Greek operetta and early popular songs (1861–1917) The
Heptanesean
kantádes (καντάδες '
serenades'; sing.: καντάδα) are based on the popular Italian music of the early 19th century and became the forerunners of the Greek modern song, influencing its development to a considerable degree. For the first part of the next century, several Greek composers continued to borrow elements from the Heptanesean style. The most successful songs during the period 1870–1930 were the so-called Athenian serenades (Αθηναϊκές καντάδες), and the songs performed on stage (επιθεωρησιακά τραγούδια 'theatrical revue songs') in
revues,
musical comedies,
operettas and
nocturnes that were dominating Athens' theatre scene. Notable composers of
operettas or
nocturnes were
Spyridon Samaras,
Kostas Giannidis,
Spyridon Kaisaris,
Dionysios Lavrangas,
Nikos Hatziapostolou, while
Theophrastos Sakellaridis'
The Godson remains probably the most popular operetta. Despite the fact that the Athenian songs were not autonomous artistic creations (in contrast with the serenades) and despite their original connection with mainly
dramatic forms of Art, they eventually became hits as independent songs. Notable actors of Greek operettas, who also made a series of melodies and songs popular at that time, include
Orestis Makris,
Kalouta sisters,
Petros Epitropakis,
Vasilis Avlonitis,
Afroditi Laoutari,
Rena Vlahopoulou,
Eleni Papadaki,
Aris Maliagros,
Marika Nezer,
Marika Krevata and others.
Italian opera also had a great influence on the musical aesthetics of the modern Greeks. Some popular operettas include: •
Kritikopoula (
Spyridon Samaras, 1916) •
The Godson (
Theophrastos Sakellaridis, 1918) •
I want to see the Pope (
Theophrastos Sakellaridis, 1920) •
Oi Apachides ton Athinon (
Nikos Hatziapostolou, 1921) •
Beba (
Theophrastos Sakellaridis, 1928) After 1930, wavering among American and European musical influences as well as the Greek musical tradition, Greek composers begin to write music using the tunes of the
tango,
samba,
waltz,
swing,
bolero,
foxtrot, some times combined with melodies in the style of
Athenian serenades' repertory.
Nikos Gounaris was probably the most renowned composer and singer of the time (often called "Mr. Greece").
Giorgos Mouzakis was a prominent virtuoso
trumpeter (borrowed
latin jazz elements), while
Attik and
Michalis Souyioul were also among the most successful and popular composers. Notable singers of this style include also
Fotis Polymeris,
Sofia Vembo (a star of the era),
Mary Lo,
Danaë Stratigopoulou,
Stella Greca and
Tony Maroudas.
Notable artists Composers: •
Attik (Kleon Triantafyllou) •
Kostas Giannidis •
Kostas Kapnisis •
Giorgos Mouzakis •
Theophrastos Sakellaridis •
Michalis Souyioul (Souyioultzoglou) •
Giorgos Giannakopoulos (lyricist) • (lyricist) •
Alekos Sakellarios (lyricist) •
Mimis Traiforos (lyricist)
Singers: •
Ioannis Filandros/
Spyros Koronis duo •
Nikos Gounaris •
Tony Maroudas •
Kakia Mendri •
Fotis Polymeris •
Luisa Poselli •
Danaë •
Sofia Vembo Rebetiko ,
Agapios Tomboulis,
Roza Eskenazi (Athens 1932)
Rebetiko was initially associated with the lower and poor classes, but later reached greater general acceptance as the rough edges of its overt subcultural character were softened and polished. Rebetiko probably originated in the music of the larger Greek cities, most of them coastal, in today's Greece and
Asia Minor. Emerged by the 1920s as the urban folk music of Greek society's outcasts (
manges). The earliest Greek
rebetiko singers (refugees, drug-users, criminals, and itinerants) were scorned by mainstream society. They sang heartrending tales of drug abuse, prison, and violence, usually accompanied by the
bouzouki. In 1923, after the
population exchange between Greece and Turkey, many
ethnic Greeks from Asia Minor fled to Greece as a result of the
Greco-Turkish War. They settled in poor neighborhoods in
Piraeus,
Thessaloniki, and
Athens. Many of these immigrants were highly educated, such as songwriter
Vangelis Papazoglou, and
