@@therandomgeek85 there are plenty of bands who don't block. I think it would have made a lot more sense to put up the video with the audio and see what happens. Worst case is you have to take 1-2 out. Look at Rick Beato's "What Makes This Song Great" series. He's done 70+ episodes and probably fewer than 10 have been blocked.
@@rome8180 it's 3 strikes and you're out. They could get 3 strikes in one video and, poof, the whole channel is gone, and someone with whatcultures reputation wouldn't take that risk.
Pantera was Glam Skrillex fronted a screamo band Ministry was an electronica band Journey started as Instrumental Prog Rock Phil Collins was originally the drummer for Genesis in their prog rock days Avenged Sevenfold was a screamo band
@@winterdreller5840 you can't know everything and music is subjective so no harm done. But Scott knows who the are and he knows that they started as glam metal and ended as thrash metal
Pantera doesn't consider anything before Cowboys as "official" though. So, according to Pantera they've always been the pioneers of groove metal people know them as. Nobody listens to Power Metal except elitist hipsters.
Kenny Rogers (psychedelic rock), kid rock(hip hop complete with high top fade), dr.dre (house music), pink Floyd (psychedelic 60's), beastie boys and red hot chili peppers (punk) these are some more i can think of
Dr. Dre never did house music. House wasn't popular on the west coast nor did it exist when Dre started. If you're talking about Electrofunk, yes he was involved. Electrofunk and house music are not the same genre , particularly when Electrofunk predates House and the sound is different.
Although a while ago, Cindy Lauper began as a pop singer. "Girls just want to have fun" was a huge hit in the 80's with her half-shaved rainbow hair. Now she is a jazz singer and her voice is just as lovely. 🐈
robo23yobo I love how much they've changed, and you have the choice to either rock out to songs like Chelsea Smile or Shadow Moses, or some of the more poppier songs like Avalanche or Medicine, depending on whatever mood your in :D
gagalover2k10 I agree, the band consciously evolved from metalcore into what they are now, some like the new, some don’t, but it’s great to see the span of genre and there’s definitely something there for a lot of people
It's no surprise that Katy Perry's parents disliked her first album that wasn't a Christian album, considering that Katy is a preacher's kid Fun fact: Katy took her mother's maiden name as her professional name
I've been the only person I've known for a long time that every time I'd see the name Danny Elfman I'd picture him with Oingo Boingo performing "Dead Man's Party" in "Back to School". Thank you!
P!nk got better with time. Family Portrait, Sober, I'm Not Dead and Dear Mr President were rare amongst popular songs in that they faced genuine issues many people face. It's incredibly rare to find music targeting difficult topics outside the Punk and Metal genres.
Bands that came out of nowhere, most diverse singers, most talented songwriters, songs with deeper meaning, best follow-up to a successful debut, bands that have been around longer than you realize, rock /metslrivalries, rap/R&B rivalries, etc. How's that for some suggestions? Lol. Just keep using this channe. I love music & your guys take on it.
That's some good topics! I like the they been around alot longer then u thought. Korn has been around for 27 freaking years! I wonder how many non korn fans know that lol
Michael Bolton started out as a hard rocker and by his third album, he recorded it with Bruce Kulick. He auditioned to be the lead singer for Black Sabbath but was denied before finding success as a crooner with songs like Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay and When a Man Loves a Woman.
Hey, what culture crew! Jules, your little positive comments thrown in at the end of your videos have turned my day around on multiple occasions. Thank you so much, you southwest savage. It would be cool to see artists with different bands that are nothing like the original. As in side projects, new bands, etc. But, not just singers. Example: Devour the Day is all the same members of Egypt central, but without the original singer, and as such is a completely different animal. To all of you, you guys are one of my top favorite channels (all of your channels) on TH-cam! Never change.
Glad yall put the Bee Gees in here. That was one of the trippiest and drastic changes in genre I ever found out about. I love it all though, they were hella talented.
Sugar Ray is what came to mind after I saw the title of this video. A note from personal experience. I got to see Sugar Ray play at a military base and they played all of their heaviest stuff (and play “Fly” like a long jam session).
Impressive that OB/Elfman made #1. Miss them terribly but still have Former Members play with Brenden, excellent sound and shows. Long live Avila and Bartek!
