History of Rock & Roll - The 2000s

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 577

  • @sincity3018
    @sincity3018 Před 2 lety +300

    You should definitely do 2010s even if it would only be 15 minutes long

    • @caesarorzell600
      @caesarorzell600 Před 2 lety +38

      Arctic Monkeys, Black Keys, Cage the Elephant, Paramore, Halestorm/Pretty Reckless, Greta Van Fleet, Tool. Over.

    • @IceCreamMeatballs
      @IceCreamMeatballs Před 2 lety +24

      @@caesarorzell600 Also Badflower, King Gizzard and Tyler Bryant.

    • @Yanited1710
      @Yanited1710 Před 2 lety +2

      Neck deep?

    • @saulomarruizgarcia2408
      @saulomarruizgarcia2408 Před 2 lety +18

      @@caesarorzell600 Royal Blood, Nothing but Thieves, Jack White, The War on Drugs, Catfish and the Bottlemen, Foals, Ghost, Bring me the horizon, The National, Palaye Royale, White Lies, Japandroids, The Kooks and a lot of indie bands. Not much but something.

    • @elizabethbaker4304
      @elizabethbaker4304 Před 2 lety +18

      The Story so Far, Tame Impala, HAIM, Harry Styles, Sam Fender, The Aces... that's the thing about music through the decades it grows and transforms.. in a way that's the beauty of it too. But I think rock and pop-punk and alternative are coming back to the mainstream especially in the early 2020's with Olivia Rodrigo, The Hunna, Machine Gun Kelly and Willow Smith (with the help of Travis Barker producing).

  • @sarahsandstrom9175
    @sarahsandstrom9175 Před 2 lety +81

    The hardest thing about the 2000s and 2010s is that rock in it’s true form has fallen from the mainstream. And there’s so much crossover within sub genres that it’s hard to classify anything. I would love to see you put together the puzzle of the 2010s cuz it’s another decade that’s all over the place!

    • @jackthorton10
      @jackthorton10 Před 2 lety +4

      It could be worse, we could have lost the genre entirely in relevance if not in part because of the internet

    • @SuperGabetendo777
      @SuperGabetendo777 Před 2 lety

      @@jackthorton10 that was a great album.

    • @ouyrtuy5334
      @ouyrtuy5334 Před rokem

      I listen to modern rock and I could say the same about the 2020s.

    • @erickh6587
      @erickh6587 Před 11 měsíci

      2000s was still a GREAT decade for rock, it's the 2010s when it fell off

    • @luisn642
      @luisn642 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ⁠@@jackthorton10Jazz is a genre over 100 years old and its still alive and well

  • @matthewshedden6456
    @matthewshedden6456 Před 2 lety +79

    Arctic Monkey's two early albums are so iconic here in the UK. Although this is US-focussed (they only broke into the US with "AM"), I was a lil' surprised not to see a nod to Silent Alarm (although Franz Ferdinand suitably mentioned)

    • @julianebel9106
      @julianebel9106 Před 2 lety +2

      Absolutely agree! I’m from Germany, those first two albums were huge here as well!!

    • @DaBroski100
      @DaBroski100 Před 2 lety +6

      Agreed! Arctic Monkeys definitely deserved more attention, especially since they rose out of myspace. I also get a very classic Beatles vibe from them, I guess mostly from their first album (four British kids from a working class town with thick accents, high energy, reviving an earlier, back to basics rock sound, etc.)

    • @justinianthegreatandnerd6377
      @justinianthegreatandnerd6377 Před 2 lety +2

      monke

    • @JammerAma
      @JammerAma Před 2 lety +3

      I've been listening to the first album for years and years over here but never gave the second one a chance until this year. So fucking good

    • @taipeijoey101
      @taipeijoey101 Před 2 lety

      LCD Soundsystem's self-titled was big in the indie scene, as was Andrew WK's blend of bubblegum and arena rock

  • @YungFryhole
    @YungFryhole Před 2 lety +46

    Can’t wait to see some Tool, Queens of the Stone Age, Red Hot Chili Peppers, White Stripes, Strokes, Nine Inch Nails!!

  • @NokiGaming
    @NokiGaming Před 2 lety +37

    I feel like Red Hot Chili Peppers should have been mentioned more. Stadium Arcadium was one of the hardest rocking albums of the mid 2000s, was a number one album worldwide, and featured many Top 40 hits. THAT rocked hard

    • @das0ul177
      @das0ul177 Před rokem +1

      Fax and By The Way in 02 that had some dope singles and even better deep cuts

  • @oussbro
    @oussbro Před 2 lety +22

    Hello, actually it was in the 2000s when i start discovering rock n roll and metal music during my highschool period, and to be honest i still have some nostalgia to that time, but watching this video made me sad somehow , how much rock n roll fade and no intresting music was made even though I like some bands you've mentioned, i love rock n roll and it makes sad seeing dying , but the good thing i guess we still have more and more to discover from it's golden years ,
    Thank you JT curtis and the cast for the whole work you have done , i really appreciate it ,

  • @jk7065
    @jk7065 Před 2 lety +10

    The 2010s would have to address seismic shifts in Rock and the Music Industry in general:
    1) The proliferation of social media and streaming platforms like Spotify, CZcams, Soundclound, Bandcamp etc made it easier than ever for musicians to share their music independently without going through the big label machinery. This also saw many small/regional labels able to extend their reach without necessarily having to use the big labels for distribution. Rock, being an anti-establishment genre flocked to this new method of distribution, but it meant that many great rock bands stayed at a local/regional level. There were a million bands getting 10 sales rather than 10 bands getting a million sales, and only like-minded listeners would get the same algorithm recommendations -- so there are pockets of the internet/cities/regions where certain bands are massive, and yet virtually unknown anywhere else.
    2) A lot of notable rock acts (or acts that had moderately successful rock songs) from the 2010s were female voiced and fronted, like St. Vincent, The Dead Weather, HAIM, Courtney Barnett, Phoebe Bridgers, Soccer Mommy, Beabadoobee, Alvvays, Beach House, Best Coast, The Beaches, Crumb, Khruangbin, Angel Olsen, Sharon Van Etten, Marika Hackman, Alabama Shakes etc. The male-dominated major labels could be circumvented and as a result more people were able to hear a larger number and variety of female voices in rock music.
    3) Because of the democratization of music distribution, the big labels started pushing catch-all, mono-genre music that incorporates elements of hip-hop, rock, and pop. This makes it more difficult to distinguish where rock, pop, and hip-hop all start and end in the traditional mainstream media arena. For example, lets look at acts like Imagine Dragons, Twenty-One Pilots, and Machine Gun Kelly which are all marketed by big labels as "rock" and are referred to as being "rock" by traditional mainstream music institutions like Billboard, Rolling Stone, and the Grammys. Each of these acts definitely has elements that we'd characterize as being "rock" , such as rhythm electric/acoustic guitars, maybe acoustic drums, a 2-4 downbeat, and lyrics about teenage angst; however they ALSO have hip-hop elements like electronic bass & drum heavy production, trap hi-hats, rap-like vocal sections and delivery; and pop elements like quantization, auto-tune and bright, super compressed mixing/mastering. As such it's difficult to classify these acts. I hear Olivia Roderigo and Billie Eilish played on both rock and pop radio stations, which traditionally had very little if any overlap in formatting. Where do these artists belong? Both places? Neither? It's hard to say. We're in a weird transition period with music right now.
    The 2010s still had a number of interesting rock groups that would be worth mentioning however, (in addition to the ones I've already listed): Cage the Elephant, Jack White's solo projects, Tame Impala, Gary Clark Jr, Mac Demarco, Black Midi, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Thee Oh Sees, Michael Kiwanuka, Royal Blood, The Black Pumas, Tinariwen & Mdou Moctar (both of which are artists from the Western Sahara region of Africa that incorporate blues/rock timbres and traditional music of the area into their songs. They both existed before 2010, but saw steady a steady growth of a Western listening audience during the 2010s). Brothers, The Suburbs, King Animal, Wasting Light, Hardwired to Self-Destruct, and ...Like Clockwork were fantastic albums from older rock groups.