Panagiotis Toundas, composer and leader of
Odeon Records' Greek subsidiary, who are traditionally considered the founders of the
Smyrna school of
rebetiko. Another tradition from Smyrna that came along with the Greek refugees was the
tekés (τεκές) 'opium den', or
hashish dens. Groups of men would sit in a circle, smoke hashish from a
hookah, and improvise music of various kinds. With the coming of the
Metaxas dictatorship,
rebetiko was suppressed due to the uncompromising lyrics. Hashish dens,
baglamas and
bouzouki were banned, or at least playing in the
eastern-style manner and scales. Some of the earliest legends of Greek music, such as the quartet of
Anestis Delias,
Markos Vamvakaris,
Stratos Pagioumtzis and
Yiorgos Batis came out of this music scene. Vamvakaris became perhaps the first renowned
rebetiko musician after the beginning of his solo career. Other popular rebetiko songwriters and singers of this period (1940s) include:
Dimitris Gogos (better known as Bayandéras),
Stelios Perpiniadis,
Spyros Peristeris,
Giannis Papaioannou, and Apostolos Hatzichristos. The scene was soon popularized further by stars like
Vassilis Tsitsanis. His song Συννεφιασμένη Κυριακή -
Synnefiasméni Kyriakí became an anthem for the oppressed Greeks when it was composed in 1943 (during the
Axis occupation of Greece during World War II), despite the fact that it was not recorded until 1948. He was followed by female singers like
Marika Ninou,
Ioanna Georgakopoulou, and
Sotiria Bellou. In 1953,
Manolis Chiotis added a fourth pair of strings to the
bouzouki, which allowed it to be played as a guitar and set the stage for the future '
electrification' of
rebetiko. This final era of rebetiko (mid-1940s–1953) also featured the emergence of
nightclubs (κέντρα διασκεδάσεως) as a means of popularizing music. By the late 1950s, rebetiko had declined; it only survived in the form of
archontorebetiko (αρχοντορεμπέτικο "posh rebetiko"), a refined style of rebetiko that was far more accepted by the upper class than the traditional form of the genre. The mainstream popularity of archontorebetiko paved the way for
éntekhno and
laïkó. In the 1960s,
Manolis Chiotis popularized the eight-string bouzouki and set the stage for the future '
electrification' of
rebetiko.
Rebetiko in its original form was revived during the
Junta of 1967–1974, when the
Regime of the Colonels banned it. After the end of the Junta, many revival groups (and solo artists) appeared. The most notable of them include
Opisthodromiki Kompania,
Rembetiki Kompania,
Babis Tsertos,
Agathonas Iakovidis and others.
Éntekhno Drawing on
rebetiko's internationalization by Tsitsanis and Chiotis,
éntekhno (or
éntechno) arose in the late 1950s. Éntekhno (art song) is
orchestral music with elements from Greek folk
rhythm and
melody; its lyrical themes are often based on the work of famous Greek poets. As opposed to other forms of Greek urban folk music, éntekhno concerts would often take place outside a hall or a nightclub in the
open air.
Mikis Theodorakis and
Manos Hadjidakis were the most popular early composers of éntekhno
song cycles. They were both educated in
classical music; the lack of a wide public for this kind of music in Greece drove them to the invention of éntekhno, in which they transferred some values of Western art music, such as ballad tunes. Theodorakis was the first composer to use the bouzouki in this genre of music, trying to include this instrument in mainstream culture. Other significant Greek songwriters included
Stavros Kouyioumtzis,
Manos Loïzos, and
Dimos Moutsis. Significant lyricists of this genre are
Nikos Gatsos,
Manos Eleftheriou and poet
Tasos Livaditis. By the 1960s, innovative albums helped éntekhno become close to mainstream, and also led to its appropriation by the
film industry for use in soundtracks. A specific form of éntekhno was the so-called "political song"; songs with a political message, of the Left, which arose during the
military junta and became very popular after its fall in the late '70s.
