Music Genre Names Explained

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  • čas přidán 23. 05. 2024
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    SOURCES & FURTHER READING
    Pop: study.com/academy/lesson/hist...
    Rock: allthedifferences.com/rock-vs...
    Metal: www.britannica.com/art/heavy-...
    Country: www.britannica.com/art/countr...
    Folk: www.makingmusic.org.uk/resour...
    Bluegrass: www.masterclass.com/articles/...
    Blues: www.britannica.com/art/blues-...
    Soul: www.benvaughn.com/the-history...
    Reggae: www.thepalmsjamaica.com/brief...
    Ska: www.britannica.com/art/ska
    Punk: flashbak.com/the-story-of-pun...
    Grunge: www.revolutioncomeandgone.com/...
    Indy: www.musicindustryhowto.com/wh...
    Shoegaze: underground-england.com/histo...
    Rap: www.dictionary.com/browse/rap...
    Hiphop: www.merriam-webster.com/words...
    Electric Music: www.britannica.com/art/electr...
    Classical: www.classicfm.com/discover-mu...

Komentáře • 297

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  Před 10 měsíci +45

    What is your favourite music genre?

    • @purplex360
      @purplex360 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Various kinds of rock and jpop to name a few

    • @james.strong
      @james.strong Před 10 měsíci +3

      My favourite is Emo, although I am not an emo. I just find it cool to listen to despite everyone calling me it

    • @emil5294
      @emil5294 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Metal very much. From the heaviest death and black metal to kawaii metal

    • @masterchaoss
      @masterchaoss Před 10 měsíci +5

      Stoner Rock

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Před 10 měsíci +7

      You forgot to mention the best music genre called "Bardcore". To find it type in a search for the CZcamsr called Hildegard von Blingin'.

  • @nickimontie
    @nickimontie Před 10 měsíci +202

    Classical music has genres, too, but technically it's not all "classical" music. There's Baroque and Romantic, as well as Classical. Perhaps a video on these next?

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I like Early Music too. I've had Fine Knacks for Ladies stuck in my head again this month.

    • @OldMansWar
      @OldMansWar Před 10 měsíci +9

      Opera is also a Classical subgenre

    • @kkupsky6321
      @kkupsky6321 Před 10 měsíci +4

      I dunno. He got these all wrong. Let him learn an instrument and play for thirty years and we’ll get back. This was so patronising. He’s no idea. Good try English.

    • @brianedwards7142
      @brianedwards7142 Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@kkupsky6321 The irony of you using the word patronising in that comment.

    • @kkupsky6321
      @kkupsky6321 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@brianedwards7142 I hoped the sarcasm came thru…

  • @squidwardstesticles5914
    @squidwardstesticles5914 Před 9 měsíci +82

    Small correction from a metal head: metal and heavy metal are not always viewed as the same. Heavy metal is sometimes viewed similarly to how you described “rock and roll” in that it describes the earlier style that the rest of the genre evolved from

    • @sextuspompeius1266
      @sextuspompeius1266 Před 9 měsíci +1

      its all garbage it dont matter what its called

    • @texanarchy666
      @texanarchy666 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@sextuspompeius1266what do you listen to? 😂 mozart?

    • @sextuspompeius1266
      @sextuspompeius1266 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@texanarchy666 60s and 70s rock and 50s and 60s country mostly

    • @MrOoYT
      @MrOoYT Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@sextuspompeius1266 so with your logic any music I don’t like doesn’t need to be named

    • @frankj10000
      @frankj10000 Před měsícem

      Yeah, it used to be Heavy Metal for the whole genre up until about the mid to late '80s when you had so many new styles emerging like black, speed, thrash or death metal. That's when Metal became the new umbrella term to include all styles while Heavy Metal is usually only used for the traditional style.

  • @bf0189
    @bf0189 Před 10 měsíci +87

    Dubstep is a reference to dub music not double. Dub comes from Jamaican reggae where they would use studio effects to trip out the production and beef up the bass and have sound system parties. This would have a huge influence on dance music starting with disco / boogie in the late 70a early 80sm. Some twenty years later there was a genre called two step which came from UK garage. It had swingy beats. Well people started making dark and moodier two step with an emphasis on sub bass. Hence the dub in dubstep.

    • @danp420
      @danp420 Před 10 měsíci +6

      thats correct, 2 step is not very known I guess

    • @Binstone
      @Binstone Před 5 měsíci +1

      the dub in dub, stands for double thoughv

    • @noahshighlightreel
      @noahshighlightreel Před 4 měsíci

      The video creator isn’t very qualified. It annoyed me as a Ska enthusiast 😵‍💫

  • @christopherantonio3612
    @christopherantonio3612 Před 10 měsíci +107

    Lo-fi means low-fidelity. While hi-fi comes from high-fidelity. Fidelity being the crispness and "fidelity" to high quality souding audio.

    • @pusangmaligalig9058
      @pusangmaligalig9058 Před 9 měsíci +3

      and wi-fi?