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před měsícem

      I've noticed that Metallica has been mentioned in every episode since the 1980s. The 2010s will mention them again! I believe it. Female fronted bands being a thing is a good thing. I forgot to mention that, but I knew that some people like you would be talking about that. I talked about how we will talk about social media in the 2010s and the effects music had as a result. Social media is the easiest way to get popular and it's showing that. The Beatles released Please Please Me in 1963 and was a huge success in England. It took them a year to get recognition in America. Sure they did have some of that by the end of 1963, but it wasn't until February 1964 when they came to the US and took over.

  • @kipperbill
    @kipperbill Před 2 lety +46

    I think the 2 biggest rock related bands you missed out on are LCD Soundsystem and Radiohead's later albums like In Rainbows. I believe in Rock and Roll the 2010s, since this is the age of Spotify, you should take a deep dive into more obscure bands and not only what makes it big (enough). I feel this has huge potential

    • @bretvyon2336
      @bretvyon2336 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes! LCD Soundsystem should've been definitely been mentioned

    • @joshreiners5284
      @joshreiners5284 Před 2 lety

      I agree i love sound of silver and this is happening

  • @DukesMusic84
    @DukesMusic84 Před 2 lety +12

    The coolest movement in the 2000s were retro garage bands like the Strokes and White Stripes. The Black Keys' success in the 2010s was amazing too.

  • @SuperTJK1992
    @SuperTJK1992 Před 2 lety +26

    The 2000's when it came to music was more of a decade of hidden gems. Mainstream music (Especially Pop Music) was awful in the 2000's but if you searched hard enough you would find some great interesting albums. For examples albums like Burial - Untrue, Unwound -Leaves Turn Inside You, Daft Punk - Discovery (With the fantastic anime film Interstella 5555 that was based upon the album) and At The Drive-In - Relationship Of Command are just of the albums that came out during the 2000s.

    • @theedspage
      @theedspage Před 2 lety +5

      The 2000s was the decade where I gave up on mainstream media and went primarily, if not solely, on underground and deep cuts. I have not regretted that decision since.

    • @jackthorton10
      @jackthorton10 Před 2 lety

      I went in the different of going back to the classic rock genre and seeing what I could get from there

  • @rodmaher194
    @rodmaher194 Před 2 lety +54

    Let’s help J.T Curtis get 5 million fans! 🎙🎸

  • @simpbartson2426
    @simpbartson2426 Před 2 lety +17

    Sad you couldn’t mention “Where Oh Where is Reptar,” really is a masterpiece of music. Thanks for having it as a cameo at 42:13, though!

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +4

      That would be the 90s, but yes, it is a masterpiece!

    • @simpbartson2426
      @simpbartson2426 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JTCurtisMusic thanks for agreeing!
      In all honesty, if you are going to make an extras video or an expanded version, I’d recommend talking about the indie rock of the late 2000s (MGMT, Phoenix) that lead to the indie pop boom of the early 2010s.
      And if you really are ending with a 2010s, check out Gary Clark Jr…no doubt you’d absolutely love him.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +2

      @@simpbartson2426 I saw Gary Clarke Jr at MSG a few years back, he was amazing.

  • @sincity3018
    @sincity3018 Před 2 lety +11

    Gonna be honest not a big fan of the 2000s but I’m still pumped

  • @SirRelkinstein
    @SirRelkinstein Před rokem +8

    Honestly, I think that a full length video of the 2010’s could be done, there’s many bands that come up that can easily be discussed such as Greta Van Fleet, Five Finger Death Punch, Ghost, etc. However the last years of the decade would be a very depressing time especially 2017-2019 when many artists died such as Tom Petty, Chester Bennington, Chuck Berry, Chris Cornell, Ric Ocasek, Ginger Baker, etc. I do also want to see the growth of nostalgia in rock with reissues of albums selling very well and some artists having successful comeback albums such as Paul McCartney, The Who, etc.

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před rokem

      You make a really great point. The deaths in particular would be interesting to put in the video. It's sad to see these stars go. But we still will listen to them. Even if they are not here with us, their music will still live on forever.

  • @xXRaocnumDudeXx
    @xXRaocnumDudeXx Před 2 lety +11

    This is probably the best written episode of the series, I absolutely love it! Even if the 2000s doesn't have a lot of content for rock, you did a great job with the content you had to work with. Did the 2000s Rock Hard? Well, from my memories it did rock really hard, but that was because I started with metal... which is kind of the point of the genre: To rock hard. Gojira, Mastodon, Opeth and Meshuggah were metal kings of the 2000s in my book and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't excited to see them get mentioned. Alas, this is the History of *Rock*, not the history of metal. That said, I only have one word! Or... three, rather: Coheed and Cambria. They are positively awesome! They rock hard and the whole concept of the band is so unique. The idea of adapting a comic book story into such an abstract medium like music is almost unheard of! With each album telling the story of this very interesting sci-fi political war drama. While you're at it, you should definitely check out Ayreon. They're doing a similar thing, with having an interconnected story throughout their albums. It's a little less original however, but the story is exclusively tied to the music as a means of communicating the story, which is even cooler.
    And if you ever come around to doing the 2010s, I beg of you: Talk about post-Rock!
    Thanks for coming to my TedTalk, I'm excited to see your next project, JT!

  • @gabrielavega1114
    @gabrielavega1114 Před 2 lety +11

    I would die in the cross for 2000's rock for Linkin Park, System Of A Down, Avenged Sevenfold, MCR, Flyleaf, Bullet for my Valentine, P!ATD and Paramore.
    Dont @ me.

  • @gaelforcewind2351
    @gaelforcewind2351 Před 3 lety +12

    been years since I last checked on this series. Then, the day I check, the next one's premiering in a week. Can't wait!

  • @brandonmclendon5368
    @brandonmclendon5368 Před 2 lety +15

    One of the most underrated channels on CZcams.

  • @chloef-h8244
    @chloef-h8244 Před 2 lety +12

    I really love this series, you can tell how much effort you guys put into these. I love the way that theses videos have all been done, they are insightful, you can learn from them and they are also really funny. Thank you.

  • @Noah-dq9bd
    @Noah-dq9bd Před 2 lety +6

    This series has always helped me discover new songs to fall in love with

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +14

    I'm very glad that Nick mentioned Nightwish. Love that band, but I would say that I'm more of a Lacuna Coil fan! Definitely one of the best goth bands of all time! Epica and Within Temptation are other bands with front women that totally rocks! I love some of the other bands with women in the 00s more than Fleetwood Mac and Heart personally!

