All posts by Pulse Ruiz

TOC

Table of Contents

* This is an R&B focused blog 

The chart below is arranged by music genres and subgenres. There are 9 major categories of modern music listed below starting with “Influences on R&B” to “Hip Hop”. Within each category are commonly known genres and sub-genres grouped in a roughly chronological order.

1 – Influences on R&B

 A – The Blues

1 – Rural Blues

2 – Transitional Blues

3 – Urban Blues

B – Jazz*

1 – Swing jazz

2 – Boogie-woogie

C – Gospel

D – Folk Music*

E – Country & Western*

* Please note that these genres are way too big for this blog to cover. 

2 – R&B

A – Early Classic R&B

1 – Jump Blues – (1945-1950) 

2 – Classic Early R&B – (1948-1954)

B – Rock & Roll

1 – Doo-Wop – (1948-1964)

2 – Rock & Roll’s Golden Age – (1955-1959)

C – Late R&B – (1960-1964) 

D – Early 60s Rock & Roll

1 – Garage Rock – (1958-1967)

2 – Surf Rock & Pop – (1962-1963)

The Beach Boys

3 – The British Invasion – (1964-1965)

The Beatles

3 – Soul

 A – 60s Soul

1 – Architects of Soul

2 – Soul Influences 

3 – 60s Soul Music

4 – 60s Soul – top 10 hits 

5 – 60s Soul – top 40 hits

6 – Blue-Eyed Soul

7 – Psychedelic Soul

B – 70s Soul

1 – 70s Soul

2 – 70s Soul – top 10 hits

3 – 70s Soul – top 40 hits

4 – Northern Soul 

5 – Philly Soul  – Also, see “Disco” in Chapter “6. 

C – 80s & 90s Soul & Contemporary R&B

1 – 80s Soul

a – 80s Popular Dance Music

b – 80s R&B Crossover 

2 – The Quiet Storm

3 – Contemporary R&B

4 – 90s Soul & Neo Soul

 

4 – Funk

 A – Funk Influences

1 – Soul

2 – Psychedelic Soul

The Temptations

B – Funk Pioneers

1 – James Brown

2 –  Sly & the Family Stone

3 – George Clinton

4 –  Other Major Funk Bands

C – Mainstream Funk

1 –  Funk’s Influence on mainstream music

2 – Earth Wind & Fire

3 – Kool & the Gang

D – Modern Funk Music

5 – Rock

A – 60s Rock

1 – 60s Rock

2 – The Beatles

3 – Folk Rock

4 – Blues Rock

5 – Psychedelic Rock

6 – Country Rock

7 – Hard Rock

B – 70s Rock

1 – Prog Rock

2 – Glam Rock

3 – Funk Rock

4 – Light Rock

5 – Mainstream Rock

a – Classic Rock

b – Album Oriented Rock (AOR)

 c – Arena Rock

 

C – Punk Rock

1 – Classic Punk Rock

a – Punk rock Influences

b – Punk Rock (1st Wave)

c – Post-Punk Rock

2 – Ska Punk

3 – Hardcore Punk

4 – Mainstream Punk Rock

a – Pop Punk

b – Mainstream Ska Punk

c – Later 90s Mainstream Pop-Punk

d – Female Punk Rockers

e – Post-Punk Revival – 2000

D – New Waves

A – New Wave Influences 

1 – Glam Rock

2 – Punk

3- Pub Rock bands

B – First Waves – Rock & Punk 

1 –  Early Post Punk

2 – 80s Power Pop

3 – Ska – 2Tone

4 – African Influenced New Wave

5 – 50s Revival

6 – Rock goes New Wave

 

E – 80s Mainstream Rock

 

F – 80s Alternative Rock

1 – Neo-Psychedelia

2 – Folk Punk

Quirky Alternative Pop

3 – Gothic Rock

4 – Industrial Rock

5 – Later Post-Punk Rock

a – Other New Wave & Post Punk bands

b – Madchester Scene

6 – Noise Rock

7 – Shoegazing

G – 90s Mainstream Rock

H – 90s Alternative Rock

1 – Indie Rock

2 – Brit-Pop

3 – Post-Brit-Pop

4 – Emo or Emocore

Screamo

 

6 – Modern Dance Music

A – Disco

1 – Soul and funk influences

a – Disco Pioneers

b – Philly Soul

2 – Mainstream Disco

a – 1974/75

b – 1976-77

c – 1978-79

d – 1980-1981

3 – Saturday Night Fever

4 – Rock turns disco

5 – Disco Sucks!

B – 80s Pop Dance Music

1 – Synth Pop – Early Electronica

a – Synth Pop

b – New Romantic

c –  Nueu Deutsche Welle

d – Other Waves – No Wave, Dark Wave, Cold Wave

2- 80s Pop Music

a – Paisley Park

b – Teen Pop

c – Boy Bands

3 – 80s Blued-Soul – *Also see “60s & 70s Blue-Eyed Soul”

4 – 80s R&B Crossover

a – New Jack Swing

b – New Artists –

*Also See Quiet Storm

5 – MTV

6 – Hi-NRG

7 -Hip Hop/ Electro

 

C – House Music

D – Techno 

Ambient Techno – The Orb, KLF

E – Electronica – EDM

1 – IDM – Intelligent Dance Music

2 – Trip Hop

3 – Post Trip-Hop 

4 – Dubstep

5 – Progressive Dance – Progressive House

 

7 – Jazz & R&B Fusions

A – Jazz Fusion

1 – Jazz Rock

a – Rock bands

b – Jazz & R&B bands

2 – Jazz Fusion 

a – Miles Davis

b – Frank Zappa

3 – Jazz Fusion 80s & 90s

 

B – Smooth Jazz

1 – Smooth Jazz Pioneers

2 – Popular Smooth Jazz

3 – Acid Jazz 

4 – Nu Jazz 

5 – Jazz Rap

 

 8 – Heavy Metal

A – Classic Heavy Metal

1 – Hard Rock Re-cap 

2 – Pioneer Heavy Metal

B – New Wave of British Heavy Metal

1 – NWOBHM

2 – Speed Metal

C – Mainstream Heavy Metal

1 – American Heavy Metal

2 – Glam Metal 

D – 80s Metal Sub-Genres

1 – Thrash Metal 

2 – Death Metal

a – Grindcore

b – Extreme Metal

3 – Black Metal

90s Scandinavian Black Metal

4 – Power Metal

Progressive Metal

5 – Doom Metal

Stoner Rock

E – Alternative Metal

1 – Hardcore Punk meets Heavy Metal

2 – Funk Metal

3 – Early Alternative Metal

4 – Industrial Metal

5 – Gothic Metal

6 – Rap Metal 

 F – Grunge

1 – Pioneering Seattle Sound

2 – Grunge

3 – Post Grunge 

G – Nu Metal

1 – Avante Gard

2 – Metallic Techno

3 – Symphonic metal bands

4 – Sludge Metal

5 – Metalcore

9 – Hip Hop

A – Hip Hop Pioneers

1- The Four Pillars

2 – The Three DJs 

3- Hip Hop Influences

B – Old School

1 – The First “Wave”

2- Planet Rock/Electro Hip-Hop

3 – Mid-80s Crossover

C – Golden Age of Hip Hop

1 – East Coast 

2 – West Coast 

3 – Gangsta Rap

D – Mainstream Hip Hop

1 – Mainstream Hip Hop

2 – G-Funk – Dr. Dre Snoop Dog

3 -East Coast vs West Coast Rivalry – Tupac  vs  Biggie

4 – East Coast 90s Hip Hop

a – Wu-Tang Affiliates

b – Native Tongues – Daisy Age

c – Atlanta  & Florida

5 – Other Later West Coast 

6 – Dirty South 

7 – Midwest Scene

E – Millennial Hip Hop

1 – Eminem, 50 Cent, Nelly, Busta Rhymes

2 – Alternative Hip Hop

3 – Crunk

a – Crunk & B

b – Snap Music

4 – Glitch Hop

5 – World Hip-Hop – Latin Hip Hop

 

Blog Particulars

Table of Contents

Supplemental

Blog Particulars

Blog Particulars is a supplemental menu with different articles and guides about music in general

A: Your Music Taste Matters – The blog is set up for you to explore as you wish, skip over the stuff you don’t like or try something new to explore.

