Thread started 09/06/15 11:32amMotownSubdivis ion |
What is the "1984" of each decade? By this I mean what individual year from each decade, specifically from the 60s to now was the most musically significant or the most culturally significant with music at the forefront?
IMO:
1964: The Beatles blow up internationally, the Motown Sound becomes an international sensation
1974: Disco envelops the music industry
1984: Duh!
1991: Rock changes forever when grunge hits the scene, hip hop/ rap solidifies itself as a legitimate genre and prepares to take the world by its nuts in the future
200?
2015 (so far): Hip hop is more eclectic than it's ever been, almost like 1984 where seemingly every act across the board is/ has dropping an album or contributing in some way to a project of some significance |
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Reply #1 posted 09/06/15 1:41pm
purplethunder3 121 |
MotownSubdivision said:
By this I mean what individual year from each decade, specifically from the 60s to now was the most musically significant or the most culturally significant with music at the forefront? IMO: 1964: The Beatles blow up internationally, the Motown Sound becomes an international sensation 1974: Disco envelops the music industry 1984: Duh! 1991: Rock changes forever when grunge hits the scene, hip hop/ rap solidifies itself as a legitimate genre and prepares to take the world by its nuts in the future 200? 2015 (so far): Hip hop is more eclectic than it's ever been, almost like 1984 where seemingly every act across the board is/ has dropping an album or contributing in some way to a project of some significance
"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 |
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Reply #2 posted 09/06/15 1:58pm
CynicKill
|
I think it's significant that it gets very hard to pinpoint a moment past the 90's. I can't think of any.
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Reply #3 posted 09/06/15 2:02pm
MotownSubdivis ion |
purplethunder3121 said:
MotownSubdivision said: By this I mean what individual year from each decade, specifically from the 60s to now was the most musically significant or the most culturally significant with music at the forefront? IMO: 1964: The Beatles blow up internationally, the Motown Sound becomes an international sensation 1974: Disco envelops the music industry 1984: Duh! 1991: Rock changes forever when grunge hits the scene, hip hop/ rap solidifies itself as a legitimate genre and prepares to take the world by its nuts in the future 200? 2015 (so far): Hip hop is more eclectic than it's ever been, almost like 1984 where seemingly every act across the board is/ has dropping an album or contributing in some way to a project of some significance
Listen to the subject matter. Listen to the production. Look at the artists we have. Regardless of what you feel, we have a more diverse assortment of rappers than we did in the 90s. |
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Reply #4 posted 09/06/15 6:16pm
dm3857 |
for 2000's i might say 2007: I was only in Jr High at the time, but I remember that being a time where I was really excited about more current music that was happening. As far as pop/top 40 music I remember being really into Kanye West's Graduation album, and a lot of the Akon singles, and even some of the Tpain stuff. I've always been an MJ fan so a bunch of the 'Thriller 25' stuff was exciting. Prince played at the Superbowl. And then you had of course Radioheads In Rainbows, Arcade Fire Neon Bible, LCD soundsystem. I just remember liking 07 a lot for some reason. |
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Reply #5 posted 09/06/15 8:11pm
MotownSubdivis ion |
dm3857 said: for 2000's i might say 2007: I was only in Jr High at the time, but I remember that being a time where I was really excited about more current music that was happening. As far as pop/top 40 music I remember being really into Kanye West's Graduation album, and a lot of the Akon singles, and even some of the Tpain stuff. I've always been an MJ fan so a bunch of the 'Thriller 25' stuff was exciting. Prince played at the Superbowl. And then you had of course Radioheads In Rainbows, Arcade Fire Neon Bible, LCD soundsystem. I just remember liking 07 a lot for some reason. We're about the same age then so I know exactly where you're coming from. 2006 was the year where I really began getting into rap and music in general. 07 only continued my interest. I have fond memories of my middle school years and a lot of them revolve around the mainstream music at the time. 2007 introduced me to Kanye via Graduation (his best album) and I only became more interested in hip hop (a good amount of fellow classmates who liked rap also helped this). I get real nostalgic about 06-08 but I don't know if I can say any of them are the "1984" of the 2000s. |
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Reply #6 posted 09/07/15 12:29pm
728huey |
The groundbreaking years in pop/rock music:
1954: The birth of rock and roll with Bill Haley and rockabilly.
1957: The rise of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Jerry Lee Lewis show rock and roll's first true suuperstars and proves the music is not a fad.
1964: The British Invasion and Motown explosion herald a new generation of rock and roll fans in the Baby Boomers.
1967: The "Summer of Love" and rise of FM radio pave the way for acid rock and brings innovative and politically charged artists like Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, Janis Joplin, and The Doors to the mainstream.
