@@randomshits7730 That’s how Ragtime was seen when it was just getting popular. I’m personally not a fan of Pop or Rap or really anything modern, but just because it’s a new genre doesn’t mean it’s bad. People in 2100 and far into the future will see today’s songs as historical masterpieces.
@@user-cj6pe3vy3b I don't think so. There are two possible ways (that my mind can think of now): 1. The future generation will be as sophisticate as we are now (or even less): They would just think it's the music that "only our grandparent listen to". 2. The future generation will be more sophisticated than we are now (let say... like the early 1900s): They would say something like what elitist critic would say to or music now. But who am I even to dare to predict the future. Also, I don't mean that "modern is bad". Feel free to change my mind!
@@zyzor "White noise" means that noise that is like- idk, ill just put a link to white noise. th-cam.com/video/lzmSKX5TF3g/w-d-xo.html Trust me, the link is safe TvT
Cos people from then we're hardened psychos. . At 14 u have to fight Huns. Then come back and fight Spanish flu. U gotta still work. After that great depression hits off goes u r life savings. After that just as u think u can settle down, u gotta save the world from Hitler. That's a hard life.
The average human generation is 25 years. Since 1750, Mozart's time, there have only been about 10 generations. Two in Mozart's, four in the 1800's, and 4 in the 1900's. That might be a tree you'd be okay falling from. Obviously, these generations even overlap. We can probably just cut these numbers in half because of that. That being said, we are 5 generations close to Mozart, and probably 2, at max from this music. Parents seem to pass on their music to some degree. It's not inconceivable that this is still known, actually. Said, I believe it's still too early to know if even classical music will survive from a recreational standpoint. Maybe a great thinker could put an expiration date on these matters. But, today's music will probably last just as long as this. However, there will be more genres being listened to at the same time as the population allows for this type of expansion. Eventually, musical diversity is held in check by the population. Example, if only one person person is listening to some musical genre they made up, who will pass it on? Also, basing an estimate like this on "quality" of the composition is relative. What grooves you? For me, it's a cup of jark juice.
And these songs are AWSOME cause they are very catchy with the piano notes and it has no booty part slapped on it....I can't say anything about today's "popular" music which is trash
Well there weren't many artists back in 1900 to choose from, so obviously not many of the thousands of artists in our day will stand out like they did back the . But music today is an unique genre and just because it's mainstream and popular doesn't mean it's not art. I mean EDM style songs (roses, faded, etc) are pretty amazing in the way they're written. And Adele and Beyoncé and plenty others are also very gifted singers.
DeathRocket4990 well back in the day, most people used to criticize these music claiming that old musics were better. Future kids will consider our music as classics. It's just that we humans can hardly appreciate the present.
Fascinating how the time span between this music and the 1960s vs 2000s and the music of the 1950s is the same, yet the cultural changes in those 2 periods seem wildly different. Funny what 2 world wars and a sexual revolution will do.
The first sexual revolution was actually in the early 1900s, the women's sufferage movement which inspired flapper girls of the 1920s to become much more independent than women were previously to then. The late 1960s was the second sexual revolution.
It’s crazy how 1972 is more similar to 2022 than it is 1922. It was normal for woman to wear jeans and men to have long hair in the early 70s just like today, but those things in the 1920s would’ve be been looked down upon.
This is so cool!!! I closed my eyes while listening (still awake lol) and when I was listening to them I felt and imagined that I was in the 1900’s - 1920’s. I absolutely loved the feeling bc I like olden days stuff!!
George Strum maybe not, in the early 1900s there was a new and better era of music, in the 2100s, people might be still listening to our same style. Personally, I love the early and middle 1900s style of music. Nothing can top it, even the era with Mozart and Beethoven. Thanks for listening.
i can just imagine myself being in these old times as a young adult, as other people, who ranged from young adult to middle aged are dancing on the streets while it's raining, enjoying themselves. everything looks all black and white to me. everybody is wearing things like old fashioned fedoras/bowlers. they all look so happy, as nothing wrong is happening there. i can see myself standing inside a brick shop of some kind, with windows, as i watch everybody enjoying themselves. i don't really see too many cars where i am around, but the ones i do see look old fashioned, mainly fit for one person. i feel as this very thing is happening right now, or like if it did happen before, even though it obviously didn't. it just feels...familiar.