I had to listen to it to believe it... but holy shit, the goo goo dolls were legit crust punk with a tinge of hardcore. lol, wow I always knew the goos started as a noise rock band... but punk? I’m shocked.
Status Quo went from a sort of mod-psychedelic band to full on 8-bar-blues mum rock! Seeing as he mostly sticks with Body Count nowadays, Ice-T went from rap to metal...albeit rap-metal, I guess. Beastie Boys should have been on here.
surely Depeche mode should be on this list, with there first album speak and spell being Vince Clarks first attempt of the sound he would perfect with erasure while later albums like violator ( personally i believe it to be one of the best alterative rock albums of all time), songs of faith and devotion and ultra sound very different. As with martin gore darker lyrics and introduction of guitar and drums their sound went from synth pop and influencing the likes of a-ha to alternative rock and influencing the likes of nine inch nails, deftones and Rammstein.
They certainly have MATURED, as a group...both lyrically and literally playing actual instruments beyond 3-4 guys standing around playing around synthesizers and singing. I also agree that Violator was an outstanding album and definitely their high point. Just not sure they made as profound a transformation as others on this list or that we can think up collectively. (Certainly they have slid, if slowly, down since their brutal kicking out of Wilder. Whether by coincidence or not, they went from great albums with essentially no 'filler songs' (with Some Great Reward being a personal favorite example) to the lazier standard of three for release and whatever we can throw in without too much work...as evidenced from Songs of Faith and Devotion onward.)
@@cynicallydepressed1 I do agree with you that there sound has definitely suffered due to the loss of Alan Wilder and also martins lyrics not being as good as they used to be. Though there has still been some strong albums since then in ultra, which may be one of my favourite comeback albums from a band, as when you look at all the personal issues that each member of the band had been through. The fact they still but out a strong album is remarkable, with the album still having a great sound especially on its no good and barrel of a gun. On top of that Dave's voice still sounds great and martin also gives some great vocal performances on the likes of home and bottom line. And as I said before though a lot of martins song lyrics have left a lot to be desired of late, Dave's songwriting ability seems to be getting stronger with every album as shown by cover me probably being the best song on there last album.
I interpreted the title of this wrong. I thought it was gonna be about old singers who’s voices are messed up now due to drugs, old age, and whatever else. Like how Vince Neil sounds like Bob Dylan, Axl Rose sounds like Mickey Mouse, and Ozzy Osbourne sounds like someone doing a bad Ozzy Osbourne impression.
Talk Talk - synthpop to post rock blink-182 - skate punk to pop punk to experimental pop back to pop rock Panic! At The Disco - emo pop punk/electropunk/baroque pop to psychedelic pop to alt rock to 80s style synthpop to generic pop
The real main reasons for artists sounding different from their debut cd/ L.P. is because they get comfy satisfied or satiated and lose touch with the belly fire they once had as hiding artists.
That was One of the Bands that was a FAR CRY from their beginnings!! Thanks for mentioning That Band because a Most Total transition. Because of you bringing up Ministry, can't use them in my comments no more despite this being one of the first bands I thought of! BTW, their RELAPSE Album Kicks Ass!! Their first album sounds like Tears for Fears or some crap like that LMAO
@@cynicallydepressed1 I love synth-pop and Effigy is just a fabulous example of that genre, even if Al and the band were just faking being a British synth-pop group.
Ministry should've stuck to that With Sympathy era sound... They would've been pretty well respected as Depeche Mode... But meh. Their industrial stuff isn't bad and their metal stuff is kinda hit n miss for me ...oh well...
Glen Campbell before being big as a country artist, he was a member of The Champs who were rock and roll. Vince Gill before becoming a country artist was the lead singer for soft rock group Pure Prairie League. Kenny Rogers went through different sounds from rock and roll to jazz to pop and to country. Dan Seals before he went country, he was part of a pop duo for England Dan and John Ford Coley. Sheryl Crow from a rocker to traditional country artist. Fergie from an all girl group to a rap artist. Queen Latifa from rap to jazz. These are a few you missed.
