The Popcorn genre is a style of music and dancing first established in Belgium (the Land of Beers) in the late 1960s and it got it's name from a discotheque called the Popcorn. This style includes a pretty eclectic and wide range of American R&B and pop songs mostly recorded in the 1950s and mid-1960s in a slow or medium tempo and often in a minor key. Popcorn can be recognized by it's tempo just as much as it's sound. In an article for The Guardian titled "Belgium's 'Popcorn: the last underground music scene in Europe" musician and writer Bob Stanley wrote "the purity of Belgian Popcorn is it's very impurity. R&B, Broadway numbers, tangos, Phil Spector-Esque girl groups, and loungey instrumentals, they are all constituent parts of a rare, and still largely undiscovered scene. It won't stay that way forever.
7 Kenny and Moe (The Blue Boys) - I Want to Love You
8 Les de Merle and His Band - Bulldozer
9 Lula Reed - Lovin'
10 "Big" Buddy Lucas - I Can't Go
11 Titus Turner - Coralee
12 Priscilla Bowman - Sugar Daddy
13 Edgar Allen and the Po' Boys - Panic Button
14 Perry Como - Glendora
15 Bobby Brookes - Little Girl (Is It True)
16 Danny Darrow - Impulse
17 Lefty (Guitar) Bates - Ninety Days
18 Little Jimmy Ray - You Need to Fall in Love
19 Sherri Taylor - He's the One That Rings My Bell
20 Bobby King - Thanks Mr Postman
21 Barry White and the Atlantic's - Tracy (All I Have Is You)
22 The Clovers Featuring Buddy Bailey - One More Time (Come on)
23 Chance Halladay - 13 Women
24 Ben E. King - Don't Play That Song (You Lied)
25 The Ray-O-Vacs - Besame Mucho (Kiss Me Much)
26 Etta James - Seven Day Fool
27 Roy Hamilton - Earthquake
28 Timi Yuro - I Ain't Gonna Cry No More
The Popcorn genre is a style of music and dancing first established in Belgium (the Land of Beers) in the late 1960s and it got it's name from a discotheque called the Popcorn. This style includes a pretty eclectic and wide range of American R&B and pop songs mostly recorded in the 1950s and mid-1960s in a slow or medium tempo and often in a minor key. Popcorn can be recognized by it's tempo just as much as it's sound. In an article for The Guardian titled "Belgium's 'Popcorn: the last underground music scene in Europe" musician and writer Bob Stanley wrote "the purity of Belgian Popcorn is it's very impurity. R&B, Broadway numbers, tangos, Phil Spector-Esque girl groups, and loungey instrumentals, they are all constituent parts of a rare, and still largely undiscovered scene. It won't stay that way forever.