  • @jameshoffman7217
    @jameshoffman7217 Před 2 lety +8

    yes im in the credits! thank you for this whole journey guys. you have educated me on an artform i have fallen in love with. i wouldnt bother making another vid for the 10s. 2000s is a good end point.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you so much James!

    • @chriscupp
      @chriscupp Před rokem

      I love this series but have to disagree about not making one for the 2010s...it might take a bit more effort to find it, but good forms of rock were out there! Not all music was autotuned to death 😁 I love JTs analysis of each decade and would love to see one more!

  • @TheEntilza
    @TheEntilza Před 2 lety +8

    "Too many protest singers, not enough protest songs." (Edwyn Collins) Thanks for the video. Enjoyed it very much. Back in the early 2000s I listened more to pop: Nelly Furtado, Pink, Moby, etc. So this video is all new stuff for me. Except the Gorillas - love them.

  • @theedspage
    @theedspage Před 2 lety +3

    Someone else on planet Earth isn't a Justin Timberlake fan. Thank you JT! You restored my faith in humanity.

  • @Switchblade781
    @Switchblade781 Před 2 lety +5

    I'm glad he got to Muse at the end there. As for a band doing their own thing I would put Coheed and Cambria on the list. The idea of not just a concept album but an entire world building exercise over multiple albums and comic series is pretty unique.

  • @AmandaCrossMusic
    @AmandaCrossMusic Před 2 lety +9

    Nicely done!!! Great production and loved the segments. Reminded me of bands I hadn’t thought of in a while. Nice Avril spot Ashley!

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +8

    Top 10 Bands of the 00s
    1. Green Day
    2. Sum 41
    3. Linkin Park
    4. Yellowcard
    5. Avenged Sevenfold
    6. Queens of the Stone Age
    7. Red Hot Chili Peppers
    8. Lacuna Coil
    9. Trivium
    10. The White Stripes

  • @kirikoza2488
    @kirikoza2488 Před 2 lety +8

    These videos are so well made. Thank you for putting so much effort into these. They're incredibly entertaining

  • @36inc
    @36inc Před 2 lety +6

    as a person who was deeply influenced by 2000s rock Im glad ya took a look at my favorite decade of music even though it was far outside your lense of appreciation. it is kinda funny to see some of my main influences like modest mouse and mcr kinda glossed over snese I could gush for literally days on just one of their albums. and my favorite band of all time not even mentioned; Coheed and cambria which Im sure youd appreciate since theyre stylistically all over the rock spectrum sonically. I could gush about them for years so Ill save your eyes from that.
    it was a wild ride Im so glad I subscribed to you ever since my other favorite decade the 70s was covered. and even if theres not much to talk about going forward I cant wait to see any new series' you can come up with. be proud of this series ya did really fucking good work and I consider this channel Deeply underated. caio for now JT and keep rockin

  • @kidcharlemagne3044
    @kidcharlemagne3044 Před 2 lety +34

    Was kinda hoping Steely Dan’s reunion would be mentioned, but that’s just me being a super fan of them. Very cool video nonetheless, even though it’s probably my least favourite decade for music lol.

    • @breadzeppelin2165
      @breadzeppelin2165 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you prefer this or the 2010's?

    • @kidcharlemagne3044
      @kidcharlemagne3044 Před 2 lety +1

      @@breadzeppelin2165 tough choice, neither are great lmao. Still some good stuff but not as much.

  • @The_Book_Of_M
    @The_Book_Of_M Před 2 lety +8

    In your history videos, you've talked about many different subgenres of rock. I'd like to see a video on what makes these subgenres distinct. How are heavy metal and hard rock different? What makes punk sound like punk? And so on.

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety

      Metal has gone extreme with the 1980s, starting with Venom's Welcome to Hell in 1981. Black metal band that would make a big impact on extreme metal. Celtic Frost was another black metal band from the 80s and Possessed (Larry LaLonde's first band before Primus) started the death metal craze that would be around in the mid-late 80s early 90s.

  • @thesjkexperience
    @thesjkexperience Před rokem +3

    Your comments were interesting as I was in bands from 1980 until around 88 and really missed most of the music presented in your 80s history. It would have been interesting to see what we could have done had we been 20 years later when it was easier to do it yourself. Ive always been good at that. Ive made my own guitars for decades.

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +7

    One modern band that has been keeping rock alive and well is Rise Against! Ever since Siren Song of the Counter Culture, they're been consistently releasing awesome punk rock albums and releasing a ton of awesome songs like Give It All, Swing Life Away, Prayer of the Refugee, Ready to Fall, Injection, Re-Education (Through Labor), Savior, Satellite, Broken Dreams Inc, and Nowhere Generation. They're released 9 albums since 2001 and have been very much consistent, not having a single bad album. Alkaline Trio is also another punk band that has been making awesome albums from Goddammit (yes, that's the name of their debut album, not kidding all the way up to Crimson. Agony & Irony, This Addiction and My Shame Is True aren't that great, but came back with a punch with Is This Thing Cursed? in 2018.

  • @colincolbert6759
    @colincolbert6759 Před rokem +5

    Wow, Radiohead's Hail to the Thief album was totally missed out on. It was Radiohead's return to guitar rock with Kid A's experimentation. It was a more subtle protest of Bush and the Iraq War and it contained some of Radiohead's best songs such as There, There and 2 + 2 =5. I highly suggest you check it out if you enjoyed Kid A.

  • @ZX-zw3ge
    @ZX-zw3ge Před rokem +3

    Around 2005, I sorta veered from all this rock stuff, but still was into Killers, Vines and Hives. That year was sad for me, because my idol from the 1970's had passed away. He was the reason why Texano music was slowly emerging, though he was born in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico, he lived in Houston and he started a new genre of music that fusioned rock, cuban, and Colombian beats to his style, eventually becoming popular in 2971. His name was Rigo Tovar. He was the reason I started wanting to sing, play drums and guitar. Anyway yeah, mid 2000's was pretty much the end of music for me.

  • @Chico50445
    @Chico50445 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I grew up in this era of rock, and while I did listen to a lot of these mentioned bands, honestly none have stuck with me as much as Muse, their first 6 albums(Showbiz-The 2nd Law) are incredible, especially Origin of Symmetry, one of my favorite albums of all time.

  • @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382

    anyone who says they're not a fan of the 2000s hasn't looked deep enough into the music being released during that time. Women, The Microphones/Mount Eerie, Scott fucking Walker, Animal Collective, Boris, Aphex Twin, Sun Kil Moon, Godspeed You! Black Emperor. all fantastic bands that sound completely different to each other.

    • @36inc
      @36inc Před 2 lety +1

      you could say this about just about any era. if ya just skim the mainstream or sub mainstream well knowns youll likely have heard of all the acts in any of these videos; I think that intentional cause if they dug into the pits to find all the best music it wouldnt really translate as a general experience of a rock fan in the era. and of course an old emo postcore type would prolly know all the cool bands they generally skimmed over but id be lying if I said everyones heard of from first to last or at the drive in, hell Im 90% sure that a good chunk of people who know who from first to last is is because Skrillex was their singer before literally defining an electronic style of music called Brostep and off shoot of dubstep.