    • @huismus111
      @huismus111 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@pusangmaligalig9058With fedility, in contrary to nofi l, which is no fidelity

    • @pusangmaligalig9058
      @pusangmaligalig9058 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@huismus111 dont forget pedo-fil to the list brothar

    • @kaeez
      @kaeez Před 4 měsíci

      @@pusangmaligalig9058funny man

    • @noahshighlightreel
      @noahshighlightreel Před 4 měsíci +2

      He’s conflating lo-fi with lo-fi hip hop. Lo-fi is just a descriptior. Not a genre in itself.

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 Před 10 měsíci +46

    You haven't mentioned Industrial.
    In Germany is the genre "Schlager" (which can be translated with "Beat"), which may be a bit between Pop, Country and Folk. But it is never really dying.
    In the 80s there was the style "NDW" for "Neue Deutsche Welle" ("New German Wave"). In the 2000s there was the style "Neue Deutsche Härte" ("New German Hardness"), which follewed in the trails of NDW.

    • @rdbury507
      @rdbury507 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I was thinking about this during the video. The only styles mentioned are ones known to English speakers and other countries have their own styles that have unique names. Anyway, I think Schager has a lot in common with Motown. (I'm pretty sure that derives from "Motor City", the nickname for Detroit.") Both have a very "Pop" sound and have sentimental lyrics, usually about "Liebe/Love". I think Schlager is more than just Germany or even German speaking countries, but appears all over central and northern Europe.

    • @Amelia-vk4jt
      @Amelia-vk4jt Před 10 měsíci +1

      We also have Slager in the Netherlands and Belgium, yeah I'd describe it as pop, country, carnival music, the only music were you'll hear a touter or claksen and it perfectly fits the songs

    • @Kylora2112
      @Kylora2112 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@rdbury507 Yeah, Motown comes from "Motor City" and specifically the record company Motown that was publishing that style of music.

    • @noahshighlightreel
      @noahshighlightreel Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@rdbury507that really annoyed me. It’s so US-UK-centric that it literally said folk music was just quiet music telling stories over a guitar. SO inaccurate. If you’re going to do that at least mention world music - nope. Didn’t even do that.

    • @marthyparthy395
      @marthyparthy395 Před 3 měsíci

      In finland schlager is pretty popular and we call it iskelmä

  • @ScreamingAllTheTime
    @ScreamingAllTheTime Před 10 měsíci +23

    An interesting thing that wasn’t really mentioned in this video, but for a long while, R&B and Soul (among a few other sub genres) were labelled under one name in the US, Race Music. This wasn’t changed til the 60s I think, because it’s pretty messed up that a bunch of music got basically called “Black People Music.” It’s definitely an important part of music history though, since so much of our music was built upon African American pioneers whose legacies has since been covered up.

    • @capeverdeanprincess4444
      @capeverdeanprincess4444 Před 5 měsíci

      Black Americans are just Americans having been in the country just as long as European Americans and their legacy will always be remembered.

  • @someguy165
    @someguy165 Před 8 měsíci +34

    I think rap is an acronym for "Rythm And Poetry"

    • @darkskinwhite
      @darkskinwhite Před 3 měsíci +10

      it's not, that's some shit corny people made up afterwards.
      before 'rap music' existed people said "rap" in the 60s & 70s meaning just talking. taking fast or a lot. "let me rap with you" would mean let me talk to you.

    • @CannonadeStudios
      @CannonadeStudios Před 8 dny

      rap sucks

  • @Zundfolge
    @Zundfolge Před 10 měsíci +23

    As for the "Rap vs Hip Hop" thing, I had it explained to me by an old rapper that "Rap is the words, Hip Hop is the music". But that's just conjecture.

    • @Tables-zm7db
      @Tables-zm7db Před 8 měsíci +1

      Hip Hop is a way of life, rap is ryming words

    • @bossedup3008
      @bossedup3008 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Hip-hop is a culture

    • @MINUSENN
      @MINUSENN Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@Tables-zm7dbi like to think of it as twins that were born seconds apart from eachother

    • @frankj10000
      @frankj10000 Před měsícem

      That's how I always understood it too. Because you can literally rap to all kinds of music. Like, there's a lot of rapping, for example, in '90s Eurodance music. That doesn't make it Hip Hop.

  • @timmmahhhh
    @timmmahhhh Před 10 měsíci +10

    I ususlly see Indie Rock spelled accordingly, I-N-D-I-E. Having grown up in Indiana, Indy is short for Indianapolis, as in the Indy 500.

  • @sampugh8266
    @sampugh8266 Před 10 měsíci +19

    Dubstep is actually a portmanteau of Dub (from dub reggae) and 2-Step (A style of UK garage)

    • @bf0189
      @bf0189 Před 10 měsíci +1

      This is correct

    • @MrPDTaylor
      @MrPDTaylor Před 3 měsíci

      Sorry close, but no cigar. The suffix step was used to describe different styles of dance music way before 2 step. i.e. techstep, darkstep etc.

  • @rianantony
    @rianantony Před 10 měsíci +18

    Weird that you didn't mention the many types of metal. I'd imagine there's a lot to the etymology of that

    • @scorchedamber
      @scorchedamber Před 10 měsíci +4

      And the only genre I care to subgenre cuz they all sound so unique and distinct xD

    • @jettlethedragonpeeltheoran8915
      @jettlethedragonpeeltheoran8915 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Many of which there's no solid agreement over the exact definition, and in which the actual distinctions are so microscopically small that there's virtually no real distinction. Like how the only differention between sh*tcore and speedfilth is whether the song goes over a particular time limit. That's not enough to make it a genre.

