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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/oblsk on 2023-09-06 22:18:53+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/ZEPIX39 on 2023-09-06 22:13:09+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/YU_AKI on 2023-09-06 21:37:34+00:00.


From a deep dive into 80s funk adjacent music, I swear a band like Level 42 had a similar bassline somewhere. But I've trawled all of Level 42 and couldn't find it. Has anyone heard a similar bassline from a band long before Thundercat?

Not intending to take away anything from Thundercat; I love his work. It'd help settle a long-running question in my head.

I know that the drums are from 'Footsteps in the Dark' by the Isley Brothers by the way!

Eta: stupid autocorrect in the title; should read 'bassline'

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/git-fetch-me-a-beer on 2023-09-06 21:11:06+00:00.


Maybe I'm late to the party but in the past 2 years I discovered a few rock bands composed primarily or led by women that I've come to enjoy a lot.

They are: Alvvays, Alexandra Savior, Wet Leg and Juniore.

Do you guys have other similar bands I should be aware of?

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/stabbinU on 2023-09-06 21:10:00+00:00.


Post great live performances below and win Reddit Premium/Gold.

Artists from the r/Music 'Hall of Fame' can be posted here. Remember to include the artist's name, song name, genre, and year/location of the performance if you can find it.

Higher-quality audio/video, live vocals, and live instrumentals are preferred. For cell-phone videos, soundboard audio is encouraged.

Unless there's a significant visual element to the performance that makes it worth watching, lip-syncing, over-dubbing, and post-production changes should be kept to a tasteful minimum.

Winners will receive a month of gold (with 700 coins, r/lounge access and all other perks).

Reddit's gifting program is being phased out in the next 2-3 weeks, so remember to use those coins before it's too late.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Grouchy-Cicada-3743 on 2023-09-06 20:49:29+00:00.


Throw away acount, because I feel very stupid, beyond belief.

How is everyone able to understand the lyrics in music without first looking up the lyrics?

I can barely tell the difference beetween if its a musical beat or a voice half the time, or more. I like music. I just can't understand what they are saying most of the time if not all the time. Also, what they are singing about does not make sense to me at all. The doctors said my hearing is perfect. I just cant understand the difference in sound when they overlap or something.

Edit: I'm trying to get to posts, and trying to respond with information that seems useful, but this kind of blew up with comments to go though. I need a moment. its overwhelming.

Edit 2: I probably have some form of auditory processing disorder and possibly some tactile synthensisa. I will check into it more with a doctor.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Mamacrass on 2023-09-06 20:16:58+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/d3rk2007 on 2023-09-06 20:12:48+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/stroh_1002 on 2023-09-06 19:30:42+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Notinyourbushes on 2023-09-06 18:43:28+00:00.


I'm a Gen-Xer who worked in the music industry (playing and later promotion) through the 90s and early aughts. It's been my passion project for the past few years to try and create listener friendly playlists that would introduce and/or catch up Boomers and my fellow Gen Xers to the last 20 years worth of music. After three years, I've finally finished up my master lists.

For the rest of this post, anyone 40 or younger will be referred to as a "kid" (no offense).

I see the posts on reddit constantly asking about (or judging) new music, usually from posters that have only been exposed to a handful of newer radio hits. They're judging the state of rock by the pop hits and that's never been an accurate way to gauge the state of music. I grew up in the 70s and 80s and we've always been bombarded by some of the most horrible, shallow pop imaginable (I'm looking at you Vanilla Ice).

So here's the answers to some of the most asked questions I've seen on reddit:

  1. Is rock dead? No. No where close. The charts might not reflect it, but at any given time there are hundreds upon hundreds of kids out there trying to make it playing some form of rock and roll.
  2. Do the kids still play guitar? Yes, absolutely. Even more than before. Just not the type of guitar you want them to play. Sorry, Eddie Van Halen and Yngwie Malmsteen turned out to not be as influential as Thurston Moore, Kevin Shields, or even J. Mascis. Guitarists like Johnny Marr cast as much longer shadow than Mick Mars did. I'm personally ok with that.
  3. Do the kids still rock? Hell yes. I would even go as far to say they grinder harder on their guitars, slap harder on the bass and pound more furiously on the drums than ever before. You get out of the top 40 and a lot of the older generations are going to look at what they're doing in the same light as the greatest generation viewed The Who or Pink Floyd. Wonderful, beautiful noise.

So here are my as-radio-friendly-as-possible playlists designed to let you see first hand what the kids have been doing for the past 18 years (if you feel so inclined). Well over 3000 songs between the 6 lists and easily at least 2500 different artists from across the globe. Hundreds and hundreds of hours work on my part. All I ask is you give an honest listen and give the kids a chance to change your mind.

Word of warning: placement of songs varied on the style of the individual songs, not the genre of the artists. You'll see some artists popping up on all the lists. Also, I was sorting through nearly 6000 songs while making 6 playlists. You might find an occasional song that ended up on the wrong list. Sorry in advance.

Folk: great starting point. This covers alt country, singer song writers, folk, post folk, granola and the occasional bluegrass tune. Also; a whole lot of people going "hey ho" for a few years around 2008-12. "They don't write songs like that anymore." Yeah, actually they do. It's a bit up and down, it jumps from very somber to very happy, but there are some absolutely amazing songs in there.

