Dj Shots Makinny aka oOMCMOo
https://soundcloud.com/oomcmoo
• Aleatoric music – music the composition of which is partially left to chance
• Algerias
• Alomaco
• Alpine New Wave
• Alpunk
• Alternative country – reaction against the 1990s highly-polished Nashville sound
• Alternative hip hop – opposite of gangsta rap, usually includes socially or politically aware lyrics (also known as alternative rap or Bohemian hip hop)
• Alternative metal – catch-all term for heavy metal mixed with punk, funk, hip hop or other influences
• Alternative punk
• Alternative rock- broad movement born in the 1980s generally relegated to the underground music scene and operating outside of the mainstream
• Alternative synth – Also known as Subliminal, this features usually a repeatative bass riff and/or a bass riff that is played backwards. It also features a lot of keyboards and is usually instrumental
• Amanédhes
• Ambient – atmospheric electronic music combined with jazz, New Age and other influences
• Ambient acoustic
• Ambient breakbeat
• Ambient dub
• Ambient electronica
• Ambient house
• Ambient groove
• Ambient techno
• Ambient trance
• American fingerstyle guitar (American primitive guitar)
• Americana
• Anadolu rock – Turkish rock music
• Anarcho-punk – 1970s mixture of punk rock with anarchist lyrics
• Andártika
• Andean New Age – a mixture of native Peruvian and Western musics which arose in tourist areas in Lima, Cuzco, and Ollantaytambo
• Angklung – Osinger and Balinese style of gamelan performed exclusively by young boys
• Angolan merengue
• Anti-folk
• Antiphonal
• Apala
• Appalachian folk – in the United States, commonly referred to as simply folk music
• Arabesk – A versatile collection of music fusing Turkish folk music, Arab classical music and various other genres
• Areito
• Arena rock – 1970s catchy, bombastic mixture of hard rock, prog and pop music
• Argentinean rock
• Arpa grande – a style of rural Mexican folk music
• Arribeño – lyrical folk music from Sierra Gorda, Mexico
• Ars antiqua
• Ars nova
• Artcore
• Art metal
• Art punk
• Art rock
• Ashiq – Azeri bards who sing and accompany themselves on a saz (a kind of lute)
• Ashoug
• Asian Underground – British-based form of Indian and Western fusion
• Australian country music (see also Country music)
• Australian pub rock
• Australian hip hop
• Australian humour
• Australian warmetal
• Avant-garde jazz
• Avant-garde metal
• Avant-garde music – any kind of experimental music incorporated bizarre ideas, structures or instrumentation
• Axé – pop music from Salvador, Bahia
• Bachata
• Baião
• Bakersfield sound – gritty, hard-edged reaction against 1950s pop country (Nashville sound)
• Bakshy – Turkmen folk music made by travelling musicians also called bakshy
• Baiáo – Dance music created by a trio of triangle, bass drum and accordion
• Baila – Sri Lankan dance music derived from African slaves held by the Portuguese
• Baile Funk – Brazilian dance music literally means “ball”, as in “dance party”, and “funk”
• Baisha xiyue – a song and dance suite from the Naxi of Lijiang, China
• Bajourou
• Bakou – trilling vocals that accompany Wolof wrestling
• Bagad
• Bal granmoun
• Bal-musette
• Balakadri
• Ballad – generic term for usually slow, romantic, despairing and catastrophic songs
• Ballad calypso
• Ballata
• Ballet (music)
• Balss
• Bamberas
• Bamboo band – originally from the Solomon Islands, music played by hitting bamboo tubes with sandals
• Bamboula wake
• Bambuco
• Banda – Mexican brass norteño pop music invented in the 1960s
• Bangsawan
• Bantowbol
• Barbarian black metal – extreme black metal about paganism and barbarism
• Barbershop music – extremely melodic a cappella vocal style
• Barndance
• Baroque music – 17th-18th century European classical music
• Baroque metal
• Bass music (Miami bass, Booty bass) – electro influenced form of hip hop dance music arising in Miami, Florida
