Laïkó
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Laïkó"
.

Laïkó tragoudi (Greek: λαϊκό τραγούδι, popular/folk song) is a style of Greek urban folk music, especially the Greek music popular after the end of the 1950s, when a new generation of musicians developed from the rebetiko folk music of the time a characteristic new style, the modern laïkó tragoudi.

Although laïkó tragoudi evolved from rebetiko, it adopted innovations including the use of amplifiers on the instruments, the use of drums and the four-chord bouzouki and, later on, electronic keyboards. Poverty remained a strong theme, although love and relationships also figured prominently.

As laïkó became ubiquitous in 1960s Greece, a number of different schools emerged. One branch was indoprepeh (Greek: ινδοπρεπή, "Indian proper", of Indian origin or influence) heavily influenced by Middle Eastern music with performers such as Manolis Angelopoulos covering Indian filmi songs.

At the same time the skyladika emerged — nightclubs with a bad reputation, most of them not quite legal, typicaly on the outskirts of town. The style of music played there was called skiladiko too. In the '80s laïkó began to interact with Western pop music.

See also

content
© jGames.co.uk 2007 (some content from Wikipedia under GDL ) !-- ValueClick Media 468x60 and 728x90 Banner CODE for jgames.co.uk -->
Your Ad Here