Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Post-disco> ?p ?o. }
- Post-disco abstract "Post-disco refers to a disco music movement initially of urban contemporary artists that started in the New York City area partially in response to over-commercialization and artistic downfall of disco culture or more specifically, to a historically significant period in popular music history beginning with the backlash against disco music in the United States, starting in Chicago, Illinois and spreading elsewhere, in the late 1970s and ending with the mainstream appearance of house music in late 1980s.According to Britannica, the very prototype post-disco sound is the music as performed by Parliament-Funkadelic, who in this regard also laid a foundation of post-punk.The stripped-down musical trends followed from the mixed community of DJs and producers, serendipitously establishing itself as an off-shot of disco—increasingly electronic and experimental in nature—during the contemporaneous emergence of more advanced electronic instruments, and new programming tools, enabling to come up with "radically different sounds." The music is technology-centric, keyboard-ladden, melodic, and employs funk-oriented bass lines, synth riffs, dub music aesthetics, background jazzy or blues-y piano layers. Characterized from drawing rhythmically from its predecessor disco, it went on about destabilizing previously established conventions of the genre, like the lack of a four-on-the-floor rhythm pattern, the shuffling high-hat driven beat, both basic essential components of disco. It is set in 4/4 time signature commonly found in other western popular music genres like rock or pop music. Strings- and horns-esque sounds of the synthesizer were preferred to the lush orchestral arrangements which resurfaced later only as samples in house music. Soulful female vocals, however, remained an essence of post-disco. Post-disco had a direct or indirect influence over the creation of dance-pop, boogie, and Italo disco and led to the development of the early alternative dance, club-centered house, and anti-capitalist techno music.".
- Post-disco derivative Dance-pop.
- Post-disco derivative Dance-punk.
- Post-disco derivative Dance-rock.
- Post-disco derivative Freestyle_music.
- Post-disco derivative Italo_disco.
- Post-disco instrument Drum_machine.
- Post-disco instrument Human_voice.
- Post-disco instrument Keyboard_instrument.
- Post-disco instrument Music_sequencer.
- Post-disco instrument Sampler_(musical_instrument).
- Post-disco instrument Synthesizer.
- Post-disco musicSubgenre Boogie_(genre).
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Disco.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Dub_(music).
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Electronic_music.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Experimental_music.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Funk.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigin Soul_music.
- Post-disco thumbnail Moog_Voyager,_Yamaha_CS-15D_Dual_Channel_Synthesizer.jpg?width=300.
- Post-disco wikiPageID "13371576".
- Post-disco wikiPageRevisionID "605979036".
- Post-disco alt "Madonna 1990".
- Post-disco alt "Michael Jackson 1988".
- Post-disco bgcolor "silver".
- Post-disco color "black".
- Post-disco culturalOrigins "1970.0".
- Post-disco derivatives Dance-pop.
- Post-disco derivatives Dance-punk.
- Post-disco derivatives Dance-rock.
- Post-disco derivatives Freestyle_music.
- Post-disco derivatives Italo_disco.
- Post-disco description "Short sample of "Let's Groove", originally released in 1981 by Earth, Wind & Fire.".
- Post-disco description "Short sample of "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'", a song that appeared on Michael Jackson's album Thriller.".
- Post-disco filename "Let's Groove by Earth, Wind & Fire.ogg".
- Post-disco filename "Michael Jackson - Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'.ogg".
- Post-disco footer "Michael Jackson and Madonna: the most successful artists of post-disco.".
- Post-disco format Ogg.
- Post-disco hasPhotoCollection Post-disco.
- Post-disco image "Madonna 1990 cropped.jpg".
- Post-disco image "Michaeljackson .jpg".
- Post-disco instruments "Synthesizers, drum machines, sequencers, vocals, keyboards, samplers".
- Post-disco name "Post-disco".
- Post-disco otherTopics Chicago_house.
- Post-disco otherTopics Disco_Demolition_Night.
- Post-disco otherTopics Electro_(music).
- Post-disco otherTopics Garage_music_(North_America).
- Post-disco otherTopics List_of_post-disco_artists_and_songs.
- Post-disco otherTopics Post-punk.
- Post-disco otherTopics Rare_groove.
- Post-disco popularity "1980.0".
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Disco.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Dub_(music).
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Electronic_music.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Experimental_music.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Funk.
- Post-disco stylisticOrigins Soul_music.
- Post-disco subgenres Boogie_(genre).
- Post-disco title "Earth, Wind & Fire - Let's Groove".
- Post-disco title "Michael Jackson - Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'".
- Post-disco width "120".
- Post-disco subject Category:1980s_in_music.
- Post-disco subject Category:2000s_in_music.
- Post-disco subject Category:2010s_in_music.
- Post-disco subject Category:African-American_music.
- Post-disco subject Category:American_styles_of_music.
- Post-disco subject Category:Music_of_New_York_City.
- Post-disco subject Category:Music_scenes.
- Post-disco subject Category:Post-disco.
- Post-disco type Area108497294.
- Post-disco type Location100027167.
- Post-disco type MusicScenes.
- Post-disco type Object100002684.
- Post-disco type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Post-disco type Region108630985.
- Post-disco type Scene108645963.
- Post-disco type YagoGeoEntity.
- Post-disco type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- Post-disco type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Post-disco type Genre.
- Post-disco type MusicGenre.
- Post-disco type TopicalConcept.
- Post-disco type MusicalComposition.
- Post-disco type Concept.
- Post-disco comment "Post-disco refers to a disco music movement initially of urban contemporary artists that started in the New York City area partially in response to over-commercialization and artistic downfall of disco culture or more specifically, to a historically significant period in popular music history beginning with the backlash against disco music in the United States, starting in Chicago, Illinois and spreading elsewhere, in the late 1970s and ending with the mainstream appearance of house music in late 1980s.According to Britannica, the very prototype post-disco sound is the music as performed by Parliament-Funkadelic, who in this regard also laid a foundation of post-punk.The stripped-down musical trends followed from the mixed community of DJs and producers, serendipitously establishing itself as an off-shot of disco—increasingly electronic and experimental in nature—during the contemporaneous emergence of more advanced electronic instruments, and new programming tools, enabling to come up with "radically different sounds." The music is technology-centric, keyboard-ladden, melodic, and employs funk-oriented bass lines, synth riffs, dub music aesthetics, background jazzy or blues-y piano layers. ".
- Post-disco label "Post-Disco".
- Post-disco label "Post-disco".
- Post-disco label "Post-disco".
- Post-disco label "Post-disco".
- Post-disco label "ポスト・ディスコ".
- Post-disco sameAs Post-Disco.
- Post-disco sameAs Post-disco.
- Post-disco sameAs ポスト・ディスコ.
- Post-disco sameAs Post-disco.
- Post-disco sameAs m.03c34yl.
- Post-disco sameAs Q1190485.
- Post-disco sameAs Q1190485.
- Post-disco sameAs Post-disco.
- Post-disco wasDerivedFrom Post-disco?oldid=605979036.
- Post-disco depiction Moog_Voyager,_Yamaha_CS-15D_Dual_Channel_Synthesizer.jpg.