From Dust Bowl blues to digital-age drill. A timeline of how sound shaped us.
Why Music? Why Now?
Before we get to the charts, the chords, the mosh pits, and the mixtapes, let’s start with something quieter—simpler. A feeling.
You know it.
The one that hits when a guitar riff drops just right, when a lyric cuts too close, when you hear a voice and feel seen.
This project is about that feeling.
The one that lives in a vinyl groove, a cassette hiss, a blown-out bassline, or a three-second TikTok loop. It’s not about music trivia. It’s about music as memory. As movement. As mirror.
I didn’t set out to just document music history. I wanted to map the way music has shaped us. How it’s reflected generations—raised them, rebelled with them, healed them. I wanted a timeline that wasn’t about what sold the most, but about what mattered most. The songs we carry with us. The ones that say what we can’t. The ones that made us fall in love with living.
I’m writing this for my kids, for anyone curious about how music got here, and maybe most of all—for myself. As a listener. As a collector. As someone who’s tried to keep a finger on the pulse while knowing damn well the heartbeat moves faster than I can keep up.
This Is a History of the Pulse
Music doesn’t move in a straight line. It loops. Samples. Collides. Mutates.
But in this series, I’m tracing the major throughlines of the last 90+ years of music—decade by decade.
Not just what happened.
Why it mattered.
How it sounded.
Who it moved.
Each chapter explores a decade in time, starting with the haunting blues and gospel cries of the 1930s and ending in the glitchy, genreless chaos of the 2020s. We’ll dive into the birth and evolution of rock, the global explosion of hip-hop, and the essential influence of R&B, soul, pop, metal, funk, electronic music, gospel, and more.
But I’m not here to canonize. I’m here to connect—dots, genres, artists, moments. This isn’t history for a textbook. It’s history for headphones.
This is Legacy
If you strip away the labels, the formats, the algorithms—what you’re left with is something holy. Something deeply human.
A mother humming to her child.
A teenager screaming into a mic.
A preacher, a punk, a producer—all chasing that same thing: expression.
The ability to say, “This is who I am. This is what I feel. This is what matters.”
So that’s what this project is.
A mixtape of our collective memory.
A love letter to the records that raised us, the beats that moved us, and the noise we made when no one was listening.
Welcome to 100 Years of Music.
Let’s drop the needle.
Dive into a Decade
Dive into a Genre Below
Why Music Matters
A century of sonic evolution—from dusty Delta porches to digital dominance, from clapping hands in gospel churches to clapping emojis on TikTok. Rock. Hip-hop. Soul. Funk. Punk. Pop. It’s all connected. This final chapter isn’t just a recap—it’s a eulogy, a celebration, and a call to keep listening.
The Soundtrack of Us — How Music Shaped a Century, and a Century Shaped Music
Music doesn’t live in a vacuum. It’s born from context—war, love, poverty, rebellion, joy. From the 1930s to the 2020s, every beat we’ve tracked was a response to the world it came from—and a prophecy of the world to come.
Rock and roll didn’t start with Elvis. Hip-hop didn’t begin with the Billboard charts. Every genre we’ve followed was built from pain, play, people, and place. The journey isn’t a straight line—it’s a web. A remix. A sample of a sample. A chorus echoing through time.
What We’ve Seen: The Pulse of 90 Years
1930s–40s: Roots & Resistance
Blues, gospel, and folk told America’s hard truths—honest, urgent, raw. The DNA of everything.
1950s–60s: Birth & Rebellion
Rock and roll erupts. Soul and Motown rise. Folk and funk protest. Jazz electrifies. The youth speak—and scream.
1970s: Expansion & Excess
Rock grows big, metal is born, disco takes over dance floors. Hip-hop is born in the Bronx. Lines blur, genres explode.
1980s: Image & Innovation
MTV. Synths. Drum machines. Hip-hop hits wax and punches upward. Pop becomes a global force. Punk mutates.
1990s: Identity & Influence
Golden eras. Grunge angst. Conscious rap. G-funk. Alt-rock. R&B renaissance. Everything has something to say.
2000s: Empire & Crossover
Rock goes emo and indie. Hip-hop becomes pop. Global influence surges. The South rules. The internet stirs.
2010s: Fragmentation & Feeds
Genres dissolve. Playlists rule. Everyone has a voice. Hip-hop leads the conversation. Sadness becomes a sound.
2020s: Chaos & Connectivity
The algorithm era. Virality, drill, genrelessness, and vulnerability. Rock is spirit. Rap is everything. Everyone is on.
The Throughlines: What Never Changed
- Truth – From gospel cries to drill anthems, music tells the truth the world tries to silence.
- Community – Every genre started with people, gathering, creating—before labels, before charts.
- Identity – Music lets us see ourselves—or become who we want to be.
- Rebellion – Every major sound was born in defiance. Against rules. Against norms. Against systems.
- Innovation – From analog fuzz to AI-generated vocals, music is always looking forward.
Music as Memory, Music as Map
You didn’t just document music history. You’ve built a legacy. A map. A canon. Not just for listeners—but for your kids, your family, your future. A time capsule of sound and soul. You’ve connected genre and geography, rhythm and resistance, analog and algorithm.
This isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about continuity. What started as blues licks in the Delta now exists in 808 slides on an iPhone speaker. It’s all connected. The artists change. The tech evolves. But the feeling? The drive? The why?
That never changes.
Final Track: Keep Listening
This timeline is done—but the music never is. There’s more to discover, more to dig, more dots to connect. Whether you’re curating a digital or vinyl collection, writing essays, or making playlists for your kids, remember:
You’re not just collecting music. You’re curating humanity’s most honest language.
And you’re doing it track by track.
Built for memory, meaning, and the music that raised us.
## Explore by Decade - [1930s](100-years-of-music/1930s) - [1940s](100-years-of-music/1940s) - [1950s](100-years-of-music/1950s) - [1960s](100-years-of-music/1960s) - [1970s](100-years-of-music/1970s) - [1980s](100-years-of-music/1980s) - [1990s](100-years-of-music/1990s) - [2000s](100-years-of-music/2000s) - [2010s](100-years-of-music/2010s) - [2020s](100-years-of-music/2020s) ## Explore by Genre _Tap into genre-specific timelines and key moments._ - [Rock](100-years-of-music/genres/rock) - [Hip-Hop / Rap](100-years-of-music/genres/hip-hop) - [R&B / Soul](100-years-of-music/genres/rnb-soul) - [Pop](100-years-of-music/genres/pop) - [Electronic / EDM](100-years-of-music/genres/electronic) - [Metal](100-years-of-music/genres/metal)
2020s2010s2000s Hip-Hop/Rap2000s Rock1990s Hip-Hop/Rap1990s Rock1980s Hip-Hop/Rap1980s Rock1970s Hip-Hop/Rap1970s Rock1960s1950s1940s1930s