    • @callmeishmael5742
      @callmeishmael5742 Před 9 měsíci +5

      man nobody wants to talk about the etymology of different metal subgenres there's like 40 of them

  • @espvp
    @espvp Před 10 měsíci +15

    Was expecting at least a mention of the many latin american genres like bachata, salsa, merengue, cumbia, tango, ranchera, bolero, and many more. There's also flamenco from Spain.

  • @The0Stroy
    @The0Stroy Před 10 měsíci +11

    How do we call the vocalist of a Heavy Metal band?
    Lead singer.

  • @SuprousOxide
    @SuprousOxide Před 10 měsíci +7

    I remember hearing the term Acid Rock and imagining it applied to some sharp hard edge sound, only later to learn that the acid in question is LSD and it tends to be pretty mellow music

  • @laser8389
    @laser8389 Před 9 měsíci +4

    "Classical" music when it was new went by many names since there are actually many different styles that make up what we now call "Classical" (which is more properly a period of music between the Baroque and Romantic periods). The textbook time frame for the Classical period is typically around 1750-1825, and can be broadly categorized by features distinguishing it from previous movements like Baroque (initially a term meaning something like "over-the-top" and was something of a pejorative term for the music). My favorite, though overly general, way to distinguish Classical from other periods is something my high school music theory teacher used: if it sounds like you're riding a horse, it's Classical (unless it's a song about riding a horse. in which case it might be Romantic, which was famous for "text-painting", or making the music sound like the lyrics). The term itself was used in-period, as the music (and other arts, I believe, though that's not my expertise) was meant to evoke ideas of the "Classical" Greco-Roman world, even more old-timey to them than they are to us, and seen as ideal in many ways. Brief overview of what I remember from several music history and musicology courses.

  • @metal_nerd
    @metal_nerd Před měsícem +1

    Awesome video. I was happy to see metal and ska mentioned. There are a lot of genres out there, too many to include all of them of course... But I was surprised there was no mention of funk as popular as that genre is. Never the less, I enjoyed the video

  • @taitano12
    @taitano12 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Classical is music that has stood the test of time. What you're talking about with "modern classical" is technically just "orchestral". Though, most non musicians, and a surprising number of musicians, use "classical" to mean pretty much any orchestral music.

  • @kandipiatkowski8589
    @kandipiatkowski8589 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I always chuckle when watching Star Trek Beyond, when they were describing the Beastie Boys song, Sabotage. Jayla even said she likes the "beats and shouting".

  • @Kylora2112
    @Kylora2112 Před 10 měsíci +15

    "Grunge" was more of a scene (specifically from Seattle, WA USA) than a musical style. The Big Four of grunge (Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and Alice In Chains) have VERY different sounds (Nirvana is punk, Pearl Jam is rock, Soundgarden is acid rock, Alice In Chains is metal); they just all dressed like your typical person from the Pacific Northwest would and all made it big at the same time from the same area (and members of Pearl Jam and Soundgarden had a project called Temple of the Dog).

    • @perceivedvelocity9914
      @perceivedvelocity9914 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Thank you for posting this. I don't think that he understood what Grunge meant. This video was very broad and covered a lot of territory. He did the best that he could I guess.

    • @poetryflynn3712
      @poetryflynn3712 Před 10 měsíci

      Considering Post-Grunge, Be-Bop, and Shoegaze are things, I beg to differ.

    • @shroomlord682
      @shroomlord682 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@poetryflynn3712post grunge also has the the same kinda spectrum, though i dont know post grunge bands as well as i know grunge
      shoegaze isnt grunge, some of it sounds a bit similar to some of grunge, but they are pretty different
      bebop is jazz isnt it? nowhere near grunge
      edit: i forgot to mention that post grunge is trying to imitate grunge but more radio friendly, so different post grunge bands tried to sound like different grunge bands, also stp is a good example of what the original commenter was saying, stp was from san francisco if i remember correctly, came out around the same time (of grunges mainstream popularity, grunge started in the early 80s, stp started in the early 90s), sounded a good amount like soundgarden and pearl jam, yet werent considered grunge by a large amount of people

    • @jettlethedragonpeeltheoran8915
      @jettlethedragonpeeltheoran8915 Před 10 měsíci +1

      So the definition of grunge is how gatekept it is? ;)

    • @isteinbergli3510
      @isteinbergli3510 Před 8 dny

      Compared with most genres, grunge isn't that broad - and there is definitely a grunge 'sound'. Different bands found inspiration from different genres, sure, but that's the case in every genre; and the punk (hardcore punk, early post-hardcore, as well as some british punk and post-punk) and metal (heavy metal and thrash, mostly) that influenced the grunge scene isn't all that far apart.
      To me most grunge sound way too similar, so I've grown tired of it. Then again, I'm rarely in the mood for it, and I think more than anything there's a particular grungey mood that connects most of the bands.

  • @feliciapate7926
    @feliciapate7926 Před 10 měsíci +3

    If you listen to old school rock, you can hear blues, folk, gospel, and even field work songs (yes, even slave songs) / elements thereof in it.