B: The Nature of Music- The science & philosophy of sound, music and the human nature as related to music. Scientific evidence. Deep thoughts, emotions, and the human condition interpreted, perceived and replicated in music. Tragedy Out of the Spirit of Music.

C: Music Theory for the Lay Person – An introductory guide to understanding music theory as discussed in this blog specifically geared to the beginner or layperson.

1 – Influences on R&B

Table of Contents

1 – Influences on R&B

There are five major genres listed below that have an influence on R&B music, which is basically, the blues, jazz, gospel, folk and country & western (C&W). This is misleading, I know, there are hundreds of subgenres. And myriads of influence. I’ll be concentrating on rhythm & blues (R&B) for this blog so I’ll briefly mention these parent and influential genres that make up the whole of truly indigenous American music.

 A) The Blues

Music from a mystical past, out into a recorded time, rural to urban, the great-grandfather of modern music. Encompassing Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith, Muddy Waters, T-Bone Walker, BB King, and Eric Clapton and beyond. 19th century – 21st century.  

1) Rural BluesAcoustic blues sprouted up generally from the American deep south, and specifically “the Delta”, Texas, New Orleans, Memphis and many other southern locations. WC Handy, Charlie Patton, Robert Johnson, Lonnie Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Mamie Smith & Ethel Waters, and more. The 1920s & 1930s.

2) Transitional BluesBlues progressed by becoming modern and plugging into electricity, now the guitar could keep up and lead the band. Muddy Waters, Tampa Red, Leadbelly, Lonnie Johnson, Leroy Carr and Big Bill Broonzy among others. 1938-1947. 

3) Urban BluesElectric Blues guitar becomes an art form and leads the bands into heavy amplified territories in dance music and R&B. Chicago Blues, UK Blues. T-Bone Walker, BB King, John Lee Hooker, Blues Revival, and Eric Clapton. 1948-Present

  

B) Jazz*

Another mysterious music splintering off from the blues and becoming its own technically proficient musical genre. Consisting of many phases from (1890s-1960s) and many sub-genres like Dixieland, Swing, Be-bop, Hard Bop, Free & Avante Gard. Below is a listing of specific styles of jazz that were influential in the development of rhythm & blues.

1) Swing jazzSwing jazz as a dance music was very influential to the bands of early jump blues and R&B. Andrew Sisters, Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Lionel Hampton, Cab Calloway. 1935-1946

2) Boogie-woogieA jazz piano style that splintered off of “stride” piano and gave a blues structure to R&B. Albert Ammons, Meade Lux Lewis, Jimmy Yancey, Pinetop. 1929, 1938-1946

       

C) Gospel

Gospel music is sacred music. The black church brought forth a highly animated and spiritual music, that went on to inspire popular secular modern music. Mahalia Jackson, Soul Stirrers, Sam Cooke, Aretha Franklin. 18th century – 21st century.

D) Folk Music*

Many forms of folk music were imported to America, country blues, hillbilly, Bluegrass, country stomps, Vaudeville, jug bands, Texas troubadours and ring shouters, there are too many genres to list. 17th century – 21st century. 

E) Country & Western*

There are many forms of Country & Western sub-genres such as country pop, bluegrass, outlaw country, heartland country, Western Swing, honky-tonk, rockabilly, Nashville Sound, Bakersfield Sound and many more. 19th century – 21st century.

 

* Please note that these genres are way too big for this blog to cover. 

2 – R&B

Table of Contents

2 – Rhythm & Blues

Rhythm and Blues coalesced out of several forms of the blues and boogie-woogie swing jazz, with gospel and folk music in the mix as well. The boogie-woogie craze was revived in 1938 & 1939 and carried over during the war years. Urban Blues, Gospel, rural blues and jump blues were other popular forms of the “race records” categories in the years just after WWII.

A) Early Classic R&B

(1948-1954) – Generally, classic R&B starts when Billboard magazine opened up a chart for R&B hits in 1949. Blues, Gospel, Jump Blues and many other “race” records were then all under the R&B category. It was in Classic R&B that rock & roll grew out of eventually in 1955, but in 1949 rock & roll was just getting started.

1) Jump Blues 1945-1950 – A conglomerate of country stomp, western swing, and electric blues barrelhouses came “Jump Blues”. At the time jump blues was a fresh danceable shuffle eight to the bar style of dance music. Check out Louis Jordan, Big Mama Thorton, Amos Milburn, Roy Brown, Wynonie Harris, and much more. 

2) Classic Early R&B 1948-1954 – Many names from jump blues were instrumental in the growth of R&B and rock & roll. Many other names in classic R&B are the Treniers, Ike Turner’s “Rocket 88”, the Orioles, the Ravens, Goree Carter, Fats Domino, Ray Charles, the Dominos, the Drifters, Joe Turner, the Crows, Ruth Brown, Lavern Baker, the Coasters and much more. 

B) Rock & Roll

(1955-1959) – Rhythm & Blues music of enormous crossover popularity, dubbed rock & roll in 1953 by Alan Freed became a new societal American phenomenon and barometer of American culture. Rock & Roll would become all Americana after this particular period of growth and prosperity after America won the war.

1) Doo-Wop – (1948-1967) – Starting around 1948 I study this vocal form of R&B that was later referred to as doo-wop. There is a lot of beauty here with the Ravens, the Orioles, the Dominos, the Crows, the Coasters, the Penguins, the Wrens, the Drifters, the Dell-Vikings, Danny & the Juniors, Frankie Lymon, the Platters, The Shirelles, the Crystals and so much more.

 2) The Golden Age – (1955-1959) – Scholars do not agree as to when rock & roll began, was it 1953 or was 1955, there are many arguments. I chose 1955 for many reasons that i explain. There many articles about R&B, rock & roll and rockabilly. See Ray Charles, Bill Haley, Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Fats Domino, Little Richard, Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Duane Eddy, Dion, Bud Holly, Sam Cooke, Everly Brothers, the Drifters, and many more. 

C) Late R&B

(1960-1964) – This was a transitional phase for R&B (rock & roll) in the early 1960s. At the end of the 50s, there seemed a lull in rock & roll.  There was the day the music died early in 1959, and things seemed to change but then things bounced back in the early 60s. 

Check out Chubby Checker, “The Twist”, Little Eva, the Ronettes, the Everly Brothers, Ben E. King,  Etta James, Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons, the Beach Boys surf rock, great songs like the Kingsmen “Louie Louie”.

A newer form of R&B called “Soul” had started up and began to dominate, artists like  Sam Cooke, Mary Wells, Martha & the Vandellas, the Temptations, the Four Tops, Motown was in its ascendancy.

The purely acoustical genre of folk music was making a resurgence with groups like Kingston Trio, Peter Paul & Mary, Joan Baez, and Bob Dylan; as was old time rock & roll. Things would start to change fast as the 60s progressed. 

D) Early 60s Rock & Roll

There were many competing forms of music in the early 60s. There was vocal R&B (doo-wop) which dominated the charts and several  50s styled rock & roll phases like surf rock, surf pop, and garage rock.

1) Garage Rock – (1958-1967) – Starting simply as instrumental R&B the genre quickly became music to cruise to and about cars. Link Wray’s 1957 “Rumble, the Ventures, Del Shannon, the Regents, the Revels, the Centurians, the Rivingtons, the Tornados, the Kingsmen.

