The New Pornographers are a Canadian indie rock group formed in 1997 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The name of the band represents a subversion of a comment by disgraced televangelist Jimmy Swaggart, who once referred to rock music as "the new pornography." Their sound is influenced by that of such power pop bands as The Cars and Cheap Trick, but they use much more sophisticated keys and chord changes. They are also lyrically more like indie rockers The Repacements, Alex Chilton, and modern folk music. Carl Newman, who writes most of the band's material, has said, "When I seriously started to try to write songs, my main influences were, like, Burt Bacharach, Jim Webb, and Brian Wilson. Those were the guys I kinda looked at their music and went, 'What the hell are they doing here?' I was just fascinated by the structures and the harmonics." The melody of the first and eponymous track on their second album Electric Version, for instance, begins with an arpeggiated diminished triad --- a rare and strange opening flourish for a pop song. The band has released four albums to date:
Álbumes
| 1 | From Blown Speakers | Electric Version |
| 2 | Falling Through Your Clothes | Twin Cinema |
| 3 | To Wild Homes | Mass Romantic |
| 4 | The Electric Version | Electric Version |
| 5 | The Bleeding Heart Show | Twin Cinema |
| 6 | Mystery Hours | Mass Romantic |
| 7 | Streets Of Fire | Twin Cinema |
| 8 | Three Or Four | Twin Cinema |
| 9 | These Are The Fables | Twin Cinema |
| 10 | The Slow Descent into Alcoholism | Mass Romantic |
| 11 | Testament To Youth In Verse | Electric Version |
| 12 | Ballad Of A Comeback Kid | Electric Version |
| 13 | Loose Translation | Electric Version |
| 14 | Use It | Twin Cinema |
| 15 | The Bones Of An Idol | Twin Cinema |
| 16 | The New Face Of Zero And One | Electric Version |
| 17 | Miss Teen Wordpower | Electric Version |
| 18 | The Laws Have Changed | Electric Version |
| 19 | Chump Change | Electric Version |
| 20 | The Body Says No | Mass Romantic |