1976: The Ramones and the Sex Pistols give a shot of adreanline to a stagnant rock scene while at the same time disco begins to blow up huge thanks to the Bee Gees and KC and the Sunshine Band.
1983-84: Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, and a whole slew of new wave and hair metal acts usher in the MTV era.
1991-92: The grunge era roars its big head while gangsta rap begins to dominate the hip-hop scene and creeps into R&B as well.
1999: The Millennial generation makes its presence felt in music and pop culture with the rise of the Backstreeet Boys, "Nsync, Britney Spears, Destiny's Child and Christina Aguliera but also embraces diversity with hip-hop superstars like Jay-Z and introduces Latin music artists to a mostly white audience.
2008: The second Millennial wave occurs with the rise of Rihanna, Lady GaGa, Katy Perry, and Taylor Swift while also bringing electronic dance music further to the mainstream then it ever has been before.
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Reply #7 posted 09/07/15 12:33pm
MotownSubdivis ion |
728huey said: The groundbreaking years in pop/rock music:
1954: The birth of rock and roll with Bill Haley and rockabilly.
1957: The rise of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Jerry Lee Lewis show rock and roll's first true suuperstars and proves the music is not a fad.
1964: The British Invasion and Motown explosion herald a new generation of rock and roll fans in the Baby Boomers.
1967: The "Summer of Love" and rise of FM radio pave the way for acid rock and brings innovative and politically charged artists like Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, Janis Joplin, and The Doors to the mainstream.
1976: The Ramones and the Sex Pistols give a shot of adreanline to a stagnant rock scene while at the same time disco begins to blow up huge thanks to the Bee Gees and KC and the Sunshine Band.
1983-84: Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, and a whole slew of new wave and hair metal acts usher in the MTV era.
1991-92: The grunge era roars its big head while gangsta rap begins to dominate the hip-hop scene and creeps into R&B as well.
1999: The Millennial generation makes its presence felt in music and pop culture with the rise of the Backstreeet Boys, "Nsync, Britney Spears, Destiny's Child and Christina Aguliera but also embraces diversity with hip-hop superstars like Jay-Z and introduces Latin music artists to a mostly white audience.
2008: The second Millennial wave occurs with the rise of Rihanna, Lady GaGa, Katy Perry, and Taylor Swift while also bringing electronic dance music further to the mainstream then it ever has been before.
huey on point as usual! Thanks for contributing to my topic!
What year of this decade so far would you say comes close to being a "1984"? [Edited 9/7/15 12:37pm] |
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Reply #8 posted 09/07/15 12:45pm
728huey |
MotownSubdivision said:
728huey said:
The groundbreaking years in pop/rock music:
1954: The birth of rock and roll with Bill Haley and rockabilly.
1957: The rise of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Jerry Lee Lewis show rock and roll's first true suuperstars and proves the music is not a fad.
1964: The British Invasion and Motown explosion herald a new generation of rock and roll fans in the Baby Boomers.
1967: The "Summer of Love" and rise of FM radio pave the way for acid rock and brings innovative and politically charged artists like Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, Janis Joplin, and The Doors to the mainstream.
1976: The Ramones and the Sex Pistols give a shot of adreanline to a stagnant rock scene while at the same time disco begins to blow up huge thanks to the Bee Gees and KC and the Sunshine Band.
1983-84: Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, and a whole slew of new wave and hair metal acts usher in the MTV era.
1991-92: The grunge era roars its big head while gangsta rap begins to dominate the hip-hop scene and creeps into R&B as well.
1999: The Millennial generation makes its presence felt in music and pop culture with the rise of the Backstreeet Boys, "Nsync, Britney Spears, Destiny's Child and Christina Aguliera but also embraces diversity with hip-hop superstars like Jay-Z and introduces Latin music artists to a mostly white audience.
2008: The second Millennial wave occurs with the rise of Rihanna, Lady GaGa, Katy Perry, and Taylor Swift while also bringing electronic dance music further to the mainstream then it ever has been before.
huey on point as usual! Thanks for contributing to my topic! What year of this decade so far would you say comes close to being a "1984"? [Edited 9/7/15 12:37pm]
The closest to me would be 2012, but I honestly don't think we've reached that point yet. I'm thinking it will probably happen next year, but I believe it will be a more gradual shift like 1999 or 2008 than an abrupt shift like 1964 or 1991-92.
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Reply #9 posted 09/07/15 12:48pm
MotownSubdivis ion |
728huey said:
MotownSubdivision said: 728huey said:
The groundbreaking years in pop/rock music:
1954: The birth of rock and roll with Bill Haley and rockabilly.
1957: The rise of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Jerry Lee Lewis show rock and roll's first true suuperstars and proves the music is not a fad.
1964: The British Invasion and Motown explosion herald a new generation of rock and roll fans in the Baby Boomers.