@@alexisc585, I've felt before that I was around in the 1900s and 1910s, and the world had this quaint feel to it. There was more of an amazement and awe to so many things, not like today where you can find detailed descriptions to just about everything, which takes away the wonder. The world seemed bigger, the fastest way to get from the US to Europe was by steamship which took about 5 days (no 7 hour flights). Still, the world was more simple, yet had more principal. There was a pride and dignity in the air, from other people, and within myself. Family life seemed more important and special. And eating was a more enjoyable and special thing than it has been in this life. Eating was more special to people back then because it was something more difficult to get the privilege to do then and was not taken so much for granted. Also, food tasted better because it was more natural, it wasn't so processed, there weren't all the fillers and additives that food today has, and even meat tasted better because lifestock was also fed more natural food and wasn't pumped full of unnatural feed and growth hormones
Cohan wrote "Give My Regards to Broadway," and frequently performed it live, however I don't think there is any recording of him singing it. He was not a recording artist, and only recorded one or two of his songs. I think this is Billy Murray singing on the one you have here. It's also Murray singing "You're a Grand Old Rag." Probably more of him coming up. I haven't finished listening. He was very prolific, has an unmistakeable voice, and recorded many songs that would be recognized today.Okay, he's also singing "Pretty baby."
PUBLIC DOMAIN song DELETED 05:19 Copyright expires if composers age + 70 years have passed. I did some research: - Christopher M. Smith (COMPOSER) - passed away on October 4, 1949 ; 1 year in Public domain - James Henry Burris (LYRICS) - passed away in 1923 ; 28 year Public domain You should let youtube know that the song: Ballin the Jack's copyright has expired.
"Give my regards to Broadway," "you're a grand old rag", "Pretty Baby" and "over there" were sung by Billy Murray. "Take me out to the ball game", was sung by Edward Meeker.
@@jasmingross95 neither do i. But then again, those people don't understand my boomer ass music taste so i can't really complain. We all have our own tastes.
First time i stumbled into 1900s music i kept wondering what makes these tunes so special compare to majority ( not all ) of songs nowadays and turned out, the 1900s music had this perfect balance of sounding both EPIC and LIGHTHEARTED at the same time. In todays time where most of the songs are infested with egdelords appreciating their hubris nature through lyrics, scorned tunes and overly simple half baked melodies, its no wonder its difficult to find todays music that can match the same element to what 1900s music had offered which to flawlessly combine the sound of shear epic vibe with lighthearted sounds.
You should have used the Arthur Collins recording of "Meet Me in Saint Louis." Should use the Collins & Harlan recording of Alexander's ragtime band." And I'd rather hear Nora Bayes, or second choice Ada Jones, singing "Has anybody here seen Kelly?" I don't recognize the voice on the one you used. I think you do actually have Jack Norworth sing "Turn off your light..." I'm trying to recall if he sand this as a duet with Nora Bayes. They made a great team, but unfortunately had a rather nasty divorce.
Judy Garlands sings the “Meet Me in St. Louis” recording and it was used in the 1944 musical “Meet Me in St. Louis”. Her voice is used in a few other of these recordings too such as “Balling a Jack” and “Meet Me in Dreamland”
Well I'm an edgy-fuck with bad taste so I'm glade I able to have music from this decade, though to be fair their is a bug differentce between pop music and underground music in each decade.
Most of the people who entertain my husband and I are long dead. We don't have any use for what they call music today. "Pretty Baby" was written by Gus Kahn.
Even though these songs were written at the start of the 1900s, several of these songs on this video were sung by Judy Garland in around the 1940s, "Meet me tonight in dreamland" was sung by Judy in the film "The good ol summertime" in 1949, "Ball and the jack" was sung by Judy and Gene Kelly in "Me and my gal" in 1942, "Meet me in St Louie" was sung by Judy in the film with same name in 1944, and "You made me love you" was sung by her in "Broadway melody 38" in 1938. I've seen each of those films and seen and heard the songs in them numerous times, and I know Judy's voice all too well
This is helping me out a lot this cheers me up when I'm feeling happy or sad or tired or angry or bored or sick or surprised or gloomy or scared or lonely
Music today is nothing compared to this era's music. like everything else in this age our music will also be another throw away item when the next best thing comes along.