• Bastard Pop
• Batá
• Batá-rumba
• Batcave (club)
• Batucada
• Batuco
• Bayin – Taiwanese Hakka instrumental music
• Beach music
• Beat
• Beatboxing
• Bebop – 1940s jazz style with complex improvisation and a fast tempo
• Bedoui
• Bedoui citadinisé
• Beguine (biguine)
• Beguine moderne
• Beguine vide
• Beiguan – Taiwanese instrumental music
• Bel canto – Italian vocal style which arose in the late 16th century and which ended in the mid-19th century
• Belair
• Bend-skin
• Benga
• Bhajan – a northern Hindu religious song
• Bhakti
• Bhangra – originally Punjabi dance music USAGE OF DHOOL (A PERCUSSION INSTRUMENT TYPE OF DRUM )IS THE MAIN FEATURE)which became popular in the UK
• Bhangra-wine
• Bhangragga
• Bhangramuffin
• Big band music – large orchestras which play a form of swing music
• Big Beat – 1990s electronic music based on breakbeat with other influences
• Big Hip
• Biguine – Martinican folk music
• Biguine moderne – Martinican biguine adapted to pop forms and including reggae and other influences
• Black ambient – blackened form of dark ambient music
• Black metal – highly distorted and swift form of heavy metal
• Bleak house – downbeat techno
• Blair beat a little knowen type of music founded by Sir Blair Mason
• Bloco afro
• Bluegrass – American country music mixed with Irish and Scottish influences
• Blue-eyed soul
• Blues – African-American music from the Mississippi Delta area
• Blues ballad
• Blues-rock
• Blurcore
• Big Drum Dance
• Bigono duu
• Biomusic
• Bitchcore
• Bitpop
• Bocet
• Bohemian Dub – Contemporary music style that blends Hip-Hop, Dub, Funk, Pop and Klezmer music
• Boi – Central Amazonian folk music
• Bolero – Spanish and Cuban dance and music
• Bomba
• Bombay pop
• Bongo – distinctive African drum and style of drumming
• Bongo wake
• Boogie rock
• Boogie woogie – style of piano-based blues popular in the 1940s US
• Boogaloo – soul and mambo fusion popular in 1960s United States
• BooM Rock-Persian Melodies & Sounds and world Funk-RockBOOMBAND for exmpl.
• Booty bass (Miami bass, Bass music)
• Borbangnadyr
• Borbannadir – type of Tuvan xoomii said to sound like the rapids of a river
• Border ballad
• Bossa nova
• Bothy ballad
• Bouncy techno
• Boy band
• Brass band
• Brass Hop
• Brat Rock
• Brazilian funk
• Brazilian jazz – bossa nova and samba mixed with American jazz
• Breakbeat
• Breakbeat hardcore
• Breakcore
• Bright disco
• Brill Building Pop – named after New York’s Brill Building at 1619 Broadway
• Britfunk
• Britpop
• British blues
• British dance band
• British folk
• British Invasion
• Broadside ballad
• Broken beat
• Brown-eyed soul
• Brukdown – rural Belizean creole music
• Brutal prog
• Bubblegum dance
• Bubblegum pop – sometimes synonymous with pop music, especially that performed by teen idols; can also refer to specific styles of South African or Japanese pop
• Buiasche
• Bikutsi
• Bulerias
• Bumba-meu-boi
• Bunggul
• Bunraku – Japanese style originated from a kind of puppet-theater.
• Burger-highlife
• Burgundian School
• Ca din tulnic
• Ca pe lunca
• Ca tru – (hat a dao) Vietnamese folk music
• Cabaret
• Cadence
• Cadence-lypso – guitar-dominated Cadence music combined with calypso horns
• Cadence rampa
• Café-aman
• Cai luong – Vietnamese opera
• Cajun music
• Cakewalk
• Calenda – Trinidadian drum dance
• Calentanos – folk music of the Balsas River Basin, Mexico
• Calgia – traditional urban ensemble music from Macedonia
• Calipso – Venezuelan calypso music
• Calypso – Trinidadian folk, and later pop, genre
• Calypso-style baila – Sri Lankan baila mixed with calypso influences
• Campursari – Indonesian modern folk music, a fusion of dangdut, langgam, and pop music
• Campillaneros
• Caña
• Candombe
• Caninecore – A sub-genre of death metal marked by its inclusion of audio clips of dog barks and howls.
