Goth Radio
  • 3.4

Goth Radio

  • Latest Version
  • RadioPlus

Goth Radio ***** Listen to the Best Goth Music!

About this app

Goth Radio ***** Listen to the best radio stream available. We have gathered the best internet radio stations from the web. This radio app is loaded with numerous Goth Radio stations playing the best Goth songs from all around the world. Listen to your favorite music now from everywhere on your android device.

Radio Player Features:
1) Stream Music In The Background
2) Stable Streaming
3) Social Networking
4) Song Info

RadioPlus radio apps are constantly updated! Enjoy Listening ;)

******************** ALSO AVAILABLE ON TABLETS ********************

Due to all the different android devices, it is very challenging providing support for every single device. If you have any technical difficulties or questions then please don't hesitate to contact the RadioPlus team before posting any negative feedback in the comments.
Thanks for your continued support!

If you like the radio app, please leave us a review! Thanks in advance!

******************** THE ORIGIN & HISTORY OF GOTH MUSIC ********************

Gothic rock, also famously called goth rock or just goth, is a musical subcategory and mixture of alternative rock and post-punk that was created in the late 1970s. Bands like Joy Division, The Cure, Bauhaus, and Siouxsie and the Banshees were considered early goth rock bands by both NME and Pitchfork.

Goth rock was considered distinct from punk rock since the former’s style diverged considerably and consisted of dark music and atmosphere. Music journalist Simon Reynolds believed typical goth rock features include “scything guitar patterns, high-pitched Joy Division basslines that often usurped the melodic role [and] beats that were either hypnotically dirgelike or "tribal"[African polyrhythmic].” Furthermore, according to him, vocal styles for gothic rock consist of “deep, droning alloys of Jim Morrison and Leonard Cohen.”

Gothic rock became so popular (in some countries, like Japan) that it spawned its own subculture that comprised fashion for men and women, clubs, and even several publications that drew fame throughout the 1980s.

Versions Goth Radio