I sing 'Long Way to Tipperary' in the car when I'm alone, but I heard from Tiny Tim_ at first I didn't realize that it was such an old song that he had remade, but here it is on this video
Um unless your a straight white male the 1900s wasn't really a good time period to live in. Like in the next forty years you have two world wars, red scares, immigration quotas, the Great Depression, the second rise of the kkk...
And getting drafted like a tool in the bloodiest wars ever is so great, and guess what gender, and I think even race had to experience that. Strait. White. Men. Honestly, I think the 1950's were the greatest time to live, no spoiled hipsters and people whining about "gender roles" and crap. Nice and simple
not good times for non straight white males ... , or poor/lower class in general, or irish, or handicapped, or part of any diaspora in any other country, or jew (I think it isn't very clear on the internet, and I don't want to spend more time than this shitty comment needs to actually find out), or communist (that might be latter though, I think there was a soviet revolution just before/during 1920)...
aesthetically it was pretty cool, though everyone from the time was the same way were are now?? 40 years from now people are gonna be complaining about how that generation was trash and the early 2000s were much better
my great grandma, she's in her 90s lol she lost track exactly the age, I showed her some trap music and she just laughed and said "how cute " idk if she meant the music or me
Shelly G Yeah, those girls with bobbed hair and short dresses don't dress right. They call that flapper or something. Why can't they dress like they did in 1901? lol
Damn i never heard them but i feel like i did but when i was yonger i wpuld draw these werid tactical maps like if i were in the military or something and i have a birth mark on my stomach and it looks like i got stabbed weird maybe i was a solider in ww1 in my past life and when i do see a ww1 pjc i get a weird as feeling like ive been there and now i am listening to these music and i feel like i heard them before but i didint lord help lol
I’m a huge fan of Ragtime, but don’t get me wrong, you should keep an eye out of other genres of music. I’m personally not a fan of Rap or Pop genres, but you should really keep an open eye about other genres, as they have many other fans. Remember, Ragtime was seen as the same way you see about Rap or K-Pop.
Got a question, in my comment below, I made an interesting point about Judy Garland having several of her songs from several of her 1930s and 1940s films placed in this video, and there's not one thumbs up on it, and I posted it 8 months ago. But there's another comment posted 2 years ago from someone else mentioning in one sentence every singer in this video being dead and saying nothing else, and that comment has got 253 thumbs up. I seriously doubt that my comment will go from zero thumbs up to 253 thumbs up in the difference of time between 8 months and 2 years, so I would like to know why a comment saying how everyone is dead interested so many more people than me mentioning Judy Garland's songs from her films being in this video.
George M. Cohan and Billy Murray are not the same person. Billy lived into 1954 and George passed in the 1940s around the start of WWII. Billy recorded George's songs.
@@MattCookOregon Yeah I know for sure Scott Joplin and a few others are definitely copyright free. The basic rule of copyright is if the composer died, for example let’s take Scott Joplin who passed away in 1918, his compositions became available in 1988, 70 years after his death. If you wanna use any other composer’s music just look them up and you can use that rule.
No, the music from our generation isn't going to be remembered in a 100 years. We still know of this music because you actually had to be talanted/putting in hard work to make and record music back then.
Thank you for very specific names of the singers. I had no idea who sung that verson of "Take Me out to The Ball Game" as you see on one of my playlist the publisher of The song did not name the singer.
*currently listening to dead people singing*
This comment makes me sad.
yeah...like Freddy mercury on theaters now..you mean?
SoggyPinecone FALLOUT LORE MASTER but its true
@@raelyn-de-flamingo6796 Yes
Queen Anonymous cue gravity falls scene
*YOUR MAKING MY DANCE SAD*
Some of these I’ve never heard but it feels like I’ve heard all of them
true
Past life probably, but dame
Same*
Jesus me too
Could be the games cuz lots of them use these melodies can't remember the names but...
