Information about Technopop



Electropop (also called Technopop) is a form of synth pop music that is made with synthesizers, and which first flourished from 1978 to 1981. Electropop laid the groundwork for a mass market in chart-oriented synthpop, but later became seen by musicologists as merely a subgenre of synthpop. Numerous bands have since carried on the electropop tradition into the 1990s and 2000s.

Electropop is different from synthpop because it is often characterised by a cold, robotic, electronic sound, which was largely due to the early limitations of the analog synthesizers used to make the music. The alienated deadpan lyrics usually have a science-fiction edge to them, and do not use the "boy meets girl, boy loses girl" theme that was so common among mass-market chart-topping new wave synthpop from about 1981 onwards.

Most electropop songs are pop songs at heart, often with simple, catchy hooks and dance beats, but differing from those of electronic dance music genres which electropop helped to inspire — techno, dub, house, electroclash, etc. — in that strong songwriting is emphasized over simple danceability.

History

(Early electropop should not be confused with the early disco-synth hits of 1978-1980, such as Blondie's "Heart of Glass", Sparks's "No.1 in Heaven", and M's "Pop Muzik".)

Almost all early electropop artists were English, and were inspired by innovative artists such as Thomas Brown and the David Bowie/Brian Eno 'Berlin' albums Heroes and Low, and also by the German pioneers Kraftwerk, Neu!, Cluster, and CAN. There were also influences from the band Suicide in the USA, and from about 1981 from the innovative Japanese trio Yellow Magic Orchestra.

There had been a long history of experimental avant-garde electronic music, notably in northern continental Europe, but this only marginally influenced some British artists such as Mike Oldfield (Tubular Bells) who cannot be seen as electropop pioneers. The influence of avant-garde electronic music in Britain on electropop was largely one of giving access to a huge bank of technical expertise built up over decades, via organisations such as the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, and the London Electronic Music Studios which was patronised by early rock synth pioneers such as Brian Eno, Roxy Music, Tangerine Dream, and Pink Floyd. Many early electropop artists also chose to record in West Berlin.

Electropop was strongly disparaged in the British music press of the late 1970s and early 1980s as the "Adolf Hitler Memorial Space Patrol" (Mick Farren, exemplifying the suspicions of left-wing journalists). The New Musical Express once printed a two-page photomontage showing the band Kraftwerk on the podium of the Nuremberg Rally. Slightly later, many British bands chose Nazi names, such as New Order, A Certain Ratio, and Joy Division, influenced of the Junge Wilde movement then current in German music.

Electropop later fed into, and its synthesiser sound became intertwined with, the British New Romantic movement of the early 80s. Early electropop laid the groundwork for acceptance of later electronic acid/rave and progressive dance music, which appeared from New Order's 1983 "Blue Monday" single. Within ten years of electropop's 'death' around 1982, the cultural meaning of its 'blips and beeps' had been shorn of the taint of modernism, and firmly attached to rave culture's neo-romantic 'nostalgia for the archaic'.

Electropop - notably the mid-career work of Kraftwerk and the first single by The Human League ("Being Boiled", 45rpm)- was extensively plundered to create the early hip-hop sound in the USA.

Electropop later fed into the synthpop and electroclash movements of the 1990s and beyond, and underwent a revival at the end of the 1990s (witness the Random tribute album to Gary Numan) with electroclash, which arose out of the staleness and exhaustion of the commercialised rave/house music scene.

Further reading

  • Q/Mojo magazine collaboration Depeche Mode & The Story of Electro-Pop - is a 124-page history published in 2005. It uses a Depeche Mode cover as the 'hook' to get people to buy it, but actually covers the history of early electropop in great depth.
  • Electronic Music: The Instruments, the Music & The Musicians by Andy Mackay, of Roxy Music (Harrow House, 1981)
Pop Music
By style: Baroque pop - Bubblegum pop - Country pop - Futurepop - Pop rock - Pop punk - Pop rap - Power pop - Synthpop/Electropop
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By region: American pop - C-pop (Cantopop, Mandopop) - Taiwanese pop - HK English pop
Europop (Austropop, Nederpop) - Indi-pop (Bhangra, Filmi)
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Other topics
Boy band - Girl group - Pop icon - Popular music - Pop culture - Summer hit
Technopop, Inc. was an American videogame developer, founded by Randel B. Reiss in 1990. It was the first independent American developer for the Sega Genesis, and responsible for most of the early development tools to that system.
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Synthpop is a subgenre of New Wave in which the synthesizer is the dominant musical instrument. It is most closely associated with the era between the late 1970s and early to middle 1980s, although it has continued to exist and develop ever since.
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
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The 2000s is the current decade, spanning from 2000 to 2009.
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New Wave was a rock music and pop genre and movement that existed during the late 1970s and the early-to-mid 1980s. In those days, many music groups were inspired by punk rock and used elements of other genres, such as electronic music, reggae, and ska.
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1950s  1960s  1970s  - 1980s -  1990s  2000s  2010s
1978 1979 1980 - 1981 - 1982 1983 1984

Year 1981 (MCMLXXXI
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This article has been tagged since October 2007.

