I think my main point with this video was to show how we listen to music genres with a decade lag. In the 2000s we were listenning to older forms of Drum & Bass, Jungle, Trance, Techno, Break Beat, Hip Hop, etc etc, which were created in the 70s, 80s and 90s (with no particular order). In a way, this video shows you the kind of genres we will likely be listenning to as mainstream music and underground music in the 2010s.
@KurokibaDubstep: Ive never heard of wobble house, and there doesn't seem to be any references on it. All youtube searches seem to use the term similarly with fidget house, which i included in the video. As for Hardstyle, the first recorded events with hardstyle music date to the very late 90s, so i didnt include it either as it is related to another decade.
@Sadsic I understand your concerns, but Wikipedia is the best source out there, even if it constantly changes. I have never seen any references in wikipedia to witch house or folktronica, and in wikipedia post-metal its listed as a 00s genre. Since i only realized chillwave was 00s genre after i made the video, i have listed it in the description.
@theones77 : According to my source, Prog House has cultural origins in the early 90s, not the 2000s, which is what this video was about. I AM planning on making video with ALL the music genres created during the 20th century, but my WMM isnt working. Do tell me what zillion genres i've missed during the 2000s, though. I'm all ears!
nicely compiled video, never heard of half of these. Skweee sounds a lot like Broken Beat and Fusion Plus marks for all the UKG style ones... dubstep, grime, funky, bassline, grindie also for including liquid funk, sambass, fidget, electrotech, electrohouse btw, clownstep is also known as 'jump-up'
Yeah I get what you mean. There's definitely some early recordings of dubstep, but they were pretty much instrumental dub remixes of 2-step garage tracks attempting to incorporate the funky elements of breakbeat, or the dark elements of drum and bass into 2-step. There aren't any real examples of dubstep in the 90s, but feel free to link me to one.
@RaynaDJ : Grindie is actually a fusin genre from Grime and Indie Rock. It might sound as breakbeat (which you are right, is from the 80s), but they'r different things. There are experimental dub samples from the 90s, but dubstep as we know it and as the genre started to become an actual genre, was only during the 00s. I also don't see how you can claim grime to be from the 90s. All my sources are from wikipedia. It might not be perfect, but its the most accurate yet. Thanks 4 commenting.
@RaynaDJ : Yeah I get what you mean. There's definitely some early recordings of dubstep, but they were pretty much instrumental dub remixes of 2-step garage tracks attempting to incorporate the funky elements of breakbeat, or the dark elements of drum and bass into 2-step. As for grime it also makes sense to have appeared earlier, but there aren't any examples of both of these genres from the 90s. You can prove me wrong though, and I will stand corrected.
@Sadsic Third-wave emo is not listed in wikipedia. One could argue that it certainly skyrocketed in popularity in the 00s, but it goes as back as the 80s. Those 'waves' you speak of are probably just peaks in popularity. Regarding Screamo, its listed as a 90s genre, which is why I didnt include it.
@Sadsic thanks for the info. i wasn't able to access wikipedia due to the blackout. I will add those two genres to the list of genres I missed after doing this video
@RaynaDJ : There was no genre described as "dnb". I only showed subgenres of dnb created during the 2000s. OBviously that dnb is older. Some of its subgenres are also older, such as Neurofunk. Breakcore is indeed from the 90s, but I specifically mentioned Raggacore as legitimate variant, and i'm quite sure you won't find any examples of Raggacore of te 90s, only breakcore. Electro is different from electro-house. Electro IS from the 80s, but electro-house is from 00s. Continued in next post.
@theones77 : Thanks for the info. However, hands-up (aka eurodance) has its roots in (early) 90s, so does hardstyle (late 90s). Schranz is also from the 90s. I couldnt find any info on progressive dubstep. If it really exists, then its definitely worth including in the video (btw, i updated the video info with a genre i forgot: electroswing). Once again, thanks for the feedback.
@TranceExplosion : thank you for sharing! however, dubstyle is listed as a 2010s genre, not a 2000s genre. Another example of a 2010s genre is Complextro
@HayenMill well if you just look up witch house or folktronica on wikipedia both are there. The Beta Band was doing "folktronica" in 1998, and Salem's been doing witch house since around 2008.
@adamshiftyelso : Thanks! I've also heard the terms jump up and clownstep being thrown around synonimously, but Jump Up is listed as being older (90s), which is why i haven't included it. I do agree they sound quite similar though
@HayenMill well wikipedia isnt always right. dubstep definitely started in the 90s, and grime in a very early form was definitely in the 90s, pretty much exclusively on pirate radios in london, but it was definitely about.
@OnlyVideoGuyOnEarth : Most of them are actually sub-genres, not genres. So yeah, i agree. Crunkcore is something beyond my comprehension xD As for clownstep, its more because of the 'happy' synths used, that are trying to be to Drum & Bass what happy hardcore was to hardcore.
