1997 to like 2004 more or less was the Y2K era.
Anything before that and it turns into Gen-X grunge territory and anything after that starts to turn into emo youtube myspace internet culture.
1997 to like 2004 more or less was the Y2K era.
Anything before that and it turns into Gen-X grunge territory and anything after that starts to turn into emo youtube myspace internet culture.
zoomers have the cultural remove necessary to make these pronouncements
Generations just aren't interesting enough to make a thread over. Let's raise our standards a bit, boys.
i peaked during those years. enjoyed the tailend of britpop. got into "IDM", basically mute records. noise music was a thing, enjoyed some live acts. daft punk and chemical bros gave a taste of hard house and acid house to the alt crowd. it was getting possible to get deep musical knowledge thanks to some mp3 sharing apps, to hell with those 300 dollars japanese new wave records that were taunting me at the record store: now i had the chance to actually listen to it. hah. it was still the end of the 90s interest in fusion; there was some retro shit but people really invested in it a lot from 2004 and on for about a decade. it was the end of a lot of electronic music diversity in the night life, bars that played drum n bass since the early 90s closed, same with jungle and they let room for... ostentatious hip hop of course. fricking hip hop.
>mute records
meant warp records. man its been a minute since i checked their existence. i think i heard they release post punk that imitate the vocals of THe Fall ? like jams murphy was doing in 2002: lcd soundsystem had some tracks floating around efore they released their album : big big fun. oh yea 2002 and such there was disco punk. that was fun, dancing being silly, having a giggle. good times.
buddy, you need to lay off the doobies. Warp records release lots of subgenres of pop, including more experimental stuff like Oneohtrix Point Never.
>it was the end of a lot of electronic music diversity in the night life, bars that played drum n bass since the early 90s closed, same with jungle and they let room for... ostentatious hip hop of course. fricking hip hop.
Popular music became more black, electronic music faded away vs hip hop
Hip hop was already popular in the Y2K era i.e. Eminem, dmx, nelly. Even before that with 2pac and Biggie.
Yeah and even g funk before it. It was club rap that took over and turned into the mess it is today.
>Hip hop was already popular in the Y2K era i.e. Eminem, dmx, nelly. Even before that with 2pac and Biggie.
But outside the USA it did not ascend to its present popularity until the 2010s. Probably is simply related to the growth of the internet, videos & music spreading online. Certainly in the 1990s, Europe was a bit insulated from US music, EDM was popular in Europe for years and years while in the USA grunge was the thing.
I think the music scene has moved on even since the early 2010s when someone like Avicii became famous doing dance music.
>Even before that with 2pac and Biggie
Holy shit you're so stupid. You think hip-hop started in the mid-90s? It's been around since the 70s.
I share this board with infants.
Woah, a kid with the same hairdo and male pattern baldness as i. Makes me feel much better than i'm older than he looks
>Anything before that and it turns into Gen-X grunge territory and anything after that starts to turn into emo youtube myspace internet culture.
pre-2010 YouTube is still in the Y2K era.
it's so funny seeing zoomies co-opt how I dressed in junior high.
My favorite era.
Correct.
korn's first album came out in 94,
my first listen was on video cassette in my dorm
That was around the time I discovered Ska Punk in my teens and was permanently divorced from popular music for awhile.
what happened? did you realize ska punk is fricking gay>?
No I was a bassist and played it for the next few decades.
Its fun, frick you
it's just white guys complaining they can't get a girlfriend. literal incel rock.
It was weird to see the emo takeover but I was too old for that teenage shit by then.
>scene used to be a noun maaaaaaaan
Somehow less cringy than numetal, as long as you didn’t dress ska.
Ska? Like reel big fish?
I used to be so salty that my parents wouldn't let me dress up like these hot topic homosexuals. but now I'm glad they didn't. Thanks
>thinkin bout shooting up the locker room.
would've loved to see local nu metal shows in that era, miss when rock music was fun
me on the left
>2004 Y2K
>Gen X grunge territory
You have no clue what you're talking about. Gen X was 80s. Y2K was 1999-early 2001, because you know, that was the turn of the millennium. Once Bush became president the Y2K era ended and the 2000s officially began.
Bush was president in the 80s