Sunday 26 May 2013

Top 50 Chart (May 26-June 9, 2013)

This is an occassional chart.
  1. "Get Lucky" - Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rodgers
  2. "Can't Hold Us" - Macklemore and Ryan Lewis featuring Ray Dalton
  3. "Gentleman" - Psy
  4. "Let Her Go" - Passenger
  5. "Heart Attack" - Demi Lovato
  6. "Candles in the Sun" - Miguel
  7. "The Way" - Ariana Grande featuring Mac Miller
  8. "Blurred Lines" - Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell Williams
  9. "Still Into You" - Paramore
  10. "Lost into Paradise" - Evanescence
  11. "Because the Night" - Garbage and Screaming Females
  12. "#Beautiful" - Mariah Carey featuring Miguel
  13. "Young and Beautiful" - Lana Del Rey
  14. "The Phoenix" - Fall Out Boy
  15. "Boys 'Round Here" - Blake Shelton featuring Pistol Annies and Friends
  16. "Looking Hot" - No Doubt
  17. "Suit and Tie" - Justin Timberlake featuring Jay-Z
  18. "White Noise" - Disclosure featuring AlunaGeorge
  19. "I Believed in You" - Skunk Anansie
  20. "Rain" - Guano Apes
  21. "Castle of Glass" - Linkin Park
  22. "Pompeii" - Bastille
  23. "Baby Love Child" - Pizzicato Five
  24. "Only Teardrops" - Emmelie De Forest
  25. "Just Give Me a Reason" - Pink and Nate Ruess
  26. "Here's to Never Growing Up" - Avril Lavigne
  27. "End of the Beginning" - Black Sabbath
  28. "Pour It Up" - Rihanna featuring Young Jeezy, T.I., Rick Ross and Juicy J 
  29. "End of Night" - Dido
  30. "The Dope Show" - Marilyn Manson
  31. "You Are Not Alone" - Michael Jackson
  32. "Frozen" - Madonna
  33. "Constantinople" - The Residents
  34. "Hero of the Day" - Metallica
  35. "Let Us Slay" - Gwar
  36. "Harlem Shake" - Baauer
  37. "Downtown" - Lady Antebellum
  38. "Live It Up" - Jennifer Lopez featuring Pitbull
  39. "I'll Bite Your Face Off" - Alice Cooper
  40. "Tears on Tape" - HIM
  41. "Hurt" - Nine Inch Nails
  42. "Buddy Holly" - Weezer
  43. "You're the One" - Charli XCX
  44. "The End of the End" - The Cure
  45. "Ready to Go" - Limp Bizkit featuring Lil Wayne
  46. "Weak" - Skunk Anansie
  47. "Beast of Blood" - Malice Mizer
  48. "End of the Road" - Boyz II Men
  49. "Young and Beautiful" - Lana Del Rey
  50. "Empathy" - Alanis Morissette

Friday 24 May 2013

What is Glam Rock?

In the end of the Swinging Sixties, rock music began to develop into more genres thanks to The Beatles being an influence to the genres heavy metal, psychedelic rock and baroque pop.

Suddenly, a new British music scene influenced by hard rock, psychedelic rock, art rock and pop rock was born in the early Seventies: Glam rock.

The genre was known for putting T. Rex, Slade and most famously David Bowie into the mainstream audience. The bands were known for its look, androgyny, fashion and launching the glam subculture.

Originally a psychedelic folk singer, Bowie released the rock opera Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders of Mars in 1972, which became an instant success and became one of the greatest albums of all time.

He would retain the glam rock sound in the following three albums: Aladdin Sane (1973), Pin-Ups (1974) and Diamond Dogs (1975). Also he used his glam alter ego, Ziggy Stardust, sporting a bright red proto-mullet, wearing make up and light fashion. He used his alter ego for the music video of space rock ballad "Space Oddity", when its reissue topped the British charts in 1973.