2) Surf Rock & Pop – (1962-1963) – This sub-genre emulated surfing on the beach specifically Dick Dale, a very fast paced guitarists with lots of ornamentation and foreign music influences. Dick Dale, the Chantays “Pipeline”, the Lively Ones, the Surfaris “Wipe Out”, “Surf City”, the Rivieras, and the Trashmen “Bird Is a Word”. Surf Pop –  A pop version of surf rock mostly produced by Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys, “Surfin Safari”, “Surfin USA” “Surfer Girl”, Jan & Dean “Surf City” and Dick Dale’s “Miserlou”. 

The Beach Boys

3) The British Invasion – (1964-1965) – Then in 1964, the British invaded America, the Beatles, Dave Clarke 5, the Searchers, Jerry & the Pacemakers, Herman’s Hermits, the Zombies, the Rolling Stones, the Animals the Kinks and the Who.

The Beatles

 

3 –  Soul

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3 – Soul

Soul music is gospel-influenced R&B music that splintered off from R&B starting at the end of the 50s, by the early 60s soul was its own and went on to spawn many derivatives of soul music.

A – 60s Soul

60s Soul was the seat of modern dance throughout the decade alongside older styled R&B. The new soul music was upbeat and had a crispness it utilized horn, rhythm, and string sections to add color and flavor to the music.

Soul music dominated the pop charts as the decade progressed. Successful soul labels were startups like Motown & Stax Records, as opposed to the prestigious Atlantic Records, Prominent soul cities like Detroit, Memphis, and New Orleans or studio sounds like Muscle Shoals.

1) Architects of Soul Ray Charles – The Father of Soul, James Brown – the Godfather of Soul, Sam Cooke The King of Soul, Etta James, Berry Gordy – Motown, Smokey Robinson. Aretha Franklin Queen of Soul.

2) Soul InfluencesR&B stars that influenced soul music. Sonny Til and the Orioles, Clyde McPhatter & the Drifters, Hank Ballard & the Midnighters, Little Richard, Jackie Wilson, Solomon Burke, Jerry Butler & the Impressions, the Isley Brothers.

3) 60s Soul Music – 60s soul music was comprised of many different labels, regions, and studios. Doc Pomus, Phil Spector, 

a) Atlantic Records – Lieber & Stoller, The Drifters, Ben E. King. Percy Sledge, Aretha Franklin,

b) Motown Records – Carla & Rufus Thomas, The Miracles, Mary Wells, Martha & the Vandellas, the Temptations, the Four Tops,  the Supremes, Marvin Gaye, Junior Walker & the All-Stars, Stevie Wonder,

c) Stax Records – Booker T & the MGs, Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Sam & Dave, Eddie Floyd, Joe Tex, Isaac Hayes

d) Other soundsKeen, New Brunswick, Chess Records, ABC Records, Gene Chandler, David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks, Jerry Butler, Sly & the Family Stone. 

4) 60s Soul – top 10 hits R&B influences of soul 1959-1962 and yearly lists for 1963-1969. 

5) 60s Soul – top 40 hitsDetailed 1959-1969 top 40 hits and other relevant songs.

6) Blue-Eyed Soul – The Righteous Brothers, Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield, Spencer Davis Group, Traffic, Steve Winwood, Hall & Oates, Adele

7) Psychedelic SoulThe late 60s Temptations,  Sly & the Family Stone, Funkadelic, Jimi Hendrix, Isaac Hayes, Curtis Mayfield.

B) 70s Soul

70s soul was a lot different then the high paced active soul of the 60s, 70s soul, slowed down a bit and concentrated on ballads and love songs. It became more topical and led to several soul album masterpieces. Soul became a genre that could be as light, easy-listening music, as light jazzy funk or to be as of a novelty in an “old- style” R&B.

As this was happening, funk music grew out of soul and psychedelia and began to transform popular music with its bass fidelity or funkiness.

1) 70s SoulSoul became very progressive after its late 60s and early 70s spiritual triumphs. Soul was now open to concepts and styles only hinted at in the 60s. Marvin Gaye “What’s Going On”; Roberta Flack, Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight & the Pips, Stevie Wonder “Innervisions”, “Songs in the Key of Life”; Earth Wind & Fire, Jackson 5, Diana Ross, LaBelle, Natalie Cole, Luther Vandross.

2) 70s Soul – top 10 hitsThe ballads, the light songs, the funky ditties, the epic suites and the love songs.

3) 70s Soul – top 40 hitsDetailed top 40 hits with many relevant album tracks.

4) Northern Soul – A whole vast sub-genre of American 60s soul rarities that became popular during the 1970s, but only in northern England.

5) Philly Soul & DiscoThom Bell, Gamble  & Huff, the Delfonics, Barry White, the Stylistics, the O’Jays, the Spinners, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, Teddy Pendergast, TSOP and many early funk and disco classics.

C) 80s Soul & Contemporary R&B

1) 80s SoulNewer sounds from Hip Hop and Hi NRG started to influence soul. Michael Jackson, Madonna, Prince, DeBarge, Lionel Ritchie, Miami Sound Machine, George Michaels, Sade, Soul II Soul. 

See New Wave & 80s Pop

 

2) Contemporary R&B  Contemporary R&B has an easy. smooth, silky, well-produced sound, with breathy, lush lyrics and vocal arrangements and flawless computer generated beats and instrumentation. Influenced by pop, rhythm & blues, soul, funk, hip-hop, gospel and electronic dance music.

The production is so perfect you’d think a machine did it, oh wait that is exactly what was done. Think of a Quincy Jones production of the albums “Off the Wall” or “Thriller” by Michael Jackson

Check out Janet Jackson’s 2 late 80s albums “Control” and “Rhythm Nation 1814” , the master producer Quincy Jones, master producers Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Bobby Brown, Keith Sweat, Stevie Wonder, Al B. Sure, Whitney Houston, Guy, Jodeci, Bell Biv DeVoe, Boyz to Men, R. Kelly, Timbaland, Aaliyah, Craig David, Destinys Child, Mariah Carey, Mary J. Blige.

 

3) The Quiet Storm – Luther Vandross, Anita Baker, Sade, Frankie Beverly, Maze, Marvin Gaye, Al Green, Barry White, Gil Scott-Heron, Bill Withers, All of Philly Soul, Peabo Bryson

 

4) Neo Soul –  Neo Soul has less of contemporary soul’s slick, polished, digitized production yet it is an album-oriented form of music. The influential genres here are jazz, funk, hip-hop, electronica, pop but with African music and rhythms as the identifier, the crucial ingredient. Inspired by Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson.

Prince, Terence Trent D’Arby, Joi, Mint Condition, Sade, Soul II Soul, Caron Wheeler, the Brand New Heavies, Jamiroquai, Lisa Stansfield, Zhane, Groove Theory, Tonu Rish and Me’Shell NdegeOcello. Mainstream break through D’Angelo, Erykah Badu, Lauryn Hill, Tony! Yoni! Tone!, and Maxwell 90s. Also in the UK, Young Disciples, Omar Lye-Fook, 

 

4 – Funk

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4 – Funk

In 1967, James Brown started a revolution in music and rhythm.  He gave the drums the most important role of the song and basically turned the entire band into a drum set (or machine, if you will).

A) Funk Influences

1 – Soul – Soul veterans like Curtis Mayfield, Stevie Wonder, and Marvin Gaye had several masterpiece albums each,

2 – Psychedelic Soul – A new revamped Temptations with masterpiece songs like “Papa was a Rolling Stone”, Isaac Hayes had “Theme from Shaft”.

B) Funk Pioneers

Starting off with James Brown, there came in rapid succession and almost all at once Sly & the Family Stone, George Clinton and Funkadelic, these three first artists I refer to as the “Funk Triumvirate”.

1 – James Brown-  On the One – The rhythm concept of funk. James Brown changed the emphasis of the pulse from a backbeat to emphasizing the “One” of each 4 or 8-bar measure.

