Music genres are not static categories; they are constantly evolving, influencing one another, and often fading from mainstream popularity only to resurface in new forms or niche subcultures. As one source states, “The dynamic nature of rock illustrates how quickly subcultures can emerge and vanish.” This document explores the rise, characteristics, decline, and lasting influence of various musical styles, drawing on insights from several sources.
A music genre is defined by “similarities in form, style, or subject matter.” Classification is based on “techniques and instrumentation,” lyrical content, and even target audience. Historically, before the 20th century, music was often grouped by broader periods like Baroque or Romantic. However, with the rise of the American music business and innovations in listening technologies like the phonograph and radio, “the idea of genre really solidified” as a marketing tool.
Music genres constantly emerge, evolve, and sometimes fade, driven by cultural, technological, and industry shifts.
“Forgotten” musical genres or styles are those that once defined an era but now have limited mainstream presence, their influence often subtly integrated into newer sounds.
Despite fading from the mainstream, the “DNA” of these forgotten genres persists through sampling, online revivals, and genre blending.
Ragtime: The Roots of Jazz
Ragtime was the dominant American popular music from 1899 to 1917, developed by river-town pianists along the Mississippi and Missouri.
The genre synthesised minstrel tunes, African American banjo rhythms, syncopated dance beats, and European melodies.
Scott Joplin, known as the “King of Ragtime,” became famous with “The Maple Leaf Rag” in 1899, popularizing the sound through sheet music and player pianos.
Ragtime’s signature was structured piano pieces featuring a steady bass in the left hand and off-beat syncopation in the right, which became foundational for jazz and swing music.
Its decline after World War I was due to its technical difficulty, racial bias, oversaturation by simplified imitations, and the rise of jazz, which was perceived as easier to play and more dynamic.
Ragtime’s influence can still be heard in vintage jazz revivals, blues-leaning songs, hip-hop samples, and alternative rock experiments.
Doo-Wop: The Era of Vocal Harmony
Doo-wop emerged as one of the influential Music genres in African American neighborhoods in the 1940s. It gained significant popularity in the 1950s, led by groups like The Orioles, The Ink Spots, and The Mills Brothers.
This style featured catchy songs with minimal instrumentation, simple rhythms, romantic themes, and the use of nonsense syllables like “sh-boom” or “doo-wah.”
New York City was a crucial hub for doo-wop, shaped by both Black and Italian American groups.
The genre’s decline coincided with the British Invasion and significant social changes, including JFK’s assassination, marking a shift in audience tastes.
Exploitative industry practices, “whitewashing” of artists, and a move towards rock and roll also contributed to its fading from mainstream view.
Doo-wop’s vocal harmony legacy continues to influence modern pop artists such as Bruno Mars and Meghan Trainor.
Psychedelic Rock: The 1960s Counterculture Soundtrack
Psychedelic rock rapidly emerged in 1966 as one of the dominant Music genres. It was heavily influenced by hallucinogenic drugs like LSD and marijuana, with San Francisco becoming a central hub.
Key bands included Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, The Doors, and 13th Floor Elevators, while The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and The Beach Boys’ “Pet Sounds” pushed pop boundaries.
British psychedelia was defined by bands like Pink Floyd and the Yardbirds, incorporating Eastern instruments and unusual rhythms.
The genre pioneered mind-expanding sounds, surreal lyrics, and studio experimentation, influencing heavy metal, punk, and trip-hop, as well as fashion and festival culture.
Its decline was due to commercialization, oversaturation, a perceived loss of its underground spirit, the rise of hard rock and metal, internal band conflicts, drug abuse, and societal backlash against the hippie movement.
Disco: Mainstream Explosion and Backlash
Disco dominated clubs like Studio 54 in the late 1970s, with artists such as Donna Summer, The Village People, and the Bee Gees achieving chart success.
The release of “Saturday Night Fever” in 1977 transformed disco into a national phenomenon, characterized by four-on-the-floor beats, strings, synthesizers, and mirror balls.