100 years from now there’s going to be videos titled “Music from the early 2000s(2000-2020)”
True
Omg..and some of that ‘music’ won’t make any sense,lol!
That would be trash.
@@randomshits7730 That’s how Ragtime was seen when it was just getting popular. I’m personally not a fan of Pop or Rap or really anything modern, but just because it’s a new genre doesn’t mean it’s bad. People in 2100 and far into the future will see today’s songs as historical masterpieces.
@@user-cj6pe3vy3b I don't think so.
There are two possible ways (that my mind can think of now):
1. The future generation will be as sophisticate as we are now (or even less): They would just think it's the music that "only our grandparent listen to".
2. The future generation will be more sophisticated than we are now (let say... like the early 1900s): They would say something like what elitist critic would say to or music now.
But who am I even to dare to predict the future.
Also, I don't mean that "modern is bad".
Feel free to change my mind!
99% voice
1% background sounds
100% white noise
Racist
@@zyzor what are you talking about?
Velasco 141414 Idk he’s stupid.
@Decade Authority i am the soul.
@@zyzor
"White noise" means that noise that is like- idk, ill just put a link to white noise. th-cam.com/video/lzmSKX5TF3g/w-d-xo.html
Trust me, the link is safe TvT
Me: _Lets play a song!_
Me: *_Listens to dead people singing_*
We do that all the time
With Michael Jackson
Elvis
Bob marley lol who ever else is dead
@@conorthefivechickenedcockr9003 Freddie Mercury
Wow Scott Joplin. 1902 . You know you've created a timeless song when folks 120 years later are familiar with your song lol
Holy shit! I didn't know the "take me out to the ball game" song was this old?
I had no idea it was that young XD.
1910.
Cover version by Goo Goo Dolls in 1996.
Yes, some familiar songs are even older than that. "Camptown races", for example, is from the 1870s
The golf era of the baseball was in that era when the baseball was clean and honest
@@alvexok5523 Wow. I thought that one was from like the 18th century or something. 1870s? That's crazy.
I don’t know why but when I listen to old music like this I get creeped out
Maybe because the people singing them are dead
Maybe because that was the time The Caucasian race was unjustly SUPERIOR and ruled in EVERYTHING in America. 😐
Midwest Protagonist 7 good old times
Gucci Manes Ice cream cone
Yeah, Good Times 😒
But good things don't last forever. 😌
Cos people from then we're hardened psychos. .
At 14 u have to fight Huns.
Then come back and fight Spanish flu. U gotta still work.
After that great depression hits off goes u r life savings.
After that just as u think u can settle down, u gotta save the world from Hitler.
That's a hard life.
The thing is, these songs are still well known over 100 years later. We will not be able to say that for today's music.
The average human generation is 25 years. Since 1750, Mozart's time, there have only been about 10 generations. Two in Mozart's, four in the 1800's, and 4 in the 1900's. That might be a tree you'd be okay falling from. Obviously, these generations even overlap. We can probably just cut these numbers in half because of that. That being said, we are 5 generations close to Mozart, and probably 2, at max from this music. Parents seem to pass on their music to some degree. It's not inconceivable that this is still known, actually. Said, I believe it's still too early to know if even classical music will survive from a recreational standpoint. Maybe a great thinker could put an expiration date on these matters. But, today's music will probably last just as long as this. However, there will be more genres being listened to at the same time as the population allows for this type of expansion. Eventually, musical diversity is held in check by the population. Example, if only one person person is listening to some musical genre they made up, who will pass it on? Also, basing an estimate like this on "quality" of the composition is relative. What grooves you? For me, it's a cup of jark juice.
And these songs are AWSOME cause they are very catchy with the piano notes and it has no booty part slapped on it....I can't say anything about today's "popular" music which is trash
Well there weren't many artists back in 1900 to choose from, so obviously not many of the thousands of artists in our day will stand out like they did back the . But music today is an unique genre and just because it's mainstream and popular doesn't mean it's not art. I mean EDM style songs (roses, faded, etc) are pretty amazing in the way they're written. And Adele and Beyoncé and plenty others are also very gifted singers.
