Styles of popular music that frequently employ non-lexical vocables include: •
A cappella (singing without instrumental accompaniment, sometimes accompanied by a chorus of nonsense syllables) •
Doo-wop (style of rhythm and blues music that often employs nonsense syllables)
Scat singing influenced the development of
doo-wop and
hip hop. It was popular enough in doo-wop that
Barry Mann and
Gerry Goffin made it the subject of a 1961 song,
Who Put the Bomp (in the Bomp, Bomp, Bomp)".
Neil Sedaka and
Howard Greenfield, who worked with Mann and Goffin at the
Brill Building at the same time, added non-lexical vocables at the start of their song "
Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" when they could not come up with a good lyric for the opening line; Sedaka's first recording of the song was such a success that they made it a trademark for their next several songs, including "
Next Door to an Angel" and "
Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen". (Sedaka and Greenfield had become so attached to the idea that when Sedaka
dissolved his partnership with Greenfield in the early 1970s, he labeled his final album with him
The Tra-La Days Are Over.) It has also appeared in various genres of
rock music.
Jim Morrison of
The Doors sings a chorus of slow scat on the song "Cars Hiss By My Window", trying to replicate a harmonica solo he had heard, as well as on the song "
Roadhouse Blues"; scat singing also notably opens the
B-side of
Joe Walsh's 1973 album
The Smoker You Drink, The Player You Get with the song "Meadow". The technique was employed in the song "
The Great Gig in the Sky" by
Pink Floyd, as well as the R&B song "
Rubber Biscuit" by
The Chips (also as by
The Blues Brothers). The
list of scat singers includes such greats as
Jelly Roll Morton,
Louis Armstrong,
Bing Crosby,
Cab Calloway,
Scatman Crothers,
Dizzy Gillespie,
Ella Fitzgerald,
Sarah Vaughan,
Sammy Davis Jr.,
Mel Tormé,
Tony Bennett,
Cleo Laine,
Roger Miller,
Aretha Franklin,
Van Morrison, and the
Pointer Sisters. Scatting also makes appearances in newer genres, including
industrial music, in the chorus of
Ministry's 1991 song "
Jesus Built My Hotrod";
nu metal music, particularly in the band
Korn (whose lead singer
Jonathan Davis has incorporated scat singing into songs such as "Twist", "
Ball Tongue", "
Freak on a Leash", "
B.B.K.", "Beat it Upright", "Liar", and "
Rotting in Vain"); and the heavy metal subgenre of
death metal, where scat singing is used by
John Tardy of the band
Obituary.
Jack Black incorporates scat into several
Tenacious D songs, most notably: "
Tribute", "Cosmic Shame", "Classico", "Jesus Ranch", Low Hangin' Fruit", and "Bowie". Singer
JoJo performs ad-libbed scats on the track "Yes or No". Other modern examples include "Under Pressure" by
Queen, "Rag Doll" by
Aerosmith, "Under My Voodoo" by
Sublime, "No! Don't Shoot" by
Foxy Shazam, "Ma Meeshka Mow Skwoz" by
Mr. Bungle, "In My Bed" by
Amy Winehouse, and "Stuck in the Middle" by
Mika.
Scatman John combined scat and early-1990s
electronic dance music.
Folderol, a nonsense refrain in songs, is used in genres as diverse as Christmas songs ("
Deck the Halls") and naval songs like "
Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate". The European pop genre was named after the frequent use of English-derived "Yeah!" as filler. Spanish signer
Massiel won the
1968 Eurovision Song Contest with . Due to the wide-ranging vocal styles used in popular music, occasionally songs have been mistakenly categorized as having non-lexical vocables, when in fact the singers are performing actual lyrics rendered partially (or completely) unintelligible to the ear of some (but not all) listeners. Two famous 1960s examples are "
Louie Louie" as recorded by
The Kingsmen and "
Wooly Bully" by
Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs. == Examples ==