  • @FilthyAnimal893
    @FilthyAnimal893 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Interesting one not mentioned here, House music got its name because it was the music provided by the host venue, aka the "house" as filler between live acts setting up and breaking down.

    • @mrglasses8953
      @mrglasses8953 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Others say it was named after the warehouse nightclub Frankie Knucles was resident DJ at.

    • @ConvincingPeople
      @ConvincingPeople Před měsícem

      @@mrglasses8953Yeah, it comes from the Warehouse in the same way that garage comes from the Paradise Garage.

  • @christopherbentley7289
    @christopherbentley7289 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for this fairly comprehensive breakdown of music genres. I do feel as if I have been suitably educated, in parts. I've never heard of that proto form of Jazz, Jasm before, for example. It appears that others have pointed this out below, but I have long thought that Rock 'n' Roll's origins lay in it being a Black patois for sex, rather than with anything to do with boats.
    One of my favourite confusions of genres is Rhythm & Blues, on which I note you touched. Back in the mid-Sixties if one had said "Rhythm & Blues" or "R & B" one's mental picture would have been of a group such as The Rolling Stones or Manfred Mann, possibly involving a harmonica (or Blues Harp, as some would say) and when there was a revival in interest in that towards the end of the Seventies it was thought of as "The R & B Revival". However, R & B today appears to describe what I would have thought of more as Soul, specifically the more down-tempo end of proceedings. Talking of Soul perhaps you should have mentioned Northern Soul, at least in passing, as a particularly danceable type of Soul music with its origins in the clubs of the English Midlands and northwards thereof. As a blogger on female Pop from the satellite nations of the former Soviet Bloc I've uncovered quite a bit of (fully natively composed) material that has a very Northern Soul-like beat, which I have dubbed 'Eastern Soul', BTW.
    One huge genre which was touched upon in the Czech TV documentary series 'Pop Story' and which you missed and which was hugely influential around the turn of the Sixties to the Seventies was Bubblegum, or Bubblegum Pop, which had two broad sub-strands - the manufactured Pop, sometimes involving children's Saturday Morning TV shows, where session musicians stood in for the animated characters (or chimpanzees, in the case of Lancelot Link and The Evolution Revolution) and quite faceless groups, which could be made up of an interchangeable line-up of session musicians, which was the American brand of Bubblegum and the groups out of the stable of Cook and Greenaway and Chinn and Chapman and similar, plus the Eurogum of the likes of Middle Of The Road over on this side of the Water, The Bay City Rollers taking the Scottish baton from Middle Of The Road, Scotland being described as "The spiritual home of Bubblegum." in David Smay's book, 'Bubblegum Music Is The Naked Truth'.

  • @cleokey
    @cleokey Před 10 měsíci +2

    When I was a kid in 40's, my folks were big lovers of the Big Band sound. We bought a house near the Aragon Ballroom so my folks could go dancing to Lawrence Welk. My favorite was Benny Goodman, his music was very lively. Later the 50's & 60's had a much bigger impact and Big Band orchestras fell out of favor.

  • @TheLowstef
    @TheLowstef Před 10 měsíci +2

    That's my idea! Yay! And my name mispronounced, what an absolute honour 😁

  • @kingjimmycraftofcalderonia2017
    @kingjimmycraftofcalderonia2017 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Great video. Outside the genres of English music, origins for the name of Latin American genres would be a hot topic.

  • @king1876
    @king1876 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Really interesting man! As a reggae fan

  • @dashashe
    @dashashe Před 10 měsíci +3

    "Heavy" metal isn't named so for its subject matter but its"heavy," hard sound.

  • @Baboonly
    @Baboonly Před 4 měsíci +1

    Finnally! Someone talks about Reggae!! Thank you! ❤❤❤

  • @WallieTheRed
    @WallieTheRed Před 10 měsíci +6

    Missed out so many. But happy techno got a mention

    • @greenrobot5
      @greenrobot5 Před 10 měsíci

      There are way too many, for example the diff between techno and house is just depending on where it was made, trance is faster and usually without lyrics

    • @WallieTheRed
      @WallieTheRed Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@greenrobot5 wrong, techno is much more synthetic, faster and more low end focused. House sounds more organic and is focused on the mids and has more vocals. Trance again is based more on the mids and long building phases using lots of pads to create a more euphoric sound, it totally contains lots of lyrics.
      As Derrick May said "techno is houses bigger angrier brother.
      Obvs there are countless sub genres these are just my understandings of the differences on the bass form of the genres.
      Ive been collecting records and DJing for over two decades

    • @greenrobot5
      @greenrobot5 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@WallieTheRed but house comes from Chicago and techno is from Europe

    • @WallieTheRed
      @WallieTheRed Před 10 měsíci +1

      Wrong again. House is from Chicago and techno is from Detroit

    • @greenrobot5
      @greenrobot5 Před 10 měsíci

      @@WallieTheRed idk why you wanna argue, techno originated in Europe

  • @DrFerno727
    @DrFerno727 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Yoohoo a fellow metalhead ! My favorite metal subgenres are Power and Folk personally.

