Every decade has its musical style that generally makes it easy to place what decade a song was written in if you haven’t heard it before.

40s big band

50s rock and roll

60s essentially has its genre named after the decade or at least I can’t think of anything I’d call a genre.

70s punk and beginnings of heavy metal, disco

80s electro synth, rap

90s grunge, dance, R&B, trance

Etc etc. Obviously these don’t entirely define the music of the decade but are highly recognisable genres that can more often than not pinned down to a decade.

So my question is, since the 2000s I don’t see as much differentiation but that might be because I’m too old (44) and not as exposed to be music as I was in my teens, so help me pretend I’m “hip” and “with it” by giving me some clues. I’m curious to know what you think defines the music of the 2020s, what defines the 2010s and what defines the 2000s. I.e. When someone says they are going to listen to noughties music what do they put on? Etc. Or have we reached a point where music has been explored to the point new genres are much rarer to establish?

  • davidgro@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I don’t follow music much, but I have a guess anyway. It seems like the number and diversity of genres just absolutely exploded since trading .mp3 files became a thing. And with digital stores and YouTube, distribution isn’t a hurdle anymore, publishers don’t have to pick and choose which albums to release, they can just do ‘all’ of them.

    So there’s just no longer one single sound that can define a decade the way it used to be, now people hear hundreds of wildly different bands in a year instead of a few dozen that were hand picked by studios because they had trendy sounds.