2 –  Sly & the Family Stone

3- George Clinton

A – Funkadelic

B – Parliament

c – P-Funk

4 –  Other Funk Pioneer Bands – There were newcomers Dyke & the Blazers, War (starting off with Eric Burdon from the Animals), The JB’s (James Browns back up band featuring Fred Wesley & Maceo Parker and related artists like Bobby Byrd and Lynn Collins),  and another important band made up of session players the Meters helped to shape the new genre,

C) Mainstream Funk

Then other bands went on to turn Funk into the pop music of the day in the early 70s with acts like Al Green, the Dramatics,  Kool & the Gang, Average White Band, the Soul Searchers the Commodores and Heatwave.

1 – Funky Bass – The bass guitar became more innovative during this period and would change the sound of modern music and the role of the bass guitar as a lead, forever.

2 – Funk Influence

a – Mainstream Rock –

b – Disco –

c –  Hip Hop

3 – Major Funk Acts – in Tower of Power, Chicago, Blood Sweat & Tears, Earth Wind & Fire.

D) Modern Funk Music

5 – Rock

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5 – Rock

The 60s was a decade like no other, a decade of extremes, a decade of questions, of growth, of strife, of hate, of love, of war & peace, progression then turmoil, then protest and most of all, change. Seeds were planted.

Much of the new styles and genre’s from the 1960s were further developed in the 70s and 80s, many existing genres went on to flower major modern genres in the 70s, 80s, and 90s and others had their peaks and then went underground into relative obscurity.

A – 60s Rock

1 – 60s Rock – After 1964, the British reflected a youthful energy back to the US and reignited the rock & roll craze of the late 50s for a while, but changes had already stared in the early 60s.

Changes where the folk music revival would meld with rock & roll to make folk rock. Surf & garage rock would slowly metamorphose into hard rock or folk to psychedelic rock to light rock or country rock. This tree was further spreading her branches.

2 – The Beatles – The Beatles re-energized rock & roll, and then helped create and promote new forms of rock like folk, blues, psychedelic, country, classical,  & hard rock(s), they even delved into Avante Gard and world music.

3 – Folk Rock – Bob Dylan plugged in, the Beatles unplugged, the Byrds took flight, Simon & Garfunkel topped, while the Monkees, Turtles, Hermits and the Stones hit, and all during the folk-rock peak of 1965 & 66.

4 – Blues Rock – The blues revival of the early 60s coincided with the British blues-rock scene in 1964. The Rolling Stones, John Mayall’s Blues Breakers, the Animals, the Kinks, the Yardbirds, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck meets BB King, Lightning Hopkins, Howlin’ Wolf.

5 – Psychedelic Rock – Surf, garage, and folk amalgamated into psychedelic rock which was sometimes soft, clever and soulful (psychedelic folk, light rock, jazz rock) and then there were some noisy, discordant & heavy sounds, some of it was truly out of this dimension. The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Cream, the Doors, Pink Floyd, Jefferson Aeroplane, Big Brother & the Holding Company, the Grateful Dead & Zappa.

6 – Country Rock – Bob Dylan, the Byrds, the Band reinvent themselves in country rock. Graham Parsons, Poco, Flying Burrito Brothers. Lots of acoustic sides on the White album.

7 – Hard Rock – Blue Cheer’s “Summertime Blues”, Steppenwolf’s heavy metal thunder, “In-a-Gada Da-Vida”, Led Zeppelin rises out of the ashes of the Yardbirds; the Beatles rock hard and heavy as they keep up with the hits, White Album. Hendrix, Cream, the Who, the Stones “Gimme Shelter”.

B – 70s Rock

Rock & roll matured into many “rock” sub-genres, R&B splintered into several branches of Soul & Funk music. Jazz and classical music fused with rock and soul. Hard and heavy music would mix with the light, acoustic and the psychedelia all ending the decade in a musical maelstrom. A kind of spiritual high hangover followed the cloud of the 60s in the year 1970. The roots of many branches of progress had been made during those fast times, but not without its sacrifices.

When psychedelia hit both rock and soul in the late 60s the music melded together and shared traits again, as it had during the R&B era  (1948-1964),  then in the 70s the ties were cut  soul/funk/disco/rock would start cutting ties with each other and led to concentration, intense experimentation which further isolated the genres. Genres started to become extreme however other genres would eventually mix and share yet again in the 90s.

Many ex-psychedelic bands and surf/garage rock bands with music proficiency went on to be “prog rock” bands others morphed into “glam rock’. Many blues (psychedelic) guitarists adopted a mix of funk and jazz to make “funk rock”.

By 1977, mainstream rock would experience a struggle from two fronts, first, punk rock, a direct rebellion against mainstream rock and disco the dance music that was about to enter its peak.

1 – Prog Rock – Prog Rock or progressive rock is a mix of psychedelic, classical, jazz genres with an emphasis on thematic, theatrical, programmatic structures mixed with musical proficiency and skill.

With the advent of folk rock around 1965 came “psychedelic rock” and “psychedelic folk”. Psychedelic rock went on to be fully developed, peaking in 1967, which has associations with classic rock and hard rock and then developed into “prog rock” (progressive rock).

Start with the older “psychedelic” Beatles, The Who, Frank Zappa, Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Procol Harum, Traffic, Small Faces, as an intro to the genre. Then, the the genre proper starting with Yes, King Crimson, Emerson Lake & Palmer, Moody Blues,  Genesis, Brian Eno, mixed with older psychedelic and hard rock veterans starting with Pink Floyd’s “classic period” Jethro Tull, Led Zeppelin, Grateful Dead, Kansas, Boston, Styx, ELO, Supertramp, Meatloaf

 

2 – Glam Rock – Psychedelia, art, aesthetics, theatre, costumes, dressing up, maybe a little gender-bending, many artists in the early 70s started a genre in which to express themselves without limits.

The boundaries were explored beyond outrageousness with “glam rock” which would go on to influence various “metal” genres, prog rock, AOR and even disco.  Many of the ex-psychedelic bands that were from the surf/garage rock area morphed either into hard rock or into “Glam Rock”, which became quite a trippy genre on its own.

Start with David Bowie, Mott the Hoople, Lou Reed’s 70’s  & early Velvet Underground, T-Rex, the New York Dolls, Sweet, Slade, Roxy Music, Gary Glitter, and punk pioneer Iggy Pop.

 

3 – Funk Rock – Funk rock was being explored by the various psychedelic rock groups and house bands to soul and funk artists.  In the 70s R&B/Soul and in particularly funk and rock as the reciprocal, still had a “bridge” and shared and emulated each other’s various styles.

After Jimi Hendrix, Sly the Family Stone,  the JBs or Funkadelic bridged the gap many guitarists adopted the funk rock style, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Led Zeppelin were funk-ing out in the mid 70s along with bands as diverse as Edgar Winter, Steve Miller, Steely Dan, Eagles, Doobie Brothers, Zappa, Weather Report,

 

4 – Light Rock – Much of folk-rock bands splintered off and morphed into “country rock” and/or into the singer/songwriter-oriented “light rock” in the early to middle 70s.

Psychedelic folk merged with pop to create the vast genre of “light rock”, which would hold all of the singer/songwriter folk rock. Much of light rock was jazz influenced, light soul, light funk or light funk rock. These sub-genres combined and eased into this easy-listening genre that was very popular in the late 60s and all throughout the 70s into 80s.

Light rock can be said to have come about in the 60s after being handed the baton for most popular music from the jazz era popular music of the 40s and 50s. The “big band” and “crooner” periods were over and gave way to a new rock, folk, funk tapestry. The rest of jazz went either extreme in exploring esoteric music and sound knowledge or fused with rock to create a new genre called “fusion”.

James Taylor, Crosby Stills Nash & Young, Carol King, Carly Simon, Joni Mitchell, Bread, America, Jim Croce, Don McLean, The Carpenters, Anne Murray, John Denver, Barry Manilow, Linda Rondstadt, Cat Stevens, Seals & Croft, Orleans, Air Supply, Captain & Tenille

 

5 – Mainstream Rock – During the middle of the decade, prog rock influenced mainstream rock bands became “album-oriented rock” AOR and “arena rock” and rose up to dominate the FM radio stations. All this while a new kind of R&B/Soul/Funk influenced dance music, “disco”, began its ascendency and struggle with “rock” for dominance in the late 70s.

