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What do Katy Perry, Frank Ocean, Carly Rae Jepson and nearly every other pop artist have in common? The millennial whoop. As Quartz warns, “Once you hear it, you can’t un-hear it. It will forever be with you.”

While many popular songs sound the same because they feature the same chord progression and have the same musical tropes, Quartz shares that the millennial whoop is another the reason. According to product manager Patrick Metzger, the millennial whoop is “a sequence of notes that alternates between the fifth and third notes of a major scale, typically starting on the fifth.” Listeners can easily recognize this in songs because a singer “usually belts these notes with an ‘Oh’ phoneme, often in a ‘Wah-oh-wa-oh’ pattern,” Metzger adds.

Because it’s so obvious, you’ll know it when you hear it and, as Quartz says, “you’ll realize that you’ve heard it before, in countless other songs.”

Author

  • Angelica Pronto

    Angelica studied Literature/Writing at the University of California, San Diego. She completed her undergraduate honors thesis on Postmodern Feminist Theory and Writing Practices and has since been passionate about identity politics and intersectionalism. If you spot her outside the office, she's probably petting cats, making spreadsheets or watching another musical.

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