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{{Article issues|orphan =August 2009|unreferenced =June 2009|original research =June 2009|copyedit =June 2009|POV =August 2009}} |
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{{Infobox Music genre |
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|name= {{flagicon|Philippines}} Pinoy pop (P-pop) |
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|color = black |
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|bgcolor = aqua |
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|stylistic_origins = [[Rock and roll]] <br /> [[Rock music]] <br /> [[crossover (music)|Crossover]] <br /> [[Pop music]] <br /> [[Dance-pop]] <br /> [[Pop punk]] <br /> [[Disco]] <br /> [[Trance music|Trance]] |
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|cultural_origins = Pop first came in the Philippines around 1990's |
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|instruments = [[Guitar]], [[Bass guitar]], [[Drum kit]] and [[Synthesizer]] |
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|derivatives = |
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|subgenrelist = |
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|subgenres = |
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|fusiongenres = |
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|regional_scenes = |
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|other_topics = |
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}} |
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'''Pinoy Pop''' is the abbreviations for Filipino pop, Pinoy pop is growing with all the artist that has the genre of '''Pinoy pop'''. Pinoy Pop started somewhere in the 1990s, many singers in the Philippines used Pinoy pop as their genre of music. '''Pinoy pop''' is also called OPM in the Philippines short for Original Pilipino Music. |
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==Modern Philippine music== |
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For the past 20 years, Pinoy pop have been located in Manila, where Tagalog, and English are the dominant languages. Other ethnolinguistic groups such as the Visayan, Bikol, and Kapampangan, despite making music in their native languages are not recognized in the Pinoy pop category, except in phenomenal cases like the Bisrock (Visayan Rock music) song "Charing" by Davao band 1017. |
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Multiculturalism advocates, and federalists often connect this to the Tagalog cultural hegemony of the capital city of Manila. |
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Having successfully created a subgenre of Philippine Rock they called Bisrock, the Visayans by far have the biggest collection of modern music in their native language, with great contributions from Visayan bands Phylum, and Missing Filemon. |
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Following suit are the Kapampangans. The debut music video of "Oras" (Time) by Tarlac City-based Kapampangan band Mernuts has penetrated MTV Pilipinas, making it the first ever Kapampangan music video to join the ranks of other mainstream Filipino music videos. "RocKapampangan: The Birth of Philippine Kapampangan Rock," an album of modern remakes of folk Kapampangan extemporaneous songs by various Kapampangan bands was also launched last February 2008, which are now regularly played via Kapampangan cable channel Infomax-8 and via one of Central Luzon's biggest FM radio stations, GVFM 99.1. Inspired by what the locals call "Kapampangan cultural renaissance," Angeles City-born balladeer Ronnie Liang rendered Kapampangan translations of some of his popular songs such as "Ayli" (Kapampangan version of "Ngiti"), and "Ika" (Kapampangan version of "Ikaw") for his repackaged album. |
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Despite the growing clamor for non-Tagalog, and non-English music, and greater representations of other Philippine languages; the local Philippine music industry, which is located in Manila, is still skeptical in making investments. Some of their major reasons include the language barrier, the still-small market, and the demonization of regionalism in the Philippine Islands. |
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The most recent Pinoy pop acts are the Pop Girls, a 5-member girl group, and XLR8, an 8-member boy group. Pinoy pop now describes as a combination of tagalog and english language which is formed into a song. |
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==See also== |
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* [[Music of the Philippines]] |
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* [[Pinoy Rock]] |
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* [[J-pop]] |
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* [[K-pop]] |
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[[Category:Philippine styles of music]] |