They were actually called The Mystic Knights of The Oingo Boingo. Daft Punk started out as two ambient artists. Michael Bolton was in a Rock band Marc Bolan was in John's Children a folk act Debbie Harry was in The Wind in the Willows a Folk band Frank Zappa was in a mixed R & B band The Blackouts Madonna was a drummer in The Breakfast Club Ted Nugent was in a Psyche Rock band The Amboy Dukes
I know it's going to be really hard to get into, but maybe do a list about the best live performances according to genre? That could be like a 6 part special. You could do Rock, Rap, R&B, Pop, etc. I honestly didn't know about Prince's performance on While My Guitar Gently Weeps until yesterday. Also compilations! Rage Against the Machine AND Deftones featured Maynard from Tool. John 5 has a whole album where he joins with Eric Johnson and Joe Satriani and more. Love what you guys do, keep it up! Also Hi Ash :]
@Christopher Bingham, agree...I won't claim to be the preeminent authority on them, but I do have most of their stuff (they're pretty prolific), ranging from early to current (I think...again, prolific). They seem very consistent, in my mind.
I'd rather see a list of bands made famous for a song that wasn't their normal style. The first one that came to mind for me is the band Dishwalla that became famous for the song "Counting Blue Cars" which is the most mellow and sedate song on their debut album. The rest of their music was hard rock with wailing guitars and thrashing drum beats but they got famous off their one song that was just them goofing off.
Should have Bring me the Horizon in there. They seemed to change genre's with every album. Deathcore (?) to metalcore to rock to whatever Amo was, it was all great too.
I think it was deathcore (Count Your Blessings), metalcore (Suicide Season), metalcore with symphonic elements (There Is A Hell), synth metalcore (Sempiternal), pop rock (That's The Spirit), electronic pop rock (Amo). But yeah they should definitely have been on here
Not really _that_ hard to categorize them, I feel. Their self-titled debut was straightforward bluesy hard rock, then they went progressive, the 80's saw them experiment with the sound of the times and released a string of new wave and electronic influenced albums, before going back to their established prog rock sound.
you could've added nicki minaj too. she was pure hip hop and a hint of r&b for her mixtapes, but went pop for her debut album (not that i'm complaining). she then went back to hip hop and r&b for her third (the pinkprint), and that and some trap for her fourth (queen).
Funnily enough, when I saw the Goo Goo Dolls in 1999 (with my mother and my younger sister), Sugar Ray was the opener. As to bands progressing, it could be an endless list kinda. It's interesting though when there's a common thread that still seems to tie various changes together. My all time favorite band the Moody Blues have had a number of "reinventions" but the core feeling doesn't change.
Great call...loved their first album, second was solid... Now? If you told me they were a whole different band, I'm not sure I would even recognize Yorke's voice. (I'm not a fan of the change, either.)
Lots of artists have changed from what they started out with to achieve success. Genesis, Amy Grant, Alannis Morrisette, Lady Gaga, Ambrosia, Supertramp, and so on.
Linkin park, mumford and sons, kings of leon, slipknot, avenged sevenfold and of course you can't forget (they were even mentioned in the bloody video) the beatles.
A few ones: Panic! At the Disco (who I'm surprised wasn't on here) used to be one of the biggest pop punk/emo bands alongside Fall Out Boy and Paramore (who also went in a popper direction like P!AtD) Ice Nine Kills used to be a Ska punk band before they became a metalcore band with a heavy horror movie influence. New Years Day was an emo band and now they're a new version of Evanescence with a bit of post hardcore Pantera. Nuff said Northlane. Started off as a progressive metalcore band and when the new singer joined, they added a lot more atmosphere/ambience and then Alien added a lot of electronics and nu metal elements Again, shocked Panic! didn't make the list
No Pantera? You could also have gone with Alanis Morissette. If you wanted obscure you could have gone AC/DC. The band that have sounded exactly the same for 40 years had a more generic sound with their first single. The original singer, Dave Evans, didn't quite have the distinctive sound as those who followed him.
Shakira use to make rock and dance music back in the 90's, there wasn't any latin sounds in her 2 iconic albums "Pies Descalzos" and "Dónde Están los Ladrones".
Talks about differences, but doesn't give audio examples.