  • @BoynamedMagnus183
    @BoynamedMagnus183 Před 9 měsíci +1

    It did exist some few Rock And Roll artists/bands after the 40`s and 50`s like:The Rolling Stones,The Yardbirds,The Kinks,Lynyrd Skynyrd,SAFT and Bloodrock in the 60`s and the 70`s,Slade,ZZ Top,T.Rex,83 Special,Aerosmith,The Fabulous Thunderbirds,Terry Reid,Stevie Ray Vaughan,ACDC and The Outlaws in the 70`s,Def Leppard and Axl Rose in the 80`s,
    The Black Crowes,Oasis,The Verve,Drive-By Truckers,Gov`t Mule in the 90`s,Blackberry Smoke,Taylor Swift,Whiskey Myers in the 2000`s and 2010`s,
    The Struts,The Kvednabekkjers and Beady Eye in The 2010`s and Olivia Rodrigo in the 2020`s

  • @YakAttack915
    @YakAttack915 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Amazing breakdown. Kudos for taking such a broad subject with so many different subsections, yet piecing it together in an entertaining and informative way. Great work

  • @Bubbles_the_Siren
    @Bubbles_the_Siren Před 10 měsíci +1

    Regarding “Classical” music, that became a pop culture catch all for music from the Baroque, Classical, Romantic and some early 20th century music (including Impressionism among other styles) as well as works created in those styles or “neo-classical” music. More modern compositions are often referred to as “art song” or simply “symphonic”, “orchestral” or “instrumental” works. Some forms of “classical” music seem to be more commonly and appropriately referred to by their own names, such as opera, or film score/cinematic.
    This is purely speculation, but I hypothesize that the term “classical” has been adopted due to the dominance of classical era composers, such as Mozart and Haydn (as well as some early Beethoven). While romantic era composers are arguably more popular (Beethoven, Schubert, Wagner, Chopin, Liszt…), the term “Romantic” had already taken it’s own different popular definition. Additionally, though Bach and Handel are icons of the Baroque era, that term is too recognizably specific to apply to a more broad collection of music as seen by pop culture. So classical became the term by default. But then again, this is simply speculation.
    Oh, and my favorite genre is rock or metal, though I frequently enjoy opera and film scores. And pretty much anything but country.

  • @josh0g
    @josh0g Před 10 měsíci +2

    Soul is secularized Gospel music. The subject matter is not explicitly religious, and it is blended with blues roots.

  • @michaelcirco3948
    @michaelcirco3948 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The term Rock and Roll may originate with sailing but by the 1920s it was a popular euphemism in the jazz scene for sex. That's how it got connected to dancing and to music that was said to make listeners dance and away in a lascivious fashion.

    • @michaeldriscoll8537
      @michaeldriscoll8537 Před 8 měsíci

      Came to say this

    • @ConvincingPeople
      @ConvincingPeople Před měsícem

      Was about to say this. The blues song which popularised the term was 100% about sex, although by the standards of the blues of the time that one is honestly downright tame. A lot of those songs are *extremely* explicit.

  • @dcarbs2979
    @dcarbs2979 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Pete Waterman claims he originated the term 'indie'. He was a very commercial pop producer on his independent label. Because his small label gained a greater market share than major labels c. 1987-1990, the wider industry hated both his sound of music and his success. Due to the success and vendetta against him, the industry split off and no longer considered his commercial pop to be 'indie'. The industry's idea of true independent music was guitar bands, so post 1991, that's what it tended to mean, more than commercially independent (of major labels). Independent labels like Creation, Rough Trade, One Little Indian and Blanco Y Negro

  • @SWLinPHX
    @SWLinPHX Před 9 měsíci +3

    In common usage "soul" is generically used as another name for both rhythm & blues and gospel.

  • @itsyawerrr
    @itsyawerrr Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks so much bro

  • @mk_rexx
    @mk_rexx Před 9 měsíci +1

    9:18 In my opinion, Hip-Hop music is the music associated wit h Hip-Hop culture, and that music doesn't always involve rapping. Meanwhile. Rap music is an umbrella for music that utilizes rapping including part of Hip-Hop, but also EDM genres such as Trap, and Grime, which may or may not be closely related to Hip-Hop other than the rapping part. Similarly, Electronic music is an umbrella for music that heavily utilizes synthesizers which range from the academic Concrete music, Ambient, to dance genres such as Dubstep, which are mostly unrelated aside from having synthesizers

  • @kaileebailee23
    @kaileebailee23 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you name explain. Genre breaks my brain and I am just so high rn I needed someone to bring me back to basics before I go attempt to understand p*rno grindcore vs Industrial Slam metal or hyper electro vs deathstep

  • @stereotoneband
    @stereotoneband Před 9 měsíci +1

    Renaissance -> Baroque -> Classical -> Romantic -> 20th + 21st Century

  • @helenbaumander3953
    @helenbaumander3953 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I'd say modern music produced with the same methods and instruments as classical is more accurately described as "orchestral". Classical, as you said, refers to arts from the past that we still enjoy.

    • @dansattah
      @dansattah Před 10 měsíci

      Very interesting. For the Power Metal band "Powerwolf", you can notice the trend of "Orchestral" covers of their own songs.