    • @diegopaimsouza
      @diegopaimsouza Před 2 lety +1

      none of them are rock tho (except for Boris). And Mount Eeerie sucks.
      I mean, there was good stuff, I like Arcade Fire, Animal Collective, Vampire Weekend, Bright Eyes and Borken Social Scene. But they weren't really the cultural zeitgeist of that era.

    • @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382
      @heckicusdoomicuswizardus1382 Před 2 lety

      @@diegopaimsouza >Mount Eerie sucks
      >I like Arcade Fire
      I'm not trusting your opinion dude

  • @Sally-uu3yt
    @Sally-uu3yt Před 3 lety +6

    Cant wait bro. I love this series so much. Love from indonesia

  • @dankonishi9644
    @dankonishi9644 Před 2 lety +4

    Another great history of rock doc!
    My fav albums from the 2000s:
    Ash - “Free All Angels” (2001)
    Incubus - “Morning View” (2001)
    Incubus - “A Crow Left of the Murder” (2004)
    Fountains of Wayne - “Welcome Interstate Managers” (2003)
    New Found Glory - Self-Titled (2000)
    Nerd Herder - “How To Meet Girls” (2000)
    Goldfinger - “Open Your Eyes” (2002)
    Reel Big Fish - “Cheer Up!” (2002)
    Phantom Planet - “The Guest” (2002)
    Superdrag - “In the Valley of Dying Stars” (2000)

  • @redpig6878
    @redpig6878 Před rokem +2

    Another band you need to talk about from the 2010s is King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, they’re really one of the only popular prog band still putting out albums today, and Nonagon Infinity is one of the best prog and psychedelic albums ever

  • @thegnosianjournals1350
    @thegnosianjournals1350 Před 2 lety +5

    just finished watching your whole series. Awesome job! you deserve more subs and views. I'll be spreading the videos around to my music students and my social media.

    • @chriscupp
      @chriscupp Před rokem +1

      I just discovered the series this week and will also be sharing them. Fun and entertaining!!

  • @theasdguy
    @theasdguy Před 2 lety +3

    Good summary. This show reminds me of those music shows on VH1 in the early 2000s. I might need to subscribe soon. Keep it up!!

  • @richarddorazi8565
    @richarddorazi8565 Před 2 lety +7

    Good video as always. You forgot to mention about the recent resurgence in the ‘00s pop punk/emo aesthetic being due to current big acts adapting it like Olivia Rodrigo having a #1 hit this year with “good 4 u” which people noted sounded so similar to “Misery Business” that she wound up giving the band songwriting credits even though she didn’t use anything from the song which is another music business fuckery that would deserve its own video. In fact, “good 4 u” is considered the first full on rock song to hit #1 on the Hot 100 since probably “How You Remind Me.”

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +2

      That bit was done before “Good 4 U” came out. I believe “Good 4 U” was made because of the pop-punk resurgence.

  • @karaliusking6833
    @karaliusking6833 Před 2 lety +3

    Just finished watching all the episodes back to back (even the extra episode and introduction ) I really liked all the episodes and learned about bands I never heard before , thanks for the episodes

  • @beatnik111
    @beatnik111 Před 3 lety +7

    Even though I'm not really the biggest fan of the early 2000s music really I think this still so be interesting to look at as kind of a Time castle and they were some good bands in the early 2000s who this could be like what we should take from the decade and what we shouldn't

  • @shortorderproductions8688

    Been waiting for this one! Great work man and thank you for putting in the time to do this. These videos need to be in the Library of Congress.

  • @aheshle
    @aheshle Před rokem +6

    For me, the best band of the 2000's was Porcupine Tree. All 4 of their 2000's albums was incredible. Criminally underrated

    • @midwestogkush1969
      @midwestogkush1969 Před rokem +1

      Fear of a blank planet is a masterpiece

    • @emigm2155
      @emigm2155 Před rokem

      100% agree, I think lightbulb sun was their best actually

  • @kadecopenhaver3454
    @kadecopenhaver3454 Před 2 lety +13

    I Love these videos, it’s so obvious that you guys put a TON of effort and time into them! Keep it it up!

  • @scottyvalero3691
    @scottyvalero3691 Před 2 lety +4

    Damn. This gives me childhood nostalgia. Fallen by evanescence and life for rent by Dido or two albums that my mom would play to help me fall asleep when I was really young

  • @Criosdan
    @Criosdan Před 2 lety +4

    I love these videos 'bout the history of Rock & Roll. There are a few gems in the 2000s until now: The Black Keys with their great Blues for example.

  • @PenelopeStoneVT
    @PenelopeStoneVT Před 2 lety +5

    It does feel like heavy metal was slightly under-represented. Great video as always. I say do the 2010s just to cover all bases. It will probably be more like a retrospect last decade's music, and perhaps if there's any hope. A fee suggestions. Lady Gaga, Foo Fighter's documentary, Beyonce's protest song, Weird Al mandatory fun, Imagine Dragons... Billie Eilish? Okay, good or bad, I am struggling to think of acts/topics.

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +2

      I would agree! Heavy metal doesn't really get the respect that it truly deserves from the mainstream media unfortunately! Sad but true! Metal actually has gone extreme already since the mid to late 80s-early 90s, starting with black metal and death metal.

  • @LeSensuel
    @LeSensuel Před 2 lety +7

    There was a severe lack of mentioning Anthrax’s superb album We’ve Come For You All following the Anthrax name controversy with 911 and the rebirth of Thrash metal. Honorable mention for amazing albums in the 2000s, Dream Theater’s Octavarium with Panic Attack and Porcupine Tree’s Fear of a Blank Planet with Anesthetize. Both incredible prog metal albums. I can’t help but wonder what a History of Rock: The 2010s would look like.

    • @chriscupp
      @chriscupp Před rokem

      Me, too! Surely it's time for the next installment now that we are well into the 2020s!!

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +8

    Avenged Sevenfold is definitely one of my favorite metal bands of the 00s! City of Evil is a fantastic album! They actually started out metalcore. Sounds of the Seventh Trumpet isn't that great of an album compared to their other albums, but their second album Waking the Fallen is awesome! After that, they were just heavy metal. However, my favorite metalcore bands are Trivium, As I Lay Dying, Dillinger Escape Plan, and Underoath.

  • @mistouko
    @mistouko Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you so much, JTCurtis & friends. What a good work!!!

  • @GoldAmple
    @GoldAmple Před rokem +3

    One thing from the 2010s that’s good is astronoid. They’re a post metal band from Massachusetts and the their Air album was awesome

  • @pettyofficerwelch
    @pettyofficerwelch Před rokem +4

    You should absolutely do the 2010s. There are still a lot of great bands, even if you have to branch out to the roots rock revival guys like the Bellfuries, Nathaniel Rateliff and the Nightsweats, the Rhythm Shakers, and the Alabama Shakes.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před rokem +2

      It's still difficult to gauge their popularity in relation to the decade. Alabama Shakes definitely had some attention a few years back, but I haven't really from them since. And The Rhythm Shakers and Bellfuries I've never heard of at all. In fact they haven't even broken 1 million views on any youtube video or have any wikipedia page. It's basically the problem I run into in getting into more of these indie bands.

    • @pettyofficerwelch
      @pettyofficerwelch Před rokem +1

      @@JTCurtisMusic fair enough. It's a shame though, because there's definitely a lot of talent out there, but it's so hard for any rock bands to break out these days. Anyway, I love the stuff you put out. Though I can't help, but be disappointed it the lag of Devo and Aerosmith, but I get it.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před rokem +2

      @@pettyofficerwelch Devo was a copyright issue. In retrospect Aerosmith might have gotten overshadowed by so many other artists in the 70s. Great band though, no doubt about it.

