Orchestral pop

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Orchestral pop refers to popular music that has been arranged and performed by a symphonic orchestra.[2]

History

During the 1960s, pop music on radio and in both American and British film moved away from refined Tin Pan Alley to more eccentric songwriting and incorporated reverb-drenched rock guitar, symphonic strings, and horns played by groups of properly arranged and rehearsed studio musicians.[3] Many pop arrangers and producers worked orchestral pop into their artists' releases, including George Martin and his strings arrangements with the Beatles, and John Barry for his scores to the James Bond films.[4] Also in the 1960s, a number of orchestral settings were made for songs written by the Beatles, including symphonic performances of "Yesterday" by orchestras. Some symphonies were specifically founded for playing predominantly popular music, such as the Boston Pops Orchestra.[2] Nick Perito was one of orchestral pop's most accomplished[according to whom?] arrangers, composers, and conductors.[5] In comparison to easy-listening, orchestral pop was more challenging.[6]

Spin magazine refers to Burt Bacharach and the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson as "gods" of orchestral pop.[7] According to critic Chris Nickson the "apex" of orchestral pop lied in singer Scott Walker, explaining that "in his most fertile period, 1967–70, he created a body of work that was, in its own way, as revolutionary as the Beatles'. He took the ideas of Mancini and Bacharach to their logical conclusion, essential redefining the concept of orchestral pop."[8]

Ork-pop

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Ork-pop is a 1990s movement which took its name from orchestral pop.[9]

References

  1. Hawkins 2015, p. 193.
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  4. Lanza et al. 2008, p. 167.
  5. Lanza 1994, p. 230.
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Bibliography

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