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  1. Bubblegum is a separate genre then children’s music (Blues Clues,Sesame Street) or teen pop music (Late 1990's "boy bands",early Britney). If music is primarily marketed for 13-25 year olds it not bubblegum. But these are general trends.

  2. Grand Prix: "Anata no Suki na Tokoro" ( ja) by Kana Nishino • Best Singer: Masayuki Suzuki for "Melancholia" • Best New Artist: iKON • Best Song: several. Mnet Asian Music Awards. Artist of the Year: BTS • Album of the Year: Ex'Act by Exo • Song of the Year: "Cheer Up" by Twice • Best Music Video: Whistle by Blackpink.

  3. Jun 27, 2000 · 25 All-Time Greatest Bubblegum Hits: The Ultimate Bubblegum Collection by Various Artists released in 2000. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and

  4. It was called 'bubblegum music.'" The above quote, taken from the liner notes to a circa-l969 sampler LP called Buddah's 360 Degree Dial-A-Hit, gives us both a succinct statement of intent for the critically reviled '60s pop music phenomenon called bubblegum and an equally-succinct recap of the genre's origin.

  5. Aqua (1996-2001/2008-2012/2016) is a Danish-Norwegian bubblegum pop group who are extremely famous not only in Denmark, but worldwide. They’ve sold a total of 28 million albums and singles worldwide

  6. Jan 3, 2012 · Actually, the “bubblegum” genre manifested long before the term was coined in 1968 by two producing whiz kids named Jeff Katz and Jerry Kasenetz, the Phil Spector and Brian Wilson of the genre. By definition, bubblegum music is simple, catchy, and repetitive, with childlike themes added into the mix.

  7. Bubblegum. Bubblegum is a lightweight, catchy pop music that was a significant commercial force in the late '60s and early '70s. Bubblegum was targeted at a preteen audience whose older siblings had been raised on rock & roll. It was simple, melodic, and light as feather -- neither the lyrics or the music had much substance.

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