• SanguinePar
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      1 month ago

      That seems really cool, although the first things I checked out were Deep House and Deep Vocal House, and the music that played really didn’t sound right at all. So, I’m not sure how reliable it is. Great idea though.

      EDIT - excellent choice for Acid House though, Energy Flash by Joey Beltram 👌

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      Goddamn, what an amazing resource. If only Spotify could make something like this instead of trying to push whatever’s popular at the time.

  • Rhynoplaz
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    221 month ago

    I’m a fan of mashing two genres together. It’s recognizable songs in a new format!

    Bluegrass covers of Rock songs

    Metal covers of classical music

    Classical covers of Pop songs

    Video game music played by a Big Band

    Wild obscure shit!

    • DrSleepless
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      41 month ago

      Frog Leap Studios has some great metal. Covers of other genres

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      System of a Down did an excellent cover of “Shame on a N,” which probably wouldn’t fly today.

      Plus one for awesome metal guitarists playing Tchaikovsky and the like.

      Cello groups covering the likes of Aphex Twin and Nine Inch Nails are excellent.

      Pretty much just trying to reenforce this comment with some examples people can find.

      • Rhynoplaz
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        21 month ago

        I’m a big System fan, so I have heard that one before. The first time I heard it i was like “I guess if Wu Tang’s ok with it, it’s allowed.” 🤷🏻‍♂️😂

    • @Adm_Drummer
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      330 days ago

      You may really enjoy Bridge City Sinners then!

      They do mostly Bluegrass/Folk but they have this metal vibe to a lot of their stuff. Their vocalist is fantastic and the song I linked feels like I’d be in the middle of a Cowboy Saloon barfight.

      • @[email protected]
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        228 days ago

        Bridge City Sinners are great! I was so disappointed to learn of them just after they’d come through my city on tour.

        • @Adm_Drummer
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          128 days ago

          That they are. I just found them recently. They’re certainly out of my usual wheelhouse but I’ve really been enjoying a lot of old folk and country. This kinda bridges the gap perfectly.

    • Lemminary
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      230 days ago

      The Norfolk Orchestra has some neat covers of Radiohead. Definitely worth listening to.

  • Skua
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    141 month ago

    Desert blues! In the 90s, a lot of Tuareg musicians living in the western part of the Sahara, especially some that met while serving in the Libyan army or fighting in the 1990 rebellion in Mali, started combining Western blues and rock music with their own folk music. This has turned into a full-fledged genre of its own which I think anyone keen on guitar-based music has a good chance of enjoying. Here’s Tamikrest playing a set https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=maXW66vz26g

    • SanguinePar
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      31 month ago

      Would Songhoy Blues fit this category? They’re excellent.

      Will check out Tamikrest when I get a chance.

      • Skua
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        31 month ago

        I’m certainly not about to say they don’t count just because they’re not Tuareg. The riff in Soubour is so god damn cool

  • Binette
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    91 month ago

    Math rock! The different time signatures are really fun, and it has a midwest emo feel

  • @[email protected]
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    730 days ago

    these are kind of micro-genres since there’s only a few bands playing in these styles:

    • brass house - saxophone-based dance rock. Moon Hooch, Too Many Zooz, and their combined side-project Thundersmack.
    • low rock - sax and bass guitar jazz rock style originated by the band Morphine, and continued by Monique Ortiz and the band Bourbon Princess
    • Go-On-A-Steam-Train
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      129 days ago

      I’m sorry to say this, but… shut the front door, there’s a genre of music like Morphine and I wasn’t informed until now?! Thank you for this knowledge, I’ll be checking both bands out tomorrow! :)

      • @[email protected]
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        229 days ago

        Well calling it a whole genre is a bit of a stretch. Mark Sandman of Morphine coined the term “low rock” for their type of music and there’s a couple bands heavily influenced by them that also use that label. Monique Ortiz makes music that continues the low rock vibe, and then she’s collaborated with Morphine’s drummer on Bourbon Princess, and put out an album with Morphine’s saxophonist as “A.K.A.C.O.D.” And there’s also the band “Twinemen” with former Morphine members.