Electro house and deathcore are both well known for taking two well known genres (electro house for electro and house music, and deathcore for death metal and hardcore/metalcore) and resulting in disdain by many people.
dnb started in the 90s, could say even late 80s. raggacore is actually called breakcore and started in the 90s. electro started in the 80s. that grindie (??) just sounded like breaks/breakbeat to me and that started in the 80s. dubstep started in the 90s, maybe even earlier depending on how strict you wanna be. grime started in the late 90s too, just wasnt very big.
bassline sound like some pre 00s stuff you can find on ishkur guide of electronic music sambass sounds like jazzstep a pre 00s that mix jazz (including bossa nova a jazz genre that have some samba influences) with jungle post metal is just a name that is used to some sludge doom metal bands, some people use to all sludge doom metal bands and some even use to other doom metal genres. a sub-genre you forgot is flashcore a hardcore (electronic music one) sub-genre that mix speedcore with breakcore with glitch with dark ambient. also you forgot brostep, that is what people usually and wrongly call dubstep
This video is very well done! It actually helped me find new songs I like too. And songs that I hate too. Crunkcore is just awful and clownstep just made me lol
Some of these are so unbelievably specific and silly that you can't take them as actual genres. Nonetheless, it's a fluid term. But that 'crunk core' was just Dance with someone screaming. And is clown core just clown core because the videos involve clowns?
@HayenMill you should reeeeeally stop using wikipedia as yr barometer for what genres exist or not... most of the genres you listed are basically micro genres that were only named because both metal and edm fans need to list every particular sound as being its own subgenre... also folktronica and post-metal are both 90's genres. post-punk revival, chillwave, and witch house would all be good genres to list as 00's genres instead.
I think my main point with this video was to show how we listen to music genres with a decade lag. In the 2000s we were listenning to older forms of Drum & Bass, Jungle, Trance, Techno, Break Beat, Hip Hop, etc etc, which were created in the 70s, 80s and 90s (with no particular order). In a way, this video shows you the kind of genres we will likely be listenning to as mainstream music and underground music in the 2010s.
@KurokibaDubstep: Ive never heard of wobble house, and there doesn't seem to be any references on it. All youtube searches seem to use the term similarly with fidget house, which i included in the video. As for Hardstyle, the first recorded events with hardstyle music date to the very late 90s, so i didnt include it either as it is related to another decade.
@Sadsic I understand your concerns, but Wikipedia is the best source out there, even if it constantly changes. I have never seen any references in wikipedia to witch house or folktronica, and in wikipedia post-metal its listed as a 00s genre. Since i only realized chillwave was 00s genre after i made the video, i have listed it in the description.
@snowboardman720 : thanks! it seems like one of those genres i completely overlooked. I'll add it in the description next to the others i forgot
@theones77 : According to my source, Prog House has cultural origins in the early 90s, not the 2000s, which is what this video was about. I AM planning on making video with ALL the music genres created during the 20th century, but my WMM isnt working. Do tell me what zillion genres i've missed during the 2000s, though. I'm all ears!
Check the description: David Guetta vs. The Egg - Love Don't Let Me Go (electro-house)
nicely compiled video, never heard of half of these. Skweee sounds a lot like Broken Beat and Fusion
Plus marks for all the UKG style ones... dubstep, grime, funky, bassline, grindie
also for including liquid funk, sambass, fidget, electrotech, electrohouse
btw, clownstep is also known as 'jump-up'
@FruangenTVservice: Thank you for the information! Description info now updated.
Yeah I get what you mean. There's definitely some early recordings of dubstep, but they were pretty much instrumental dub remixes of 2-step garage tracks attempting to incorporate the funky elements of breakbeat, or the dark elements of drum and bass into 2-step. There aren't any real examples of dubstep in the 90s, but feel free to link me to one.
@RaynaDJ : Grindie is actually a fusin genre from Grime and Indie Rock. It might sound as breakbeat (which you are right, is from the 80s), but they'r different things. There are experimental dub samples from the 90s, but dubstep as we know it and as the genre started to become an actual genre, was only during the 00s. I also don't see how you can claim grime to be from the 90s. All my sources are from wikipedia. It might not be perfect, but its the most accurate yet. Thanks 4 commenting.
@RaynaDJ : Yeah I get what you mean. There's definitely some early recordings of dubstep, but they were pretty much instrumental dub remixes of 2-step garage tracks attempting to incorporate the funky elements of breakbeat, or the dark elements of drum and bass into 2-step. As for grime it also makes sense to have appeared earlier, but there aren't any examples of both of these genres from the 90s. You can prove me wrong though, and I will stand corrected.
@Sadsic Third-wave emo is not listed in wikipedia. One could argue that it certainly skyrocketed in popularity in the 00s, but it goes as back as the 80s. Those 'waves' you speak of are probably just peaks in popularity. Regarding Screamo, its listed as a 90s genre, which is why I didnt include it.
