Folkhop: Difference between revisions – Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Content deleted Content added


Tags: Reverted Mobile edit Mobile web edit

 

Line 2: Line 2:

{{Hoax|date=August 2025}}

{{Hoax|date=August 2025}}

{{more citations needed|date=May 2015}}

{{more citations needed|date=May 2015}}

}}

{{Proposed deletion/dated

|concern = Tagged as needing more references for 10 years. No other language has a reliably sourced article from which to translate. Is not entirely a hoax, but some parts are nonsense. [[WP:TNT]].

|timestamp = 20251003004836

|nom = Bearian

|help =

}}

}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}


Latest revision as of 20:58, 7 October 2025

Folkhop is a genre of music that came about after the decline[citation needed] of bhangra in the mid-1990s. It is diametrically opposed to bhangra music in that it is not live music but instead relies on pre-recorded musical parts with only the vocals being sung live along to a live repetitive dhol drum. The pre-recorded music consists of primarily looped rhythm parts from both eastern and western percussion instruments and little to no melody on instruments. It borrows heavily from hip hop, however it is more traditional than its predecessor, bhangra which rebelled against tradition and authenticity. Traditional folk instruments like dhol and tumbi are central to folkhop productions.[1] Folkhop songs tend to be heavily produced by DJs on computer software. In the beginning, all songs start out as vocal only recordings that the folk singer records in India. This ‘vocal only’ recording is then sold on websites involved in the buying and selling of folkhop music. The DJs then pay a small sum for the rights to these vocals, and then set the music using looped samples of both hip hop and traditional folk instruments. The quintessential folkhop artist is the bedroom DJ.
Folkhop albums typically feature no credits on musicians, instead liner notes simply feature ‘big ups’ to online friends of the folkhop DJ.

Whereas bhangra music was centered on bands delivering live performances with focus on instrumentation (as evidenced by bhangra videos), folkhop shares with rap and hip hop “common textual aspects, as well as similarities in their onstage and video performance practices: an obsession with materialism, or an expressed desire or boasting of “bling”, in the form of jewelry, wealth or clothing”[1]

It also features an obsession with farming and rural lifestyle such as livestock, tractors traditional clothes etc. Many folkhop videos
showcase rappers and folk singers in the midst of farms or riding on tractors.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version