1967: The "Summer of Love" and rise of FM radio pave the way for acid rock and brings innovative and politically charged artists like Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, Steppenwolf, Janis Joplin, and The Doors to the mainstream.
1976: The Ramones and the Sex Pistols give a shot of adreanline to a stagnant rock scene while at the same time disco begins to blow up huge thanks to the Bee Gees and KC and the Sunshine Band.
1983-84: Michael Jackson, Prince, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, and a whole slew of new wave and hair metal acts usher in the MTV era.
1991-92: The grunge era roars its big head while gangsta rap begins to dominate the hip-hop scene and creeps into R&B as well.
1999: The Millennial generation makes its presence felt in music and pop culture with the rise of the Backstreeet Boys, "Nsync, Britney Spears, Destiny's Child and Christina Aguliera but also embraces diversity with hip-hop superstars like Jay-Z and introduces Latin music artists to a mostly white audience.
2008: The second Millennial wave occurs with the rise of Rihanna, Lady GaGa, Katy Perry, and Taylor Swift while also bringing electronic dance music further to the mainstream then it ever has been before.
huey on point as usual! Thanks for contributing to my topic! What year of this decade so far would you say comes close to being a "1984"? [Edited 9/7/15 12:37pm]
The closest to me would be 2012, but I honestly don't think we've reached that point yet. I'm thinking it will probably happen next year, but I believe it will be a more gradual shift like 1999 or 2008 than an abrupt shift like 1964 or 1991-92.
I was thinking 2016 myself with all that's been happening this year and the years leading up to now. We'll have to wait and see. Why 2012? |
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Reply #10 posted 09/07/15 1:41pm
JoeTyler |
seriously, the last remarkable YEAR of music was probably 1991-92 |
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Reply #11 posted 09/07/15 2:12pm
CynicKill
|
JoeTyler said:
seriously, the last remarkable YEAR of music was probably 1991-92
>
I'll inch it up to maybe '94. End point definitely '95.
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Reply #12 posted 09/07/15 2:19pm
JoeTyler |
CynicKill said:
JoeTyler said:
seriously, the last remarkable YEAR of music was probably 1991-92
>
I'll inch it up to maybe '94. End point definitely '95.
yeah, UK 94-95, US 91-92 |
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Reply #13 posted 09/07/15 3:09pm
CynicKill
|
Village Voice - Pazz & Jop Lists
1995 Albums
1. PJ Harvey - To Bring You My Love 2. Tricky - Maxinquaye 3. Moby - Everything Is Wrong 4. Elastica - Elastica 5. Neil Young - Mirror Ball 6. Foo Fighters - Foo Fighters 7. Björk - Post 8. Bruce Springsteen - The Ghost Of Tom Joad 9. Yo La Tengo - Electr-O-Pura 10. Oasis - (What's The Story) Morning Glory? 11. Joan Osborne - Relish 12. Emmylou Harris - Wrecking Ball 13. Son Volt - Trace 14. Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness 15. Raekwon - Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... 16. Rancid - ...And Out Come The Wolves 17. Pavement - Wowee Zowee 18. Sonic Youth - Washing Machine 19. Garbage - Garbage 20. Matthew Sweet - 100% Fun
Singles - 1995
1.Coolio - Gangsta's Paradise 2. Edwyn Collins - A Girl Like You 2. Alanis Morissette - You Oughta Know 4.Elastica - Connection 5.Tlc - Waterfalls 6.Joan Osborne - One Of Us 7.PJ Harvey - Down By The Water 8.Tlc - Creep 9. Dionne Farris - I Know 9. Shaggy - Boombastic 10.Oasis - Wonderwall 12. Foo Fighters - This Is A Call 12. The Presidents Of The United States Of America - Lump 13.Method Man Featuring Mary J. Blige - I'll Be There For You/You're All I Need To Get By 15. Foo Fighters - I'll Stick Around 15. Matthew Sweet - Sick Of Myself 17. Portishead - Sour Times 17. Seal - Kiss From A Rose 17. Skee-Lo - I Wish 20. Goo Goo Dolls - Name 20. Smashing Pumpkins - Bullet With Butterfly Wings 22. Elastica - Stutter 22. Filter - Hey Man Nice Shot 22. Garbage - Queer 22. Luniz - I Got 5 On It |
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Reply #14 posted 09/07/15 3:20pm
JoeTyler |
^if we're talking about singles, I'd say that 2002-2003 was still decent-entertaining-catchy |
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Reply #15 posted 09/07/15 3:42pm
CynicKill
|
Singles 2003
