Redirected from Timeline of trends in music (1951-present)
See also:
List of years in music,
Timeline of trends in music to 1899,
Timeline of trends in music (1900-1950),
Timeline of trends in music (1980-present)
1950s
1960s
1970s
- 1970 in music
- 1971 in music
- International trends
- ABBA ("Don't Know How to Love Him") begins the dominance of Europop on the continental music charts
- Singer-songwriters like John Denver (Poems, Prayers and Promises[?]), Van Morrison (Tupelo Honey[?]), Joni Mitchell (Blue[?], Don McLean (American Pie[?]), Elton John (Tumbleweed Connection[?], Madman Across the Water[?]), Billy Joel (Cold Spring Harbor[?]), Cat Stevens (Teaser and the Firecat[?]) and Carole King (Tapestry[?]) release influential and popular albums
- Early prog rock bands like Genesis (Nursery Cryme[?]), Deep Purple (Fireball), Electric Light Orchestra (Electric Light Orchestra[?]), Yes (The Yes Album[?]), Gong (Camembert Electrique[?]), Procol Harum (Broken Barricades[?]), Pink Floyd (Meddle[?]) and Jethro Tull (Aqualung) release influential albums; this is progressive rock's peak
- Music of Cuba
- Music of Germany
- Music of Martinique and Guadeloupe
- Haitian immigrants to Martinique bring with them kadans[?], which will dominate Martinican music for the next decade
- Music of Iceland[?]
- Music of Kenya
- Simba Wanyika's career as a popular performer in Kenya begins, marking the beginning of a fusion between African rhythms and western pop sounds, and the commercial success of Swahili music
- Music of Trinidad & Tobago
- Music of the United Kingdom
- Music of the United States
- 1972 in music
- 1973 in music
- 1974 in music
- 1975 in music
- Music of Iceland[?]
- Music of the United Kingdom
- Music of the United States
- Bruce Springsteen makes the cover of Time Magazine and Newsweek on the same week, releases Born to Run, and breaks into the mainstream
- 1970s-style funk is at the height of its popularity with important releases from Parliament (Chocolate City[?]), War (Why Can't We Be Friends?[?]) and The Meters (Fire on the Bayou[?])
- The first radio stations with a Christian Contemporary Music (CCM) format begin broadcasting
- Country-oriented songs are popular, including releases from Linda Ronstadt (Prisoner in Disguise[?]), John Denver ("Calypso", "Thank God I'm a Country Boy", "I'm Sorry", "Sweet Surrender", "Sunshine on My Shoulders"), The Eagles (One of These Nights[?]), Lynyrd Skynyrd (Nuthin' Fancy[?]), Glen Campbell ("Rhinestone Cowboy") and B.J. Thomas ("(Hey Won't You Play) Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song")
- Fusion jazz[?]'s golden age ends and contemporary jazz[?] emerges
- Smokey Robinson's Quiet Storm[?] is released, defining what comes to be known as easy listening
- 1976 in music
- International trends
- Music of Algeria
- Music of the Bahamas
- Music of Jamaica
- Music of Trinidad & Tobago
- Music of the United States
- The Eagles release Hotel California, one of the best-selling albums of the year and all time; this is the commercial peak of southern rock
- Blondie's debut, Blondie[?], solidifies the New Wave sound in punk music, centered in New York City
- Soft, disco-oriented ballads by The Bee Gees (Children of the World[?], "You Should Be Dancing"), Bay City Rollers ("Saturday Night", "Money Honey"), Orleans ("Still the One"), The Doobie Brothers (Takin' It to the Streets[?]), Starland Vocal Band ("Afternoon Delight"), Peter Frampton (Frampton Comes Alive[?]) and Paul Simon ("50 Ways to Leave Your Lover", "Still Crazy After All These Years") are popular
- 1977 in music
- International trends
- The Sex Pistols release Never Mind The Bollocks Here's The Sex Pistols, kickstarting the punk rock movement in the UK, while the Ramones' Rocket to Russia helps break in punk in the US - art-punk bands like Television (Marquee Moon[?]), Elvis Costello (My Aim Is True[?]), The Damned (Machine Gun Etiquette[?]), Richard Hell & the Voidoids (Blank Generation), UFO (Lights Out) and Talking Heads (Talking Heads: 77[?]) also emerge
- The soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever (largely by the Bee Gees) is the dominant album of the year and helps cement disco as the most popular genre; Chic also releases a pivotal disco album, Risque[?]
- Pop and prog rock bands like Chicago (Chicago XI[?]), Electric Light Orchestra (Out of the Blue[?]), Jethro Tull (Songs from the Wood[?]), Journey (Next), Kansas (Point of Know Return), Rush (A Farewell to Kings), Pink Floyd (Animals) and Steely Dan (Aja) release important and popular albums
- Music of the United States
- 1978 in music
- 1979 in music
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