… artists of popular music, Springsteen has been instrumental in the evolution … Federick Joseph Bruce Springsteen was born in 1949 within the class home …
(Redirected from Concept Album)
In music, a concept album is an album by a single common theme that can be instrumental, narrative, in the composition or the lyrics. Conceptual albums are planned, designed with all songs contributing to a single theme or story in general, and this story or the concept plan. This is the difference from a normal album by a band composed of several songs without connecting to each other, written by the band / artist or to be versions of other artists / bands. Sometimes it feels like a conceptual album with a disc with an atmosphere or “mood” in general, making a precise definition of the term is highly problematic.
By the time that is known as the beginning of the contemporary rock (approximately 1966, when critics began to speak of ‘rock’ and ‘pop’ as two separate genera) are starting to talk about two kinds of conceptual albums: those that essentially had a cycle of songs linked by a theme, such as Sgt Pepper‘s Lonely Hearts Club Band, which did not have a history and those who had a plot that is developed through the disc, such as the famous Pink Floyd album, The Wall. The musicians of that time did not distinguish between these two categories, and any disk that fit into one of these two was considered a conceptual album. However, this distinction is useful to try to find which was the first conceptual album in each category.
Another difficulty in determining whether a record “classified” as a conceptual album, arises from the fact that both musicians and fans are increasingly a disk as a unified art form, not simply a set of songs. Songs can have multiple albums in a certain sense of cohesion even if there is no unity in the lyrics or the narrative structure. Many discs that are not really concepts are often seen by their fans as such. The album Born to Run by Bruce Springsteen or Rust in Peace by Megadeth are good examples. In all these cases, there was an intention of the artists to make something that looks like a conceptual album. Some discs without a theme or a narrative structure can, however, have a deliberate structure in which the order in which songs are heard expressing a particular intention of the artist. An example is the album Lateralus by Tool, which has several variants in the order of songs, many of which are based on theories or mathematical equations. For the same circular line Livin’In The Future and Gypsy Biker, another turn of … Bruce Springsteen will be in concert in Bilbao on July 26 next …
The U.S. singer Bruce Springsteen next month launch its new album, after that in October 2007 presented his album Magic, by …
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