Missed opportunity there.
if they played any of those songs for even a second TH-cam would block the video for copyright infringement hence the Spotify playlist
@@therandomgeek85 that's only if they don't just mute the audio
@@therandomgeek85 there are plenty of bands who don't block. I think it would have made a lot more sense to put up the video with the audio and see what happens. Worst case is you have to take 1-2 out. Look at Rick Beato's "What Makes This Song Great" series. He's done 70+ episodes and probably fewer than 10 have been blocked.
@@rome8180 it's 3 strikes and you're out. They could get 3 strikes in one video and, poof, the whole channel is gone, and someone with whatcultures reputation wouldn't take that risk.
I don't know about you, but I'd prefer the video stayed up instead. How'd you miss the playlist they gave us, anyways?
Pantera was Glam
Skrillex fronted a screamo band
Ministry was an electronica band
Journey started as Instrumental Prog Rock
Phil Collins was originally the drummer for Genesis in their prog rock days
Avenged Sevenfold was a screamo band
Cody W make a channel I’ll watch :)
@@HeatherCoste I've been thinking about it
Blink-182
Manyard james keenan left green jello to go on an piss off taylor swift fans.
Thats common knowledge
"Odeesia"? Swing and a miss, my friend. Swing and a miss.
Pantera better be on here
Scott, I am disappointed in you
Leo Bjerregaard same
was just about to comment the same thing lol
Leo Bjerregaard I’ll be honest. I don’t know that band
@@winterdreller5840 you can't know everything and music is subjective so no harm done. But Scott knows who the are and he knows that they started as glam metal and ended as thrash metal
Pantera doesn't consider anything before Cowboys as "official" though. So, according to Pantera they've always been the pioneers of groove metal people know them as. Nobody listens to Power Metal except elitist hipsters.
Genesis and No Doubt
Maybe not the group, but Gwen changed her sound completely.
What about AFI? From bratty punk to alt goth pop.
Also, how about instead of just talking about these songs you play some clips from them as examples?
So so happy to see Oingo Boingo on this list. They are an incredibly underrated band with a load of brilliant songs!
Frank L Dead Mans Party has been my ringtone for forever. Only 2 people have ever known it.
But disturbed that some don't know Danny Elfman was in the band. Jeez!
Yyyyyeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaahhhhh.......and Oingo Boingo is responsible for the song "Little Girls".....criiiiiinggggggge
Kenny Rogers (psychedelic rock), kid rock(hip hop complete with high top fade), dr.dre (house music), pink Floyd (psychedelic 60's), beastie boys and red hot chili peppers (punk) these are some more i can think of
Dr. Dre never did house music. House wasn't popular on the west coast nor did it exist when Dre started.
If you're talking about Electrofunk, yes he was involved. Electrofunk and house music are not the same genre , particularly when Electrofunk predates House and the sound is different.
Danny Elfman also sings Jack Skellington's Parts in the Movie.
The simple fact that Oingo Boingo was mentioned made me incredibly happy
Although a while ago, Cindy Lauper began as a pop singer. "Girls just want to have fun" was a huge hit in the 80's with her half-shaved rainbow hair. Now she is a jazz singer and her voice is just as lovely.
🐈
#1 should’ve been Bring me the Horizon
I'm more surprised that Panic at the Disco wasn't on this list
Imraan Akollo-Arenz absolutely, they’ve changed so much
robo23yobo I love how much they've changed, and you have the choice to either rock out to songs like Chelsea Smile or Shadow Moses, or some of the more poppier songs like Avalanche or Medicine, depending on whatever mood your in :D
gagalover2k10 I agree, the band consciously evolved from metalcore into what they are now, some like the new, some don’t, but it’s great to see the span of genre and there’s definitely something there for a lot of people
robo23yobo Yep, for me personally, they were at their pinnacle with the Royal Albert Hall concert, such an epic performance
It's no surprise that Katy Perry's parents disliked her first album that wasn't a Christian album, considering that Katy is a preacher's kid
Fun fact:
Katy took her mother's maiden name as her professional name
Danny Elfman
I've been the only person I've known for a long time that every time I'd see the name Danny Elfman I'd picture him with Oingo Boingo performing "Dead Man's Party" in "Back to School". Thank you!
The Beatles were a lot different in the end compared to the start.
out of subject...