After retiring the Stardust personage, Bowie have since experimented with several genres such as soul, rhythm and blues, new wave, post-punk, industrial rock and electronica. 

Due to the death of T. Rex frontman Marc Bolan in 1977, glam rock went into obscurity. However, it spanned several genres such as punk rock, post-punk, gothic rock, emo, new wave, modern shock rock and visual kei.

Glam rock became more popular in the Eighties when hard rock bands experimented the genre with heavy metal, launching glam metal. Notable artists are Bon Jovi, Motley Crüe, Twisted Sister and Kiss. 

In the Nineties, glam-influenced industrial metal/shock singer Marilyn Manson and his eponymous band released their follow up to the 1996 controversial breakthrough Antichrist Superstar named Mechanical Animals, which was largely influenced by radio-friendly glam rock itself in September 1998 when it topped the American charts. One notable example of the album is the megahit "The Dope Show", which showed Manson playing an androgynous alien rockstar named Omega. Despite the controversial album cover, the album is considered to be one of Manson's best work.

In the Noughties, new wave revivalists Scissor Sisters released their eponymous debut album in 2004, which included the glam-tinged hit "Take Your Mama".

The genre has also influenced the German pop rock group Tokio Hotel, which is evidenced by lead singer Bill Kaulitz's androgynous makeup and punkish hairstyle.

Glam rock, though not very popular anymore, still influences several rock bands.

And that answers the question.

Here's the glam rock-influenced subgenres:
Pictured: Punk rock pioneers Sex Pistols performing at the Paradiso nightclub in 1977. Despite their single "God Save the Queen" infamously became a number-two hit, they have influenced several punk rock bands, including Green Day.
  • Punk rock: A prototypical version of punk rock existed in the late Sixties and the early Seventies as evidenced in MC5' Kick Out the Jams, which was one of the first albums to include the f-word. 
  • Punk rock didn't officially exist until 1976 when British band The Damned released their debut album Damned Damned DamnedUnlike glam rock, punk rock focused on the angst-filled protesting lyrics with an hard rock-influenced sound. 
  • It became a popular genre when British anti-royalists The Sex Pistols released their most famous song from Never Mind (The Bollocks), Here's the Sex Pistols, "God Save the Queen", which became a number two hit in 1977. The Clash was also a major punk band with their best known album London Calling 
  • America was also common with the punk genre, thanks to proto-pop punk band The Ramones. Not only that, the band influenced the Japanese all-female pop punk trio Shonen Knife. Punk also spanned a subculture and a harder version called hardcore punk and after a decline in the late Eighties, it was revived in 1994, thanks to Green Day's breakthrough Dookie. 
  • Popularity: Late 1970s to early 1980s, revival: Late 1990s to present.
Pictured: Post-punk pioneers U2 during a photo shoot in 1980. This picture would become the cover for their 2006 greatest hits album U218 Singles. Not only that, they have experimented with several genres after their post-punk phase such as dance, electronica, alternative rock, industrial and pop.
  • Post-punk: Unlike punk rock, it was more experimental as it contained a dark sound, yet less protesting. The genre also had an art rock influence. U2 started out as post-punk, but has since become an alternative rock band. One notable band was Sonic Youth. The genre was revived in the Noughties, thanks to the sound of The White Stripes, The Killers and The Vines.
Pictured: Legendary gothic rock band The Cure performing in Singapore in 2007. Though they are a popular gothic rock band, frontman Robert Smith disapproves the terms "gothic rock" and "alternative rock".
  • Gothic rock: A prototypical version of gothic rock existed in the mid Sixties as evidenced in The Doors' work. Gothic rock didn't become popular until the late Seventies when post-punk band Joy Division released "Love Will Never Tear Us Apart". The genre had a hard rock influence. 
  • It became popular in the Eighties, with The Cure's breakthrough Pornography, Siouxie and the Banshees' Juju. 
  • Some bands disapprove the label to describe their music, such as The Cure  
  • Popularity: Late 1970s to mid 1990s, cult since then.
Pictured: Gerard Way, frontman of the emo band My Chemical Romance, performing in the Big Day Out on 2012. He has told the media that he disapproves the term "emo", confirming that he is one of the few musicians who disapprove the "emo" term to their music.
  • Emo: A type of hardcore punk which is less harder and has elements of melodic indie rock, post-hardcore, darkly gothic rock and pop punk.
  • The genre started in the Eighties, however it hit the mainstream in the late Nineties after the release of Weezer's magnus opus, the Madama Butterfly influenced concept album Pinkerton. Originally a critical and commercial failure, however in recent years, it has become critically acclaimed and is adored by Weezer fans.
  • Some bands disapprove the label to describe their music, such as My Chemical Romance, whilst some approve it, such as Fall Out Boy.  
  • Popularity: Mid 1990s to late 2000s.
Pictured: Glam metal band X Japan (pictured in 1990) popularised the visual kei genre in the late Eighties. Despite the death of lead guitarist hide in 1998, the band still consider him as a member and uses archive recordings and footage of him while performing songs since their 2007 reunion. The band has influenced several visual kei bands, especially the gothic rock band Malice Mizer.
  • Visual kei: Japan's version of glam rock, which has elements of heavy metal, punk rock and pop rock.
  • The genre is mostly common in Japan, thanks to gothic rock band Malice Mizer and heavy metal band X Japan.
  • However, its fashion has copied by non-Japanese artists, such as Swedish pop singer Yohio.  
  • Popularity: Mid 1990s to present, Japan only. 
  • Example: "Beast of Blood" by Malice Mizer - video: 