Taylor TM yup that is true
concordo com você Taylor . em minha opinião a partir de 2010 nao tem mais musicas boas exceto Avril Lavigne - let me go ......the music is dead
The nostalgia from listening to these music. It feels as tho i remeber some but i dont know the names.
Still better than today's music.
Edit: There's no such thing as "good music". Only music taste.
DeathRocket4990 agreed!
DeathRocket4990 well back in the day, most people used to criticize these music claiming that old musics were better. Future kids will consider our music as classics. It's just that we humans can hardly appreciate the present.
Pop yeah sure, metal no.
Yep!
@@dovahkiintim3449 couldn't agree with you more
Woah, 1908 and 1913 were filled with bops.
i love your username
@@marielnovio8222, I love yours, your username reminds me of Homer Simpson saying "Sophisti-ma-cated"
@@MontyFlower Defuque
Lowkey better than modern music
Damn... My greatgrandmother was born in 1917, she was lisening to this when she was a baby.... She is still alive though 😂💛
That’s cool you need to ask her about how life was like then and write her stories down
Man imagine not liking this
Fascinating how the time span between this music and the 1960s vs 2000s and the music of the 1950s is the same, yet the cultural changes in those 2 periods seem wildly different. Funny what 2 world wars and a sexual revolution will do.
The first sexual revolution was actually in the early 1900s, the women's sufferage movement which inspired flapper girls of the 1920s to become much more independent than women were previously to then. The late 1960s was the second sexual revolution.
@@alvexok5523 Yep. The Great Depression pretty-much killed all the fun of the 1920s and everything went serious again.
It’s crazy how 1972 is more similar to 2022 than it is 1922. It was normal for woman to wear jeans and men to have long hair in the early 70s just like today, but those things in the 1920s would’ve be been looked down upon.
Better then todays
This is so cool!!! I closed my eyes while listening (still awake lol) and when I was listening to them I felt and imagined that I was in the 1900’s - 1920’s. I absolutely loved the feeling bc I like olden days stuff!!
Will our music of the early 2000s sound just as quaint in the 2100s?
+George Strum
No.
George Strum maybe not, in the early 1900s there was a new and better era of music, in the 2100s, people might be still listening to our same style. Personally, I love the early and middle 1900s style of music. Nothing can top it, even the era with Mozart and Beethoven. Thanks for listening.
Grizzly do you know a song "why should i marry at all?" its from the early 1900s but i can find it! i also dont know from whom it is
probably not
George Strum yes. Just like people in 1900s didn't like their music, we don't like ours. Future kids will treat our music as classics.
1:06 can't believe some folk from 1902 says good old times like wow!
They sing about the ancient egyptian summer! 😂😄😁
@@ksp-crafter5907 hahaha that's insane.😊
Sometimes I found old songs have soul than today's.
I don't know why but I feel so happy Heard this old songs
When music was actually music
0 naked women
0 bad words
Just pure art
Lol they did make music about that shit too..just won’t find that on this video
@@777Revolutionary are you mad? It’s the 1900s
these type of comments are so stupid
your moms pure art
@@jinxed5723 ikr, literally gives me second hand embarrassment just reading it
The Good Old Days. For real.
I am listening to this for a history project.
It's better then the new stuff.
you'll get a plus
I am for a music project
Listening to this music while I am working on a history assignment from this era
This is better than todays bad music
No truer words could ever be spoken. You are a man of wisdom.
i can just imagine myself being in these old times as a young adult, as other people, who ranged from young adult to middle aged are dancing on the streets while it's raining, enjoying themselves. everything looks all black and white to me. everybody is wearing things like old fashioned fedoras/bowlers. they all look so happy, as nothing wrong is happening there. i can see myself standing inside a brick shop of some kind, with windows, as i watch everybody enjoying themselves. i don't really see too many cars where i am around, but the ones i do see look old fashioned, mainly fit for one person.
i feel as this very thing is happening right now, or like if it did happen before, even though it obviously didn't. it just feels...familiar.
we all lived an old life....