Manos Loizos, guitarist
Panos Tzavellas,
Maria Dimitriadi and
Maria Farantouri were some representatives.
Thanos Mikroutsikos released an album featuring Greek partisan songs of the
Greek resistance, with his own orchestration. A form of éntekhno, which is even closer to Western classical music, was introduced during the late 1970s by Mikroutsikos. (See the section '
Other popular trends' below for further information on
Néo Kýma and contemporary éntekhno.) Notable
éntekhno works include: •
Six folk paintings (
Manos Hatzidakis, 1951) •
Epitaphios (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1960, poetry by
Yiannis Ritsos) •
Epifania (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1962, poetry by
Giorgos Seferis) • ''
Dead brother's song'' (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1962) •
Mikres Kyklades (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1963, poetry by
Odysseas Elytis) •
To Axion Esti (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1964, poetry by
Odysseas Elytis) • ''
Gioconda's Smile'' (
Manos Hatzidakis, 1965) •
Romiossini (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1966, poetry by
Yiannis Ritsos) •
Ballos (
Dionysis Savvopoulos, 1970) •
O Megalos Erotikos (
Manos Hatzidakis, 1972) •
Eighteen Short Songs of the Bitter Motherland (
Mikis Theodorakis, 1973, poetry by
Yiannis Ritsos) •
Our Great Circus (
Stavros Xarchakos for the theatrical play of
Iakovos Kambanellis, 1974) •
Tetralogia (
Dimos Moutsis, 1975, poetry by
Constantine P. Cavafy,
Kostas Karyotakis,
Yiannis Ritsos and
Giorgos Seferis) •
Stavros tou Notou (Southern Cross) (
Thanos Mikroutsikos, 1979, poetry by
Nikos Kavvadias)
Notable artists Composers: •
Manos Hatzidakis •
Manos Loïzos •
Yannis Markopoulos •
Thanos Mikroutsikos •
Dimos Moutsis •
Mimis Plessas •
Mikis Theodorakis •
Stavros Xarchakos •
Argiris Kounadis •
Nikos Gatsos (lyricist) •
Manos Eleftheriou (lyricist)
Singers: •
Anna Vissi •
Haris Alexiou •
Grigoris Bithikotsis •
Giorgos Dalaras •
Maria Dimitriadi •
Maria Farantouri •
Antonis Kalogiannis •
Giannis Koutras •
Manolis Mitsias •
Vicky Moscholiou •
Nana Mouskouri •
Nena Venetsanou •
Dimitris Mitropanos Laïkó Laïkó (λαϊκό τραγούδι 'song of the people' / 'popular song' or αστική λαϊκή μουσική 'urban folk music'), is a
Greek music genre that is composed in
Greek language in accordance with the tradition of the
Greek people. Laïkó followed after the commercialization of rebetiko music. Until the 1930s the Greek
discography was dominated by two musical
genres: the
Greek folk music (
dimotiká) and the
elafró tragoudi (literally: "light song"). The latter was the Greek version of the international urban music of the era.