Experimentation, to a certain degree, was allowed and it was pursued by many of the “British exiles” ex-bands with newly hip Los Angeles bands, folk rock artists & bands mixed with funk/rock bands, and the rise of AOR and the arena rock culture,

Paul McCartney & Wings, Elton John, Billy Joel, Paul Simon, Neil Diamond, Barbara Streisand, Roberta Flack, Dionne Warwick, Rod Stewart, Chicago, Fleetwood Mac,

During the middle of the decade, mainstream rock or classic rock bands fit the FM radio format that went on to be known as “album-oriented rock” or AOR for short, another term was “arena rock” used in conjunction with classic rock as well.

 a – Classic Rock – Classic rock is basically 60s and 70s mainstream rock during FM radio formats of the 70s. There were many diverse genres to classic rock incorporating the new light rock and easy listening genres; the new country rock, and southern rock genres; the funk rock and hard rock hybrids; the prog and glam hybrids; and not forgetting the entire 50s R&B era, all mixed together under one tent.

 b – Album Oriented Rock (AOR) – Album-oriented rock refers to rock artists that create albums as either a loosely or tightly programmatic “concept” package. The album is to be seen as a cohesive unit of work unto itself and/or other albums or what Zappa refers to as conceptual continuity.

 c – Arena Rock –  Arena rock comes from the rock and soul culture starting in the late 60s of having festivals and shows that held audiences with capacities on sports arena levels like the Beatles at Shea Stadium. Bands who could sell out arenas were The Rolling Stones, The Who, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Grateful Dead, Parliament/Funkadelic, Earth Wind & Fire, Jethro Tull, Styx, ELO, Supertramp, Meatloaf, Boston, Foreigner, Kansas, Heart, Genesis, Journey

C – Punk Rock

1 – Classic Punk Rock

All the old stuff! All that of that good fashion 50s & early 60s rock & roll, and hard rock jams that led up to the initial explosion in 76′ and 77′.

a) Punk rock Influences – Punk was influenced by heavy metal in the decibel power and distortion sound, but influenced by surf rock in terms of speed. You can tell the influences of early punk in bands like the Velvet Underground, MC5, the Who, Iggy Pop & the Stooges, David Bowie, NY Dolls, Alice Cooper, the Dictators, and Bon Scott era AC/DC.

b) Punk Rock (1st Wave) – Punk rock exploded onto the scene in the mid-seventies (76′-77′) as a backlash against “dinosaur” classic rock bands, prog rock, mainstream pop, and disco. Punk had a huge impact on modern music and caused a lot of rippled new waves. All hail the Ramones, the Clash, the Sex Pistols, Television, Richard Hell & the Voidoids.

c) Punk Rock (2nd Wave) – The second wave of punk hit right away as other American and British punk bands caught the bug around 1978 and 1979 when the softer sounds of new wave were just forming.  Listen to the Buzzcocks, Generation X, the Adverts, the Germs, the Fall, the Dead Boys, the Damned, the Stranglers, Johnny Thunders & the Heartbreakers for some mosh mania music.

2 – Ska Punk

Ska Punk – Ska punk is a mix of ‘ska music” and punk rock as is skacore a mix of ska music and hardcore punk. Ska punk is differentiated from other punk sub-genres with the usage of horns or a horn section. Early pioneers like the Specials and Madness had hits alongside the other “waves” during the early 80s. This paved way for Fishbone, the Mighty Bosstones, Culture shock, Citizen Fish, Dance Hall Crashers, Operation Ivy to bubble under mainstream success which would come with Sublime and Rancid,

 3 – Hardcore Punk

Hard Core Punk – Just when you thought things couldn’t get more extreme, “hardcore” punk came around starting on the west coast and then spread to the rest of the US and UK.  Check out the Dead Kennedys, Suicidal Tendencies, the Specials, Black Flag, the Exploited, MDC, Bad Brains, GBH, Meat Puppets, the Misfits, and Void if you dare.

4 – Mainstream Punk Rock

Post-Punk Revival – for decades punk rock had always been underground music, who knew that it would go on to be part of mainstream music in the 90s.

a) Pop Punk  – The early 90s brought on a revival of pop-punk music that was more accessible to the mainstream ear. Started with bands like Bad Religion, the Descendants, Husker Du, and the Mighty Bosstones also Social Distortion, Agent Orange, TSOL, the Vandals, Guttermouth in the mid to late 80s. Pop Punk peaked with mega-sellers like Green Day, Offspring, Rancid, Face to Face, Goldfinger, Eve 6 and Blink 182.

b) Mainstream Ska Punk – Ska punk had a revival of sorts after Rancid and Sublime opened the doors to bands like Smash Mouth, Goldfinger, Sugar Ray and No Doubt.

c) Later 90s mainstream pop-punk – Pop punk became a major successful genre in the 90s and then took off with Blink 182 ushering in a whole set of bands that continue to this day. bands like Home Grown, MxPx, Unwritten Law, Lit, Jimmy Eat World, Sum 41, American Hi-Fi, Fall Out Boy, My Chemical Romance, Taking Back Sunday, Good Charlotte, Avril Lavigne, Simple Plan, the Ataris, Bowling for Soup, The All-American Rejects, Paramore.

d) Female Punk Rockers – Following Avril Lavigne’s lead other female punk rock bands achieved success such as Skye Sweetham, Fefe Dobson, Lillix, Kelly Osbourne, Krystal Meyers, Tonite Alive, and Hey Monday.

e) Post-Punk Revival 2000

Grunge or grunge rock is related to punk rock. Please see section “E – Grunge” in Chapter “8 – Heavy Metal”.

D – New Waves

Punk rock exploded on the music scene in 1977 and did exactly what the anarchic genre was meant to do. It shattered modern music into many shards which initially were new waves to punk but the went on to form other major genres in the 90s.

There were many phases in the “new waves” progressions and how they influenced each other. Some music mixed with others and then some music kept an identity.

 

1 – New Wave Influences – 

A – Glam Rock – David Bowie, Lou Reed, T-Rex, Slade, Gary Glitter, NY Dolls

B – Punk – Iggy Pop, Television, Talking Heads, Mink Deville,

C- Pub Rock bands –

2 – First Waves – Rock & Punk 

A –  Early Post Punk – Elvis Costello, Blondie,  The Police, Peter Gabriel, Squeeze, the Pretenders, the B-52s, Nick Lowe, Joe Jackson, Public Image, Joy Division. U2, Siouxsie & the Banshees,

B – 80s Power Pop –   The Knack, The Romantics The Cars, Cheap Trick, Loverboy,  the Go-GoGo’s, Huey Lewis & the News, XTC, the Vapors, the Smithereens, John Cougar Mellencamp, Men at Work, Bruce Springsteen,

C – Ska – 2Tone –  The Specials, The Police, Elvis Costello & the Attractions Madness, The English Beat, Selector, Fishbone, The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Operation Ivy

D – African Influenced New Wave – Adam Ant & the Ants, Bow Wow Wow, Malcolm McLaren

E – 50s Revival – The Stray Cats, Phil Collins, Billy Joel

F – Rock goes New Wave – Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, Dire Straits, Jefferson Starship, Genesis, ZZ Top, Heart, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Elton John, Rush, Aerosmith, Grateful Dead, Kenny Rogers, The Beach Boys, Steve Miller

 

E – 80s Mainstream Rock

Just after the punk rock revolution in the 70s, there was a definite response in mainstream rock where the music began to change yet again. Punk rocks backlash against mainstream music caused ripples of “new waves” to fan out and eventually compete with mainstream rock.

Rock was thriving in the late 70s with its rich varieties and constant reinventions. There were a lot of strong artists like Tom Petty, Pat Benatar, Eddie Money, Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Brown, Bob Seegar and many more who had endured punk, disco, and the new waves. Many of these new “rock” artists went on to sit next to many of the older generations of rock superstars from the 60s & 70s.