@Sadsic thanks for the info. i wasn't able to access wikipedia due to the blackout. I will add those two genres to the list of genres I missed after doing this video
@RaynaDJ : There was no genre described as "dnb". I only showed subgenres of dnb created during the 2000s. OBviously that dnb is older. Some of its subgenres are also older, such as Neurofunk. Breakcore is indeed from the 90s, but I specifically mentioned Raggacore as legitimate variant, and i'm quite sure you won't find any examples of Raggacore of te 90s, only breakcore. Electro is different from electro-house. Electro IS from the 80s, but electro-house is from 00s. Continued in next post.
@theones77 : Thanks for the info. However, hands-up (aka eurodance) has its roots in (early) 90s, so does hardstyle (late 90s). Schranz is also from the 90s. I couldnt find any info on progressive dubstep. If it really exists, then its definitely worth including in the video (btw, i updated the video info with a genre i forgot: electroswing). Once again, thanks for the feedback.
@TranceExplosion : thank you for sharing! however, dubstyle is listed as a 2010s genre, not a 2000s genre. Another example of a 2010s genre is Complextro
@HayenMill well if you just look up witch house or folktronica on wikipedia both are there. The Beta Band was doing "folktronica" in 1998, and Salem's been doing witch house since around 2008.
@adamshiftyelso : Thanks! I've also heard the terms jump up and clownstep being thrown around synonimously, but Jump Up is listed as being older (90s), which is why i haven't included it. I do agree they sound quite similar though
@HayenMill well wikipedia isnt always right. dubstep definitely started in the 90s, and grime in a very early form was definitely in the 90s, pretty much exclusively on pirate radios in london, but it was definitely about.
The Skweee track in the vid is "The High" by Randy Barracuda, released 2006
@OnlyVideoGuyOnEarth : Most of them are actually sub-genres, not genres. So yeah, i agree. Crunkcore is something beyond my comprehension xD As for clownstep, its more because of the 'happy' synths used, that are trying to be to Drum & Bass what happy hardcore was to hardcore.
Electro house and deathcore are both well known for taking two well known genres (electro house for electro and house music, and deathcore for death metal and hardcore/metalcore) and resulting in disdain by many people.
dnb started in the 90s, could say even late 80s. raggacore is actually called breakcore and started in the 90s. electro started in the 80s. that grindie (??) just sounded like breaks/breakbeat to me and that started in the 80s. dubstep started in the 90s, maybe even earlier depending on how strict you wanna be. grime started in the late 90s too, just wasnt very big.
Love Shack by the B-52's
bassline sound like some pre 00s stuff you can find on ishkur guide of electronic music
sambass sounds like jazzstep a pre 00s that mix jazz (including bossa nova a jazz genre that have some samba influences) with jungle
post metal is just a name that is used to some sludge doom metal bands, some people use to all sludge doom metal bands and some even use to other doom metal genres.
a sub-genre you forgot is flashcore a hardcore (electronic music one) sub-genre that mix speedcore with breakcore with glitch with dark ambient.
also you forgot brostep, that is what people usually and wrongly call dubstep
I found some music genres from 2000
Lento Violento
Dubstyle
Witch House
Moombahton
Skweee
what about chillwave?
That genre was listed as being late 90s
Clownstep and Deathcore is ... scary o_0
Dubstyle is a new genre
@UnlimitedMayhem its hard to take anyone seriously in that font
This video is very well done! It actually helped me find new songs I like too. And songs that I hate too. Crunkcore is just awful and clownstep just made me lol
Third wave emo and screamo both are 00's genres.
Does anyone know what song 2:51 is? I tried searching it from the description, but i can't find it!
what about wobble house and hardstyle?
Drumstep? Brostep?
techno the best genre out of all
Some of these are so unbelievably specific and silly that you can't take them as actual genres. Nonetheless, it's a fluid term. But that 'crunk core' was just Dance with someone screaming. And is clown core just clown core because the videos involve clowns?
What about Blackgaze
No Indie Hip Hop?
where is early Hardstyle? lol.....THIS is a realy new created Genre in 2000.....
WTF is techno drum n bass ? it's called neuro funk . Ed Rush and Optical already played it in 1998 . Also dum n roland had a neuro funk song in 1996
FFF - Murder is breakcore not raggacore
@HayenMill you should reeeeeally stop using wikipedia as yr barometer for what genres exist or not... most of the genres you listed are basically micro genres that were only named because both metal and edm fans need to list every particular sound as being its own subgenre... also folktronica and post-metal are both 90's genres. post-punk revival, chillwave, and witch house would all be good genres to list as 00's genres instead.
Deathcore is the best
TRAP ???????
Don't forget lolicore!
Dubstep started in 90's not in 2000's....-_-
All those genres were utter crap. Do people not have taste anymore?