Pop: also a great starting point. You'll find upbeat and bubbly pop, ballads, all the happy songs as well as the more electronic leaning groups. If it has a disco beat or a singer with a wide range, I threw it here. Word of warning: there's still a lot of guitar scattered out in there. I consider Slipknot a pop group. Not because they're popular, but because they have a pop sound with just a lot of guitars on top.

Rock: I have a theory that a lot of people who say they like rock actually just like pop with extra guitars. When I say rock, this is rock. The harder groups; the punk, post punk, alternative groups with metal leanings, garage and psychedelic. Pretty much every genre of guitar driven music that didn't fit into the other three categories I picked. Great stuff, but it's also most of what I cut from the master lists (below) to make things more accessible to a wider audience.

Shoegaze: This is the good stuff. This is the best stuff. Most of you want to skip it. Very guitar heavy and a lot of distortion and feedback. Again, I had to cut most of this from the other lists because it's not everyone's cup of tea.

Various 2005-14: The master list. This is a music lover's list. If you don't care about genres, this is for you. Jazz and blues influenced songs, country, a ton of rock sub genres, indie, folk, a bit of everything. It gets heavy at times and it gets really soft at times, but more than any other list, this will tell you where music was during this time period.

Various 2014-22: Same as above. For music lovers. I will make intentionally harsh transitions from near disco songs to borderline metal into Mongolian throat singing. It's about 90% radio friendly with a splash of weirdness to show the diversity that's still out there.

Thank you for coming to my Ted talk and I hope you enjoy the journey you're about to start (if you choose to).

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Darkdimo on 2023-09-06 18:39:22+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Darkdimo on 2023-09-06 17:18:30+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Darkdimo on 2023-09-06 17:07:06+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/Beltbuckle46 on 2023-09-06 16:53:22+00:00.


I like thinking about what bands have changed the direction of music and thinking about what bands revolutionised something. Especially for individual genres. I also like picking an artist and making what I call an “influence tree” and see how far back I can go before there is no resemblance to the artist I start with. Another thing is I like finding music that isn’t in the right time, Like it always shocks me that the velvet underground started in 1964, and that black sabbath and led zeppelin started in 1968.

Let me know your thoughts on these things.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/DallasSF on 2023-09-06 16:39:45+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/IPersonaI on 2023-09-06 16:27:49+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/kevtheproblem on 2023-09-06 16:06:47+00:00.


Loved Annie Lennox doing Freddie’s vocals during the tribute performance but in my opinion them never doing a live performance of the song is similar to the Library of Alexandria burning. Wish they could’ve done it during Live Aid and that we had a recording of it.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/DishRelative5853 on 2023-09-06 15:37:06+00:00.


I was just listening to Babe I'm Gonna Leave You, and it got me wondering. Did anyone sound like that before that first Zeppelin album came out? I know there were singers with high voices - McCartney, Steve Marriott, and others - but I can't think of anyone who did what Robert Plant did on the first album.

Was there a Plant/Zeppelin soundalike before them?

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/HydraBob on 2023-09-06 14:25:44+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/dragonoid296 on 2023-09-06 13:31:03+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/moneyispussy on 2023-09-06 15:50:56+00:00.


i made these music with my friends and i sang those

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/mrjake118 on 2023-09-06 14:36:42+00:00.


Like okay, obviously death metal or mopey sad emo rock or whatever is heavy. I want to know what's heavy that doesn't depend on heavy guitar riffs and loud distortion. I want something that sounds dark and grim, or that makes you want to jump up and break shit, or just cry.

I'm inspired by the Run the Jewels album RTJ4, which is all rap and hip hop but the subject matter is seriously furious and the beats slam harder than many metal albums I've heard. It's destruction music.

Another I love is 16 Horespower's Sackcloth n Ashes, which sounds like bluegrass and country music for the End Times, sinister and bleak.

Edit: I'm loving all these suggestions, more than I'll even be able to handle haha. Also loving how many of them are definitely comfortably inside the "rock and metal" territory which kinda feels like cheating (someone said Soundgarden?? lol), but they're reminding me of some good stuff I've neglected so win-win.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/fiftyshadesofdoug on 2023-09-06 14:21:58+00:00.


Just gave their new song "Angry" a listen. I've got to say it sounds a hell of a lot better than I had expected. Pretty miraculous actually that a bunch of 80-year olds can still make music like this...

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/TrashInspector69 on 2023-09-06 13:06:03+00:00.


Hands down DSOTM has more single song appeal than The Wall. But it’s undeniable to me that as a full album The Wall blows anything else I’ve listened to start to finish out of the water. It’s a very well structured album and one of those I listen to and am surprised I didn’t get bored at all and how long it took to listen to it.

I know The Wall gets hate because of Roger Waters and yes while he’s an ass and doesn’t have as soothing of a voice as David Gilmour I think his vision was executed to perfection.

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The original was posted on /r/music by /u/invasivetomato on 2023-09-06 12:36:58+00:00.


I'm not denying that she's an amazing performer and personality, and I totally appreciate her work and dedication to what she does, but I've never been a massive fan of any of her songs. This has never been an issue, but now that her Eras tour is so massive, I've found that simply saying “oh I dont really listen to her” or “Taylor Swift isn't on my album” is a massive offense to anyone who likes her music. Why does she get so much hype? Am I not understanding something here? So many other artists put massive time and effort into their careers but saying “I dont listen to Harry Styles” has never been an issue. Since when did not liking Taylor Swift's music become a crime?

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