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Friday, February 13, 2015

Timeline of music in the United States (1970–present)



1970[edit]

  • Diana Ross leaves the Supremes, considered to be the most successful and influential girl group of all time, to embark upon a solo career after her final performance with the group on January 14, 1970 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
  • Armadillo World Headquarters opens in Austin, Texas. It will become a major venue for the music of Austin, especially the local country scene.[1][2]
  • Black Sabbath's Black Sabbath and Paranoid codify the genre later known as heavy metal music; though Black Sabbath is British, heavy metal will become an important American phenomenon in the next decade.[3]
  • Charlie Gillett's The Sound of the City is the first comprehensive history of R&B and rock.[4]
  • Growing Latino "political unrest and cultural awakening" manifests in musical expression, especially in the formation of a group called El Chicano, who had a major hit with "Viva Tirado". "Viva Tirado" becomes the "first single to attain positions in all popular music categories except country and western".[5]
  • Francis Grasso opens the Sanctuary, the first "notoriously gay discothèque" in the country in the New York club scene; he innovates a technique called disco blending, which allows for uninterrupted dancing, laying the groundwork for disco music.[6]
  • Miles DavisBitches Brew is an important part of the origin of jazz-rock.[7]
  • Haitian performers with mini-djaz bands touring the United States begin deserting to settle in Miami and other cities, establishing a number of local Haitian music scenes.[8]
  • Nosotros, a Hollywood trade association for Latino entertainers, inaugurates what will become known as the Golden Eagle Awards, for Latino musicians.[5]
  • The works of Scott Joplin become the basis for a ragtime revival,[9] inspired in large part by The Complete Piano Works of Scott Joplin, a recording by John W. Parker, and Scott Joplin: Piano Rags, a recording by Joshua RifkinEubie Blake becomes the only ragtime pianist to ever record one of his own pieces, "Charleston Rag" (written in 1921).[10]
  • The case Sinatra v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., though ultimately unsuccessful, contends for the first time that the use of a performer to imitate a different performer - in this case, Nancy Sinatra - could constitute the tort of passing off.[11]
  • Jamaican musician U-Roy becomes the first to record rhythmic speech over dubs, which is the direct ancestor of rapping, one of the elements of hip hop culture.[12]
  • Louis Wayne Ballard becomes the Director of Music Programs for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He will be the first Native American to create educational materials on Native American music.[13]
  • The Stooges begin performing, becoming known for making physical contact with the crowd, one of the reasons they are considered an important predecessor of punk rock and hardcore.[14]
  • The first digital synthesizers are created.[15]

1971[edit]

Early 1970s music trends

1972[edit]

1973[edit]

1974[edit]

  • Gloria Gaynor's "Never Can Say Goodbye" is the first "disco hit to reach the charts".[50]
  • The National Endowment for the Arts creates a subcategory within its music program for "Jazz/Folk/Ethnic Music"; though jazz had previously been supported by the NEA, this is the first support for folk music.[32][51]
  • The military establishes the Bicentennial Band, which will tour across the United States over the next few years in celebration of the country's bicentennial anniversary.[52]
  • The case Schroeder v. Macaulay is a key ruling on the enforceability of music publishing agreements. Among the consequences of the case is the reversion of unused material to the ownership of the author.[11]

1975[edit]

Mid-1970s music trends

1976[edit]

1977[edit]

1978[edit]

Late 1970s music trends

1979[edit]

1980[edit]

Early 1980s music trends
  • Music education curricula in the United States begin incorporating musical elements from diverse areas of both the country and the world.[105]
  • Americans become more interested in the music education of their children, especially after news of the "Mozart effect", in which children exposed to Western classical music are said to become more intelligent later in life, spreads across the country.[105]
  • The last documented use of Ghost Dance-derived songs ends, among the Naraya songs, sung by women for general well-being, of the Wind River Shoshone.[130]
  • Hardcore punk develops and spreads across the country.[131]

1981[edit]

1982[edit]

1983[edit]

1984[edit]

1985[edit]

Mid-1980s music trends

1986[edit]

1987[edit]

1988[edit]

Late 1980s music trends

1989[edit]

1990[edit]

Early 1990s music trends

1991[edit]

1992[edit]

1993[edit]

1994[edit]

1995[edit]

Mid-1990s music trends

1996[edit]

1997[edit]

1998[edit]

Late 1990s music trends
  • Live musical instruments again become common parts of recorded hip hop.[12]

1999[edit]

2000[edit]

  • The Grammy Awards designate seven awards for Latin music: Tejano Performance, Latin Pop Performance, Latin Rock/Alternative Performance, Mexican-American Performance, Salse Performance, Merengue Performance and Traditional Tropical Latin Performance.[46] The Latin Grammys are also founded to focus specifically on rewarding Latin music in the United States.[5]
  • The O Brother Where Art Thou? is a surprise success, consisting of old time music, which provokes a resurgence of interest in American folk music.[38]
  • Napster is convicted of violating copyright law for enabling people to trade files without permission from the owner of the copyrights in the file.[219]

2001[edit]

2002[edit]

2003[edit]

2004[edit]

2005[edit]

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