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.
1 Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five - Is You Is or Is You Ain't (Ma Baby)
2 Jeanie Allen - I Really Love You
3 Jimmy Randolph - Summertime
4 Baby Washington - I've Got a Feeling
5 Jackie Jocko - Haunted Lover
6 Peggy King - Up, Up, Up (Flying High)
7 Roosevelt Jones - I Say! That's All Right
8 Ollie Jones - Helpless
9 Ray Rivera - Troubles, Troubles
10 Ken MacKintosh and His Orchestra - the Swivel
11 Dean Barlow - Come Back
12 Freddie Houston - Chills & Fever
13 Justin Jones - Love (Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere)
14 Charlie Rich - Let Me Go My Merry Way
15 The Laddins - I'll Kiss Your Teardrops Away
16 The Naturals - Lenny Goofed
17 Frankie Laine - Seven Women
18 Trevor Peacock - Can I Walk You Home
19 Ruth McFadden - Stop Playing That Song
20 Cliffie Stone's Orchestra with Bob Roubian - Here Comes the Train
21 Eddie Foster - I'm Grown
22 Jimmy Jones - Good Timin'
23 Bobby Sharp - Baby Girl of Mine
24 Barry Darvell - a King for Tonight
25 Cozy Cole - Big Noise from Winnetka Part 1
26 Betty Everett - Please Love Me
27 Bob Kayli - Tie Me Tight
28 Oscar Brown JNR. - Humdrum Blues
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.