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Post by vhsfan0101 on Jul 27, 2021 11:28:20 GMT 10
I think the Ska-Punk genre will become popular again this decade like it was in the mid-90s. The reason why I said that is because I have been seeing a lot of interest for it as of recent. One example of me seeing a lot of interest for the Ska-punk genre as of recent is me seeing a teenager wear a Sublime shirt on NBC Nightly News a few weeks ago. I find it weird that the Ska-Punk genre has not made a comeback even though I have been seen a lot of interest for it as of recent.
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Post by mc98 on Jul 27, 2021 11:55:42 GMT 10
Drum and Bass Grunge(The original Seattle sound, not post-grunge) Cheesy Eurodance Timbaland/Neptunes style productions G-Funk New Jack Swing(I know Finesse was a hit but there weren't any more after that)
Basically the 90s/early 00s genres with a 2020s twist. 70s/80s inspired songs need to go honestly.
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Post by vhsfan0101 on Jul 27, 2021 12:17:03 GMT 10
Drum and Bass Grunge(The original Seattle sound, not post-grunge) Cheesy Eurodance Neptunes style productions G-Funk New Jack Swing(I know Finesse was a hit but there weren't any more after that) Basically the 90s/early 00s genres with a 2020s twist. 70s/80s inspired songs need to go honestly. mc98, I,too, like Eurodance music.
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Post by sman12 on Jul 27, 2021 14:27:00 GMT 10
I think the Ska-Punk genre will become popular again this decade like it was in the mid-90s. The reason why I said that is because I have been seeing a lot of interest for it as of recent. One example of me seeing a lot of interest for the Ska-punk genre as of recent is me seeing a teenager wear a Sublime shirt on NBC Nightly News a few weeks ago. I find it weird that the Ska-Punk genre has not made a comeback even though I have been seen a lot of interest for it as of recent. Don't get your hopes up on it. That teen probably wore it 'cause it looked cool (same thing goes for people wearing Nirvana or Pink Floyd shirts for aesthetic purposes). Anyways, since 2000s nostalgia is underway, and pop punk is popular once again, I guess I could see a revamp of Timbaland and Neptune-style pop/hip-hop/ R&B beats.
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Post by 10slover on Jul 27, 2021 14:53:46 GMT 10
I think the Ska-Punk genre will become popular again this decade like it was in the mid-90s. The reason why I said that is because I have been seeing a lot of interest for it as of recent. One example of me seeing a lot of interest for the Ska-punk genre as of recent is me seeing a teenager wear a Sublime shirt on NBC Nightly News a few weeks ago. I find it weird that the Ska-Punk genre has not made a comeback even though I have been seen a lot of interest for it as of recent. Don't get your hopes up on it. That teen probably wore it 'cause it looked cool (same thing goes for people wearing Nirvana or Pink Floyd shirts for aesthetic purposes). Anyways, since 2000s nostalgia is underway, and pop punk is popular once again, I guess I could see a revamp of Timbaland and Neptune-style pop/hip-hop/ R&B beats. A Bruno Mars collab with Timbaland would do the trick. I sense a comeback of teen-pop ala Britney in 1999-2000.
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Post by slashpop on Jul 27, 2021 20:32:36 GMT 10
Anything that hasn't been explored in the mainstream from 1993 to 1999.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 28, 2021 12:01:45 GMT 10
Why are people so obsessed with comebacks? Let's give the 2020s a chance to create a unique and fresh genre, something we haven't heard before. We've had enough comebacks. It's time for something new.
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Post by xamo on Jul 28, 2021 21:07:08 GMT 10
Drum and Bass Grunge(The original Seattle sound, not post-grunge) Cheesy Eurodance Timbaland/Neptunes style productions G-Funk New Jack Swing(I know Finesse was a hit but there weren't any more after that) Basically the 90s/early 00s genres with a 2020s twist. 70s/80s inspired songs need to go honestly. Great list. I would add techno and house for underground club scene, Berlin techno is growing in a lot of underground circles and House with a mix of hip hop is brewing below the surface. Tons of Ex-hyperpop artists are just singing over sped up techno beats now. I dont see grunge coming back but grunge aesthetics or grunge-influenced production for sure. But more so early grunge/college rock from the late 80s in alternative spaces. G-Funk is a wildcard, it could definitely comeback. There’s already a really popular Tiktok sound with a G-Funk song. The issue is mainstream hip hop is dependent on trap-related genres like a parasite. G-Funk demands a musicality and seriousness for Hip Hop that the current crop of artists don’t have. New Jack Swing is a hard one, it could comeback but I barely see anyone wanting or making this kind of music. The potential is there though.
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Post by xamo on Jul 28, 2021 21:30:02 GMT 10
Rising genres of the 2020s: - Drum&Bass/UK Jungle: Part of the greater Gen Z soft club aesthetic, this is increasingly becoming more common especially among UK Gen Z circles. TikTok artist, PinkPanthress is a good example of an artist that is blowing up that uses aesthetics/production derived from DnB and Jungle
- House/Techno: Hyperpop is collapsing under its own weight (The Spotify playlist is stagnating) and is splitting into dozens of mini genres. Two of which are leading Gen Z and Millennial artists to rediscover Techno, Eurodance, and House. In the case of alternative styles, Hip House is being revived, see LVL1’s song FVN! which is rising up. Techno is bubbling in the underground but I suspect it’ll go big next year or in 2023 as raves replace the 2010s hip hop-based mosh pits.
- Mid/Late 2000s Pop redux: Young producers are rediscovering Britney’s monumental Blackout, Ayesha Erotica’s controversial past shines a light on her forward-thinking discography, and the iJustine craze is starting again. Out with Y2K, in with mid/late 2000s. Nobody wants to make pop like the Backstreet Boys or NSYNC anymore (did they in the first place?). The true pop bible for post-hyperpop Gen Z artists is: The Dutchess - Fergie, Blackout - Britney, The Fame, Lady Gaga, among many others. Aaliyah is timeless, but her influence now will come from her music recorded in the 2000s aka the red album(my profile pic). Basically expect the entirety of the 2000s to encompass a Y2K feeling. Also see: Coltemonikha and Junkie XL
- Pop Punk: This is more of an observation than a guess. Many pop excs were betting on the death of emo-rap to leave a void for pop punk consumption, and it largely has. Pop punk is now a comparable circle with other large subcultures, and it’s only growing. The only concern is stagnation, as crossover appeal isn’t fully there yet.
- Art Pop: This arguably never left, but it’s never been more crowded. There are so many Björk/Kate Bush clones, and everyone is dreaming of a collaboration with Arca. Expect a gen z art pop girl to go big this decade, and the genre will drastically shift this decade.
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Post by John Titor on Jul 29, 2021 3:39:19 GMT 10
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