Classic laïkó (κλασικό/παλιό λαϊκό) as it is known today, was the mainstream popular music of
Greece during the 1960s and 1970s. It was dominated by singers such as
Grigoris Bithikotsis,
Marinella,
Stelios Kazantzidis,
Panos Gavalas and others. Among the most significant songwriters and lyricists of this period are
Giorgos Zampetas,
Manolis Hiotis and
Vassilis Tsitsanis. The more cheerful version of laïkó, called
elafró laïkó (ελαφρολαϊκό,
elafrolaïkó 'light laïkó') and it was often used in musicals during the
Golden Age of Greek cinema. Contemporary laïkó (σύγχρονο λαϊκό), also called
modern laïkó, is currently Greece's mainstream music genre. Some of the strongest
Greek dances and
rhythms of today's Greek music culture
laïká are
nisiotika,
syrtos,
hasapika,
Kalamatiana,
zeibekiko,
syrtaki and
Greek belly dance and most of them are set to music by the Greek instrumental
bouzouki. Thus, on the one hand there is the homogenized
Greek popular song, with all the idioms of traditional
Greek folk music, and on the other, the peculiar musical trends of the urban
rebetiko (song of the cities) known also in Greece as
αστικό. Other significant songwriters and lyricists of this category are considered
Akis Panou,
Apostolos Kaldaras,
Giorgos Mitsakis,
Stavros Kouyioumtzis,
Lefteris Papadopoulos and
Eftychia Papagianopoulou. Many artists have combined the traditions of éntekhno and laïkó with considerable success, such as the composers
Mimis Plessas and
Stavros Xarchakos. During the same era, there was also another kind of soft music (ελαφρά μουσική, also called ελαφρό,
elafró 'soft (song)', literally 'light') which became fashionable; it was represented by ensembles of singers/musicians such as the Katsamba Brothers duo, the
Trio Kitara, the
Trio Belcanto, the
Trio Atene and others. The genre's sound was an imitation of the then-contemporary Cuban and Mexican folk music, but also had elements from the early Athenian popular songs.
Notable artists Composers: •
Manolis Chiotis •
Apostolos Kaldaras •
Stavros Kouyioumtzis •
Mimis Plessas •
Mikis Theodorakis •
Vassilis Tsitsanis •
Giorgos Zampetas •
Lefteris Papadopoulos (lyricist) •
Pythagoras Papastamatiou (lyricist) •
Eftychia Papagianopoulou (lyricist) •
Kostas Virvos (lyricist)
Singers: •
Pantelis Pantelidis •
Grigoris Bithikotsis •
Stratos Dionysiou •
Panos Gavalas •
Giannis Kalatzis •
Stelios Kazantzidis •
Mary Linda •
Marinella •
Vicky Moscholiou •
Tolis Voskopoulos •
Dimitris Mitropanos Modern laïká Modern laïka (μοντέρνα λαϊκά)—also
contemporary laïkó/
laïká (σύγχρονο λαϊκό/σύγχρονα λαϊκά) or
laïko-pop (λαϊκο-πόπ)—is currently Greece's mainstream music along with some pop recordings. Modern laïká emerged as a style in the early 1980s. An indispensable part of the contemporary laïká culture is the písta (πίστα; pl.: πίστες) "dance floor/venue". Nightclubs at which the DJs play only contemporary laïká were colloquially known in the 1990s as ellinádika. Over the years until today, the aim of the Greek music scene is only one:
quality. Virtuoso musicians and expressive singers take every season, with more professionalism and love for what they do to entertain the Greek audience, to lure and to make it dance with the songs and music that everyone loves. All this music effort takes place in
Europe and internationally. Greek-American music includes
rebetiko and
Greek folk music. The Greek music culture exists as a serious aspect of
Hellenic culture, both within
Greece and in the diaspora. Renowned songwriters of modern laïká include
Alekos Chrysovergis,
Nikos Karvelas,
Phoebus,
Nikos Terzis and
Christos Dantis. Renowned lyricists include
Giorgos Theofanous,
Evi Droutsa and
Natalia Germanou.
2010s In the 2010s, several new artists emerged. Artists, such as
Kostas Martakis,
Katerina Stikoudi,
Demy and
X Factor contestants such as
Konstantinos Argyros,
Eleftheria Eleftheriou and
Ivi Adamou. Several artists sometimes incorporated
dance-pop elements in their laïko-pop recordings.