Pictured: New wave band Blondie started out as a punk rock band in 1974, but in the late Seventies, their style eventually changed with a pop sound in their 1978 album Parallel Lines. They influenced several bands such as ska punk band No Doubt and electronica band Garbage.
  • New wave: Invented in the late 1970s.
  • The genre started out as a punk rock subgenre, but however the genre became more pop than punk, with influences of glam rock and bubblegum music. 
  • The genre declined in the late 1980s except the ongoing popularity of Depeche Mode.  
  • However the genre has been revived in the early 2000s.
  • Popularity: Late Seventies to mid Eighties, early Noughties to onwards. 

Friday 10 May 2013

Review: Hero of the Day by Metallica

Metallica is known for its thrash metal sound from their first four albums, then they evolved to more contemporary heavy metal in their 1991 eponymous black album, which spanned the megahit "Enter Sandman".

The song "Hero of the Day", is from their sixth album Load, which changed from their heavy metal sound to more then-radio friendly alternative rock sound.

The power ballad begins with a softer, yet pop rock-influenced guitar work from Kirk Hammett, then it is followed by lead singer James Hetfield's quieter voice with the lyrics "Mama, they tried to bring me." Then the first verse was kinda like a U2 song, then the chorus got elements of hard rock and alternative rock.

The second verse gets the post-grunge feel, then the second chorus begins to get heavier. After the second chorus, the song gets more metal, thanks to the bass work from Jason Newsted and more drum impact from Lars Ulrich.

The third verse is more hard rock than heavy metal, however the metal sound is still retained from the bridge. In the end of the song, the song changes from metal to post-grunge, but becomes more progressive metal. The song soon ends with a grungey guitar sound from Hetfield and Hammett.

Overall, the ballad is one of the best songs that Metallica has ever recorded and is the highlight from their Load album. I liked it because it was like what rock bands should have done the song in the pre-grunge era and it was like a true Metallica song.

I give the song 4 out of 5 stars.

Thursday 9 May 2013

Introduction

Hello and welcome to my music blog, which focuses on any type of music, mostly focusing on pop and rock.

It will include music videos, reviews and articles in a magazine-type styled blog.

From Mateus
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