• Canon
• Cantata
• Cante chico
• Cante jondo
• Canterbury Scene
• Cantiñas
• Cantiga – Portuguese ballad form
• Cantique
• Canto livre – Portuguese modernized fado
• Canto nuevo – Bolivian pop-folk music which evolved out of Chilean nueva cancion
• Canto popular – Uruguayan singer-songwriter nativist music
• Cantopop – western-style pop music from Hong Kong
• Canzone napoletana – urban songs from Naples
• Capoeira music
• Caracoles
• Carceleras
• Cardas
• Carimbó – dance music of Belém, Brazil
• Cariso
• Carnatic music
• Carol
• Cartageneras
• Cassé-co
• Cassette culture
• Cavacha
• CCM (Contemporary Christian Music)
• Celempungan
• Celtic
• Celtic fusion
• Celtic metal
• Celtic punk
• Celtic reggae
• Celtic rock
• Cha-cha-cha
• Chakacha
• Chamamé – Argentinian folk music
• Chamber jazz
• Chamber pop
• Chamber music
• Champeta – Colombian musical form derived from African communities in Cartagena
• Champloo
• Chalga
• Changuí
• Chanson
• Charanga
• Charanga-vallenato – 1980s mixture of salsa, charanga and vallenata
• Charikawi
• Chastushki – humorous Russian folk songs
• Chau van – Vietnamese trance music
• Chemical breaks
• Chèo
• Chill-Out
• Chicago house
• Chicken scratch – Arizona-based Native American music
• Chimurenga (mbira)
• Chinese music
• Chinese rock – rock and roll from China / Taiwan, often with protest lyrics
• Chip music
• Chongak – Korean aristocratic chamber music
• Chouval bwa
• Chowtal
• Chicago blues
• Chicago house
• Chicago jazz (Dixieland jazz)
• Chicago soul
• Chicha – a Peruvian fusion of rock and roll, cumbia and huayno
• Cho-kantrum – the most traditional form of Cambodian kantrum
• Choctaw Social Dance
• Chorinho
• Choro – Brazilian folk music
• Christian alternative
• Christmas carol
• Christian Hardcore
• Christian hip hop
• Christian Industrial
• Christian metal
• Christian music
• Christian rock
• Chylandyk – type of xoomii which sounds like the chirping of crickets
• Chumba
• Chut-kai-pang
• Chutney – popular Indo-Trinidadian music
• Chutney-bhangra
• Chutney-hip hop
• Chutney-soca – Chutney mixed with calypso and other influences
• Cigányzene
• Cînd ciobanu s-i a pierdut oile
• Cîntec batrînesc
• Ciobanul
• Classic female blues – early popular form of blues
• Classic metal
• Classic Rock
• Classical music era (~1730-1820), for what’s popularly known as “classical music”, see European classical music or List of musical movements
• Clicks n Cuts
• Close harmony
• Club
• Cocobale
• Codecore – The band ‘Codeca’ are famous for perfecting this sub genre of emo.
• Coimbra fado – a form of refined fado from Coimbra, Portugal
• Colombianas
• Comedy
• Comedy rock
• Comic opera
• Comparsa
• Compas direct
• Compas meringue
• Concert overture
• Concerto
• Concerto grosso
• Congo – Panamanian dance music
• Congolese sound
• Conjunto
• Conscious Reggae
• Contemporary Africa music
• Contemporary Christian Music (CCM)
• Contonbley
• Contradanza
• Cool jazz
• Cocorrido
• Coladeira
• Coldwave (or industrial rock)
• Combined Rhythm – music of the Dutch Antilles
• Corsican polyphonic song
• Cothoza mfana
• Country blues
• Country funk
• Country music
• Country rock
• Countrypolitan
• Couple de sonneurs – Breton dance music
• Cow punk
• Creative jazz
• Creole
• Crossover music
• Crunk
• Crust punk
• Csárdás
• Cuarteto – Argentinian folk music
• Cueca
• Cumbia – popular dance music, originally Colombian but now popular across Latin America, especially Mexico
• Cumbia panameña – Panamanian cumbia
• Cumfa
• Cumbia villera – Argentinian type of cumbia which contains marginal lyrics
• Cyber grindgore
• Cyber-metal
• Dabka (Dabke) – Palestinian dance music for weddings
• Dadra
• Daina – Latvian sung poetry
• Daino – Lithuanian traditional music
• Dalauna
• Dance (musical form) – dance (form of musical composition)
• Dance music – any rhythmic music intended for dancing
• Dance-pop – comtemporary form of dance music with pop music structures
• Dance-punk
• Dancehall
• Dangdut – popular Indonesian dance music with influences from Arabic and Indian music
• Danube New Wave – mixture of Viennese schrammelmusik and American blues and rock and roll
• Danza
• Danzón
• Dark ambient
• Dark cabaret
• Dark trance
• Darkwave
• De codru
• De dragoste
• De jale
• De pahar
• Deathcore
• Death industrial
• Death metal
• Death rock (also known as death punk)
• Death techno
• Deblas
• Deboche – Brazilian fusion of electric frevo and ijexá
• Décima
• Degung
• Delta blues
• Deep house
• Deep soul
• Dementia – relating to the style of music popularized by the Dr. Demento Show
• Desi – Indian folk music
• Detroit blues
• Detroit techno
• Dhamar – a type of highly-oranemented dhrupad
• Dhimotiká – traditional Greek songs
• Dhrupad – Hindustani vocal music performed by men singing in medieval Hindi
• Dhun
• Dialect rock – rock music sung in various Swiss-German dialects
• Digital hardcore
• Din Dain- Ambient blues trance
• Dirge
• Dirty rap
• Dirty South (also known as Southern rap)
• Disco
• Disco house
• Disco Polo – Polish nightclub dance music.
