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Arena rock, also called stadium rock or anthem rock, is a loosely-defined genre of rock music era. It spawned from heavy metal, hard rock, and progressive rock in the 70s by bands such as Styx and Queen.[1]
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Characteristics
Arena rock takes its sound from hard rock, heavy metal, and progressive rock.[1] Arena rock is "heavy",[1] but it is not as hard and is "more commercially oriented" than other subgenres of hard rock and heavy metal.[1] Songs are often linked by concept albums,[1] a trait inherited from progressive rock. Other features include "slick productions",[2] an emphasis on the verses,[1] and an "unnatural emphasis on big, anthemic hooks and choruses",[1] the last trait "set[ting it] apart from its influences".[1] Arena rock is not only defined by its sound, it is also defined by its concerts. It "is music designed to be performed live in stadiums and arenas".[1] Arena rock shows often feature "smoke machines, laser light spectaculars, two-story mega-amps, and JumboTron video screens",[3] as well as "guitar pyrotechnics".[1]
History
Arena rock's origins can be traced to the late 1960s, with bands such as The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and The Who. Those bands "set the stage for massive live performances in stadiums and arenas around the globe."[4] The genre itself, though, was created by bands such as Boston, Styx, Foreigner, Journey, Queen, Peter Frampton, and (Phil Collins-era) Genesis. Those bands would go on to "sell-out the world’s largest venues throughout most of (the 70s) and beyond" [4] and help make arena rock popular in the 80s. Arena rock's popularity peaked in the '80s. Along with the creators of the genre, other bands such as Heart, Blue Oyster Cult, REO Speedwagon, Cheap Trick, Kansas, ZZ Top, ACDC, KISS, and Aerosmith, "were at the zenith of their popularity, selling millions of units".[1] At this time, arena rock's popularity "only seemed on the way up."[1] Eventually, arena rock would lose its popularity to alternative rock and grunge for a number of reasons. One reason was the "limitations in the style".[1] Many of the younger fans felt a more personal connection with genres such as punk, new wave, and indie rock,[1] and the older fans tired of stadium rock, as many of "the performers were ants on the stage from the upper decks."[1] Other reasons include "declining admission sales and album sales"[1] and stadiums decreasing in size.[1] By the time MTV had formed, "it no longer bore any relevance."[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Uao (2005-9-11). Sunday Morning Playlist: Arena Rock. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Arena Rock Description. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ Arena Rock Album Information. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
- ^ a b Richards, Kelli (2006-7-13). Arena Rock Morphs. Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
See also
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| Alternative rock · Anatolian rock · Arena rock · Art rock · Beat music · Blues-rock · Boogaloo · British Invasion · Canterbury sound · Christian rock · Country rock · Folk rock · Frat rock · Garage rock · Glam rock · Hard rock · Heavy metal · Instrumental rock · Jam band · Jangle pop · Krautrock · Pop rock · Power pop · Progressive rock · Psychedelic rock · Pub rock (UK) · Pub rock (Australia) · Punk rock · Rap rock · Rockabilly · Rock and roll · Soft rock · Southern rock · Surf rock | |
| Other topics | List of rock genres - Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - Rock band - Social effects of rock and roll |
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| Arena rock - Baroque pop - British Invasion - Bubblegum pop/rock - Glam rock - Indie pop - New Wave - Piano pop/rock - Power pop - Pop punk - Soft rock - Sunshine pop/rock - Surf rock - Synthpop - Synthpunk - Synth rock |


