1. R&B
R&B can be regarded as "black pop music". It originated from black blues music and is the basis of today's western pop music and rock music. Billboard magazine once defined R&B Music for all black people.
Except for Jazz and Blues, everything can be classified as R&B, which shows how broad the scope of R&B is. Hip Hop and Rap, which have become very popular in the black music circle in recent years, both originate from R&B and retain many R&B elements.
2. Jazz
It originated in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and was born in the southern port city of New Orleans. The musical roots come from blues and ragtime. . Jazz pays attention to improvisation, is based on the shuffle rhythm with swing characteristics, and is a combination of black African culture and white European culture.
3. Electronic music (electronic music)
Is music produced using electronic instruments and electronic music technology; musicians who create or perform this type of music are called electronic music Home. In general, a distinction can be made between sounds produced using electromechanical techniques and those produced using electronic techniques. Equipment that uses electronic machinery to produce sound includes telephonic harmonies, Hanmen-style electric organs, and electric guitars.
4. Electronic dance music?
Origined in the late 1970s, it is a general term for a wide range of dance music genres, mainly used in nightclubs and electronic music festivals and played by DJs. In the UK and continental Europe, its categories include House, Techno, Trance, Drum and bass, Dubstep, EDM, Bass Music, Hard Dance and their respective subcategories.
5. Baroque music
Music often expresses a basic emotion: those that start with lightness must continue with lightness throughout the whole song. The first exceptions to this single-mood Baroque principle appeared in vocal works. The consistency of emotions in Baroque music is first expressed by the continuous rhythm pattern, and the melody also forms a coherent and unified feeling, which echoes the consistent intensity levels.