  • @dexterjones4902
    @dexterjones4902 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Think rap isn’t a genre but a vocal technique/ feature. Hip hop is a genre that typically uses rap! Nice vid x

  • @SuprousOxide
    @SuprousOxide Před 10 měsíci +2

    I feel that "Heavy Metal Thunder" in Born to Be Wild is referring more to the roar of a motorcycle than to the music. Wouldn't classify Steppenwolf as metal.

  • @davidfrischknecht8261
    @davidfrischknecht8261 Před měsícem

    Small correction about the origin of bluegrass music. It was named after Bill Monroe and his Blue Grass Boys. It was that band that got its name from the grass that grows in Kentucky.

  • @gibarel
    @gibarel Před 10 měsíci +5

    I thought RAP stood for "rythm and poetry"...
    Also, kind of sad you didn't talk about non English names/genres, like samba or bossa nova.

  • @osaario7734
    @osaario7734 Před 4 měsíci

    My teacher explained in class rap seemed to have a connection to the ancient Greek word for sewing, because they "sew" words together to spread a message. Your theory also makes sense, though!

  • @MahmudTurobov27
    @MahmudTurobov27 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks 👍🏻

  • @pedrofmra
    @pedrofmra Před 10 měsíci +2

    I missed some popular brazilian music genres like samba, bossa, choro...

  • @xz3ss
    @xz3ss Před 4 měsíci +1

    2 that weren’t covered are: Ambient and D&B (Drum And Bass). Although the origins are pretty strait forward

  • @nathancox6929
    @nathancox6929 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks

  • @josh0g
    @josh0g Před 10 měsíci +1

    "Shoegaze" was also a derogatory term coined by music journalists critical of those bands' performances.

  • @ketchakik
    @ketchakik Před 10 měsíci +1

    Classical music was an outgrowth of the neoclassical art movement which was heavily steeped in Ancient Greek and Roman. Since the music didn’t really survive it was just stylistically influenced by the art, architecture, and writing of those periods

    • @ketchakik
      @ketchakik Před 10 měsíci

      Therefore even in the time it was being written it was called classical or neoclassical

  • @danishviking5068
    @danishviking5068 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Very nice video

  • @cha0sunity
    @cha0sunity Před 4 měsíci

    I would suggest the dubstep may have a name origin from the book Necromancer, released 1984, as there is a character in the book who listens to music he called "The righteous dub".

  • @cranklabexplosion-labcentr8245
    @cranklabexplosion-labcentr8245 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I always thought that Hip-hop was just rap but more danceable

  • @Arlecchino_Gatto
    @Arlecchino_Gatto Před 10 měsíci

    I basically enjoy ALL forms of music at least in some capacity. I am not a huge fan of country, but I love the music of Johnny Cash. Some of the rockabilly I listen to dances on the line between rock and country. In addition while I am not a big fan of bluegrass, there are groups like Steve n Seagulls that I absolutely enjoy. I love ska, punk, various types of electronic music (especially Jean Michael Jarre), some rap (the 80s stuff and Baltic Beat Box and Snow) all types of orchestral music. I am a fan of the various kinds of music labled celtic. I like some of the folk music of Native Americans, Africa, South America, Eurpoe, Southeast Asia. But my favorite kind of music is metal. Every type of metal.

  • @jonchius
    @jonchius Před měsícem

    Diamond music - harder than metal - it's the sound of life and the song keeps playing ;)

  • @purplecouch4767
    @purplecouch4767 Před 9 měsíci

    I think these are most of the music genres he mentioned. there’s Pop, Rock/Rock And Roll, Heavy Metal/Metal, Country, Folk, Bluegrass, Blues, Jazz, Rhythm And Blues/RMB, Soul, gospel, Reggae, Ska, Punk Rock, Grunge, Indy Rock, Alternative Rock, Shoegaze, Rap, hip hop, Electronic Music, techno, EDM/electronic dance music, Dubstep, Lofi, hi-fi, chill wave, Vapour Wave, and Classical. Plus there’s many other music genres he didn’t mention. More words and ect. Cool video. bye

  • @cjthechill
    @cjthechill Před 2 měsíci

    Pop pertaining to music as a genre/descriptive category is derived from "pop culture", so "pop music" in actuality is "pop culture music".
    It does typically reflect as though the music is popular because pop music is what's chosen to be played everywhere - it's sort of "forced" to be popular, but does not mean it is popular.

  • @cjthechill
    @cjthechill Před 2 měsíci

    Simplified description for what Classical could have gone by: orchestral, concert music or concert hall music, string orchestra, symphony, duet - trio - quartet - quintet - etc. ...

  • @chandlerpaulk4518
    @chandlerpaulk4518 Před 3 měsíci

    Pop music is intended to be accessible to the general public, and tends to shy away from complicated chord structures and instead sticking chiefly to the I-V-vi-IV cadence.

  • @gjdjdtht
    @gjdjdtht Před 10 měsíci +1

    These cartoons are so adorable

  • @tomcrowell6697
    @tomcrowell6697 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Actually rock and roll doesn't come from ships on the sea.... It derives from black slang and is actually a term for sex as in the lyric, "rocking and rolling all night long.". It was because of this that music like it was named rock and roll.