Terminology In effect, there is no single name for modern laïká in the
Greek language, but it is often formally referred to as σύγχρονο λαϊκό (), a term which is however also used for denoting newly composed songs in the tradition of "proper" laïkó; when ambiguity arises, σύγχρονο ('contemporary') λαϊκό or disparagingly λαϊκο-ποπ ('folk-pop', also in the sense of "westernized") is used for the former, while γνήσιο ('genuine') or even καθαρόαιμο ('pureblood') λαϊκό is used for the latter. The choice of contrasting the notions of "westernized" and "genuine" may often be based on
ideological and
aesthetic grounds.
Criticism Despite its popularity, the genre of modern laïká (especially laïko-pop) has come under scrutiny for "featuring musical clichés, average singing voices and slogan-like lyrics" and for "being a hybrid, neither laïkó, nor pop".
Skyládiko Skyládiko (; pl.:
Skyládika; , meaning "doghouse") is a derogatory term to describe some branches of laïkó music and some of the current nightclubs in Greece in which a form of popular Greek music is performed. It is performed with electric
bouzouki and
guitars. It is associated with mass entertainment of lower quality and, until the 1970s, was marginal, but gained popularity after the 1980s. Critics of this genre relate it to modern laïká, mentioning the low quality and the indispensable common part of the
pista (πίστα, pl.: πίστες) "dance floor/venue".
Other popular trends New Wave (Néo Kýma) Folk singer-songwriters (τραγουδοποιοί) first appeared in the 1960s after
Dionysis Savvopoulos' 1966 breakthrough album
Fortigó. Many of these musicians started out playing
Néo Kýma, "New wave" (not to be confused with
new wave music, the British-born genre), a mixture of éntekhno and
chansons from
France. Savvopoulos mixed American musicians like
Bob Dylan and
Frank Zappa with
Macedonian folk music and
politically incisive lyrics. In his wake came more folk-influenced performers like
Arleta,
Mariza Koch,
Mihalis Violaris, Kostas Hatzis and the composer
Giannis Spanos. This music scene flourished in a specific type of
boîte de nuit.
Political song A notable musical trend in the 1970s (during the
Junta of 1967–1974 and a few years after its end) was the rise in popularity of the
topical songs (πολιτικό τραγούδι "political song"). Classic éntekhno composers associated with this movement include
Mikis Theodorakis,
Thanos Mikroutsikos,
Giannis Markopoulos, and
Manos Loïzos.
Other Nikos Xydakis, one of Savvopoulos' pupils, was among the people who revolutionized laïkó by using orientalized instrumentation. His most successful album was 1987's
Kondá sti Dóxa miá Stigmí, recorded with
Eleftheria Arvanitaki.
Thanasis Polykandriotis, laïkó composer and classically trained
bouzouki player, became renowned for his mixture of rebetiko and orchestral music (as in his 1996 composition "Concert for Bouzouki and Orchestra No. 1"). A popular trend since the late 1980s has been the fusion of éntekhno (urban folk ballads with artistic lyrics) with pop /
soft rock music (έντεχνο ποπ-ροκ). Moreover, certain composers, such as
Dimitris Papadimitriou have been inspired by elements of the classic éntekhno tradition and written song cycles for singers of contemporary éntekhno music, such as
Fotini Darra. The most renowned contemporary éntekhno (σύγχρονο έντεχνο) lyricist is
Lina Nikolakopoulou. There are however other composers of
instrumental and
incidental music (including film scores and music for the stage), whose work cannot be easily classified, such as
Stamatis Spanoudakis,
Giannis Spanos,
Giorgos Hatzinasios,
Giorgos Tsangaris,
Nikos Kypourgos,
Nikos Mamangakis,
Eleni Karaindrou, and
Evanthia Remboutsika.
Vangelis and
Yanni were also Greek instrumental composers who became internationally renowned. Even though it has always had a considerable number of listeners supporting it throughout the history of the post-1960s Greek music, it is only very recently (late 2000s) that pop-oriented music has reached the popularity of laïkó/laïká, and there is a tendency among many urban folk artists to turn to more pop-oriented sounds.
