Music Genres

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Across
  1. 1. a genre of drama in which singing and dancing play an essential part, often performed on a stage.
  2. 4. a genre of American popular music originating in the 1920s-1930s Southern US. It is characterized by narrative storytelling, simple harmonies, emotional lyrics, and acoustic/electric instrumentation, including guitar, banjo, fiddle, and pedal steel.
  3. 5. type of popular music originating in the 1950s, characterized by a heavy beat and simple melodies. Instruments used include drums (trap set), electric & bass guitars, and lead vocals with background vocals.
  4. 7. musical form originating from African-American communities in the Deep South of the United States, characterized by its emotional expression, often using a 12-bar structure, call-and-response patterns, and blue notes, and with roots in work & field songs and spirituals.
  5. 9. a style of pop music intended mainly for dancing to, typically soul-influenced and melodic with a regular bass beat, popular particularly in the late 1970s.
  6. 10. characterized by its strong, syncopated rhythm, often with a heavy bassline and offbeat accents, and lyrics that frequently address themes of social justice, resistance, and Rastafarian spirituality.
  7. 12. a dramatic art form of classical vocal style where a story is told primarily through sung music, combining music, drama, and visual arts into a single, cohesive performance.
Down
  1. 2. a genre of music, emerged from African-American communities, blending elements of jazz, blues, gospel, and folk music, characterized by strong rhythms, emotive vocals, and a strong backbeat.
  2. 3. a form of monophonic, unaccompanied sacred song, traditionally used in the Roman Catholic Church, characterized by its simple, unison melodies and Latin texts.
  3. 6. a kind of music evolved by African American musicians in the 1890s and usually played on the piano, characterized by a syncopated melodic line and regularly accented accompaniment.
  4. 8. American musical genre originating in New Orleans (late 19th-early 20th century) that blends West African rhythms, African American blues/ragtime, and European harmony. Defined by improvisation, swing rhythm, syncopation, and intricate harmonies, it is played on instruments like trumpets, saxophones, and pianos, allowing for unique performer expression.
  5. 11. characterized by its roots in oral tradition, often featuring simple melodies, narrative lyrics, and anonymous or forgotten authorship, passed down through generations within a specific culture or region.