@@alexisc585, I've felt before that I was around in the 1900s and 1910s, and the world had this quaint feel to it. There was more of an amazement and awe to so many things, not like today where you can find detailed descriptions to just about everything, which takes away the wonder. The world seemed bigger, the fastest way to get from the US to Europe was by steamship which took about 5 days (no 7 hour flights). Still, the world was more simple, yet had more principal. There was a pride and dignity in the air, from other people, and within myself. Family life seemed more important and special. And eating was a more enjoyable and special thing than it has been in this life. Eating was more special to people back then because it was something more difficult to get the privilege to do then and was not taken so much for granted. Also, food tasted better because it was more natural, it wasn't so processed, there weren't all the fillers and additives that food today has, and even meat tasted better because lifestock was also fed more natural food and wasn't pumped full of unnatural feed and growth hormones
Excited Homie, my response to you is the same as my response to Alexis Lane
@@trisvdoosterkamp7632 lmao
I read all this in color 😁
I really hope all this music is archived even in the future and I also hope classic music all gets archived in the future so we can keep it forever
2:42 ANOTHER CLASSIC! THIS SONG IS MORE THAN A CENTURY OLD!
I should have been born in the early 1900's so I could have listened to this music while dying of the spanish flu. #wronggeneration
ugh, wish i could’ve been a slave owner in new orleans with yellow fever🙄
@@litterbyy ugh... if only we could get polio and hookworm while lynching black people for trying to get treated like human beings
Well now you have coronavirus
Cohan wrote "Give My Regards to Broadway," and frequently performed it live, however I don't think there is any recording of him singing it. He was not a recording artist, and only recorded one or two of his songs. I think this is Billy Murray singing on the one you have here.
It's also Murray singing "You're a Grand Old Rag." Probably more of him coming up. I haven't finished listening. He was very prolific, has an unmistakeable voice, and recorded many songs that would be recognized today.Okay, he's also singing "Pretty baby."
And over there
PUBLIC DOMAIN song DELETED 05:19
Copyright expires if composers age + 70 years have passed.
I did some research:
- Christopher M. Smith (COMPOSER) - passed away on October 4, 1949 ; 1 year in Public domain
- James Henry Burris (LYRICS) - passed away in 1923 ; 28 year Public domain
You should let youtube know that the song: Ballin the Jack's copyright has expired.
3:22 this is the version from 1931. Jack Norworth and Nora Bayes never recorded the song, but Billy Murray and Ada Jones did record it in 1909.
"Give my regards to Broadway," "you're a grand old rag", "Pretty Baby" and "over there" were sung by Billy Murray. "Take me out to the ball game", was sung by Edward Meeker.
Right up my street, I love old music!
0:33 STILL POPULAR UNTIL NOW😮😮😮😮
Yes,mind blown 😳
It's on my local ice cream truck
Then: *this video*
Now: *kpop*
In my opinion, kpop is such a terrible music. I dont understand how people listen this horrible music.
I wished i were born in this time.
@@jasmingross95 neither do i. But then again, those people don't understand my boomer ass music taste so i can't really complain. We all have our own tastes.
*kpoop
First time i stumbled into 1900s music i kept wondering what makes these tunes so special compare to majority ( not all ) of songs nowadays and turned out, the 1900s music had this perfect balance of sounding both EPIC and LIGHTHEARTED at the same time.
In todays time where most of the songs are infested with egdelords appreciating their hubris nature through lyrics, scorned tunes and overly simple half baked melodies, its no wonder its difficult to find todays music that can match the same element to what 1900s music had offered which to flawlessly combine the sound of shear epic vibe with lighthearted sounds.
0:27 the one I love the most.
You should have used the Arthur Collins recording of "Meet Me in Saint Louis." Should use the Collins & Harlan recording of Alexander's ragtime band." And I'd rather hear Nora Bayes, or second choice Ada Jones, singing "Has anybody here seen Kelly?" I don't recognize the voice on the one you used.
I think you do actually have Jack Norworth sing "Turn off your light..." I'm trying to recall if he sand this as a duet with Nora Bayes. They made a great team, but unfortunately had a rather nasty divorce.
I also wish he would have used Collin's recording of "Under the Bamboo Tree"
Judy Garlands sings the “Meet Me in St. Louis” recording and it was used in the 1944 musical “Meet Me in St. Louis”. Her voice is used in a few other of these recordings too such as “Balling a Jack” and “Meet Me in Dreamland”
I know your comment is six years old but Florrie Forde sang this song.