Mainstream rock did slightly and gradually change after punk, disco & new wave, incorporating elements of the new genres into its realm like it did in the past with folk, funk, and hard rock. Synthesizers, drum machines, and samples would become accepted into the mainstream of rock before the 80s were done.

F – 80s Alternative Rock

Alternative rock evolved out of the indie rock scene and some strands of new wave music. The indie rock scene or rather the independent labels on popular “college rock” radio in the 1980s saw a rapid increase in interest.

Alternative rock got so big and popular that on September 10, 1988, Billboard opened up a new Alternative Songs chart with Siouxsie & the Banshees “Peek-a-Boo”. Other UK alternative rock bands in the late 80s were New Order, Public Image Limited, and The Sugarcubes.

1 – Neo-Psychedelia – Bauhaus, Siouxie & the Banshees, Devo, the Soft Boys, the Teardrop Explodes, Echo & the Bunnymen, and the Paisley Underground, the Cure, the Smiths, Morrisey.

The Church, Nick Saloman’s Bevis Frond, Spacemen 3, Robyn Hitchcock, Mercury Rev, the Flaming Lips and Super Furry Animals.

 

2 – Folk Punk – many early bands like REM, the Violent Femmes, Dream Syndicate and the Feelies combined folk rock with punk rock and started a vast genre. REM also started Jangle-Pop a sub-genre early in the 80s.

Quirky Alternative Pop – They Might Be Giants, Camper Van Beethoven

 

3 – Gothic Rock – Was one of the waves that popped out of post-punk in the late 70s and developing in the 80s. Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees and Bauhaus song “Bela Lugosi’s Dead”. Other great gothic bands were The Cure,  the Smiths, Morrisey,

 

4 – Industrial Rock –  Industrial rock started in the late 70s with various underground bands as diverse as Joy Division, Bad Brains, and Kraftwerk. Early industrial rock bands were influenced by Gary Numan and Tubeway,

The sub-genre includes Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, NON, SPK ZEV, post-punk bands like Pere Ubu, Killing Joke, and Foetus as well as the Swans, and noise rock/hardcore band, Big Black.

 

5 – Later Post-Punk Rock – Certain punk rock bands started to diversify and become more melodic, bands like Husker Du and the Replacements. Bands like Janes Addiction and the Pixies soon followed suit.

Other New Wave & Post Punk bands – Primal Scream, 10,000 Maniacs, the Feelies, Firehose, Shoegazing inspiring bands like The Jesus and Mary Chain. Dinosaur Jr., C86, the Cocteau Twins and rising from Joy Division, New Order,

Madchester Scene– Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses acid house with melodic guitars.

6 – Noise Rock – Inspired by Velvet Undergrounds 1968 album White Light/White Heat, noise rock spun off from punk rock Sonic Youth, Big Black, The Jesus Lizard, Killdozer, Flipper, the Buthole Surfers & Lightning Bolt.

7 – Shoegazing  – bands like Jesus & the Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Ride, Lush, SlowdiveChapterhouse, Boo Radleys .

 

 

G – 90s Mainstream Rock

H – 90s Alternative Rock

1 – Indie Rock –  Pavement, Superchunk, Fugazi and Sleater-Minney, Guided by Voices, Sebadoh, Beck, Liz Fair, Lynda Thomas, PJ Harvey, Alanis Morissette

2 – Brit-Pop – OasisSuede, Blur, Oasis, Pulp, Supergrass, Elastica, Shinedown, Seether, 3 Door Down.

3 – Post-Brit-Pop 

4 – Emo or Emocore – Emo or emotional hardcore is a post-hardcore punk genre that developed in the late 80s. Pioneering bands were Rites of Spring and Embrace, 90’s reinventions gave us Weezer, Jimmy Eat World, Dashboard Confessional, My Chemical Romance, Fall Out Boy, Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, and also Sunny Day Real Estate, Jawbreaker, Braid, the Promise Ring and the GetUp Kids.

Screamo – Heroin and Antioch Arrow

 

6 – Dance

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6 – Modern Dance Music

A – Disco

Disco morphed out of the psychedelic soul and funk music of the late sixties and early-seventies. Due to the new tech audio upgrades, the beat was simpler yet louder, just “four on the floor” with the bass reverberating to the snare snap back best.

The music was now even more conducive to dancing. Disco had a lot of hits and took a lot of hits over its existence. It was the last baby-boomer music genre and the beginning of modern dance music.

1 – Soul and funk influences – Groups like late-60s Temptations, the Supremes, James Brown, Isaac Hayes, Sly & the Family Stone, Billy Preston. Aretha Franklin.

a – Disco Pioneers – Eddie Kendrick, Jerry Butler, Barry White, Manu Dibango, Barrabas, Jimmy Castor Bunch, Isley Brothers, the Staples Singers, Babe Ruth. Barry White, Love Unlimited

b – Philly Soul from the O’Jays, Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes, the Trammps, Teddy Pendergast, the Spinners, the Delfonics. MFSB

2 – Mainstream Disco –

1974/75 – Hues Incorporated, Redbone, Commodores, AWB, BT Express, Jackson 5, Carl Douglas, Three Degrees, Jimmy Ruffin, KC & the Sunshine Band, Gloria Gaynor, Labelle, Van McCoy, Tavares, Silver Connection, Four Tops, Kool and the Gang.

1976-77 – Donna Summer, Stevie Wonder, the Miracles, EW&F, Johnie Taylor, Maxine Nightingale, the Sylvers, Diana Ross, Vicki Sue Robinson, Elton John, Ohio Players, Leo Sayer, Rose Royce, Brick, Thelma Houston, Marvin Gaye, Parliament, Heatwave, Giorgio Moroder’s with Donna Summer “I Feel Love” in July of 1977

 

3 – Saturday Night Fever – Bee Gees, David Shire, Ralph MacDonald, Chic, Yvonne Elliman, Ashford & Simpson, A Taste Of Honey, Prince, Sylvester, Alicia Bridges, Musique, Dan Hartman, The Village People, Peaches & Herb, Amii Stewart the Jacksons, Sister Sledge, Anita Ward, Lipps Inc and so much more!

4 – Rock turns disco – The Rolling Stones, Rod Stewart, the Doobie Brothers, Blondie, Paul McCartney, the Grateful Dead, Pink Floyd.

5 – Disco Sucks! – The decline of disco was unfortunate, yet did it really even die at all or did it just progress – Kool & the Gang, the Whispers, Con Funk Shun, Frankie Smith, Tom Tom Club, D-Train, Bar-Kays, Michael Jackson, Herbie Hancock.

B – 80s Popular Dance Music

1 – Synth Pop – Early Electronica

a – Synth Pop – Brian Eno, The Bugles, Giorgio Moroder, Kraftwerk, Gary Numan, OCD, Yazoo, Depeche Mode, Erasure, A-Ha, Pet Shop Boys, the Eurythmics, Human League, INXS, Flock of Seagulls

b – New Romantic – Duran Duran, ABC, Culture Club, Ultravox, Visage, the Blitz, Spandau Ballet

c –  Nueu Deutsche Welle – Nina Hagen, Trio “Da Da Da”, Falco “Rock Me Amadeus”,

d – Other Waves – No Wave, Dark Wave, Cold Wave.

