Friday 29 April 2011

WHEN THE MUSIC HAVE A FORMULA


Math rock is a rhythmically pseudo-complex, compared to other rock music, guitar-based style of experimental rocks that emerged in the 1980s. It is characterized by complex, atypical rhythmics structures (including irregular stopping and starting), angular melodies, and unstructured chords.
Math rock shares its place of origin in the late 80s underground music scene of the American Midwest. Some earlier bands have characteristics of both math rock and post-rock, using instruments for textures rather than melodies and riffs, featuring atypical rhythms and some dissonance. The genres soon diverged: math rock concentrated on angular melodies, atypical time signatures, start-stop rhythms, and dissonance, while staying closer to rock music in sound and instrumentation. Post-rock, on the other hand, concentrated on heavy use of dynamics, creating soundscapes, and expanded the variety of instruments used, used a jazzier drumming style, and incorporated elements of shoegaze music.


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