Music of New Jersey

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Music of the United States
Local music
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One of the most renowned musicians from New Jersey is probably Bruce Springsteen, who became a 1980s icon with complex lyrical stories about teens growing up in Freehold and other economically depressed areas of New Jersey. In addition, Jersey native Frank Sinatra became one of the most popular singers of the 20th century. Francis Hopkinson of Bordentown, is perhaps the first American composer. William Dunlap wrote the first American opera, The Archers. Other famous Jersey musicians include Lauryn Hill, Whitney Houston, Jon Bon Jovi, and Kool and the Gang.

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In the early 20th century, Newark was an important center for jazz innovation. James P. Johnson and other pioneers helped invent stride. Other famous New Jersey jazzmen include bandleader Count Basie and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, who lived in Englewood from 1965 until his death in 1993.

Main article: New Jersey hardcore

New Jersey had many early punk bands, circa 1977-'80, including The Misfits, Shrapnel, and The Pleasure Hounds, and developed several regional, overlapping hardcore punk scenes by 1981-'82.

Proximity to New York and Philadelphia has long tended to draw punk and hardcore bands away from New Jersey, with historic examples including the Bergen County bands The Misfits and Cause For Alarm Who were an offshoot of The Radicals, later turned into U.S. Chaos, defecting in one direction, and South Jersey bands such as Sadistic Exploits defecting in the other. Adrenalin OD was probably the most important early hardcore punk band to identify primarily with New Jersey, however there were and continue to be multitudes of others, many of whom are nationally popular.

New Jersey has long been an important area for both rock and rap music.

  • Akon (Aliaune Thiam) was born in Senegal but moved and was raised in Jersey City. He was also arrested & detained for robbery in New Jersey.
  • Blanks 77 A prominent punk band of the 1990s still on the forefront of the genre. They are popular worldwide and have influenced 2 generations (if not more) of rockers.
  • Someday Never, is also from NJ, having started out in Marlboro, NJ.

  • Asbury Park, is home of The Stone Pony, where Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, and Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes frequented early in their careers, and which is still considered by many to be a "Mecca" for up-and-coming Jersey Shore sound musicians.
  • The Velvet Underground gave their first performance as a band at Summit High School in Summit, New Jersey. Songs included "There She Goes Again" and "Heroin."
  • Legendary rock band Queen (touring with Bad Company frontman Paul Rodgers) chose a New Jersey venue - the Continental Airlines Arena - to perform their first USA concert in 23 years on October 16, 2005. The crowd surprised them with a strong reaction and plentiful participation, even in what were thought to be the lesser-known songs.
  • Princeton Record Exchange, the Northeast's largest independent record store, was founded in 1980 and is located in Princeton, New Jersey. They have been featured in the New York Times and in Billboard magazine, and have been praised by LCD Soundsystem in Wired magazine. On a note of trivia, they have employed Micky of Ween before the band's rise to fame.
  • Green Day's biggest concert in the USA was at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
  • The Bloomfield Ave Cafe & Stage in Montclair has brought up and coming bands to NJ since 2002. Past bands have included: The Casualties, The Slackers, My Chemical Romance, Fallout Boy, Avail, Hidden In Plane View, Places Mistaken For Stars, The Academy Is, The Banner, 108, Ensign, Further Seems Foverever, and countless others.
  • The Dirt Club, world famous rock club, Bloomfield New Jersey mid 1970s to late 1980s
  • The Pipeline Club, world famous Punk and Industrial club. Newark, New Jersey 1985 to 1998 played host to 2 generations of punk specific music. Bands like Nine Inch Nails, GBH, The Exploited, Fahrenheight 451, Ministry, The Wretched Ones, Blanks 77, U.S.CHAOS, DOA, as well as thousands of bands had played, to its patrons in 13 years of operation. Its Idiology and name became synonymous for NJ and eastern US Punk, as did CBGB's in NYC. It had the worlds loudest sound system for its relatively small square footage and capacity. The engineers used the vibrating aluminum siding outside the club to verify proper operation of the overpowered mono sound system of at least 20,000 watts.
  • City Gardens Calhoun St. Trenton, New Jersey Famous Punk venue 1978-1998.
  • The 449 Room 449 S Broad St. Trenton, New Jesey Intimate underground venue that opened in 2006. Located in the same building as the renown Greenlight Vegetarian Cafe, it has played host to surprising number of major-label, national touring bands of all genres.
  • The Brighton Bar, New Jersey shore punk venue
  • The Capitol Theatre in Passaic hosted a number of famous acts in the late 1970s and early 1980s, including The Clash, Motörhead, Ozzy Osbourne, Van Halen, and Bruce Springsteen. Marty Munsch was first employed at Passaic The Capitol Theatre, as an engineer's assistant in 1984 and later was the head stage manager and engineer at The Pipeline in Newark [4]
  • Studio One, Rock Club, Newark, New Jersey. Acts including Skid Row, L.A. Guns, Dirty Looks, The Fiends, Heft, Kix, Warrant and many others. It re-opened as Tequila Joe's and was used in The Sopranno's as Adriana's rock club the Crazy Horse.

  • Blush, Steven (2001). American Hardcore: A Tribal History. Los Angeles, CA: Feral House. ISBN 0-92291-571-7.
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