Nothing by the Beatles sounds the same
P!nk got better with time. Family Portrait, Sober, I'm Not Dead and Dear Mr President were rare amongst popular songs in that they faced genuine issues many people face. It's incredibly rare to find music targeting difficult topics outside the Punk and Metal genres.
Bands that came out of nowhere, most diverse singers, most talented songwriters, songs with deeper meaning, best follow-up to a successful debut, bands that have been around longer than you realize, rock /metslrivalries, rap/R&B rivalries, etc.
How's that for some suggestions? Lol. Just keep using this channe. I love music & your guys take on it.
That's some good topics! I like the they been around alot longer then u thought. Korn has been around for 27 freaking years! I wonder how many non korn fans know that lol
Sugar Ray's "Mean Machine" from Road Rash 3D on PS1 is pure mosh fuel! Dont believe me? LOOK IT UP!
Along with tap twist snap
Don't forget about Speed home California
@@Serbanelooo Any track from "Floored" except Fly
I did, and was surprised. th-cam.com/video/Gjb7UD7jPqM/w-d-xo.html
Always happy to see Oingo Boingo anywhere, but I'd argue you can definitely hear elements of what Elfman is still giving us even back then.
I love Oingo Boingo, Dead Mans Party is one of the greatest albums of all time. Love the Halloween and 80s new wave mix.
Pixel Pencil best bassist ever
I still listen to Sugar Ray's early stuff. Lemonade and Brownies is an absolute classic.
I'll be honest...did not know that about Hoobastank.
Katy Perry was provided back up vocals for Christian Nu-Metal band POD
Maroon 5 could’ve easily been on here as well, they made one incredible album then wrote sooooo much garbage.
Trace (Interrobang) The Fourth World and Songs About Jane are both amazing albums.
Totally forgot about the fourth world😯
They are still good. I don't know what you are talking.
I thought they were gonna be awesome and then they sold out.
@@rocklesson86 nah they sold out and are pop now
One hit wonder bands that are still making great music?
Michael Bolton started out as a hard rocker and by his third album, he recorded it with Bruce Kulick. He auditioned to be the lead singer for Black Sabbath but was denied before finding success as a crooner with songs like Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay and When a Man Loves a Woman.
What about Pink Floyd!
Yeah, huh? That's a weird one to leave off.
@Joshua Hammond they early songs they did in the sixties sound nothing like the stuff they did in seventies
@Joshua Hammond like these bands in the video
Beastie Boys, The Beatles, Billy Idol, Pink Floyd, and Ministry
PS- Damn, Ash is hot
Oliver Klosov So hot. Her love of horror just does more for me!
Confirmed. Ash is hot.
I'm glad someone else mentioned Pink Floyd.
Simp
10 bands maknig a comeback in 2019. (mainly for pendulum)
And tool
Anybody over 40 knew EVERYTHING about Oingo Boingo and Dead Mans Party and Weird Science ARE STILL PLAYED ALL THE TIME!
Yes!
Yup.
Do the top 10 Bands that switched genres
Lydian Dominant scale. Hot damn, you guys did your research!! Great music theory drop, keep up the great work.
Hey, what culture crew! Jules, your little positive comments thrown in at the end of your videos have turned my day around on multiple occasions. Thank you so much, you southwest savage. It would be cool to see artists with different bands that are nothing like the original. As in side projects, new bands, etc. But, not just singers. Example: Devour the Day is all the same members of Egypt central, but without the original singer, and as such is a completely different animal. To all of you, you guys are one of my top favorite channels (all of your channels) on TH-cam! Never change.
Hole, The Who, Tyler Swift, Stone Temple Pilots, Elvis Costello, Bob Dylan, Marianne Faithfull, Alanis Morissette.
Dolly Dagger TYLER Swift? Lmao
Glad yall put the Bee Gees in here. That was one of the trippiest and drastic changes in genre I ever found out about. I love it all though, they were hella talented.
Sugar Ray is what came to mind after I saw the title of this video. A note from personal experience. I got to see Sugar Ray play at a military base and they played all of their heaviest stuff (and play “Fly” like a long jam session).
Bring Me The Horizon went from Deathcore to Alternative Pop Rock
Most people I know don’t talk much about Elfman, so thanks for that. He’s basically two different musicians
Impressive that OB/Elfman made #1. Miss them terribly but still have Former Members play with Brenden, excellent sound and shows. Long live Avila and Bartek!