  • @mvmmotovlogmusic2815
    @mvmmotovlogmusic2815 Před 2 lety +4

    I wasn’t paying attention to the music being released during the 2000s, but still, I enjoyed this video.

  • @The_Book_Of_M
    @The_Book_Of_M Před 2 lety +5

    Your 2010s video should definitely include Royal Blood and more Muse.

  • @chossomosso7699
    @chossomosso7699 Před 2 lety +2

    Kanye West actually didn’t use auto tune as much people think he did. Even when he did it was done pretty well with him adding some 808s. Good video Kurtis. Big fan

  • @Brigwood
    @Brigwood Před 2 lety +4

    A 2010 history of rock and roll would be very nice, but I would also love to see you do a history of music series or if it's too broad a subject, maybe a history of pop? Basically, I love what you're doing and I want more :)

  • @hzoethetaco7492
    @hzoethetaco7492 Před 2 lety +3

    20:04
    I laughed way too hard at this.
    Such a dark but great bait and switch, brilliant.

  • @gracefullynadine864
    @gracefullynadine864 Před 2 lety +2

    The very brief mention of Nightwish was nice and unexpected, they're my favorite all-time band

  • @dguenther8099
    @dguenther8099 Před 2 lety +3

    Subscribed very early with your channel and all I can say is it just gets better and better. Great show!!!

  • @TheJadariusExperience
    @TheJadariusExperience Před 2 lety +3

    I grew up in the era and discovered my love for alternative and nu metal. Man I miss Lincoln Park that music got me through my younger years and man I was emo as hell back then 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @earlewhitcher970
    @earlewhitcher970 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I just finished binge watching all your "History" videos by the decades. I am unchanged in my opinion that nothing has been worth listening to since the mid eighties, however, I will say that your presentations were first rate. They were informative, entertaining and although a bit contrived at times, definitely worth watching. Two thumbs up.

  • @ravetheplanetlive
    @ravetheplanetlive Před 2 lety +3

    I have been waiting for this one for a long time. Great show guys 👏👏👏

  • @kangaroo4527
    @kangaroo4527 Před rokem +2

    Hit me with the 2010's and DO NOT FORGET the Legendary mordecai and the rigby's.

  • @Manays
    @Manays Před rokem +2

    Looking at this video in retrospective, I don’t think rock had died, more so, mainstream rock was dying, with pop punk already being popular in the late 90’s, some indie, underground acts started to gain momentum in the 2000’s.
    Despite that, these artists didn’t have the public’s attention or the sudden legacy some of the more popular artists gained.
    Which is why I think we should check artists like: The Microphones, Have a Nice Life, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, The Flaming Lips and even others you mentioned like Interpol, Queens of the Stones Age and Modest Mouse.
    Another thing I’d like to mention is that you said that all of the rock doesn’t sound bluesy anymore, a characteristic spotted in the early years of rock and while I too myself love blues rock, the genres change overtime and what once was a part of the genre might be totally scrapped by others because they simply want to create their own sounds, worlds and music. I also think hip hop has been going through drastic changes, what once was popular in the 90’s like gangsta rap and hardcore hip hop is now reduced and we hear more trap influenced music, things just change!

  • @uncaringzebra7sevensquad46

    The 2010s should be talked about even if rock didn't flourish as much.

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před měsícem +1

    I saw a lot of people's comments including myself wanting a 2010s videos. I don't know if i wanted it at all, but due to you guys celebrating 10 years of the History of Rock and Roll, I can see why you would want to do the video. Either way, I'm excited for it to happen. The 2010s will be very interesting. I will be very surprised. Social media will definitely be talked about. The Internet has evolved onto our phones, and we would be listening to music on Spotify, Apple Music and CZcams Music. I'm not sure if the 2012 Olympics will be talked about, but The Who was the closing band for the closing ceremony. They were unfortunately the last band to perform at the Super Bowl halftime show as they would go back to popular artists performing at the halftime show. It's not about talent. It's about money.
    I forgot to mention some of the garage rock bands you mentioned like The White Stripes, The Strokes, The Black Keys and The Hives are fan favorites on Little Steven's Underground Garage. They play older bands of the 60s and newer bands of the 2000s and 2010s, which would made a huge appeal to me. The Ramones get played on here a lot as well. They play music that influenced The Ramones, The Ramones, and bands influenced The Ramones.
    MySpace was the first social media page before Facebook. I'm not sure if it's not around anymore, but it has been downhill.

  • @zym5435
    @zym5435 Před rokem +2

    As someone born in 2003, I wanna at least give my take on 2010s rock, even if I'm not an expert on what's super popular/influential, or what specifically constitutes rock (as you mentioned in this, the lines defining what "is" or "isn't" rock got kinda blurred for my generation). My parents were also teens during the 70s/80s, so my tastes have probably been influenced by them, to some extent, which you can take as you will. (I actually watched this series with my dad, because he wanted me to understand his definition of “rock”) Because of that confusion, some of these artists/songs I list might not actually be rock, and I’m sorry about that, I genuinely don’t know how to distinguish it at this point, if such a method even exists.
    Anywho, I could start with all the big pop artists but I figured those would be kinda obvious (not to mention more likely to go off topic), so I’ll mostly just stick to ones I like/would be sad if they didn’t get mentioned. I also tried to look up specifics of album/release year for the songs I remembered, but for full transparency, most of these I just remembered in isolation tbh, since I don’t usually follow artists, I just find a few tracks I latch onto and stick to those usually sorry.
    *Fall Out Boy* - _Save Rock And Roll_ album (2013), my personal favorite was _Phoenix,_ but I know _Light Em Up_ was really popular. _American Beauty/American Psycho_ (2015), main songs that stick out in my memories are _Centuries, Uma Thurman,_ and _Immortals_ (i think i mostly knew that last one was bc it was in Big Hero 6, tbh).
    *Twenty One Pilots* - I did a ukulele cover of _Can’t Help Falling In Love_ for my school talent show bc they did. Other than that, I think _Blurryface_ (2015) is the main album I know of, it had one of the 4 songs I ever actually bought off iTunes back in middle school, _The Judge._ That was probably my favorite song of theirs, although I also liked _Tear in My Heart,_ but I think the main two most popular at the time were probably _Stressed Out_ and _Heathens._
    *Panic! At the Disco* - Need to mention because #2 of the Four Only Songs I Bought Back Then, _This Is Gospel_ from _Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!_ (2013).
    *Marina and the Diamonds* - Spot #3 in that list, _Are You Satisfied_ from her debut album, _The Family Jewels_ (2010). Honestly you should do a 2010s video for her sake if nothing else tbh. The other two from that album I really liked were _I Am Not A Robot_ and _Oh No!._ _Electra Heart_ (2012) also had _Bubblegum Bitch_ (iconic song in general imo).
    *Mitski* - Lesbians will riot if you don’t mention her. _Retired from Sad, New Career in Business_ (2013) had _Strawberry Blonde,_ although admittedly I think that song mostly got popular through TikTok in 2020. I think the first I heard about her was when her song _Francis Forever_ (from the 2014 album _Bury Me at Makeout Creek)_ featured in an episode of Adventure Time, and I feel like she kinda took off in popularity after that iirc. _Be The Cowboy_ (2018) also had _Nobody,_ the song that basically carried me through 8th-10th grade.
    It also might seem a bit silly, but its probably worth mentioning _Gangnam Style_ from 2012, if only as a segue into the popularity of K-pop as a whole later in the decade, although unfortunately all I can give you on that are a couple names like BTS or Blackpink, I didn’t really follow it myself.
    I’m gonna use this as an opportunity to segue into J-pop/J-rock, popularized in the west in large part thanks to the growing popularity of anime. This is mostly for my own sake though, idk how popular this stuff Is outside my own circles, so you can ignore everything from here on out if you want. I’d appreciate it if you at least gave some of this stuff a try though.
    If nothing else, I wanna mention *Eve.* Please watch his music videos they’re incredible. _Dramaturgy_ (2017) is the first one I watched, and probably his most popular I think. However, that one I personally consider is best watched in a particular order with a few of his other videos, specifically _Nonsense Bungaku_ (aka _Literary Nonsense,_ 2017), _then Draumaturgy,_ then _Outsider_ (2018), then finally _Last Dance_ (2018). They all connect in a way, and it's fun to watch (although admittedly not at all necessary if you don’t want to, I just think it's cool). Besides that, some of my other favorites of his (not counting the ones after 2020) are _The Secret About That Girl_ (2017), _As You Like It_ (2017), _Tokyo Ghetto_ (2018), _We’re Still Underground_ (2019), and _Raison d’être_ (2019). All the ones I mention have english subtitles on their official videos, btw, so its real easy to watch and get into any of em (although _Literary Nonsense_ only displays as japanese characters, at least for me, so just look out for the thumbnail of the b&w monochrome ink drawing of a one-eyed man in a hat and scarf looking at the screen if you’re having trouble finding it).
    Besides that, a couple of other Japanese artists I like:
    *Mafumafu* - High energy, sometimes lighthearted, sometimes really intense/serious. Also has fun MVs, though not quite to the extent of Eve’s. I recommend watching his songs _Merry Bad End_ and _Hello Dystopia_ (both 2018) in that order, they both work together in the story they tell.
    *FAKE TYPE* - Electro-Swing mostly, but they like to experiment. I discovered their music because their composer, Dyes Iwasaki, also composed some of the music for Mad Rat Dead. They don’t have their own wiki page though so idk if I can justify talking about them any more tho rip. Trust me they’re good tho, I wanted to mention them at least.