 

2- 80s Pop Music – Michael Jackson, Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Prince, Culture Club, Duran Duran, Human League, Wham! Men at Work, Phil Collins, Janet Jackson, Paula Abdul, Olivia Newton-John, Laura Branigan, Terrence Trent D’Arby, Fine Young Cannibals, Sinead O’Connor,

a – Paisley Park – Prince,  Vanity 6, Morris Day & the Time, Sheila E, Apollonia, Sheena Easton

b – Teen Pop – Expose, Debbie Gibson, Tiffany, New Edition, Stacy Q, New Kids on the Block, Wham!, George Michael, Rick Astley

c – Boy Bands –

 

3 – 80s Blue-Eyed-Soul – Hall & Oates, Annie Lenox, Simply Red, Boy George & Culture Club, George Michael, Tom Jones, Melissa Morgan, Alison Moyet

 

4- 80s R&B Crossover – Whitney Houston, The Jacksons, Tina Turner, Lionel Ritchie, Marvin Gaye, Chaka Kahn, The Pointer Sisters, Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson,

a – New Jack Swing – Bobby Brown, Keith Sweat, Boyz II Men, Guy, Jodeci, BellBiv DeVoe

b – New Artists – Jeffery Osbourne, Billy Ocean, Evelyn King DeBarge, Midnight Star, Club Nouveau, Stephanie Mills, Jody Watley, Luther Vandross, Freddie Jackson, Sade, Anita Baker, Teddy Pendergrass, Peabo Bryson.

Also See, Quiet Storm

 

5 –  MTV – MTV started in 1981 and gave many artists exposure that they might not have had without the new media.

The Bugles “Video Killed the Radio Star”, Elvis Costello, M,  Squeeze,  Devo, The B-52s, Talking Heads, Huey Lewis & the News The Pretenders, The Cars, Blondie, The Police, Adam Ant, Loverboy, Kim Karnes, Madness, Rick Springfield, Tommy Tutone, Duran Duran, Men at Work, Flock of Seagulls mixed with  Pat Benatar, Pete Townshend, Billy Joel, Phil Collins and much, much more.

 

6 – Hi-NRG – Inspired by Donna Summer and Giorgio Moroder’s “I Feel Love” and Kraftwerk’s “Trans-Europe Express” came artists like Shannon, Cerrone, C Bank, Planet Patrol, Freeez, Midnight Star, Chaka Khan, Bananarama, Dead or Alive, Divine,

 

7 – Hip Hop/ Electro – Afrika Bambaataa & the Soul Sonic Force, Malcolm McLaren, World Famous Supreme Team, Steinski, Double Dee, Newkleus, Strafe.

 

C – House Music

 

D – Techno  

Ambient Techno – The Orb, KLF

 

E – Electronica – EDM

 1 – IDM – Intelligent Dance Music –  Aphex Twins, the Black Dog, the Orb, Autechre, B12, Luke Vibert, Squarepusher and Boards of Canada

2 – Trip Hop – Bristol’s Wild Bunk: MC Adrian, Acid Jazz, Acid House, Massive Attack, Tricky, Portishead, Dollar, Shara Nelson, Tackhead, DJ Shadow, Bjork, Howie B, Earthling.

Ninja Tune record label – Cold Cut Duo, DJ Food, 9 Lazy 9, Up, Bustle & Out, Funki Porcini

3 – Post Trip-Hop – Bowery Electric, Esthero, Morcheeba, Sneaker Pimps, Anomie Belle, Alpha, Jaianto, Mudville and Cibo Matto, Lamb, Second Person, Antimatter, Gotye, Lana Del Rey

 4 – Dubstep –  Nightclub called “Plastic People” at   “Forward” (FWD>>) night. Distance, Digital Mystikz, Plastician

5 – Progressive Dance –  Progressive House

 

7 – Fusions

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Jazz & R&B Fusions

A) Jazz Fusion

1 – Jazz Rock – Jazz rock grew out during the psychedelic movement when certain bands started to incorporating jazz instruments and arrangements into their rock music. Up till the late 60s, jazz and rock had been separate genres, hardly ever crossing streams.

a – Rock bands – Established rock bands like Cream, Hendrix, the Doors the Grateful Dead and Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention mixed with newer bands like Soft Machine, Caravan, Colosseum, Spirit.

b – Jazz & R&B bands – Other bands came to rock from jazz like Blood Sweat & Tears, & Chicago (Transit Authority), Nucleus and the Canterbury scene.

c – Miles Davis – Miles Davis was pivotal in the fusion of jazz and rock, he helped bring a lot of new artists to the developing scene.  Albums “Bitches Brew” and “In a Silent Way”.

d – Frank Zappa – Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention or rather the various band incarnations were also pivotal and helped shape jazz fusion to the extremes. Albums like “Hot Rats”, “Gand Wazzoo” and “Waka/Jawaka”

 

2 – Jazz Fusion – The 70s brought in the first waves of strictly jazz fusion bands that went on to define the genre. Many of these bands would go on to considerable commercial success.

Bands like Weather Report, Return to Forever, John McLaughlin, Tony Williams Lifetime, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Nucleus and Herbie Hancock. Also Lenny White, Stanley Clarke, Pat Metheny and Jaco Pastorius.

3 – Jazz Fusion 80s & 90s – Jazz fusion continued to exist with Jeff Lorber, the Yellow Jackets, Tribal Tech, Chick Corea’s Elektric Band and

B) Smooth Jazz – Smooth Jazz developed in the 70s with a considerably more lighter sound influenced by R&B, funk, and pop of the late 70s.

1 – Smooth Jazz Pioneers – Artists like Wes Montgomery, George Benson, Chet Baker, Lee Ritenour, Spiro Gyra, Chuck Mangione, Grover Washington Jr., Sergio Mendes, Joe Sample and much more.

2 – Popular Smooth Jazz – In the 80s smooth jazz became very popular with artists like Al Jarreau, Kenny G, David Sanbourne, Tom Scott, Bob James and the Brecker brothers.

3 – Acid Jazz – Acid Jazz developed out of the late 80s combining electronica, sampling, DJ scratching with jazz. With artists like Donald Byrd and Roy Ayers.

4 – Nu Jazz – Live instrumentation with beats of “jazz house” with a wide range of styles. Artists like St. Germain, Jazzanova, Fila Brazillia, The Cinematic Orchestra, Kobol, Norwegian, Bugge Wesseltoft, Jaga Jazzist and Nils Petter Molvær.

5 – Jazz Rap – Gangsta, Stetsosonic, Jungle Brothers, Tribe Called Quest,  Pete Rock & CL Smooth, Guru, Common.

 

8 – Heavy Metal

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8 – Heavy Metal

The “heavy sound” that John Lennon kept referring to was something the Beatles, Hendrix, Townshend and the Yardbirds 3 guitarists Clapton Beck and Page, among others, explored extensively.

February 13, 1970, Black Sabbath is released, it was like heavy metal prepackaged and instant, the music will forever be shockingly different with almost no hint of the blues & psychedelia roots it came from, yet deja vu familiarity for time to come.

Heavy Metal vs, Hard Rock, Black Sabbath vs. Led Zeppelin are discussed at length. I have re-cap lists of hard rock influences,  the artists, and songs that helped shape both heavy metal & punk rock.

A – Classic Heavy Metal

1 – Hard Rock Re-cap – For about 2 years before Black Sabbath there were a number of bands that helped develop the new sound of heavy metal. Look for Blue Cheer, Iron Butterfly, Deep Purple, Vanilla Fudge, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Pink Floyd, Neil Young, James Gang, Mountain, David Bowie, Free.

2 – Pioneer Heavy Metal – Hard rock as a genre contained many of the following artists who slowly helped carry the heavy metal flag in the early years of the 70s. Beginning with Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Motorhead, Rainbow, UFO, Budgie, Rush, AC/DC, and Blue Oyster Cult for a start.

B – New Wave of British Heavy Metal

1 – NWOBHM – The “new wave” of British heavy metal” coming at the end of the 70s was the beginning of a hard-hitting decade in the 80s. Many of these bands would combine with earlier pioneers to usher in a vast and varied genre in its own right. Iron Maiden, Def Lepard, Samson, Saxon, Diamond Head, Tygers of Pan Tang, Raven, Angel Witch, Girlschool, Sweet Revenge, Blitzkrieg, Jaguar, Avenger, Demon, Witchfynde, Merciful Fate, Witch Finder General, Accept, Venom.