Artists The following classification is conventional and categories may occasionally overlap with each other. Each artist is entried under the genre designation that the Greek musical press usually classifies him or her.
Laïkó and Skiladiko (1970s–2010s) Songs from this period of Greek
Laïkó were mainly influenced by the music
Skiladiko, including branch of laiko music and some of the current nightclubs in Greece in which this music is performed, the
country music movement and
style folk-pop. •
Chryspa •
Lefteris Pantazis •
Giorgos Mazonakis •
Giorgos Xanthiotis •
Katerina Stanisi •
Nancy Alexiadi •
Nikos Makropoulos •
Panagiotis Psaltis •
Eleana Papaioannou •
Sofia Petrou •
Nikos Vertis •
Haris Kostopoulos •
Peggy Zina •
Dionysis Makris •
Yannis Ploutarchos •
Kelly Kelekidou •
Maro Litra •
Lillian Madianou •
Sotis Volanis •
Nikos Kourkoulis •
Vasilis Karras •
Panos Kiamos •
Ioanna Koutalidou •
Konstantinos Thalassohoris •
Christina Koletsa •
Pericles Stergianoudes •
Artemis Alexandratou •
Loukas Alexandrou •
Paola Foka •
Antzy Samiou •
Anneta Marmarinou •
Antonis Kardamillis •
Zafeiris Melas •
Stamatis Gonidis •
Hristina Anagnostopoulou •
Christos Kyriazis •
Angela Dimitriou •
Antypas (singer) •
Themis Adamantidis •
Christos Menidiatis •
Roula Stavrou Pop and contemporary laïkó (1980–2010s) •
Anna Vissi (Cypriot singer) (laïká, pop) •
Alexia (Alexia Vassiliou) (Cypriot singer) •
Bessy Argyraki (pop ballads) •
Kostas Bigalis (
pop, contemporary laïkó) •
Christos Dantis (pop, contemporary laïkó) •
Marianna Efstratiou •
Kostas Doxas •
Elpida •
Evridiki (Cypriot singer) (pop, contemporary laïkó) •
Thanos Kalliris (occasionally pop, ballads, contemporary laïkó) •
Nikos Karvelas (contemporary laïkó and pop composer) •
Elli Kokkinou (laïkó and pop) •
Irini Merkouri (laïkó and pop) •
Stephanos Korkolis (pop, and laïkó composer (late 1980s–'10s); piano-oriented pop singer (early 1990s) •
Mando (pop ballads, laïká) •
Natalia •
Natasa Theodoridou •
Kostas Tournas •
Giorgos Lempesis •
Stelios Maximos •
Nino (Greek singer) •
Giannis Vardis •
Elena Paparizou (a.k.a. Helena Paparizou), winner of the
Eurovision Song Contest 2005 representing
Greece •
Marianta Pieridi (Cypriot singer) •
Thanos Petrelis •
Polina (disco, contemporary laïkó) •
Antonis Remos (laïkó, pop) •
Grigoris Petrakos •
Michalis Rakintzis (disco, power ballad) •
Sakis Rouvas (pop ballad,
dance-pop,
soul) •
Despina Vandi (laïká, pop) •
Sophia Vossou (pop ballad, contemporary laïkó)
Europop (1990s–2010s) •
Artemis Gounaki (record producer, musical arranger) •
Hi-5 (
girl group) •
Kalomira •
Sarbel •
Alcazar (group) •
Despina Olympiou •
Aspa Tsina •
Pandora (singer) •
Roxette (Swedish-Greek Pop band) •
A*Teens (Swedish-Greek Pop band) •
Antique (band) •
Velvet (singer) •
4 Play (Greek Pop band) •
Cue (band) •
Da Buzz (Swedish-Greek Pop band) •
Bosson (Swedish-Greek Pop singer) •
Ace of Base (Swedish-Greek Pop band) •
Måns Zelmerlöw •
Mystique (Greek Pop band) •
Friends (Swedish band) •