That skit at the end was very amusing.
I had to listen to it to believe it... but holy shit, the goo goo dolls were legit crust punk with a tinge of hardcore. lol, wow
I always knew the goos started as a noise rock band... but punk? I’m shocked.
Sweet display pic.
3:13 Now I can't get "You Make Me Sick" out of my head. It's been a week. Thanks!
I never considered Pink "generic" & I loved her debut album & that Choice joint.
Status Quo went from a sort of mod-psychedelic band to full on 8-bar-blues mum rock!
Seeing as he mostly sticks with Body Count nowadays, Ice-T went from rap to metal...albeit rap-metal, I guess.
Beastie Boys should have been on here.
Hoobastank's latest album Push Pull actually brings back some of the ska elements from Basketball Shorts, which is pretty neat. Give it a listen!
surely Depeche mode should be on this list, with there first album speak and spell being Vince Clarks first attempt of the sound he would perfect with erasure while later albums like violator ( personally i believe it to be one of the best alterative rock albums of all time), songs of faith and devotion and ultra sound very different. As with martin gore darker lyrics and introduction of guitar and drums their sound went from synth pop and influencing the likes of a-ha to alternative rock and influencing the likes of nine inch nails, deftones and Rammstein.
They certainly have MATURED, as a group...both lyrically and literally playing actual instruments beyond 3-4 guys standing around playing around synthesizers and singing.
I also agree that Violator was an outstanding album and definitely their high point.
Just not sure they made as profound a transformation as others on this list or that we can think up collectively.
(Certainly they have slid, if slowly, down since their brutal kicking out of Wilder. Whether by coincidence or not, they went from great albums with essentially no 'filler songs' (with Some Great Reward being a personal favorite example) to the lazier standard of three for release and whatever we can throw in without too much work...as evidenced from Songs of Faith and Devotion onward.)
@@cynicallydepressed1 I do agree with you that there sound has definitely suffered due to the loss of Alan Wilder and also martins lyrics not being as good as they used to be. Though there has still been some strong albums since then in ultra, which may be one of my favourite comeback albums from a band, as when you look at all the personal issues that each member of the band had been through. The fact they still but out a strong album is remarkable, with the album still having a great sound especially on its no good and barrel of a gun. On top of that Dave's voice still sounds great and martin also gives some great vocal performances on the likes of home and bottom line.
And as I said before though a lot of martins song lyrics have left a lot to be desired of late, Dave's songwriting ability seems to be getting stronger with every album as shown by cover me probably being the best song on there last album.
It's actually called Odessa.
I interpreted the title of this wrong. I thought it was gonna be about old singers who’s voices are messed up now due to drugs, old age, and whatever else. Like how Vince Neil sounds like Bob Dylan, Axl Rose sounds like Mickey Mouse, and Ozzy Osbourne sounds like someone doing a bad Ozzy Osbourne impression.
Meat loaf would be on that version of the list
Lydian dominant scale touch was superb, more of that please
The band Winger went from commercial hard rock to darker heavier hard rock in the 2000s , they definetly changed directions
Talk Talk - synthpop to post rock
blink-182 - skate punk to pop punk to experimental pop back to pop rock
Panic! At The Disco - emo pop punk/electropunk/baroque pop to psychedelic pop to alt rock to 80s style synthpop to generic pop
The real main reasons for artists sounding different from their debut cd/ L.P. is because they get comfy satisfied or satiated and lose touch with the belly fire they once had as hiding artists.
Beastie Boys should of been on this. Going from Hardcore Punk to Hip Hop
For the Goo Goo Dolls, the Original Lead singer was the bassist. I believe it was the 3rd album, Johnny the guitarist started singing.
Ministry's first album doesn't even sound like it's from the same band.
That was One of the Bands that was a FAR CRY from their beginnings!! Thanks for mentioning That Band because a Most Total transition. Because of you bringing up Ministry, can't use them in my comments no more despite this being one of the first bands I thought of! BTW, their RELAPSE Album Kicks Ass!! Their first album sounds like Tears for Fears or some crap like that LMAO
Totally should have been on the list...whether you like either style from them, they are certainly dramatically DIFFERENT styles.
