Friday, May 31, 2013

A Brief History of Boy Bands and Their "Direction" in Modern Society

Something about men singing together just makes people happy. For centuries, men have gathered together to make sweet harmony and win the hearts of ladies all across the globe.


The first known boy band came about in 1321 BC in ancient Egypt. Shown below, Tutankhamun and the Boyz became a huge success domestically as well as throughout the Mediterranean. Here, Tut and his two cohorts can be seen consorting with what we can only surmise are ancient groupies.


Despite having more than a few hits, the band broke up after Tut's untimely death at the tragically young age of 18.


But the harmonious door of melodic men's music had forever been opened and the world witnessed many more bay bands before the present day.

Socrates' Mu Eta Pi (Melody-Harmony-Philosophy) was very popular from 452-446 BC, though constantly attacked for "polluting the minds of young listeners."



The Round Tables were so legendary that some argue that they never actually existed, but are an allegory for what a truly great boy band should be.


Perhaps the most well-known boy band producer of all time was the great circumventor himself, Ferdy Magellan, who managed a handful of Filipino groups during his travels, including Trinidad, The Serranos, and Victoria. However, when other Pacific Islanders were bit by the boy band bug, a rival group, Mactan decided to take out the competition and ended Magellan's career and his life with a bamboo spear to the chest.


In the last few centuries there has been an explosion of interest in the boy bands, including barbershop quartets, Einstein's Bagels, The Beatles, The Jackson 5, The Beach Boys, and New Kids on the Block.







In recent years, however, a troubling trend has taken tendency which is that boy bands are largely using greater number of singers with less harmony. The whole point of the male ensemble is to gather together the single instrument capable of producing the most formants, namely the male voice, and creating music that stirs the soul on both an emotional and a physical level. While sex appeal has always been an added bonus of getting so much musical talent together in one performance, it has now become the focal point of the boy band.

To demonstrate this, I have extracted data from some of the biggest names in boy band lore from the last two decades- Backstreet Boys, Boyz 2 Men, NSYNC, and One Direction. All of these groups fit pretty squarely into the "pop" genre, while some wade out into the waters of hip-hop or R&B.



Consider the following chart which displays the number of voices singing in each section of a song:
This data was taken from all tracks of the listed artists' first (1) and most most recent (2) albums.
Boyz 2 Men's data has been skewed up by 25% to account for their smaller numbers.
All of these groups obviously fall into the pattern of having one member sing a verse and the rest join in for the chorus, a community-feel song form used all over the world. The most stark example of this is Boz 2 Men who rarely sings in harmony during a verse and conversely almost never sings in unison during a chorus. 

I must say that listening through these albums was, in general, a joy. I was especially impressed by NSYNC who, as can be seen, was the group most dedicated to having all of their singers sing! Even during the verses, they would break into 5-part harmony to make cadences even more spectacular, a real throwback to their predecessors, Manhattan Transfer. 
Too cool to stand in the same picture together
The disappointment came, though, while listening to the newcomers, One Direction. Here we have 5 strapping young boys with fantastic voices, and yet I could count on one hand the number of times that they were all singing different notes at the same time! Approximately 30 writers credited on both of their albums and they can't bring themselves to write some duets for verses or rocking harmonies for the choruses? Even a 5-part acapella breakdown bridge would have done, but at the end of two albums I was left wanting. I believe strongly that these boys are capable of singing as I have suggested, so it must be a hiccup with the producers. Don't they realize? Women like men who sing about love, but they go bananas, gaga, what have you, over guys who HARMONIZE about love. 

To sing in unison is to care about yourself in a group; to harmonize is to care about others.

3 comments:

  1. This is excellent. But I do resent that you are trying to make me respect N'Sync on a certain level.

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  2. Josh thinks that by listening to not one, but TWO, One Direction albums in the pursuit of musical analysis, you have sacrificed your body for science on a level comparable to Marie Curie.

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  3. I'm glad NSYNC wins. I've always appreciated their harmonic abilities. I was surprised you didn't mention anything about the Jonas Brothers though. While their hay day was somewhat short-lived, they made quite the impression for awhile there.. They even sold Jonas Brothers paraphernalia at the mall and T-Swift even dated one of them!

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