  • @IceCreamMeatballs
    @IceCreamMeatballs Před 2 lety +4

    If you ever do a 2010's episode, I think you should consider including Tyler Bryant & the Shakedown. Even if it's just a 10-second clip from a music video I think they're worth a mention.

  • @elizabethbaker4304
    @elizabethbaker4304 Před 2 lety +5

    I absolutely love your videos and have watched all of them from the 50's to you last video! However, (and i know I'm the outcast for saying this) but I disagree with you on your views on how you say "the 2000's in rock sucked". Now i know the 2000's weren't alot of peoples cup of tea and that you are of course entitled to your own opinion but 2000's rock music was very special for a lot of people and take us back to very fond memories of the past through the music! I am also aware that alot of bands were super corporate as well, but isn't that what it was for bands through the decades as well? With that being said, i think you should absolutely work on a video about the 2010's and if you wanted I could even help you! Thats the beautiful thing about music, it's subjective. It changes and isn't that exciting to see where it all goes? Even now, with rock in the 2010's, you can see loads of singers and bands influenced by musicians and bands from the past, using those influences in their projects and making it into their own style! Harry Styles solo music for example (he uses early 70's influences) or current music in the early 2020's, a lot of bands are taking pop-punk and skate-punk influences from the early 2000's and using it in their music (with the help of travis barker producing almost everything in sight lol) Anyway, i LOVE your videos, keep them up and i hope you see this comment because I would be so happy to have a conversation with you and where music is going, from one music obsessed person to the next! Have a good one!

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you for the compliment and offering a unique POV. It's interesting, the public opinion about 2000s rock seemed to change instantaneously AS we were doing this video. As I said, if this was for your generation what Nirvana was to mine, it's totally understood. At the end of the day, I have to give my two cents and it's still just not for me. And like I said, it's VERY hard to be subjective when this was the era I had the most interaction with the music industry and saw the "Corporate" nature of everything.

    • @elizabethbaker4304
      @elizabethbaker4304 Před 2 lety +2

      @@JTCurtisMusic for sure! i completely understand where you're coming from and respect it! I hope you do a 2010's video (whenever that comes up, lol no rush!) because i'm interested in your opinion on where you think the music industry is heading? Anyway, thanks for the reply!

  • @chelseamaresh9939
    @chelseamaresh9939 Před 2 lety +2

    Man, I feel like y'all missed a TONNNN! Like SOAD got one mention?? Come on guys! You also missed the entire prog rock guys, no Dream Theater, Opeth, Porcupine Tree.
    So many more: Perfect Circle, Bowling for Soup, Avenge Sevenfold, Between the Burried and Me, Death Cab for Cutie, Queens of the Stone Age, Tenacious D(movie mention only), Manson?!, Breaking Benjamin, Skillet, Chevelle, Lamb of God, Deftones, Hoobastank, Seether, Smile Empty Soul, AFI, Mars Volta, Killswitch Engage, and Rammstein. I feel like you missed soooo much! Oh, and anti-establishment got big too! Pennywise, Anti-Flag...

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +1

      System of a Down's "B.Y.O.B." is in the section discussing protest songs.

    • @chelseamaresh9939
      @chelseamaresh9939 Před 2 lety

      @@JTCurtisMusic yeah, that's why I said one mention. I think Chop Suey! should have gotten some recognition. It was a more progressive song that went main stream.
      Maybe some of these others will get picked up in the teens?

  • @helpimadog-otherstuff8377

    The Green Album is ironically, the moment Weezer stopped being emo.
    I’d say Pinkerton, or even The Blue Album would better fit that description.

  • @KingFilth
    @KingFilth Před 2 lety +4

    This series is just awesome

  • @thediabeetle4806
    @thediabeetle4806 Před 2 lety +9

    Built to Spill, Stephen Malkmus, The Shins, Broken Social Scene, Fleet Foxes, The Fratellis, Phoenix, The Postal Service, SuperChunk was still going.
    The 2000's had good indie

  • @SonicAndOKKOFanatic
    @SonicAndOKKOFanatic Před 7 měsíci +1

    I would love to see History of Rock & Roll - The 2010s. I don't know if I can think of any artists for rock music from that decade, but I'm sure hoping I will find out what artists will be in that video.

  • @jcav9410
    @jcav9410 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video JT! Totally worth the wait! I do point out a few omissions from 2008 like
    “Don’t Stop” by Innerpartysystem (a sleeper hit that’s seeing a big re-evaluation as of late)
    the Death Magnetic album by Metallica
    “You’re Gonna Go Far Kid” by The Offspring
    2009 could be about Green Day’s 21st Century Breakdown
    Now, if there are rock albums from the 2010s worth talking about...
    - Wasting Light (Foo Fighters)
    - The Next Day / Blackstar (David Bowie)
    - Battle Born (The Killers)
    - Infestissumam / Meliora (Ghost)
    - Seal the Deal and Let’s Boogie (Volbeat)
    Perhaps you could talk about the trend of Zeppelin aping bands such as Rival Sons, The Temperance Movement and of course, Greta Van Fleet
    On a darker note, you could talk about the rockstar deaths of 2015-2018: Scott Weiland, Lemmy, David Bowie, Glenn Frey, Prince, Leonard Cohen, then Chris Cornell, Chester Bennington and Dolores O’Riordan.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety

      There would definitely be a memoriam section for the 2010s. 2016 alone was an awful year.