@@cynicallydepressed1 I love synth-pop and Effigy is just a fabulous example of that genre, even if Al and the band were just faking being a British synth-pop group.
Ministry should've stuck to that With Sympathy era sound... They would've been pretty well respected as Depeche Mode... But meh. Their industrial stuff isn't bad and their metal stuff is kinda hit n miss for me ...oh well...
The other way around for me: I started as a big fan of Oingo Boingo back in the 80s, then learned about Danny's work in movie and TV songs.
Glen Campbell before being big as a country artist, he was a member of The Champs who were rock and roll.
Vince Gill before becoming a country artist was the lead singer for soft rock group Pure Prairie League.
Kenny Rogers went through different sounds from rock and roll to jazz to pop and to country.
Dan Seals before he went country, he was part of a pop duo for England Dan and John Ford Coley.
Sheryl Crow from a rocker to traditional country artist.
Fergie from an all girl group to a rap artist.
Queen Latifa from rap to jazz.
These are a few you missed.
If you ask Hoobastankin' up the place, it's probably You ba stankin' up the place.
M83. A very strange but awesome combination of shoegaze and IDM, then heavy dream pop, then 80s-inspired synth pop and cinematic ambient.
Hoobastank are just budget Incubus, even their really early stuff sounds like early Incubus. Even budget Incubus is better than current Incubus.
They were actually called The Mystic Knights of The Oingo Boingo.
Daft Punk started out as two ambient artists.
Michael Bolton was in a Rock band
Marc Bolan was in John's Children a folk act
Debbie Harry was in The Wind in the Willows a Folk band
Frank Zappa was in a mixed R & B band The Blackouts
Madonna was a drummer in The Breakfast Club
Ted Nugent was in a Psyche Rock band The Amboy Dukes
Part of Frank Zappas style was being all over the place and constantly changing.
The old Sugar Ray was featured in movie Father's Day, starring Billy Crystal and Robin Williams.
I know it's going to be really hard to get into, but maybe do a list about the best live performances according to genre? That could be like a 6 part special. You could do Rock, Rap, R&B, Pop, etc. I honestly didn't know about Prince's performance on While My Guitar Gently Weeps until yesterday. Also compilations! Rage Against the Machine AND Deftones featured Maynard from Tool. John 5 has a whole album where he joins with Eric Johnson and Joe Satriani and more.
Love what you guys do, keep it up!
Also Hi Ash :]
Taylor Swift was a country singer, Katy Perry was a Christian contemporary, and Nickleback wasn't musical torture.
Hey! Some people LIKE Nickleback.
🐈
Oingo Boingo was amazing.
I still love old sugar ray they were hard! Floored was an amazing album
Classic
Sometimes, many times, it's the industry suits that change artists... gotta sell, forget art.
Oingo boingo is one of my favorite bands
Top ten artist who changed genres
Madonna started her career in a rock band too
Nah man, Madonna started as a Da Vinci painting
@@markojaager5006 Yes but her singing career started in a punk/rock band in the late 70's
@@markojaager5006 You do know the “Madonna” was around *_looooong_* before the Renaissance right?
@@misterwinkybluff shiiieeet i guess
katy perry's best work was being featured in P.O.D.'s Goodbye for Now
But that song was terrible! So is everything POD has done. Even worse than Katy Perry's solo music.
@@musicman6555 what else can I say...
that's a bad opinion if I ever saw one
*Bring me Horizon
*Sum 41
*The Menzingers
*The Rasmus
*Bad Religion
*Gerard Way was the lead singer of MCR
*Gary Numan
what? i don't think you understand the list. gerard way is most famous for being in MCR.
@Christopher Bingham, agree...I won't claim to be the preeminent authority on them, but I do have most of their stuff (they're pretty prolific), ranging from early to current (I think...again, prolific).
They seem very consistent, in my mind.
He didn't even mention "Little Girls" what a shame
While I love that Danny Elfman was on the list, I would have thought Taylor Swift would have been on there
kropp circle to palaye royale. because seriously, that transition is insane
I'd rather see a list of bands made famous for a song that wasn't their normal style. The first one that came to mind for me is the band Dishwalla that became famous for the song "Counting Blue Cars" which is the most mellow and sedate song on their debut album. The rest of their music was hard rock with wailing guitars and thrashing drum beats but they got famous off their one song that was just them goofing off.