• Dixieland jazz (Chicago jazz)
• Djambadon
• Dodompa – Japanese tango
• Doina
• Dombola
• Dondang sayang – slow folk music that mixes Malaysian forms with Portuguese, India, Chinese and Arabic music
• Donegal fiddle tradition
• Dongjing – Chinese Naxi form of folk music, related to silk and bamboo music from Chinca
• Doo wop
• Doom metal
• Dopé
• Douche Metal – Metal made by knobheads.
• Downtempo
• Dream pop
• Drill and bass
• Dronology
• Drum and bass (DNB)
• Dub
• Dub techno
• Dubstep
• Dunun – Yoruban drum music
• Dunedin Sound – early 1980s alternative rock sound based out of Dunedin, New Zealand and Flying Nun Records
• Dutch jazz
• Dutch trance
• Dziesma
• Dzoke – type of yang chanting
• Early music
• East Coast blues
• East Coast hip hop
• Eastern Tradition of Sephardic music
• Easy listening
• Ecocore – A subgenre of black metal containing hardcore elements and lyrics concerning the ecosystem
• Pasillo
• Yaraví
• Elafrolaïkó
• Electric blues
• Electric folk
• Electro
• Electro Backbeat
• Electro hop
• Electroclash
• Electrofunk
• Electronic art music
• Electronic body music (EBM, also known as industrial dance)
• Electronic luk thung – Dance-ready form of Thai pleng luk thung
• Electronic music
• Electronic rock / Synth rock
• Electronica
• Electronicore – digital hardcore
• Electropop
• Elektro
• Elevator music (or Muzak)
• Emeba
• Emo
• Endecasillabo – Central Italian 11-syllabic song form
• English funk
• English madrigal
• Enka – Japanese pop music, using native forms
• Éntekhno
• Eremwu eu
• Euba
• Eurobeat
• Eurodance
• Europop
• Eurotrance (traditional dance music)
• Exotica
• Experimental music
• Experimental noise
• Experimental rock
• Extreme Computer Music
• Ezengileer – type of Tuvan xoomii said to imitate the trotting of horses
• Fag (music) – Music from Fetcham, usually involving lots of banjo riffs, ‘Fag Music’
• F-Step – variant of hardcore jungle with simultaneous, overlapping beats
• Fado – Portuguese roots-based popular music
• Falak – Tajik folk music
• fandango – Spanish dance music
• Farruca – a genre of flamenco
• Filk – modern, science fiction-oriented music
• Film scores
• Filmi – Indian film music
• Filmi-ghazal – filmi based on Hindustani ghazal
• Finger-style
• Fjatpangarri – Aboriginal Australian music local to Yirrbala
• Flamenco – dance music of Spanish Gypsies
• Flower power
• Foaie verde – classical form of Romanian Gypsy doina
• Fofa
• Folk metal
• Folk music
• Folk pop
• Folk punk
• Folk rock
• Folktronica
• Fonn Mall
• Forró – extremely popular music of Northeastern Brazil
• Foxcore – a specific style of grunge played by all-female bands
• Franco-country
• Freakbeat
• Freak-folk
• Free improvisation – freeform musical improvisation
• Free jazz – improvised 1960s jazz
• Free music
• Freestyle
• Freestyle house – a cross-culture mix of hip-hop/electro/house/pop
• Freetekno
• Frevo – folk music from Recife, Brazil
• Fricote – dance music from Salvador, Brazil
• Fuji – Yoruban vocal and percussion music
• Fulia – Afro-Venezuelan percussion music
• Funacola
• Funaná
• Funk – a bass-heavy outgrowth of soul music
• Funkcore
• Funk metal – 1980s combination of funk, heavy metal and punk rock
• Funk Rock
• Funky breaks – a type of breaks electronic music
• Funky highlife – fusion of funk and Ghanaian highlife
• Furniture music – Erik Satie’s invention of Background music
• Fusion bhangra (New Wave bhangra) – bhangra combined with rock and roll, reggae, hip hop, ragga and funk
• Fusion jazz – mixture of rock and jazz
• Future jazz
