Mallsoft
Mallsoft (also known as mallwave) is a vaporwave subgenre centered around shopping malls.[1] OverviewOften based on corporate lounge music, mallsoft is meant to conjure images of shopping malls, grocery stores, lobbies, and other places of public commerce.[2] Mallsoft artists typically elicit nostalgic memories of these retail establishments, even to those who did not experience them firsthand,[3] sampling easy listening, bossa nova, and smooth jazz music. The genre also often attempts to provide commentary on consumerism and corporate capitalism.[4] Much of the enjoyment from listeners is derived from nostalgia and the "pleasure of remembering for the sake of the act of remembering itself".[5] CharacteristicsSome artists simply slow down and reverberate existing 1980s pop songs to make them sound like they're coming from the overhead speakers in an empty or abandoned mall.[6] Reverb and distortion are often overlaid on top of tracks to give them an isolating and disorienting feeling.[6] YouTube videos often pair mallsoft tracks with images of malls, with an emphasis on selected images that appear to have been taken from the 1980s and 1990s.[6][7] The visuals can often be meant to invoke a sense of loneliness along with the cold nature of meandering through overly-corporate mercantile environments.[8] ReceptionMusic journalist Simon Chandler described Dutch artist Cat System Corp.'s 2014 album Palm Mall as being "perhaps the definitive mallsoft album".[9] See alsoReferences
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