1. OutKast - Hey Ya! (Arista) 2. Beyonce featuring Jay-Z - Crazy in Love (Columbia) 3. The White Stripes - Seven Nation Army (Third Man/V2) 4. Kelis - Milkshake (Star Trak/Arista) 5. 50 Cent - In Da Club (G-Unit/Shady/Aftermath/Interscope) 6. Johnny Cash - Hurt (Universal) 7. Fountains of Wayne - Stacy's Mom (S-Curve/Virgin) 8. R. Kelly - Ignition (Remix) (Jive) 9. Junior Senior - Move Your Feet (Atlantic) 10. Panjabi MC featuring Jay-Z - Beware of the Boys (Mundian To Bach Ke) (Sequence) 11. Electric Six - Danger! High Voltage (XL) 12. Justin Timberlake - Rock Your Body (Jive) 13. OutKast featuring Sleepy Brown - The Way You Move (Arista) 14. Justin Timberlake - Cry Me a River (Jive) 15. Missy Elliott - Pass That Dutch (Elektra) 16. !!! - Me and Giuliani Down by the Schoolyard (A True Story) (Touch & Go) 17. Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz featuring Ying Yang Twins - Get Low (TVT) 18. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Maps (Interscope) 19. Strokes - 12 - 51 (RCA) 20. Sean Paul - Get Busy (VP/Atlantic) 21. Darkness - I Believe in a Thing Called Love (Atlantic) 22. Pharrell featuring Jay-Z - Frontin' (Star Trak/Arista) 23. Coldplay - Clocks (Capitol) 24. Jet - Are You Gonna Be My Girl (Elektra) .... Snoop Dogg featuring Pharrell and Uncle Charlie Wilson - Beautiful (Capitol) 26. Lumidee - Never Leave You - Uh Ooh, Uh Oooh! (Universal) .... Rapture - House of Jealous Lovers (Universal) 28. Christina Aguilera - Beautiful (RCA) .... Roots (feat. Cody Chesnutt) - The Seed (2.0) (MCA) 30. Ludacris featuring Shawnna - Stand Up (Disturbing Tha Peace/Def Jam South) 31. Alicia Keys - You Don't Know My Name (J Records) .... New Pornographers - The Laws Have Changed (Matador) .... The White Stripes - The Hardest Button to Button (Third Man/V2) 34. Liz Phair - Why Can't I? (Capitol) .... Postal Service - Such Great Heights (Sub Pop) 36. Dizzee Rascal - I Luv U (XL) .... Ted Leo/Pharmacists - Where Have All the Rude Boys Gone? (Lookout!) .... Warren Zevon - Keep Me in Your Heart (Artemis) 39. R. Kelly - Step in the Name of Love (remix) (Jive) .... Radiohead - There There (Capitol) |
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Reply #16 posted 09/07/15 4:10pm
Reply #17 posted 09/08/15 10:29am
NorthC |
For the 1960s it would be 1965. It had Like a Rolling Stone, Satisfaction and Respect and many more. For the 1970s it would be 1976. It had Parliament's Mothership Connection, Dylan's Desire (with Hurricane) and the beginning of punk and disco. |
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Reply #18 posted 09/09/15 3:24pm
namepeace |
I'd say there are some good candidates listed here, I'd say 1977 is one of the great years due to the confluence of great albums and singles across many different genres of music.
For genre-specific eras, I'd put in a bid for 1993-1995 as the defining era for modern hip-hop. From Wu-Tang to OutKast, Biggie to Tupac, Digable Planets to Mobb Deep, Common to Gang Starr, so many artists on the east and west coasts put out their defining albums that shot them to superstardom, hip-hop legends, or both. If I had to choose one of those years, I'd go with 1994.
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder |
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Reply #19 posted 09/09/15 6:11pm
MotownSubdivis ion |
namepeace said: I'd say there are some good candidates listed here, I'd say 1977 is one of the great years due to the confluence of great albums and singles across many different genres of music.
For genre-specific eras, I'd put in a bid for 1993-1995 as the defining era for modern hip-hop. From Wu-Tang to OutKast, Biggie to Tupac, Digable Planets to Mobb Deep, Common to Gang Starr, so many artists on the east and west coasts put out their defining albums that shot them to superstardom, hip-hop legends, or both. If I had to choose one of those years, I'd go with 1994. My birth year! |
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Reply #20 posted 09/10/15 8:20am
namepeace |
MotownSubdivision said:
namepeace said:
I'd say there are some good candidates listed here, I'd say 1977 is one of the great years due to the confluence of great albums and singles across many different genres of music.
For genre-specific eras, I'd put in a bid for 1993-1995 as the defining era for modern hip-hop. From Wu-Tang to OutKast, Biggie to Tupac, Digable Planets to Mobb Deep, Common to Gang Starr, so many artists on the east and west coasts put out their defining albums that shot them to superstardom, hip-hop legends, or both. If I had to choose one of those years, I'd go with 1994.
My birth year!
Well there you go!
(way to make some of us feel really old . . . )
Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder |
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