From time to time, I may have my music player on shuffle while a group of people listen to it. Every so often, a song will come up that will make everybody in the room look at me with a quizzical look. What just happened? All of a sudden a song considered by many as “not cool” or “cheezy” happened to be next in the shuffle. My reaction is always the same: hey “good music is good music”. This is something I have learned to expect when playing my music of every single genre in random fashion for groups of people.
Here is someone else explaining the same situation:
A music genre is a category (or genre) of pieces of music that share a certain style or “basic musical language” (van der Merwe 1989, p.3). Music may also be categorised by non-musical criteria such as geographical origin though a single geographical category will often include a wide variety of sub-genres
The article explains the different attributes that make up a music genre. The post continues to explain the subjectivity in separating music into genres. Finally, the article also explains the necessity by some organizations, such as record labels, to cluster music into genres.
These first few versions of the application will simply offer the ability to traverse the genre tree. In a few months, I will add the ability to get information on each genre and possibly add a community around the site.
One of the reasons I am offering an advanced sneak-peek is to get feedback regarding the overall look-and-feel and to get suggestions on the genre tree itself.
soundunwound is a new Amazon.com music site that has been curated with information from Amazon’s own music database, imdb, and musicbrainz. This is a great site to find all the information you need on a certain musical artist. Soundwound is artist-focused, not enough emphasis is placed on genres.
Genres appear on each artist’s page to describe them. This site breaks down the genres in three levels (mainly, quite, hints of), as you will see in the following screenshot for Calexico.
clicking on a genre takes you to a description and top artists on that genre. These are a few criticisms that I have come up with after playing around for a while:
there is not one page where we can take a look at all the genres together in an organized fashion. It seems that the only way to get to a genre page is to search for an artist, then click on a genre describing that genre.
many of the genres seem to have no descriptions. Really ? how much would it have cost Amazon to pay somebody to simply copy-n-paste from wikipedia ? It seems that the information for the populated genres has been retrieved from wikipedia – so why not complete them all, or most of ‘em ?
For finding artist information this site has potential – maybe even calling it the imdb for music. However as a site for finding information about genres and discovering music based on genres it lacks some points.
I was randomly listening to my music collection when the next song in the queue came up to be: Gnarls Barkley’s Crazy. I currently have this song under my “Rock” genre. I don’t know what I was thinking when I assigned “Rock” for this song. Anyways, my first reaction was to move it from rock to …. – then, i froze. What genre is this song, really ? It has a dance groove, but the vocals are heavy on R&B, hmm…
After a quick google search, I found an article that decomposes this song and mentions its genre:
“Crazy” is not really gospel, that “Ha ha ha, bless your soul” line notwithstanding. Nor is it disco (despite the undeniable groove), or hip-hop (despite the presence of a rapper and a DJ), or a pure pop song (despite the monumentally catchy chorus). In fact, “Crazy” seems to float outside genre altogether, which helps explain its wide appeal—most every musical constituency feels comfortable claiming it. “Crazy” has landed on the pop, R&B/hip-hop, adult contemporary, and modern-rock charts. No other hit in recent memory has crashed as many radio formats.
heh. I knew I wasn’t alone. There are very few songs that are released nowadays that have a great appeal to audiences from multiple genres. Popular music is more than 50 years old and many music variations have been tried. It takes songs like “Crazy” to prove that there is still room for uniqueness in the music industry. It’s no surprise this song made a huge impact in 2006 (#7 top song of the year).
As to my personal dilemma in assigning a genre to “Crazy”, well I just left it at Rock, for the moment. As I have mentioned before, I don’t place much emphasis/time in genre associations in my digital music collection – I just pick whatever makes sense at that moment.