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Electronic dance music (EDM), is a broad set of percussive music genres that largely inherit from 1970s disco music and, to some extent, the experimental pop music of Kraftwerk. Such music was originally borne of and popularized via regional nightclub scenes in the 1980s.
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Techno is a form of electronic dance music that had its early beginnings in Western Europe in the late 1970s[1] and later developed and established as a genre in Detroit, Michigan during the 1980s.
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Dub is a form of Jamaican music, which evolved out of Reggae in 1960's Jamaica. The dub sound consists predominantly of instrumental re-mixes of existing recordings and is achieved by significantly manipulating and reshaping the recordings, usually by removing the vocals
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House music is a style of electronic dance music that was developed by dance club DJs in Chicago in the early to mid-1980s. House music is strongly influenced by elements of the late 1970s soul- and funk-infused dance music style of disco.
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Blondie is the name of an American rock band that first gained fame in the late 1970s, and which has sold over 40 million records. The band was a pioneer in the early American punk rock and New Wave scenes.
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Heart of Glass is the title of:
  • Heart of Glass (film) - a 1976 film directed by Werner Herzog.
  • "Heart of Glass" (song) - a 1978 single by Blondie.

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B-side(s) "M Factor"
Released 1979
Format 7", 12"
Genre New Wave, Synthpop
Length 3:21
Label MCA / EMI / Sire
Writer(s) Robin Scott
Producer(s) Robin Scott
Peak chart positions

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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2]   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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Brian Eno (pronounced IPA: /ˌbraɪən ˈiːnəʊ/) born on 15 May 1948 in Woodbridge, Suffolk, England) is an English electronic musician, music theorist and record producer.
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"Heroes"
(1977) Stage
(1978)

"Heroes" (the quotation marks are part of the title, for reasons of irony)[1] is an album by David Bowie, released in 1977.
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Low
(1977) "Heroes"
(1977)

Low is a 1977 album by British musician David Bowie. Widely regarded as one of his most influential releases, Low
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Kraftwerk (pronounced [ˈkʁaftvɛɐk], German for "power station") is a German musical group from Düsseldorf that has made immense contributions to the development of improvisational rock and electronic music,
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Neu! (ger. "New!", pronounced [nɔɪ] "noy") was a German band, probably the archetypal example of what the UK music press at the time dubbed Krautrock.
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Cluster is a German experimental musical group who influenced the development of contemporary popular electronic and ambient music. They have recorded albums in a wide variety of styles ranging from experimental music to progressive rock, all of which had an avant-garde edge.
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Can was a musical group formed in West Germany in 1968. One of the most important "krautrock" groups, Can had a style grounded in the art rock of bands such as The Velvet Underground, with strong experimental and world music influences.
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Suicide is an American rock music group intermittently active since 1971 and composed of Alan Vega (vocals) and Martin Rev (synthesizers and drum machines). Much like Silver Apples, they are an early synthesizer/vocal musical duo.
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Yellow Magic Orchestra is a Japanese electropop band, formed in 1978. Ranked No.2 in HMV Japan's Top 100 Japanese Pop Artists.

The band is renowned as having pioneered the Synthpop and Electropop music genres, along with Germany's Kraftwerk.
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Michael Gordon Oldfield (born 15 May 1953 in Reading, Berkshire) is an English multi-instrumentalist musician and composer, working a style that blends progressive rock, folk, ethnic or world music, classical music, electronic music, New Age and more recently dance.
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Tubular Bells
(1973) Hergest Ridge
(1974)

Tubular Bells is a record album, written and mostly performed by Mike Oldfield (and later orchestrated by David Bedford for The Orchestral Tubular Bells version).
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The BBC Radiophonic Workshop, one of the sound effects units of the BBC, was created in 1958 to produce effects and new music for radio, and was closed in March 1998, although much of its traditional work had already been outsourced by 1995.
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Electronic Music Studios (London) Ltd. (usually abbreviated to EMS) is a synthesizer company formed in 1969 by Dr. Peter Zinovieff. This same year the company created the VCS 3.
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