Thanks bioshock infinite for making me discover this type of music.. been loving this kind for about 5 years.
Bioshock Infinite's soundtrack led me to enjoy and find this music. I just wish there was more.
still better than the shit we have now a days.
The Amazing Metalhead yeah better than shitty metal musics.... fuck metal
STRIKE OF THE MOTHERFUCKING BEAST!!!!!!!
I heard most of these music and songs from piano tiles
What a pure music! Personally I listen to Rock'n'Roll and Hard Rock but man this is really good!
I remember Tom dancing with a black woman without a head
in 2120 these music will be a national treasure.
Some of these people sound like Judy Garland. Freaky
That's interesting, but for me, seems that we improved in music, the 80's was the apex, then we start to regress.
1960s was the apex of music
80s sucked in my opinion.
@@jayco9214 70s and 90s music is modern music.
Well I'm an edgy-fuck with bad taste so I'm glade I able to have music from this decade, though to be fair their is a bug differentce between pop music and underground music in each decade.
Regressed 2010s onward
Most of the people who entertain my husband and I are long dead. We don't have any use for what they call music today. "Pretty Baby" was written by Gus Kahn.
I love songs from early 1900s 🖤
Beautiful tunes. My parents were born in 21.they sang all of these songs.
21th century music is suck, but i love their humor
I heard this when I was doing homeworks in the highschool, good remembers, Hi for everybodie from Spain
Only people born in the 1700s-1800s can relate. We valid
Even though these songs were written at the start of the 1900s, several of these songs on this video were sung by Judy Garland in around the 1940s, "Meet me tonight in dreamland" was sung by Judy in the film "The good ol summertime" in 1949, "Ball and the jack" was sung by Judy and Gene Kelly in "Me and my gal" in 1942, "Meet me in St Louie" was sung by Judy in the film with same name in 1944, and "You made me love you" was sung by her in "Broadway melody 38" in 1938. I've seen each of those films and seen and heard the songs in them numerous times, and I know Judy's voice all too well
I’m 15 and I love this gold
Me too (15 years old)
This is old but gold
I’m 2 and listen to even older music. I win.
John Doe haha you old
same
Ghost music
This is helping me out a lot this cheers me up when I'm feeling happy or sad or tired or angry or bored or sick or surprised or gloomy or scared or lonely
My great grandfather’s father was Scott Joplin :D
So Scott Joplin was your great great grandfather? Amazing!!
Lol currently playing rdr 2 while listening to this
a few of these songs I listen to with my people at nursing home volunteering good memories
Wow,lucky..❤️
The sad fact is that also these first 20 years of this new century have gone, so allof these songs are now more than 100 years old
This is a good life
I love that perfect Judy sings so many of these tunes 🌷💖
wow very very different compared to modern music...I even recognise some of this 100 year old music
I love the songs that were played on here because I don’t really like some of the music in the modern timeframe
Back when famous singers were not worshipping satan
Music today is nothing compared to this era's music. like everything else in this age our music will also be another throw away item when the next best thing comes along.
Ironically I'm 13 and these musics are my jam. Oh yeah there was 666 thumbs up before I clicked it.
"I wAS boRN in tHE WroNG GeneRaTiON"
50s music is way better but this is ok. I'm 11...and others that are 100 like modern music
i always yo to baseball games with my father, its always fun when you hear that song song, but i had noooo idea that it was THIS OLD
reminds me of entering haunted plantation
Thanks for this great collection of classic music.
I sing 'Long Way to Tipperary' in the car when I'm alone, but I heard from Tiny Tim_ at first I didn't realize that it was such an old song that he had remade, but here it is on this video
I wish this generation havent changed and it would stay like the 1900 for ever. Because people from that era are more elegant and intelligent
Um unless your a straight white male the 1900s wasn't really a good time period to live in. Like in the next forty years you have two world wars, red scares, immigration quotas, the Great Depression, the second rise of the kkk...