• Futurepop – outgrowth of synthpop, EBM and darkwave
• G-funk
• Gaana – Tamil folk/rap from Chennai, India
• Gabber (also spelled as Gabba)
• Gagá
• Gagaku – Japanese classical music derived from ancient court traditions
• Gaikyoku
• Gaita – Afro-Venezuelan form of percussion music
• Galant
• Gamad – Malay-style ballad
• Gambang kromong – popular, highly-evolved form of kroncong, originally adapted for the theater
• Game
• Gamelan – diverse Indonesian classical music, making use of a vast array of melodic percussion
• Gamelan angklung – Balinese gamelan played for cremations and festivals
• Gamelan bebonangan – Balinese cymbal-based processional gamelan
• Gamelan degung – a form of popular Sundanese gamelan
• Gamelan bang – Balinese sacred gamelan played for cremations
• Gamelan buh – Balinese form of gamelan
• Gamelan gede – ceremonial gamelan from the temple of Bator
• Gamelan kebyar – an energetic form of large Balinese gamelan
• Gamelan salendro – gamelan dance music from Sunda, known as lower-class music
• Gamelan selunding – possibly the oldest style of gamelan, played only in the village of Tenganan in Bali
• Gamelan semar pegulingan – sensual form of gamelan from Bali
• Gammeldan
• Gandrung – Osing music performed at weddings and other celebrations
• Gangsta folk
• Gangsta rap – American form of hip hop music which focuses on underground lifestyles and illegal activities
• Gar – Tibetan classical music
• Garage
• Garage rock
• Garage techno
• Garrotin
• Gavotte
• Gay – Afro-Trinidadian call and response work song
• Gelugpa chanting – form of Tibetan Buddhist chanting, very austere and restrained
• Gender wayang – Indonesion gamelan that accompanies shadow plays and other puppet plays
• Gending – a distinct gamelan music from southern Sumatra
• Gharbi
• Gharnati
• Ghazal – vocal form originally Persian but since spread to Central Asia, Iran, Turkey and India
• Ghazal-song – a modernized version of ghazal influenced by filmi
• Ghetto house – form of Miami bass influenced by house music which arose in Chicago
• Ghettotech – form of Miami bass which developed in 1990s Detroit
• Girl group – Girls singing rock songs
• Glam metal
• Glam rock
• Glitch
• Gnawa
• Go go
• Goa (also known as Goa trance)
• Golden Period of Karnatic classical music – music composed by the legendary Trimurti
• Gong-chime music
• Goombay – Bahamanian percussion music
• Goregrind
• Gore Metal
• Goshu ondo – a form of popularized Okinawan folk music
• Gospel music
• Gospel-soca
• Gothenburg Sound
• Gothic metal
• Gothic punk
• Gothic rock
• Granadinas
• Gregorian chant (plainchant)
• Grime – emerged from London, dark electronic beats with rapping
• Grindcore
• Group Sounds – Japanese pop music from the 1960s, which included Appalachian folk music and psychedelic rock
• Grunge
• Grupera – a mixture of Mexican ranchera, norteño and cumbia
• Guaguanbo
• Guajira
• Guitarra baiana – from Pernambuco, Brazil, a style of playing frevo using electric guitars
• Guitarradas
• Gumbe
• Gunchei
• Gunka – military marches with Japanese influences, created during the Meiji Restoration
• Guoyue – invented conservatoire style of national Chinese music
• Gwerz
• Gwo ka – Guadeloupan percussion music
• Gwo ka moderne – modernized gwo ka
• Gypsy jazz
• Gyu ke – form of Tibetan Tantric chanting
• Habanera – Africanized danzón
• Haiducesti
• Hajnali – Hungarian-Transylvanian wedding songs
• Half calypso (semi-tone calypso)
• Hakka
• Hambo
• Hands Up
• Hapa haole – a mixture of traditional Hawaiian music and English lyrics
• Happy hardcore