Danny Elfman was fantastic. I never put that together. Surprised there was not a mention of incubus
Mental festival crowd participation moments please
7:43 okay tell me that isn't what Ryan was trying to be during pretty odd
If enter Shikari is not on here imma b anger
Should have Bring me the Horizon in there. They seemed to change genre's with every album. Deathcore (?) to metalcore to rock to whatever Amo was, it was all great too.
I think it was deathcore (Count Your Blessings), metalcore (Suicide Season), metalcore with symphonic elements (There Is A Hell), synth metalcore (Sempiternal), pop rock (That's The Spirit), electronic pop rock (Amo).
But yeah they should definitely have been on here
They definitely should have been in there I think they started in deathcore in the early 2000s and went to pop that a huge ass jump
@@AlexGreat321 sweet spot for me was Sempiternal
Disappointing that Ministry wasnt on here. They started out as nu-wave 80s pop, but turned into industrial metal.
Mentioning Rush as a prog band though? Trying to pigeonhole Rush is a tricky game.
Yes Rush is a prog band .
Not really _that_ hard to categorize them, I feel. Their self-titled debut was straightforward bluesy hard rock, then they went progressive, the 80's saw them experiment with the sound of the times and released a string of new wave and electronic influenced albums, before going back to their established prog rock sound.
And could you guys do some lists about British Alt/Punk/New Wave form the 80's and early 90's?
Disturbed got softer over the years The Sickness was their heaviest album.
What about Fleetwood Mac? 🤷🏼♀️
Yeah, they started as a blues band
Katy Hudson played some coffee shop shows in my hometown back in the day
I love it, keep doing what you do.
you could've added nicki minaj too. she was pure hip hop and a hint of r&b for her mixtapes, but went pop for her debut album (not that i'm complaining). she then went back to hip hop and r&b for her third (the pinkprint), and that and some trap for her fourth (queen).
i loved the ending...brilliant!....
Where are they now metalcore bands that broke up from 2009 to 2012
Funnily enough, when I saw the Goo Goo Dolls in 1999 (with my mother and my younger sister), Sugar Ray was the opener. As to bands progressing, it could be an endless list kinda. It's interesting though when there's a common thread that still seems to tie various changes together. My all time favorite band the Moody Blues have had a number of "reinventions" but the core feeling doesn't change.
How on earth didn't you include Radiohead??😵
Great call...loved their first album, second was solid...
Now?
If you told me they were a whole different band, I'm not sure I would even recognize Yorke's voice.
(I'm not a fan of the change, either.)
how do you get Odeesia from Odessa?
Lots of artists have changed from what they started out with to achieve success. Genesis, Amy Grant, Alannis Morrisette, Lady Gaga, Ambrosia, Supertramp, and so on.
Linkin park, mumford and sons, kings of leon, slipknot, avenged sevenfold and of course you can't forget (they were even mentioned in the bloody video) the beatles.
A few ones:
Panic! At the Disco (who I'm surprised wasn't on here) used to be one of the biggest pop punk/emo bands alongside Fall Out Boy and Paramore (who also went in a popper direction like P!AtD)
Ice Nine Kills used to be a Ska punk band before they became a metalcore band with a heavy horror movie influence.
New Years Day was an emo band and now they're a new version of Evanescence with a bit of post hardcore
Pantera. Nuff said
Northlane. Started off as a progressive metalcore band and when the new singer joined, they added a lot more atmosphere/ambience and then Alien added a lot of electronics and nu metal elements
Again, shocked Panic! didn't make the list
No Pantera? You could also have gone with Alanis Morissette. If you wanted obscure you could have gone AC/DC. The band that have sounded exactly the same for 40 years had a more generic sound with their first single. The original singer, Dave Evans, didn't quite have the distinctive sound as those who followed him.
UK doom metal legends Paradise Lost took a 20 year detour into sample-heavy electro-rock before coming back around to their roots.
Shakira use to make rock and dance music back in the 90's, there wasn't any latin sounds in her 2 iconic albums "Pies Descalzos" and "Dónde Están los Ladrones".