  • @karimygirl5826
    @karimygirl5826 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Saying Coldplay sounded like U2 on valium had me dieing. 😂funny as hell, im stealing it!

  • @deemanthegreaser7248
    @deemanthegreaser7248 Před 2 lety +4

    Brian Setzer had some kickass stuff during this decade

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před rokem +1

      Brian Setzer did 2 Christmas albums and a tribute album to Sun Records, which is extremely awesome!

  • @GenX1964
    @GenX1964 Před 2 lety +2

    1 week ago!? Feel like I been watching these things for 60 years? lol

  • @kevinm4138
    @kevinm4138 Před 2 lety +3

    The Hives are the best band to come out the 2000’s. The Interpol debut is a must for any post punk fan . A few bands you missed , and I realize you’re staying fairly mainstream, but here are some of my favs , Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, LCD Soundsystem,The Kills, Editors,The Walkman, Eagles of Death Metal, Doves and perhaps the best post punk album ever The Horrors 2009 release “ Primary Colours”
    Most definitely do the 2010’s , best decade since the 80’s!

  • @totallyanonymousbish9599
    @totallyanonymousbish9599 Před 2 lety +2

    Evanescence is my favorite 2000's band😂😍👌🏻 Y'all cannot deny Amy's hauntingly beautiful voice, and now that they have become independent artists, they are rocking more than ever!🥸

  • @redpig6878
    @redpig6878 Před 2 lety +4

    If you need a band to talk about in the 2010s, talk about Ancient Bards, great progressive metal band with a great female vocalist

  • @nextorman
    @nextorman Před 2 lety +2

    I loved the 2000s, since thanks to Limewire I got to hear a lot of stuff I missed out from the 90s!!!😁

  • @caesarorzell600
    @caesarorzell600 Před 2 lety +2

    Just discovered this video today via the recommendations. Thank you CZcams!!!

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +1

      Glad to hear! Please subscribe and check out our other stuff.

    • @caesarorzell600
      @caesarorzell600 Před 2 lety +1

      @@JTCurtisMusic Oh I DID! And I WILL!! >:D

  • @eamonnofloinn9355
    @eamonnofloinn9355 Před 2 lety +2

    I have watched your whole series going through the decades of rock music and I have really enjoyed it all!
    However, as a guy who grew up in the 2000s and is really into rock, I'm a bit surprised that you very quickly glossed over Arctic Monkeys, which is undoubtedly one of the biggest acts of the late 2000s (in England anyway) even though they didn't break into the States until the next decade. Their first three albums were as rock as you could get from the 2000s.
    Along with this, two bands that managed to carry their success over to the 2000s from the 90s were Radiohead and Red Hot Chilli peppers who both had critically acclaimed albums and received a lot on airplay in the early part of the decade.
    Other then this, you did a great job covering the 2000s, especially emo, which was a kind of new rock sub genre that was introduced and reached popularity in the later part of the decade.

  • @wpjohnston0213
    @wpjohnston0213 Před 8 měsíci +1

    You forgot a few bands. Shinedown, Alien Ant Farm, Crossfade, and Saliva to name a few. Great rundown overall but the previous mentioned bands were instrumental in my 20's.

  • @coreyolson2481
    @coreyolson2481 Před 22 dny +2

    I didn't realize how much the 2000's sucked. I see why I went almost 100% underground/indie and I'm so glad I did. There's still a lot of really good music being made but in my opinion you're not going to find it on the radio/mainstream.

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před rokem +1

    It'd be cool if you continue to do the series talking about the 2010s, but I don't think there's a lot to talk about for the decade to be quite honest. Although we could talk about the lose of many musicians from 2015-2017, like Scott Weiland, Lemmy, David Bowie, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, BB King, Chester Bennington, and Chris Cornell. It would definitely be a sad section to get through.
    Anyway, here are my top 20 bands of the 2010s.
    1. Black Veil Brides
    2. All Time Low
    3. Halestorm
    4. Saxon
    5. The Wonder Years
    6. The Pretty Reckless
    7. Neck Deep
    8. Blackberry Smoke
    9. Shinedown
    10. Greta Van Fleet
    11. Linkin Park
    12. Motorhead
    13. Five Finger Death Punch
    14. Yellowcard
    15. Avenged Sevenfold
    16. Foo Fighters
    17. Kreator
    18. Epica
    19. Black Moth
    20. Rival Sons
    21. Sum 41
    22. Queens of the Stone Age
    23. Stray Cats
    24. Within Temptation
    25. Slipknot

  • @SinghPainBuddy
    @SinghPainBuddy Před 3 lety +6

    For the 2010's you can talk about)
    Rival Sons
    King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard
    Black Country Communion
    Northlane
    Arcade Fire - The Suburbs
    Daft Punk - "Get Lucky'
    The Black Keys - Brothers/El Camino/Turn Blue/Let's Rock
    Artic Monkeys - AM/Tranquility Base Hotel and Casino
    The Pretty Reckless
    Daughters
    Ape Machine
    Slash
    Myles Kennedy and his Conspirators
    Paramore - Paramore
    Fleet Foxes
    Ne Obliviscaris
    Beartooth
    Gojira
    Kids See Ghost
    Highly Suspect
    Alcest
    Neon Trees
    Alt J
    Pilot Red Sun
    Nine Ice Kills
    Mitski
    Cold War Kids
    Power Trip
    Anathema - Weather Systems
    Fever 333
    Mayday Parade
    Poppy
    Mark Ronson - "Uptown Funk"
    K Flay
    Dirty Honey
    Knocked Loose
    War on Drugs
    Peach Pit
    Queens of the Stone Age - Like Clockwork/Villans
    Foo Fighters - Wasting Light/Sonic Highways/Concrete and Gold
    Melt Banana
    Palaye Royale
    Linkin Park
    Two Door Cinema Club
    Idles
    Red Sun Rising
    Swans - To be Kind
    Foster the People
    High on Fire
    Badflower
    Father John Misty
    All That Remains
    Twenty One Pilots
    Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier/Book of Souls
    Avenged Sevenfold
    Blue Pills
    Lines in the Sky
    Crowbar
    Wintersun
    Royal Blood
    Elder
    Greta Van Fleet
    Pineapple Thief
    Bring me the Horizon
    Wilderun
    Rivers of Nihil
    Alter Bridge
    Starset
    Kamelot
    Rush - Clockwork Angels
    Sons of Apollo
    Asking Alexandrea
    The 1975
    Vampire Weekend
    Walk the Moon - "Shut Up and Dance"
    Tame Impala
    Courtney Barnette
    Young the Giant
    Architects
    Dirty Projects
    Mac DeMarco
    Snail Mail
    Weyes Blood - Titanic Rising
    Cigarettes After Sex
    Gotye - "Somebody I used to Know"
    The Neighbourhood
    Haven
    Ty Segal
    Car Seat Headrest
    Negative XP - Heads up his music is very controversial
    Pale Waves
    Echosmith - "Cool Kids"
    Florence Plus Machine
    Kasabian
    Protest the Hero
    Gary Clark Jr.
    Portugal the Man
    St. Vincent
    Vektor
    Mitski
    Gorillaz
    John Newman
    Lovely the Band
    Glass Animals
    Steven Wilson
    Waterparks
    Neck Deep
    Baroness
    Radiohead - Heart Shaped Moon
    Fleet Foxes
    Halestorm
    Cage the Elephant
    Beach House
    LCD Soundsystem
    Hollywood Undead
    Fun
    Code Orange
    Kasabian
    Chickenfoot
    Tesseract
    Hozier - "Take me to Church"
    Awolnation - "Sail"
    Phoenix
    Nothing More
    Biffy Clyro
    Sleep Token
    Of Mice and Men
    Piece the Veil
    Issues
    Alabama Shakes
    Foals
    Parkway Drive
    Iceage
    Holding Absence
    Black Angels
    Parquet Courts
    MGMT
    Swans - To Be Kind
    Nothing But Thieves
    Deerhunter
    Thank You Scientist
    Ninja Sex Party - They Were CZcams Vial Sensations
    Animals As Leaders
    Loathe
    The Fray
    Black Veil Brides
    Lil Peep - "Come Over when your Sober"
    Motionless in White
    Sleeping with Sirens
    Falling in Reverse
    In this Moment
    Babymetal
    Lana Del Ray - "Ultraviolence"
    Kaleo
    Oliver Tree
    Ghost

