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  1. Pop Soul Soft Rock Philly Soul Progressive Pop. mellow bittersweet melodic soft warm lush eclectic love. Shapes and Patterns. Swing Out Sister. 3.70 223 6. 1997. Sophisti-Pop Jazz Pop Blue-Eyed Soul. Brill Building. melodic lush Wall of Sound optimistic passionate uplifting.

  2. Dec 23, 2019 · The 1960s saw a significant turn as the Civil Rights Movement continued. Black artists maintained their own cultural real estate, but the emergence of blue-eyed soul labelled white artists of similar sound to the Black soul artists of Motown. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Dusty Springfield remained one of the leading artists in a time where ...

  3. Created by TIDAL. In a still-segregated, 1960s America, 'blue-eyed soul' described white artists performing soul and R&B. Blue-eyed soul artists often would not include their images on any pressings to keep their race hidden. Artists such as Bobby Caldwell, Teena Marie, Michael McDonald and more still received radio play on predominantly black ...

  4. Jun 11, 2024 · Date: 1964 - c. 1972. the Rascals, American pop group who, along with the Righteous Brothers, were the preeminent practitioners in the 1960s of blue-eyed soul (music created by white recording artists who faithfully imitated soul music ). The Rascals’ music was an eclectic mix of influences and styles, including soul, rhythm and blues (R&B ...

  5. New sheet music in Blue-Eyed Soul. Title Title / Artist / Type Artist Year Type Level; Young Americans: Young Americans. David Bowie. Accompaniment. David Bowie: 1974 ...

  6. Mar 3, 2017 · March 3, 2017. Despite her standing across the Atlantic as one of the crown jewels of British pop, in American histories of 1960s music Dusty Springfield tends to float around the edges as an outlier. Among female soul singers, black and white, her star is well eclipsed by those of Aretha Franklin, Janis Joplin, and Tina Turner, to name just a ...

  7. www.wikiwand.com › simple › Blue-eyed_soulBlue-eyed soul - Wikiwand

    Blue Eyed Soul is a term used to describe Soul and R&B music sung by white people. The term was first used in the 1960s about white artists performing music which was similar to the music being performed by Motown artists.[1] It is sometimes called white soul.