Power ballad
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It is customary for crowds to hold up lit cigerette lighters during power ballads. |
Power Ballad is the name given to a genre of
songs that were frequently included on
arena rock,
hard rock and
heavy metal albums in the
1970s and
1980s, though the style has evolved into more modern forms since.
These songs often explored sentimental themes such as yearning and need, love and loss. Their usually confessional nature differed from metal's more lyrical themes of
hedonism,
violence, or the
occult. The term is partly a misnomer, as they are not so much
ballads as love songs. In the years when record companies first considered the marketability of power ballads, they perhaps calculated that
power ballad was more accessible and appealing than
metal love song.
Format
Typically, a power ballad begins with a soft
keyboard or
acoustic guitar introduction. Heavy
drums and distorted
electric guitars don't enter into the arrangement until the chorus or even later in the song, in the more modern takes (Such as
Creed's "
With Arms Wide Open" or
Evanescence's "
My Immortal"). The electric guitar parts usually take the form of simple
root/
fifth chords which sustain until the next chord change, but screaming, melodic guitar solos are also important markers of this genre. The interplay throughout the arrangement between "clean"
timbres and distorted ones is crucial to the creation of emotional tension in the power ballad aesthetic.
History
Power ballads initially came into popularity at the insistence of a
record company in hope of scoring a
Top Forty hit, and in the genre's formative years were written only grudgingly by band members. However in recent years, power ballads have been re-imagined (as has much of 1980s culture) as something "authentic" rather than something "manufactured" (i.e. pushed onto bands by record labels). For instance,
VH1's advertising copy for its top-25 countdown show on power ballads states: "These bands had a fantastic sense for what their fans wanted. In most cases their record labels and managers didn't want them to do these songs." In any event, power ballads were often a band's most (or only) commercially successful songs. Because of the perceived superficiality of their sentiment, though, power ballads were consistently despised by music critics, who rejected the way metal musicians actively borrowed the musical codes normally reserved for more "authentic" styles of rock.
An important precursor for the form was
The Carpenters' "Goodbye to Love" single in
1972, which featured a fuzz-tone screaming guitar solo (by Tony Peluso) in the middle of a "
Middle of the road" vocal.
Power ballads originated in the 1970s with
Power pop band
the Raspberries and
arena rock bands like
Styx,
Boston,
REO Speedwagon and
Journey. Early examples of power ballads are
Don't Wanna Say Goodbye from
the Raspberries' debut album in 1972,
The Raspberries, and
Styx's "Lady" from their 1973 album
Styx II. As a solo artist, Raspberries lead singer and chief songwriter
Eric Carmen continued to conribute to the genre by creating the #2 hit
All By Myself in 1976, which was subsequently covered by artists such as
Shirley Bassey,
Celine Dion, and
Il Divo.
Probably the first great power ballad (in terms of what power ballads would become for hair metal/pop metal (or glam metal), the genre in which power ballads were most important) is Foreigner's "I Want to Know what Love is."
Later development of the style from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s is exemplified by such hits as
Scorpions' "Still Loving You",
Dokken's "Alone Again"; and
Skid Row's "I Remember You".
For some 1970s arena rock artists, the power ballad was also responsible for helping to revive their careers in the 1980s; examples include
Heart's "These Dreams" and
Cheap Trick's "The Flame". After the release of
Guns N' Roses's
Patience, the term power ballad started to decline in use.
The term "power ballad" is still used to this day in reference to songs such as
Avril Lavigne's "
I'm with You",
Lifehouse's "
Hanging by a Moment",
Kelly Clarkson's "
Because of You", or
Velvet Revolver's "Fall to Pieces", and other such works.
Present Use
Occasionally, the term
power ballad is applied more generally to earlier rock songs which start slowly and quietly and then gradually
crescendo to a powerful, climactic end. This usage is far less common, however, and seems to be a retroactive application of the genre's name to pre-1980s
album-oriented rock songs such as
Led Zeppelin's "
Stairway to Heaven,"
Lynyrd Skynyrd's "
Free Bird," and
Aerosmith's "
Dream On", which vaguely fit the power ballad aesthetic. Generally, a power (or rock) ballad is considered suitable for
slow dancing because of its slow beat.
*
Lighter