Much of Western classical music uses instruments based on acoustic resonance. Such instruments produce harmonic or quasi-harmonic sounds. On the other hand, since the early 1970s, popular music has largely been produced in the recording studio. As a result, popular music is not bound to be based on harmonic or quasi-harmonic sounds. In this study, we use modified MPEG-7 features to explore and characterise the way in which the use of noise and inharmonicity has evolved in popular music since 1961. We set this evolution in the context of other broad categories of music, including Western classical piano music, Western classical orchestral music, and musique concr\`ete. We propose new features that allow us to distinguish between inharmonicity resulting from noise and inharmonicity resulting from interactions between relatively discrete partials. When the history of contemporary popular music is viewed through the lens of these new features, we find that the period since 1961 can be divided into three phases. From 1961 to 1972, there was a steady increase in inharmonicity but no significant increase in noise. From 1972 to 1986, both inharmonicity and noise increased. Then, since 1986, there has been a steady decrease in both inharmonicity and noise to today's popular music which is significantly less noisy but more inharmonic than the music of the sixties. We relate these observed trends to the development of music production practice over the period and illustrate them with focused analyses of certain key artists and tracks.