  • Drusas
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    61 month ago

    Post rock, the most famous example being Explains in the Sky.

    • cardboardchris
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      121 month ago

      I hope the typo above doesn’t prevent anyone interested from discovering this excellent genre. It’s “Explosions in the Sky”.

      • Chef_Boyargee
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        41 month ago

        Saw them open for NIN in Phoenix about a decade ago. Was very pleasantly surprised. I definitely recommend them as well.

    • Skua
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      51 month ago

      I do love a bit of post rock. We Lost the Sea are probably my favourite, but a heads up for anyone going into this that it’s about 20 minutes long and you actually need the 20 minutes to get a sense of it

  • hendrik
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    51 month ago

    Frenchcore. Especially Dr. Peacock. At least that’s something I found very few people enjoy to listen to. It’s certainly some distance away from the usual pop and rock on the radio.

    • psychOdelic
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      31 month ago

      frenchcore is epic! especially the really shit ones on SoundCloud

    • @SGGeorwell
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      41 month ago

      Yeah! I was going to say Renaissance choral music generally. Which records do you recommend?

    • @Zombiepirate
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      21 month ago

      L’homme Arme is such a cool composition. I’d love to hear a more period-accurate version, but this one is pretty great anyway.

  • Edgarallenpwn
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    1 month ago

    I’ve been trying to introduce people to Jazzcore for the last few years. Check out Last Exits self titled album or anything of John Zorn’s Painkiller and some of Naked City’s work.

    Edit: Realized I didn’t say anything about the genre. It’s a fusion genre incorporating hardcore punk, metal and free/improvisation jazz. Slightly different from Jazz Punk which always seems closer to mathrock than jazz to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      229 days ago

      I went to a lot of noise shows in my twenties. Some of the dudes took themselves way to seriously and played up the “I’m the disturbed artists bitcrushing damaged children’s gospel records” image but a lot of them were just nerdy guys who talked Star Wars or programming between their sets. Good times.

  • @Raffster
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    430 days ago

    It’s tough to get into, but I’d suggest technical death metal. Once you’re used to it everything else feels kinda boring.

      • @Raffster
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        330 days ago

        Well there’s quite the variety, but it is general consensus that Necrophagist were involved when it all started around 20 years ago. Much has happened since then and it keeps on getting better and better. Check First Fragment for super complex neoclassical swingy thechdeath. Or a bit more brutal and also recent: Archspire

        • @Adm_Drummer
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          230 days ago

          A really fun one to add is Wizardthrone! They’re certainly not as funky but they’re incredibly technical and way over my head when it comes to the math in their music lol.

          Also, I just popped on La Veuve et Le Martyr and got immediate Stormkeep vibes. Then it got F U N K Y damn that’s good.

          • @Raffster
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            129 days ago

            Yeah and it keeps getting better the more you listen to it. Can’t grasp all that’s going on in just a few listens. Om the other hand it can take just as much time until it really clicks.

      • @dirtySourdough
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        229 days ago

        My personal favorite is Decapitated. Try the song “Spheres of Madness” first. If you really dig that sound and would like something faster and more aggressive, check out the album “Winds of Creation”. If the production value isn’t high enough for you, you can check out some newer stuff. I like the songs “Veins” on “Blood Mantra” and “Impulse” on “Anticult”.

      • @whotookkarl
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        29 days ago

        Atheist and Death are also big names in the genre for more recs, I think Periphery fits too but I’m not too clear where technical ends and progressive begins, but my fav current would be Archspire

  • @[email protected]
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    41 month ago

    Not sure if it qualifies as lesser known, but Australian hip hop is pretty fantastic. Stuff like Hilltop Hoods, Bliss & Eso, Draupht, Illy, etc. You’ve probably heard a song or two without realizing it.