Disco’s rapid ascent was followed by an equally dramatic fall, famously highlighted by “Disco Demolition Night” in Chicago on July 12, 1979, which involved smashing records in protest.
The backlash against disco was not solely musical but also exposed underlying systemic racism and homophobia.
Corporate overproduction of formulaic tracks led to audience fatigue and radio stations moving on.
Despite its decline, disco was one of the Music genres that significantly influenced production techniques and remains foundational to modern EDM through its kick patterns, lush strings, and song blending.
Britpop: British Indie Rock’s Peak
Britpop emerged in the UK in the 1990s as one of the Music genres which was a celebration of British identity, featuring catchy indie rock drawing inspiration from The Beatles and The Kinks.
Bands like Oasis, Blur, Suede, and Pulp spearheaded the movement, with lyrics often about daily British life and a pushback against American grunge.
The “Battle of Britpop” in 1995, a chart rivalry between Blur and Oasis, garnered widespread media attention.
Oasis’s album “(What’s the Story) Morning Glory?” sold over 22 million copies worldwide, solidifying Britpop’s cultural dominance from 1993 to 1997.
The genre faded in the late 1990s as many bands struggled, giving way to commercialized pop acts, media fatigue, and a resurgence of teen pop.
Its melodic essence continues to resonate within contemporary UK indie and pop music.
Nu Metal: Rock and Hip-Hop Fusion
Nu metal gained prominence in American rock during the 1990s, blending heavy metal riffs with hip-hop rhythms, funk grooves, and industrial noise.
Bands such as Korn, Slipknot, and Limp Bizkit, alongside Linkin Park, which sold over 27 million copies of “Hybrid Theory,” defined the genre.
Characteristics included low-tuned seven-string guitars, vocalists alternating between rapped verses, screams, and growls, and an aesthetic featuring baggy pants and spiked hair.
The genre’s mood often felt nihilistic, with events like Woodstock ’99 showcasing its intense energy.
Oversaturation and criticism led to its decline, as many bands distanced themselves from the label, though a mini-revival in the 2010s saw its elements blended with deathcore or metalcore.
Nu metal’s hybrid approach continues to influence modern collaborations between MCs and guitarists.
Vaporwave: Nostalgic and Satirical Electronic Sounds
Vaporwave emerged in the early 2010s, with producers like James Ferraro, Daniel Lopatin, and Ramona Langley shaping its sound, exemplified by Langley’s “Floral Shoppe.”
The genre manipulates smooth jazz, 1980s lounge, and elevator music through slowing, chopping, and heavy reverb to create a dreamy, hazy atmosphere, often satirizing consumer culture.
Visuals associated with vaporwave include glitch art and retro-futuristic graphics inspired by early web design.
Spinoffs like future funk and mallsoft quickly followed, and Japanese City Pop found renewed online popularity.
Its decline after the mid-2010s was partly due to its ephemeral nature, being born and “buried” online, its strong ties to Internet meme culture, and a desire to avoid commercialization.
Despite its short mainstream peak, vaporwave’s sampling techniques and dreamy synth textures have left a lasting mark on modern electronic music, preserved through online communities and YouTube channels.
Reasons for Genre Decline
Changing cultural trends significantly influence audience tastes, leading to the rise and fall of genres; for instance, disco’s rapid end was due to a backlash, and grunge gave way to pop-punk and hip-hop.
Oversaturation in the market occurs when too many acts replicate a successful formula, leading to listener burnout, as seen with grunge and dubstep.
Technological advancements consistently reshape music creation and consumption, moving from phonographs to tape machines, then to digital sampling tools and software like Ableton Live, enabling new genres while others fade.
The “cyclical nature of music evolution” means genres rise, peak, and fall in recurring patterns, often influenced by and reflecting broader cultural shifts.
Digital archiving and streaming platforms facilitate the rediscovery of forgotten sounds, allowing musicians to blend them into new creations and fostering niche sub-culture revivals.