The 1960s
The 1970s
More 70s
Hip-Hop
90s and Beyond
200

Sam Cooke, Aretha Franklin, and James Brown were key figures in this genre. 

Soul

200

Merle Haggard and Buck Owens were known for this sub-genre of country music named after a particular place. 

Bakersfield Sound 

200

This subgenre of country music, featuring performers like Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings, embraced some of the "counterculture" attitudes of the 60s and adopted a far less polished sound. 

Progressive country

200

This neighborhood of NYC was the first home to hip-hop. 

The Bronx

200

These were the first two rap albums to go multi-platinum in 1986.

Raising Hell by Run DMC and Licensed to Ill by the Beastie Boys

400

James Brown's "Live at The Apollo" is a key early example of this type of album. 

Concert album

400

James Taylor, Carole King, and Joni Mitchell were all known primarily as this type or category of artist. 

Singer-songwriter 

400

Bob Marley's reggae music was quickly pushed to popularity due to the cover of his song "I Shot the Sheriff" by what rock artist?

Eric Clapton

400

Early hip-hop MCs created "collages" where they spun together this particular section of records. 

The breaks 

400

This Miami-based rap group won a famous Supreme Court case which upheld the right of rap musicians to parody (via sampling) pre-existing recorded material.

2 Live Crew


600

"Folk-rock" was set into motion by what key live event in the summer of 1965? 

Bob Dylan "going electric" at the Newport Folk Festival 

600

This new format for music consumption gained mainstream popularity by the mid-1970s. 

Eight track/cassette tapes

600

Although The Stooges, the Velvet Underground, and the New York Dolls all became popular groups within punk rock, the genre was most significantly developed and performed in this type of scene. 

Regional/local scenes 

600

This was hip-hop's first massively commercially successful hit, which also popularized the term "rap". (Artist and song title) 

Sugar Hill Gang, "Rapper's Delight" 
600

This key album of West Coast gangsta rap sparked controversy and restriction from the Parents’ Music Resource Center as well as police attention. (Artist and album title) 

 Straight Outa Compton by N.W.A (1989)

800

This song by Simon and Garfunkel explored the phenomenon of folk rock by layering electric instruments over an original, more acoustic song. 

"The Sounds of Silence" 

800

This radio format, popularized in the 70s, featured bands like Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin and was primarily marketed to 18-25 year old white male listeners. 

Album-Oriented Rock

800

This key figure of funk was also known for incredible live performances, such as his "Mothership Landing" on stage.

George Clinton
800

"The Message" by this key hip-hop artist was one of the first popular tracks within the genre to directly address "social realism" and the realities of culture in their community. 

Grandmaster Flash (and the Furious Five) 

800

This hip-hop album held the #1 chart position for 21 weeks in 1990. (Artist and album) 

MC Hammer, Please Hammer Don’t Hurt Em

1000

This famous 1967 album by The Beatles "rewrote the rules" of psychedelic rock by inviting the listener in and "breaking the fourth wall" while addressing the audience directly. 

Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

1000

Disco de-emphasized the importance of this, as opposed to producers, djs, star singers, and dancers.

The band 

1000

Minimalism, clarity, texture, intellectualism, and even "awkwardness" played a large role in this rock subgenre. 

New Wave

1000

DJ Kool Herc was one of the first to implement this DJ technique, which manipulated a record across multiple turntables to repeat the same section over and over again. 

Backspinning

1000

This term referred collectively to multiple sub-genres of up-tempo, repetitive dance music that developed in club scenes of major cities from the early ‘80s on.

EDM (Electronic Dance Music)

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