS (Kylie Minogue) 02 – ABOUT YOU NOW (Sugababes) 03 – AMERICAN BOY (WITH RAPPER) (Estelle Feat. Kanye West) 04 – BACK TO BLACK (Amy Winehouse) 05 – BLACK AND GOLD (Sam Sparro) 06 – BLEEDING LOVE (Leona Lewis) 07 – CALL THE SHOTS (Girls Aloud) 08 – CAN’T SPEAK FRENCH (Girls Aloud) 09 – CHANGE (Sugababes) 10 – CHASING PAVEMENTS (Adele) 11 – DENIAL (Sugababes) 12 – DON’T STOP THE MUSIC (Rihanna) 13 – ELVIS AIN’T DEAD (Scouting For Girls) 14 – FASCINATION (Alphabeat) 15 – GOODBYE MR. A (The Hoosiers) Disc 2 01 – HEADLINES (FRIENDSHIP NEVER ENDS) (The Spice Girls) 02 – LIFE WITH YOU (The Proclaimers) 03 – MERCY (Duffy) 04 – MR ROCK AND ROLL (Amy Macdonald) 05 – NINE IN THE AFTERNOON (Panic At The Disco) 06 – REHAB (Amy Winehouse) 07 – ROCKSTAR (Nickelback) 08 – RULE THE WORLD (Take That) 09 – SUNSHINE IN THE RAIN (Bodies Without Organs) 10 – THIS IS THE LIFE (Amy Macdonald) 11 – VALERIE (Mark Ronson Feat. Amy Winehouse) 12 – WARWICK AVENUE (Duffy) 13 – WHEN YOU BELIEVE (Leon Jackson) 14 – WORRIED ABOUT RAY (The Hoosiers) 15 – WOW (Kylie Minogue)

Top of the Pops 1976


Top of the Pops 1990

Selling the Sixties: Pirates and Pop Music Radio

I’ve Got the Music in Me
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Now That’s What I Call Music Vol.44
1999 was an eventful year for music, and Now! 44 reflects this with a double-CD collection of some of the year’s biggest hits. As is expected from the Now That’s What I Call Music! series, none of the chart-toppers are left unrepresented: there’s Robbie Williams (”She’s The One”), Britney Spears (”Baby One More Time”), Shania Twain (”That Don’t Impress Me Much”) and Steps (”Tragedy”), to name a just few. In addition to the expected list of pop stars, the UK chart’s diversity is demonstrated by the inclusion of a number of different styles, from dance (Moloko, ATB, etc) to indie (Supergrass, Bran Van 3000) to reggae (Bob Marley), and all points in between. An essential snapshot of a great year for music. –Ted Kord
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Music For Zen Meditation
A celebrated jazz clarinettist in the 1950s, Tony Scott started collaborating with Japanese artists on a trip he made to the country in 1959; he returned in 1964 to teach classes in American Jazz, and ended up collaborating with koto-ist Shinichi Yuize and shakuhachi flute player Hozan Yamamoto on a dozen improvised collaborations. Based on the Zen concept of Beginner’s Mind, a state of openness that leads to exploration, the Scott-led pieces pre-date the more modern concept of ‘ambient’ by a good couple of decades–but, as music descended from temples and designed to ease the mind to a state of higher consciousness, it follows many of the same directives. The gentle clarinet is complemented by the flute, with the koto–a 13-stringed zither–providing a comfortable contrast, though all three musicians appear on only a single track, the opening “Is Not All One?”. –Randy Silver
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Will Pop Eat Itself?: Pop Music in the Soundbite Era

Pop Music has routes that come from Rhythm and Blues & Ragtime. Read more..


Selling the Sixties: Pirates and Pop Music Radio

Top of the Pops 1976

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The 1997 Academy Award winner for Best Dramatic Score, James Horner’s Titanic was the first soundtrack to reach the No. 1 slot on the Billboard charts in two decades; it also seemed to rival the Big Mac in sales for the year. And what can we say about Celine Dion’s “My Heart Will Go On”; would “ubiquitous” suffice? Horner’s combination of synths, chorale, and orchestra perfectly underscores the action in director James Cameron’s 20th-century melodrama. It’s a finely honed piece of Hollywood craftsmanship from a composer who has tackled more musically adventuresome projects in his career. FYI: Horner’s follow-up to Titanic was the score for a different disaster: Deep Impact. –Jerry McCulley
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Top Of The Pops: 1977


Top of the Pops 1976

Francis & Day’s Album of Scottish Country Dancing. Containing music & instructions (with photographs) of five favourite dances, etc. [P.F.]

Francis & Day’s Album of Scottish Country Dancing. Containing music & instructions (with photographs) of five favourite dances, etc. [P.F.]

Country Music: News & Videos about Country Music – CNN.com
Plus: Kanye gets the award he says he should have received last year – then gives it away

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