    • @YungFryhole
      @YungFryhole Před 3 lety +1

      Don't forget Tool - Fear Inoculum
      Starcrawler
      FIDLAR

    • @SinghPainBuddy
      @SinghPainBuddy Před 2 lety +1

      And here's a list of hip hop artist to cover)
      Hopsin
      Ghostmane
      Tyler the Creator
      Ski Mask The Slump God
      XXXTentaction
      Mac Miller
      Kendrick Lamar
      Death Grips
      Tom McDonald
      Odd Future
      Run The Jewels
      Post Malone
      Chance The Rapper
      J Cole
      Earl Sweatshirt
      Joey Bada$$
      Vince Staples
      Frank Ocean
      A$AP Rocky
      Danny Brown
      Childish Gambino
      Flying Lotus
      Bedroom Pop was another indie movement in Rock n Roll with a unique sound here's some bands to cover)
      Boy Pablo
      Cosmo Pyke
      Gus Dapperton
      Ghost Monument
      Clario
      Still Woozy
      Cuco
      Other indie rock bands to touch on)
      Xui Xui
      Godspeed You And The Black Emperor
      The Story So Far
      NCH
      John 5, The Creatures
      Becko
      Ayron Jones
      Spiritbox
      Atreyu
      Boygennius

    • @takodabostwick8507
      @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety

      Black Veil Brides, Asking Alexandria Falling In Reverse, Pierce the Veil, Sleeping With Sirens, Bring Me the Horizon and Motionless In White kept scene music alive. Out of all the bands I listed, Black Veil Brides are easily my favorite. We Stitch These Wounds is one of the best rock albums of the 2010s. An all killer, no filler record that has some influences of punk, metal, and a little bit of classical from guitarist Jinxx, who is actually classically influenced and he even plays violin. Jinxx and Jake Pitts are definitely talented guitarists.

  • @BringMayFlowers
    @BringMayFlowers Před 4 měsíci +1

    If I would have added a record to this list, it'd have been Bee Gees' This Is Where I Come In. It was their last release and had a much more stripped down, acoustic sound that someone I know likened to Three Doors Down.

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před měsícem +3

    Unfortunately Panic At the Disco became a part of the Machine for their last 3 albums. I called them the Brandon Urie Project instead since it was just Urie himself.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před měsícem +1

      @@takodabostwick8507 yeah pretty much what I thought as well.

  • @schawi99
    @schawi99 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thank you JT for your history of Rock & Roll clips. I just binge-watched all of them (50s to 2000s) - really a very nice compilation and well produced!!!! I would have appreciated it if you had honored one of the best bands ever (or a least in the 2000s in my view) a little more: SYSTEM OF A DOWN. Best regards from Switzerland

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 2 lety +6

    Controversy alert; I really don't mind The Jonas Brothers at all. I think that they were better than a majority of the radio rock bands, except for some alternative rock, metal and pop punk bands of the 00s. And I think that they are considered power pop, and I'm a sucker for that genre! My favorite power pop band is easily The Who (1965-1970). They're around at the 6th spot since I gave more credit to The Dave Clark Five, who was on the top of their game during the British Invasion. Other than that, great stuff! And I like them more than Nickelback, but I don't really mind them as well! And I was a kid when The Jonas Brothers were around, so there is some bias on that!

  • @takodabostwick8507
    @takodabostwick8507 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Here's a crazy fact that I didn't know until now! Tim Armstrong of Rancid won a Grammy with Pink. The song was called Trouble. It was supposed to be Rancid's song on Indestructible, but it didn't make the cut, so Armstrong gave the song to Pink. There were some changes here and there, but it ended with great success. However it only hit 68 on the Billboard Hot 100. If Pink were to release a rock album, that would be very interesting 🧐. Just saying that because Dolly Parton did a rock album. Kelly Clarkson doing a rock album would be interesting too.

  • @kipperbill
    @kipperbill Před 2 lety +2

    Hi, I'm back to say that there is a wave of Woman Solo acts that I would like mentioned in History of Rock the 2020s: so far
    Rock acts like:
    Hatchie - Sugar & Spice
    LAIIKA - Crush
    Lucy Dacus - Hot and Heavy
    ORLA GARTLAND - Zombie
    Emily Wurramara - Ngarrikwujeyinama
    Julia Jacklin - Pressure to Party
    Claud - Soft Spot
    beabadoobee - He gets me so high
    Taylor Swift - all the folklore, fearless and evermore songs
    Your Smith - Man of Weakness
    And finishing off with a boom:
    Lucius - Until we get there

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior Před 2 lety +10

    Forgot to mention, you should've mentioned "In Rainbows" as well, I think that's a bit more rocky than "Kid A", as well as the high praise it gets by music review publications...
    Also, just as a suggestion, I recommend you to create a separate playlist that only houses the "decades episodes", along with the current playlist for "History of Rock & Roll". The current playlist for "History of Rock" just has too much side videos that it just becomes annoying to look through just to find the actual episodes.

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +3

      Your wish is my command:
      czcams.com/play/PLDa7kXyM3V4VjCUBvA7Xlukua4Laz2u3a.html

    • @Urlocallordandsavior
      @Urlocallordandsavior Před 2 lety

      @@JTCurtisMusic There's still the "70s Extras" in that playlist though?

    • @JTCurtisMusic
      @JTCurtisMusic  Před 2 lety +2

      @@Urlocallordandsavior I consider that an episode (abeit a very short episode) simply because we did a full shoot for it.

  • @Coolcat3
    @Coolcat3 Před 2 lety +2

    if you do the 2010s please consider these bands - converge, protest the hero, every time i die, meshuggah, dillenger escape plan, lamb of god, and other hardcore/ metal scenes