When athletic height jumping was considered done and perfected, there was the Fosbury flop which opened new possibilities. Do you think there was such a moment in the music history? When someone showed how things can be done and from there everyone is using his/her technique?
I go with autotune. Biggest change in the last 20 years and everbody is doing it from amateur to professional.
You shouldn’t be getting downvoted for a very valid opinion.
Equal temperament, where all the keys have basically the same intervals rather than having different characters as in just intonation. Enabled modulation from one key to another as in Bach and Jazz.
I don’t believe music was ever considered done and perfected but I’ll throw in looping. What single musicians are able to do with this technique is amazing. But not sure who invented it.
This is maybe obscure but Earl Scruggs basically invented three finger picking on the banjo. It became one of the defining characteristics of bluegrass music and when most people imagine “banjo music” today, that’s probably what they imagine first. (It’s called “Scruggs Style” and he popularized but who knows who did it first as a lark?)
A recent one is abusing autotune. Autotune was invented to correct singing notes that were slightly off. Cher was apparently first to do this but people started experimenting with unintended settings combinations to make different effects and stuff. T-Pain took that to the extreme and it became a whole trend in pop music.
Plus, like, the entire history of music in New Orleans and the surrounding Mississippi Delta region. So much American (and British) music can trace a direct line to the blues, jazz, early rock and roll, and other genres that begin in the region.
Just a quick, fyi, I learned the other day. Cher actually was really against that song and the auto tune stuff. They had to talk her into it. Which is interesting because it restarted her career.
- Jamaican dub. The concept of the engineer as artist and producer and also the idea of remixing comes from dub, which was invented by people like King Tubby and Lee Scratch Perry. The way most modern genres are produced (by a creative audio engineer, without a band) originated from dub.
If you’re ever inclined to say more about this (dub/producer as artist) please do it here?
Fascinated by this.
Sorry mate, I don´t have the energy for that, I recommend the Wikipedia article on Dub.
No worries.
Actually this podcast on the topic was recommended by another kind user here: https://lemmy.world/comment/7957387
Thanks for planting the seed it’s been fun to learn about this.
Sweet, take care out there.
Off topic: Hey does anyone know how I can tag a user in lemmy?
I don’t know if @Hackerman_uwu is enough? I’m writing this comment to test it
Maybe !Hackerman_uwu@lemmy.world
Edit: nope neither of those work
Thanks for taking a swing at it! :)
I would say going from analogue to digital recording. Digital made edits possible that where impossible before.
Dave Davies of The Kinks changed rock music with a razor blade. Distortion pedals existed but they couldn’t provide the same kind of fuss sound that we hear in “You Really Got Me”… but a year later they could.
Van Halen finger tapping the fretboard. Didn’t last as a trend, but every guitar player tried it at the time.
Les Claypool from Primus playing lead bass. That was so unique, I don’t think anyone really copied it. A watershed moment anyway.
Neil Pert YYZ or the solo from Tom Sawyer. Same reaction from drummers as guitarists for Van Halen. Blew everyone’s mind as to what was possible by one drummer.
Obviously there was nothing like Jimmy Hendrix either, but there was so much new and experimental music at the time he unfortunately gets lumped into “60’s music” IMO.
The MC5’s performance at the Chicago DNC in 1968 (and by extension Punk Rock). “Kick out the Jams, MOTHERFUCKERS!”
…finger tapping the fretboard. Didn’t last as a trend
Math rock enthusiasts enter the room
Ice-T’s Original Gangster
Absolutely changed the course of rap history. In a good or a bad way is up to you, but O.G. was the O.G.