2 – Speed Metal – Speed Metal was one of the initial styles of the new wave of British heavy metal inspired by “Speed King” by Deep Purple. Judas Priest, the Canadian bands  Exciter, Anvil and Annihilator, Germany’s Accept.

C – Mainstream Heavy Metal

1 – American Heavy Metal – The west coast had a vibrant heavy metal scene.  This time both  LA and the bay area had hard rocking bands as well as up the west coast, heavy metal graduated from hard rock. Check out Van Halen, Kiss, Ozzy Osbourne’s two masterpieces ‘Blizzard of Oz’ and ‘Diary of a Madman’, Quiet Riot, Ratt, W.A.S.P., Y&T, Scorpions, and Dio. These bands along with the older pioneers of Judas Priest, Motorhead, AC/DC, Rush, and Sabbath

2 – Glam Metal – Get out your hairspray, makeup, spandex, silk scarves and high-heels a lot of hair bands became popular in the mid-eighties after the new wave of British heavy metal and the American west coast answer. MTV had quite a lot to do with the rise of this economically successful sub-genre. Ratt, Hanoi Rocks, Motley Crue, Poison, Zebra, Vixen, Europe, Warrant, Cinderella, Winger, Skid Row and Bon Jovi.

D – 80s Metal Sub-Genres

Many of the subgenres that followed the initial US mainstream success after the new wave of British heavy metal the genre started to splinter up into many different sub-genres.

Thrash Metal

1 – Thrash Metal – Initially coming out of the bay area (San Francisco Bay) the music was a mix of speed metal and hardcore punk.  Speed mixed with powerful groove-oriented jams that sometimes were very extensive suites. Queen’s “Stone Cold Crazy” is considered one of the first “thrash metal” songs.

Start out with the “big four” Metallica, Anthrax, Slayer & Megadeth. Then after you are frenzied and whiplashed, jump into the pit with Testament, Overkill, Exodus, Metal Church, Death Angel, Nuclear Assault, Stormtroopers of Death (S.O.D.), those three German speed metal bands Kreator, Sodom, Destruction and many more.

Death Metal

2 – Death Metal – The very fast, the taboo, the unintelligible, the music that should not be! Anything having to do with the touchy subject of death, in other words concerning obsessed mortal thoughts. Venom, Slayer, Possessed’s song “Death Metal” and album ‘Seven Churches’, Death, Deicide, Morbid Angel, Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, Carcass, Dismember, Mortician.

Grindcore – Napalm Death, Bolt Thrower, Doom. Extreme Noise Terror, Sore Throat, Brutal Tryth.

Extreme Metal – A taste of artists and songs that produced this dark mix of musical extremity.

Black Metal

3 – Black Metal – Black metal was practically invented by Venom. This was a sub-genre that deals with the taboo subjects of the worship of Satan, true evil and occult fetish maybe burning witches or anything having to do with demonic origin.

Some bands had their tongues in their cheeks, others were “dead” serious. Venom’s song and album “Black Metal”,   Mercyful Fate, Hellhammer, Celtic Frost, Bathory, Morbid Angel, Sodom, Sepultura. Destruction,

90s Scandinavian Black Metal – My opinion of this sub-genre is that it went a bit too far.I think things went way too far with these guys. Mayhem, Emperor/Enslaved, Dissection, Darkthrone, Mortiis, Enslaved, Burzum, Marduk.

Power Metal

4 – Power Metal – Power metal is an underground sub-genre in the United States but enjoys wide popularity in Europe, Japan, and South America. Check out Helloween, Hammer Fall, Dragon Force, Iced Earth, the symphonic sounding Kamelot, Nightwish, Stratovarius, Sonata Arctica, Rhapsody of Fire, and Catharsis.

c) Progressive Metal – Started by progressive bands like Rush and King Crimson soon matured to new bands such as Queensryche, Fate’s Warning, Dream Theatre and Symphony X.

Doom Metal

5 – Doom Metal – Slow moving, slow tempo heavy metal of the sort played by old classic Black Sabbath songs “Electric Funeral” or “Into the Void”. It also resembles hardcore punk like the Melvins or slow Blag Flag.

Bands like Saint Vitus,  Pentagram, Trouble, Candlemass, Dream Death, Cathedral, the Obsessed, Eyehategod, Corrupted, and Count Raven epitomized the doom metal as well as NWOBHM band Witchfinder General.

Doom metal has several subgenres of its own like traditional doom, epic doom, stoner doom, sludge doom, funeral doom, drone doom, death-doom, and black-doom.

E – Alternative Metal

Alternative Metal – Is a mix of heavy metal with alternative rock, however, alt. rock is vast with many subgenres.

1 – Hardcore Punk meets Heavy Metal

2 – Funk Metal – Alternative funk rock bands in the mid-80s like Fishbone, the Red Hot Chilli Peppers,  Living Colour and Faith No More started the development of funk metal along with help from Anthrax, Mordred, rap metal band Rage Against the Machine and the uncategorizable Primus.

Later bands include Mr. Bungle, Limbomaniacs, 24-7 Spyz, Infectious Grooves, Mind Funk.Korn, Incubus, Sugar Ray, Jimmie’s Chicken Shack and 311.  And new millennium Alien Ant Farm, Psychostick, Twelve Foot Ninja and Prophets of Rage.

3 – Early Alternative Metal – Butthole Surfers, Ministry, Jane’s Addiction, Faith No More, White Zombie, Helmet, Voivod, Kyus, Type O Negative

4 – Industrial Metal – Nine Inch Nails, White Zombie, Ministry and Marilyn Manson dominated this genre in the 90s. Along with Filter, Orgy, KMFDM, Fear Factory, Gravity Kills, Sister Machine Gun and Rob Zombie himself.

5 – Gothic Metal – Gothic metal is a hybrid of heavy metal and gothic rock that manifested itself in the early 90s out of the mix of doom and death metal.

The first wave was Paradise Lost, My Dying Bride, Anathema, Type O-Negative, Tiamat, the Gathering and Theatre of Tragedy. The second wave was Moonspell, Theatres des Vampires and Cradle of Filth.

6 – Rap Metal – Hard Core Rap –  Public Enemy, KRS-1, Ice-T, NWA, the Geto Boys, Ice Cube, Urban Dance Squad.

F – Grunge

1) Pioneering Seattle Sound – Grunge was heavily influenced by punk, post-punk and hardcore punk. In Seattle came punk bands like Green River, the Melvins, Mudhoney and Mother Love Bone.

2) Grunge – Grunge came out of Seattle in the early 1990s and caused a resurgence in punk music and 70s rock and heavy metal. Nirvana, Alice In Chains, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Screaming Trees, Smashing Pumpkins, Temple of the Dog, Mad Season.

3) Post-Grunge – the Breeders, Hole, L7, Bush, Candlebox, Collective Soul, Foo Fighters, Creed, Matchbox Twenty, Alanis Morrissette and Nickelback

 

G – Nu Metal

 Nu Metal – Biohazard, Fear Factory, Tool, Korn, Soulfly, System of a Down, Rob Zombie, Slipknot, Limp Bizkit, Deftones, Papa Roach, Kittie, Rage Against the Machine

1) Avante Gard Metal – Naked City, Treponem Pal, 16-17, Breadwinner, Painkiller, OPOan-Thy-Manium, Master’s Hammer, Arcturus.

2) Metallic Techno – Godflesh, Scorn, Atari Teenage Riot, Panacea.

3) Symphonic metal bands  – Tristania and Within Temptation, along with power metal band Nightwish were gothic. In the 21st century, the UK’sEntwine, HIM, Lullacry and Poionblack and the US’s Lacuna Coil and Evanescence.

4) Sludge Metal – A mix of Doom and Hardcore – Artists such as Kyuss, Eye hate god, Crowbar. other related sub-genres Stoner Metal, Drone Metal;

5) Metalcore –The Accused, Corrosion of Conformity, DRI, SOD, Cro-Mags, Dr. Know, Cryptic Slaughter, Samhain, Excel, Prong.