And getting drafted like a tool in the bloodiest wars ever is so great, and guess what gender, and I think even race had to experience that. Strait. White. Men. Honestly, I think the 1950's were the greatest time to live, no spoiled hipsters and people whining about "gender roles" and crap. Nice and simple
yeah people of color fought in the world wars they even fought in the civil war
not good times for non straight white males ... , or poor/lower class in general, or irish, or handicapped, or part of any diaspora in any other country, or jew (I think it isn't very clear on the internet, and I don't want to spend more time than this shitty comment needs to actually find out), or communist (that might be latter though, I think there was a soviet revolution just before/during 1920)...
aesthetically it was pretty cool, though everyone from the time was the same way were are now?? 40 years from now people are gonna be complaining about how that generation was trash and the early 2000s were much better
1900 is not part of the 20th century it's part of the 19th century.
I Don't know why but this music feels eerie.
if 1900s humans listenings 2016 EDM
+Logan Glauner lol
I dont like to think about the impossible :/ ... its a waste of time
my great grandma, she's in her 90s lol she lost track exactly the age, I showed her some trap music and she just laughed and said "how cute "
idk if she meant the music or me
Agar Lead how cute they call this music, no offense just guessing her thoughts.
Their ears will probs bleed
My great-grandpa was born in 1911, my great-grandma born in 1913.🥰
That version of Ballin' the Jack is not from Jim Burris and Chris Smith. It's from Judy Garland and Gene Kelly. ;-)
some of these songs sounds a lil bit creepy and horror 😅
How scott joplin survived lynchings
Its crazy how all of these people are dead
todays music is yuck and horrid (especially with girls dressing weird)
Shelly G Yeah, those girls with bobbed hair and short dresses don't dress right. They call that flapper or something. Why can't they dress like they did in 1901? lol
Damn i never heard them but i feel like i did but when i was yonger i wpuld draw these werid tactical maps like if i were in the military or something and i have a birth mark on my stomach and it looks like i got stabbed weird maybe i was a solider in ww1 in my past life and when i do see a ww1 pjc i get a weird as feeling like ive been there and now i am listening to these music and i feel like i heard them before but i didint lord help lol
@@Billy219 I think I hhhhave idk. what would your explaination be? Good sir
1900s Music maybe listening to dead people music but why not enjoy it???
So this is the songs my great grandpa listened to.
these old songs sounds better than stupid rap and k-pop shit
So true!
I’m a huge fan of Ragtime, but don’t get me wrong, you should keep an eye out of other genres of music. I’m personally not a fan of Rap or Pop genres, but you should really keep an open eye about other genres, as they have many other fans. Remember, Ragtime was seen as the same way you see about Rap or K-Pop.
I love this
Got a question, in my comment below, I made an interesting point about Judy Garland having several of her songs from several of her 1930s and 1940s films placed in this video, and there's not one thumbs up on it, and I posted it 8 months ago. But there's another comment posted 2 years ago from someone else mentioning in one sentence every singer in this video being dead and saying nothing else, and that comment has got 253 thumbs up. I seriously doubt that my comment will go from zero thumbs up to 253 thumbs up in the difference of time between 8 months and 2 years, so I would like to know why a comment saying how everyone is dead interested so many more people than me mentioning Judy Garland's songs from her films being in this video.
George M. Cohan and Billy Murray are not the same person. Billy lived into 1954 and George passed in the 1940s around the start of WWII. Billy recorded George's songs.
These songs can be used for like old haunted houses
These are all public domain right?
Not all
@@user-cj6pe3vy3b dang it thanks. Need some good copyright free music.
@@MattCookOregon Yeah I know for sure Scott Joplin and a few others are definitely copyright free. The basic rule of copyright is if the composer died, for example let’s take Scott Joplin who passed away in 1918, his compositions became available in 1988, 70 years after his death. If you wanna use any other composer’s music just look them up and you can use that rule.
This is the decade my great grandparents were born in.
No, the music from our generation isn't going to be remembered in a 100 years. We still know of this music because you actually had to be talanted/putting in hard work to make and record music back then.
Thank you for very specific names of the singers. I had no idea who sung that verson of "Take Me out to The Ball Game" as you see on one of my playlist the publisher of The song did not name the singer.
2:24 i heard that one before
02:24 This song used to be on first Bioshock Infinite teaser and since that I was looking for her...