Soft soul and smooth R&B defined 1970s romance with lush strings, slow tempos, and whisper-soft vocals. From Philly to Memphis, artists like Barry White, The Spinners, and Al Green created a sound that dominated charts and still shapes love songs today.
Graffiti was the first visual voice of hip-hop, turning subway walls into murals of resistance. It gave the culture its look, its edge, and its permanence - long before rap hit the radio.
From the lace and velvet of London's New Romantic scene to the spandex and hairspray of L.A. Hair Metal, the 1980s saw glam rock evolve into a global phenomenon - changing fashion, music, and pop culture forever.
The 1980s transformed music from sound to spectacle. CDs raised prices, MTV demanded videos, and big labels bought up the competition. Michael Jackson, Madonna, and Prince ruled-but only because they had the money to play the new game.
Elton John’s platform shoes weren’t just footwear-they were a revolution. In the 1970s, he turned glam rock into a visual spectacle, challenging gender norms and redefining male style with glittering, towering boots that still inspire fashion today.
The 1970s produced some of the most iconic album covers in history - from Pink Floyd's prism to The Rolling Stones' working zipper. These weren't just packaging - they were art that defined an era.
The Bee Gees' soundtrack for Saturday Night Fever turned disco from an underground movement into a global phenomenon, with four No. 1 hits and over 40 million copies sold. Its influence still shapes pop music today.
MTV turned Seattle’s underground grunge scene into a global phenomenon in 1991 by playing Nirvana’s 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' on loop. What followed was a cultural earthquake-flannel shirts, massive album sales, and bands who hated the spotlight but couldn’t escape it.
In the 1980s, DJs transformed turntables from playback devices into powerful musical instruments, inventing scratching, beat juggling, and turntablism that became the foundation of hip-hop. Grandmaster Flash, Jam Master Jay, and others built the genre’s sound with vinyl, two turntables, and pure skill.
The reggae guitar skank is the iconic offbeat rhythm played with downstrokes and precise muting on beats 2 and 4. Learn how to execute it correctly, avoid common mistakes, and understand why it’s the heartbeat of reggae music.