• Haqibah
• Hardcore hip hop
• Hardcore punk
• Hardcore techno
• Hard bop (hard bebop)
• Hard house
• Hard rock
• Hardstyle
• Hard techno
• Hard trance
• Harepa – harp-based music of Pedi people of South Africa
• Harley Rap
• Harmonica blues
• Hasaposérviko
• Hat cheo – an ancient form of Vietnamese stage opera
• Hát a dào – (ca tru) Vietnamese folk music
• Hát cai luong – Vietnamese popular opera
• Hat chau van – a popular spiritual folk music of Vietnam
• Hát tuông (Hát bôi) – Vietnamese operatic music
• Hauntology
• Hawaiian steel guitar – (kila kila) invented by Joseph Kekuku, who slid a solid object across slacked guitar strings
• Hawzi – evolved form of al-andalous classical music which developed in Tlemcen
• Hazzanut
• Heartland rock
• Heavy compas
• Heavy dance
• Heavy metal
• Hesher
• Hi-NRG
• Highlands
• Highlife
• Highlife fusion
• Hillybilly music
• Hiplife
• Hip hop
• Hip hop and soul (HNS)
• Hip house
• Hip pop
• Hippie metal
• Hindustani classical music
• Hiragasy
• Hiva usu – unaccompanied vocal Christian music of Tonga
• Honky tonk
• Honkyoku
• Hora lunga
• Hornpipes
• Horrorcore rap
• Horror punk
• Horror metal
• Hot rod music
• House music
• Hua’er
• Huasteco – folk music from Huasteco, Mexico
• Huaynos – Andean dance music now most widespread in Peru
• Hula
• Humppa
• Hunguhungu
• Hyangak – Korean court music
• Hypnofolkadelia – see Acid croft
• Hymn
• Hyphy
• Ibiza music
• Ibo
• Ice metal
• Igbo-highlife
• Ijexá
• Ilahije
• Illbient
• Impressionist music
• Improvisational
• Incidental music
• Indietronica
• Indie rock
• Indie pop
• Indo jazz – jazz mixed with forms of Indian music
• Indo rock
• Indoyíftika
• Industrial dance (or EBM, electronic body music)
• Industrial music
• Industrial musical (also known as corporate musical)
• Industrial metal
• Industrial rock (or coldwave)
• Instrumental pop
• Instrumental rock
• Intelligent dance music (IDM, also known as intelligent techno, listening techno or art techno)
• Irish Folk Music
• International Latin – pop ballads from various Latin countries, especially Colombia
• Inuit – music of the Inuit
• Irish folk
• Iscathamiya
• Isikhwela jo
• Island – mix of reggae,ska,latin; music sounding from the island
• Isolationist
• Italo Disco – Italian nightclub music
• Itsmeños – folk music of the Zapotecs of Mexico
• Izvorna Bosanska muzika – modernized folk music from Drina, Bosnia
• J-pop – Japanese Japanese pop music
• Jaipongan – unpredictably rhythmic dance music from Sunda, Indonesia
• Jaliscienses – Folk music of Jalisco, Mexico, and the origin of mariachi
• Jam band
• Jam rock
• Jamana kura
• Jamrieng samai
• Jangle pop
• Japanese pop – Japanese pop music using Western structures
• Jarana
• Jariang – Cambodian folk narratives
• Jarochos – folk music from Veracruz, Mexico
• Jawaiian – Hawaiian reggae
• Jaxx – Rock/Techno
• Jazz
• Jazz blues
• Jazz from night
• Jazz-funk
• Jazz fusion
• Jazz groove
• Jazz rap
• Jegog – Giant Bamboo ensemble of Bali, Indonesia
• Jenkka
• Jibaro
• Jig
• Jig Punk
• Jing ping
• Jingle – form of music used in television commercials
• Jit
• Jive
• Joged – a generic term for various types of dance music all over Indonesia
• Joged bumbung – a popular form of joged ensemble
• Joik
• Joropo
• Jota
• J’Ouvert
• Jug band
• Juke joint blues
• Juju
• Jump blues
• Jungle
• Junkanoo
• Juré
• Jtek
• Käng
• Kaba – Southern Albanian instrumental music
• Kabuki – lively and popular form of Japanese theater and music
• Kadans
• Kagok – Korean aristocratic vocal music accompanied by strings, wind and percussion instruments