Haris Varthakouris •
Michalis Hatzigiannis (Cypriot-Greek singer) •
One (Cypriot-Greek boy band) •
Thodoris Ferris (Greek singer) •
Fame (duo) •
Tamta Rock and soft rock 1970s–1980s •
Poll •
Nostradamos •
Socrates Drank the Conium •
Spyridoula •
Adiexodo (Greek Alternative/Punk band) •
Genia Tou Chaous •
Deus ex Machina •
Panx Romana (Greek Rock band)
1990s–2010s •
Ble (Greek Rock band) •
C:Real (Greek Pop Rock band) •
Trypes •
Xylina Spathia •
TNT (Norwegian band) •
Giorgos Dimitriadis •
The Hellacopters (Swedish-Greek Rock band) •
Kent (band) •
Backyard Babies •
Diafana Krina •
Mavri Magioneza •
Morá Sti Fotiá •
Domenica •
Kore. Ydro. (
Indie rock band) •
Locomondo (
reggae and
ska band)
2000s–2010s •
Bitch Alert (Finnish-Greek Rock band) •
Crucifield Barbara (Finnish-Greek Rock band) •
Infidelity (
Indie rock band) •
Monika Christodoulou •
Emigre (Greek Alternative band) •
The Hives (Swedish Rock band) •
HIM (Finnish Band) •
DumDum Boys (Norwegian-Greek Rock band) •
Kitrina Podilata •
Gymna Kalodia (Greek Rock band) •
Motivo 4 (Greek Rock band) •
Endelekheia (
Alternative Band) •
Lambretta (band) •
Matisse (
Post-Punk revival,
Indie rock) •
Nikos Mihas (
Pop punk) •
ONAR •
Onirama •
Sahara Hotnights (Swedish-Greek Rock band) •
Stalingrad Cowgirls (Finnish-Greek Rock band) •
Joanna Drigo •
The Rasmus (Finnish-Greek Rock band) •
Raining Pleasure (
anglophone Indie rock band) •
Minor Project •
Rosebleed (Alternative band) •
Simon Bloom •
Sunrise Avenue (Finnish-Greek Rock band) •
The Skelters (
anglophone rock band) •
Theodosia Tsatsou (
Alternative) •
Ypogeia Revmata (rock band)
Indie and alternative 1980s–1990s •
The Last Drive •
Popsicle (band) •
The Earthbound •
Broder Daniel (Swedish-Greek Alternative band) •
Poor Rich Ones (Norwegian-Greek Indie band) •
The Cardigans (Swedish-Greek Alternative band) •
Psyched Up Janis (Danish-Greek Indie band) •
Madrugada (band) •
Mew (band) •
Ephemera (band) •
Antonis Livieratos •
Speaker Bite Me (Greek Indie band) •
Stereo Nova •
Midnight Choir (Norwegian-Greek Alternative band)
2000s–2010s •
Kings of Convenience (Norwegian-Greek Indie band) •
Club 8 (Swedish-Greek Indie band) •
The Sounds (Swedish-Greek Indie band) •
Menta (Greek Alternative band) •
Xaxakes (Greek Indie band) •
Monsieur Minimal (Greek Indie band) •
Giannis Aggelakas •
Closer (Greek Alternative band) •
Dadafon (Norwegian-Greek Indie band) •
Mando Diao (Swedish-Greek Indie band) •
Laleh (singer) •
Film (Greek Alternative band) •
The Raveonettes (Danish-Greek Indie band) •
The Fashion (Danish-Greek Alternative band) •
Röyksopp (Norwegian-Greek Indie band) •
Acid House Kings (Swedish-Greek Indie band) •
Figurines (band) •
Superfamily (band) •
Abbie Gale (Greek Indie band) •
The Ark (Swedish band) •
Konstantinos Vita •
Kemopetrol (Finnish-Greek Indie band) •
Michalis Delta •
Mikro Mainstream hip hop and R&B (1990s–2010s) •
Imiskoúmbria •
Stereo Mike (solo artist) •
ZN •
Active Member •
Sadahzinia •
Stavento •
