From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Easy listening music is a style of popular music and radio format that emerged in the mid-20th century, evolving out of swing and big band music, and related to Beautiful music and Light music. Easy listening music features simple, catchy melodies, soft, laid-back songs and occasionally rhythms
suitable for couples dancing. The genre includes both instrumental
forms (often played on light of tone instruments such as the Hammond Organ, "lush strings", or Ukulele); and vocal forms featuring pop singers, such as Barbra Streisand, Perry Como, Andy Williams, Jack Jones, Engelbert Humperdinck, Eydie Gorme, Barry Manilow, Harry Connick Jr., Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mathis, Bing Crosby, Tom Jones and Mel Tormé. Exotica music stylists such as Les Baxter and Martin Denny are often included within the purview of easy listening music as well.
Use of term and related forms of music
The easy listening radio format has been generally but not completely superseded by the "Lite AC" form of Adult contemporary music radio.[1] Beautiful music is a subset of easy listening music, since, as a radio format, it had rigid standards for instrumentation (e.g., few or no saxophones) and restrictions on how many vocal pieces could be played in an hour. It is sometimes called Nostalgia
music. Often, songs were re-arranged instrumental "cover" versions of
popular songs of the 1960s and 1970s custom-produced for the radio
format during its peak in popularity.
The term "easy listening" has sometimes been applied negatively in
the years since it went out of fashion. It is similar to what is called
"lounge" or "lounge core", but lounge music is much more jazz-oriented and dependent on musical improvisation than easy listening. Easy listening music is usually orchestrated by an arranger rather than improvised by a small ensemble.
Since easy listening music as such is rather unknown to the younger
generation, the term "easy listening" is often incorrectly applied to
other genres such as soft rock, soft pop, smooth jazz, or new age music.
However this problem arises due to the fact that the actual definition
is relatively broad. Easy listening music is also sometimes referred to
as "mood music", "elevator music" (and in the UK as "lift music"). The term "Muzak"
is occasionally used as a (usually derogatory) synonym for easy
listening music as well, but that is erroneous as Muzak specifically
refers to the music produced and programmed for public places by the
Muzak Corporation, and is not a music genre in itself.
Notable artists
- Easy listening orchestras and conductors
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- Guitarists with high deployment in easy listening
- Other instrumentalists with high deployment in easy listening
- Easy listening vocal groups
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- Vocalists with high deployment in easy listening
- Vocalists with some deployment in easy listening
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References
Further reading
- Lanza, Joseph. (1994). Elevator Music: a Surreal History of Muzak, Easy-Listening, and Other Moodsong. New York: St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-10540-1.
See also