  • @leiocera2433
    @leiocera2433 Před 10 měsíci +2

    7:48 *Indie

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Před 10 měsíci +7

    You forgot to mention the best music genre called "Bardcore". To find it type in a search for the CZcamsr called Hildegard von Blingin'.

    • @feliciapate7926
      @feliciapate7926 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Gotta love their stuff.
      Have you ever listened to the stuff written by her sort-of namesake, Hildegard von BINGin?

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@feliciapate7926 I have listened to it.

  • @HayTatsuko
    @HayTatsuko Před 10 měsíci

    If you've not done a video on the names of visual art genres, might I suggest that sometime?
    -- Twickenhamster

  • @americanliberal09
    @americanliberal09 Před 8 měsíci

    2:06 Except for the fact that rock music, in general, can also be heavier, because having a heavier guitar sound is not synonymous with a metal sound. Back in the mid-late 1960s. There are plenty of psychedelic rock bands that also have heavier guitar sounds. But they still don't sound anything similar to bands like black sabbath.
    And, also there was a rock band back in the 1990s called helmet that have a heavier guitar sound. But they still don't sound anything remotely close to being metal.
    So, people tend to forget to realize that metal music has way more characteristics than just having heavier distortion.

  • @mrglasses8953
    @mrglasses8953 Před 4 měsíci

    Progressive House, Progressive Trance, Classic 90s Trance, Melodic Techno (e.g. Orbital, early FSOL, Ian O'Donovan), Drum & Bass (mostly intelligent/atmospheric/jazzy,) Jungle, 90s Hardcore, Ambient, New Age, Berlin School, House (most styles,) US Garage, Trip Hop, Electro, Electroclash, Future Jazz/Nu Jazz, Classical.

  • @grndragon7777777
    @grndragon7777777 Před 10 měsíci

    Yay finally

  • @elinakangas571
    @elinakangas571 Před 9 měsíci

    For a long time I had language misunderstanding. I thought there was a connection between punk (music genre) and punkki = insect in Latin called Ixodes ricinus. Algorithm love ❤

  • @theechickengamerz
    @theechickengamerz Před 8 měsíci

    I love the obscure Chuck Berry album

  • @kandipiatkowski8589
    @kandipiatkowski8589 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Metal does have subgenres too. Slash, death core, black, etc. Not my favorite....too hard to understand sometimes.
    My favorite genres are pretty much anything except country (the ones with heavy twang) and vulgar rap music. I have even grown to enjoy the odd k-pop songs (the ones in English anyway). Classical is very interesting as well.

  • @sohopedeco
    @sohopedeco Před 10 měsíci +1

    As a child learning English, it felt pretty weird that "country" was the word for things like "Italy" or "Brazil", and it was not necessarily related to cowboy stuff.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh Před 10 měsíci +1

      most country music isn't even related to cowboy stuff

    • @toni6194
      @toni6194 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Cowboy music

  • @RadMan42069
    @RadMan42069 Před 10 měsíci

    The Jazz guy in the thumbnail looks like Stevel Seagal

  • @Fishtacticss
    @Fishtacticss Před 10 měsíci +3

    Empty comments

  • @chandradrews3257
    @chandradrews3257 Před 8 měsíci

    I prefer the other theory to 'Jazz', being that it derived from the 'jasmine' perfumes worn by New Orleans prostitutes (a city where the genre originated). I find this somewhat more convincing than 'jasm' as early jazz bands were often spelt Jas/Jass, i.e. The Dixieland Jass Band.

  • @phoenicianknight7801
    @phoenicianknight7801 Před 10 měsíci

    Could've added "Folk" music to refer to "Classic" music not from the West/US, but overall amazing video thank you!

  • @MenTaLLyMenTaL
    @MenTaLLyMenTaL Před 7 měsíci

    I thought Metal referred to the use of distortion electric guitar with metal strings as opposed to acoustic guitar with nylon strings

  • @elinakangas571
    @elinakangas571 Před 9 měsíci

    I always thought pop music was pop as in popcorn. I am a foreign speaker of English. Love for algorithms. ❤

  • @Leo_ofRedKeep
    @Leo_ofRedKeep Před 9 měsíci

    Mendelssohn used the term "classical music" in a letter from 1830 which is the earliest use of the term I know but not his invention. The letter, written in Venice to Carl F. Zelter in Berlin, tells how
    "the pianists there did not play a note by Beethoven… and as I said he and Mozart has something going, they said 'so you are a lover of classical music?' - 'yes', I answered".
    This anecdote is from the liner notes of a CD of Mendelssohn's piano concertos by Andreas Staier and the Concerto Köln.

  • @krekcabnow2910
    @krekcabnow2910 Před 4 měsíci

    R&B deserves more attention that you give it. Rhythm and Blues were two separate genres that lumped together because they were both made by black people. The use it stuck for was to refer to rock/pop that wasn’t made by white people.
    A similar combining of names happened with country and western which were lumped together and became country western music or just country.
    I understand if you like to make videos about names but I think you shouldn’t be dismissive of subject matters you are unfamiliar with.