Timbuktu (musician) •
Midenistis (Greek Hip-Hop singer) •
Stixoima •
Madcon (Norwegian-Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Ominus (Greek Hip-Hop singer) •
Goin' Through (Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Nevma (Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Lazee (Swedish-Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Looptroop Rockers (Swedish-Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Professional Sinnerz (Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Warlocks (band) •
Rodes (Greek Hip-Hop band) •
Feven (Swedish-Greek Hip-Hop singer) •
Sifu VERSUS •
Kafe Piperies •
Taki Tsan •
Terror X Crew •
TUS (Greek Hip-Hop singer) •
FF.C Independent music scenes on stage Since the late 1970s, various independent scenes of "marginal" musical genres have appeared in Greece (mainly in
Athens,
Piraeus, and
Thessaloniki). Most of them were short-lived and never gained mainstream popularity but the most prominent artists/bands of these scenes are critically acclaimed today and are considered among the pioneers of independent Greek music (each one in their own genre).
Genres •
Greek jazz ('70s: Sphinx (band), Sakis Papadimitriou, Floros Floridis, Manolis Mikelis) •
Greek blues ('80s–'10s): Blues Wire •
Blues-rock /
prog rock /
art rock ('70s–'80s:
Socrates Drank the Conium,
Aphrodite's Child,
Pavlos Sidiropoulos,
Spyridoula (band),
Nikolas Asimos,
Vasilis Papakonstantinou,
Dimitris Poulikakos) •
New wave /
post-punk /
synthpop /
gothic rock ('80s bands: Metro Decay, Film Noir, Villa 21, Anti Troppau Council; 2000s:
Marsheaux) •
Greek punk ('80s–'10s bands:
Adiexodo,
Genia Tou Chaous,
Deus ex Machina,
Panx Romana) •
Greek rock ('80s–'10s bands:
Trypes,
Diafana Krina,
Endelekheia,
Xýlina Spathiá,
Morá Sti Fotiá, Dytikes Synoikies) •
Indie rock (Anglophone 1990s and 2010s bands:
The Last Drive,
The Earthbound, I Knew Them, Film, Closer, Abbie Gale,
Infidelity,
Waterpipes, Monika Christodoulou) •
Low bap (
Active Member,
Sadahzinia,
Babylona -
Βαβυλώνα) /
Greek hip hop (
FF.C, Terror X Crew, DJ ALX,
Sifu VERSUS, Eisvoleas - Εισβολέας,
ZN MCs - Ζήτα Νι MCs, Vita Peis - Βήτα Πεις, Razastarr, Voreia Asteria - Βόρεια Αστέρια, Alytoi Grifoi - Άλυτοι Γρίφοι, Rodes -
Ρόδες) •
Uplifting trance ('90s: Cyan, Cherouvim, Darma, Star Children) •
Acid house /
techno /
electronica ('90s–'10s:
Stereo Nova,
Mikro) •
Heavy metal (
Firewind,
Nightfall) /
death metal (Inactive Messiah,
On Thorns I Lay, Inveracity) /
black metal (sometimes called Hellenic metal;
Rotting Christ,
Septic Flesh, Ravencult,
Astarte, Zemial,
Naer Mataron, Varathron,
Necromantia, Mortuus Caelum,
Thou Art Lord) /
folk black metal (Kawir, Fiendish Nymphe —
sister project of the renowned Ancient Greek music revival band
Daemonia Nymphe) /
Extreme metal (
Dephosphorus) •
Parody music /
comedy rock ('80s–'10s:
Tzimis Panousis,
Harry Klynn) •
Neoclassical dark wave ('90s–'10s:
Chaostar) •
Art punk ('80s–'10s: Lost Bodies) ==See also==