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・ Minneapolis municipal election, 2013
・ Minneapolis Municipal Waterworks Railway
・ Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board election, 2013
・ Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery
・ Minneapolis Police Department
・ Minneapolis Pops Orchestra
・ Minneapolis Post Office
・ Minneapolis Public Library
・ Minneapolis Public Library, North Branch
・ Minneapolis Public Schools
・ Minneapolis Saint Paul Rochester & Dubuque Electric Traction Company Depot
・ Minneapolis Scottish Rite Temple
・ Minneapolis Sculpture Garden
・ Minneapolis Shoal Light Station
・ Minneapolis Skyway System
Minneapolis sound
・ Minneapolis St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Depot
・ Minneapolis Star Tribune Co. v. Commissioner
・ Minneapolis Steel & Machinery Company
・ Minneapolis Streetcar System
・ Minneapolis Thanksgiving Day fire
・ Minneapolis wireless internet network
・ Minneapolis YMCA Central Building
・ Minneapolis, Kansas
・ Minneapolis, North Carolina
・ Minneapolis, Northfield and Southern Railway
・ Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Depot (Moose Lake, Minnesota)
・ Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Depot (Thief River Falls, Minnesota)
・ Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad
・ Minneapolis-Moline


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Minneapolis sound : ウィキペディア英語版
Minneapolis sound

The Minneapolis sound is a hybrid mixture of funk, rock, pop, synthpop and new wave, that was pioneered by Prince in the late 1970s. Its popularity was given a boost throughout the 1980s, thanks to his musical adherents, including The Time, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Morris Day, Vanity 6, Apollonia 6, Ta Mara & the Seen, Sheila E., Jesse Johnson, Brownmark, Mazarati, and The Family.
According to the ''Rolling Stone Album Guide'', "the Minneapolis sound... loomed over mid-'80s R&B and pop, not to mention the next two decades' worth of electro, house, and techno."〔(Prince: Biography : Rolling Stone )〕
Prince's third album ''Dirty Mind'' from 1980 also earns credit. Pepe Willie, who brought his brand of music to Minneapolis from Brooklyn, New York, in the mid-'70s, is credited with being the first to bring Prince into the studio professionally to play on his group, 94 East's, demo. Owen Husney, Prince's first manager is credited with managing many of the Minneapolis artists at the time, recording them in his American Artists studio, and securing contracts for them with major labels.
Some artists who came from Minnesota were influenced by Prince's work and some came from other parts of the U.S. or world, such as Scottish star Sheena Easton, Flint, Michigan's Ready for the World and Los Angeles, California's Cherrelle. The music is also known as a form of funk rock.
==Identifying characteristics==
While the "Minneapolis sound" was a form of funk, it had some distinguishing characteristics:
* Synthesizers generally replaced horns, and were used more as accent than as fill or background.
* The rhythm was often faster and less syncopated than traditional funk, and owed much to new wave pop music.
* Guitars, while usually (but not always) played "clean" for rhythm parts, were frequently much louder and more aggressively processed during solos than in most traditional funk.
* The "bottom" of the sound was less bass-heavy than traditional funk; drums and keyboards filled more of the "bottom".
* The drums were more highly processed than in traditional funk.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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