- New jack swing - Wikipedia
New jack swing can be defined as "pop music usually performed by black musicians that combines elements of jazz, funk, rap, and rhythm and blues " [2]
- New Jack Swing - Timeline of African American Music
New Jack Swing builds on the rhythm and blues foundation and fuses the beats, sound effects, and raps of hip-hop with an innovative jazz-type shuffle bounce rhythm (the swing), and the gospel vocal stylings of soul heard on Keith Sweat’s “I Want Her” (1987) and Riley’s group, Guy “Groove Me” (1988)
- New jack swing | R B, Hip-Hop, Pop | Britannica
New jack swing (also known as swingbeat) was the most pop-oriented rhythm-and-blues music since 1960s Motown Blossoming in the late 1980s and early 90s, its performers were unabashed entertainers, free of artistic pretensions; its songwriters and producers were commercial professionals
- New Jack Swing Wiki | Fandom
New jack swing or swingbeat[1] is a fusion genre spearheaded by Teddy Riley and Bernard Belle that became popular from the late-1980s into the early 1990s [2] Its influence, along with hip-hop, seeped into pop culture and was the definitive sound of the inventive black New York club scene
- New Jack Swing Music Guide: What Is New Jack Swing?
Beginning in the mid-1980s, an R B subgenre called new jack swing surged to popularity and produced many Billboard Top 40 hits What Is New Jack Swing? New jack swing, sometimes called swingbeat, is a highly rhythmic subgenre of R B music associated with the New York-based producer Teddy Riley
- What is New Jack Swing? - Micro Genre Music
Several artists built their careers on New Jack Swing, while others used it to reinvent their sound These albums defined the era and set the standard for R B and pop crossovers
- The Lasting Impact of New Jack Swing on Music and Culture
New Jack Swing, often referred to as new jack or swingbeat, is a dynamic fusion genre that seamlessly combines the rhythms and production techniques of hip-hop and dance-pop with the urban contemporary sound of R B
- New jack swing explained
New jack swing, new jack, or swingbeat [1] is a fusion genre of the rhythms and production techniques of hip hop and dance-pop, and the urban contemporary sound of R B Spearheaded by producers Teddy Riley, Bernard Belle, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, new jack swing was most popular from the late 1980s to early 1990s
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