  • @shockwavebboy
    @shockwavebboy Před měsícem

    The term "rap" was slang meaning to talk to someone. Back then it would a regular thing for someone to say, "let me rap with ya younblood?" And rappers don't sing that's how that name stuck. And yes, Hip Hop is the name of the culture which includes : rap, graffiti, DJing, and Bboy or Breakdancing.

  • @abagz3919
    @abagz3919 Před 8 měsíci

    Jazz used to be called Jass but it changed cause they thought it was too close to the word ass to be marketable

  • @westtxtapper
    @westtxtapper Před 9 měsíci

    Country music used to be (and maybe still is) also known as "country and western".

  • @milosvasiljevic7995
    @milosvasiljevic7995 Před 9 měsíci

    - Ok, Mr Paganini, which type of music do you play?
    - Rapid fast violin.
    - Huh?
    - Erm...Rap Violin.

  • @americanliberal09
    @americanliberal09 Před 8 měsíci

    0:26 🤔hmmm....When i was a kid. I didn't even think that pop was synonymous with popular, because i personally thought that pop music was just called "pop" for no apparent reason. Just like rock music was just called "rock".
    But i didn't even know that pop music has its own abbreviation. And, also another fact that i didn't know is that pop music sells more records than any other genre, and pop artists don't even write their own songs. So, i personally thought that all genres are created equal. But that's not even the case at all, because pop music is the only genre that tends to do that. 😲

  • @halvolta8526
    @halvolta8526 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Not going to talk about Industrial, Goth Rock, or New Wave!!??

  • @thenextdoor696
    @thenextdoor696 Před 9 měsíci

    No Drum N Bass? Wub wub before Dubstep T.T
    Also I guess I can note other forms of electronic like House, Chiptune.
    Also noticed Swing didn't come into the picture, by extension Electro Swing.

    • @pabblo1
      @pabblo1 Před 8 měsíci

      Drum N Bass (DNB) is quite self-explanatory.
      House comes from the fact that it was the music provided by the host venue, aka the "house" as filler between live acts setting up and breaking down.
      And the term chiptune comes from the fact that these are meant to be the sound from sound chips (oftentimes PSG or FM chips).

    • @mrglasses8953
      @mrglasses8953 Před 4 měsíci

      @@pabblo1 House music is named after the warehouse nightclub in Chicago where Frankie Knuckles was resident DJ. Just as garage music is named after the paradise garage nightclub in NY.

  • @lysaali50
    @lysaali50 Před 10 měsíci

    Robin Daggers/Robin Sparkles/Robin Scherbatsky the mother of Grunge 🤘🇨🇦

  • @alvinstrife9201
    @alvinstrife9201 Před 7 měsíci

    How about Hard Rock, Rap Metal and Death Metal?

  • @Zundfolge
    @Zundfolge Před 10 měsíci +7

    You're wrong on Rap. Rap comes from the old Beatnik (and later Hippie) term "Rap" which is a shortening of "Repartee" which they used to mean to have a lively discussion and would often be applied to poetry reading. It was picked up by Jazz, R&B and Funk musicians who were the originators of Rap music. Oh well at least you didn't go with the ridiculous "Rhythm and Poetry" nonsense etymology so many young people seem to believe today. Ironically I believe the Beatniks picked the term up from African American urbanite culture of the early 20th century (where I believe it was often used to describe a man's ability to talk to women).

    • @xneapolisx
      @xneapolisx Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yes, I remember from my younger days, the cooler older dudes who used to hit on a lot of good looking women were said to have "a good rap."

    • @xezmakorewarriah
      @xezmakorewarriah Před měsícem

      so rap was the same as rizz lmao

  • @itssryan8431
    @itssryan8431 Před 8 měsíci

    Just gonna point out the punk part was a bit wrong, punk originates from rockabilly and surf rock around the 70's, ska started around the 60's based around jazz and Caribbean music it didnt influence punk rock too much but punk rock ended up influencing ska in the 70's and we got ska punk that is what most people refer to when talking about ska. The term punk meant people that were untrained or unskilled in the 70s and wasnt used to refer to prostitutes anymore

  • @xz3ss
    @xz3ss Před 4 měsíci +1

    1:55 but that album is thrash metal, not heavy metal

  • @khakigreengills7814
    @khakigreengills7814 Před 6 měsíci

    Fully electronic music was being made for decades before the 70s.

  • @jaimis5377
    @jaimis5377 Před 10 měsíci

    trap is named after the 'trap house' aka where dealers keep their drugs

  • @jfdavis668
    @jfdavis668 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Can't believe you mentioned Country without mentioning Western. Most people refer to them together as Country and Western.

    • @ianmacfarlane1241
      @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 10 měsíci

      I was puzzled by that myself.
      TBH it was a bit of a mess throughout.

    • @SantomPh
      @SantomPh Před 10 měsíci

      to quote Bob's Bunker, "both kinds"

  • @ianmacfarlane1241
    @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 10 měsíci +2

    (07:05)
    Most people agree that punk originated in the USA with the formation of The Ramones, (in 1974) so no, while the UK certainly played a significant role in the formation and growth of punk, it was also popular in North America and Europe.

  • @alvinstrife9201
    @alvinstrife9201 Před 7 měsíci

    How about those boyband? What is their genre type?