• Kagyupa chanting – form of Tibetan Buddhist chanting
• Kaiso
• Kalamatianó
• Kalattuut – Inuit polka
• Kalinda (kalenda, ti kannot)
• Kamba pop
• Kan ha diskan
• Kansas City blues
• Kantádhes
• Kantrum
• Karaoke
• Kargyraa
• Karma
• Kaseko – Surinamese folk music
• Katcharsee – lively, celebratory Okinawan folk music
• Kattajjaq – competitive Inuit throat singing
• Kawachi ondo – a form of modernized Okinawan folk music
• Kayōkyoku – traditionally-structured Japanese pop music
• Ke-kwe
• Kebyar – see gamelan gong kebyar above
• Kecak – Balinese “monkeychant”
• Kecapi suling – instrumental, improvisation-based music from Java
• Kélé
• Kertok – Malaysian xylophone music played in small ensembles
• Khaleeji – popular folk-based music of the Persian Gulf countries
• Khap
• Khplam wai – a type of mor lam with a slow tempo which originated in Luang Prabang, Laos
• Khelimaski djili – Hungarian Gypsy dance songs
• Khene
• Khrung sai – type of Thai classical music
• Khyal – Hindustani vocal music that is informal, partially improvised and very popular
• Khoomei
• Khorovodi – Russian dance music
• Kĩkũyũ pop
• Kilapanda
• Kinko
• Kirtan
• Kiwi rock
• Kizomba
• Klape – Dalmatian male choir music
• Klasik
• Kléftiko
• Klezmer
• Kliningan
• Kochare – Armenian folk dance
• Kolomyjka
• Komagaku
• Konpa
• Koumpaneia – Greek Gypsy music
• Kpanlogo
• Krakowiak
• Krautrock
• Krill Krill
• Kriti (krithi) – a Hindui hymn
• Kroncong – popular Indonesian music with strong Portuguese influence
• Krzesany
• Kulintang – Traditional gong-chime music of the Philippines, Eastern Indonesia, Eastern Malaysia, Brunei and Timor
• Kulning – Swedish folk songs
• Kumina – music (and religion) of the Bongo Nation of Jamaica
• Kun-borrk
• Kundere
• Kundiman – traditional Filipino songs adapted to Western song structure
• Kussundé
• Kutumba wake
• Kvæði
• Kveding – traditional Norwegian songs
• Kwaito
• Kwassa kwassa
• Kwela
• La la – Louisianan Creole music
• Laba laba
• Laïkó
• Lai
• Lam
• Lam saravane – Laotian ensemble music from a town of the same name in southern Laos
• Lam sing
• Lambada – Bolivian and Brazilian dance music which arose from sayas and became internationally popular in the 1980s
• Lancer
• Langgam jawa – type of kroncong mixed with gamelan, popular around Solo, Indonesia
• Latin American music
• Laremuna wadauman
• Latin jazz – jazz mixed with Latin musical forms like bossa nova or salsa
• Lavlu
• Lavway
• Le leagan
• Legényes – Hungarian-Transylvanian men’s dance
• Letkajenkka
• Lhamo – form of Tibetan opera
• Lieder
• Likanos
• Light Music – 20th Century light orchestral music (mainly British)
• Light Music (Nepalese) – Nepalese pop music, blending traditional styles, Western pop and Indian filmi
• Line dance
• Liquindi
• Llanera – Venezuelan music
• Llanto – a flamenco-influenced genre of Panamanian folk music
• Lo-fi
• Lo-pop Pop or Disco with extrerme cheap touch
• Loki djili – traditional Hungarian Gypsy songs
• Long-song – traditional Mongolian slow songs
• Louisiana blues
• Lounge music
• Love metal
• Lovers rai
• Lovers rock
• Lowercase – see Lowercase (music)
• Lu – unaccompanied Tibetan folk music
• Lubbock country music
• Lucknavi thumri – a type of thumri from Lucknow
• Luhya omutibo
• Luk grung – Popular Thai music from the early 20th century
• Lullaby
• Lundu
• Lundum
• M-Base
• Madchester
• Madrigal
• Mafioso hip hop
• Maglaal (tuuli)
• Magnificat
• Mahori – type of Thai classical music
• Makossa
• Makossa-soukous
• Malagueñas
• Malawian jazz
• Maloya
• Maluf – evolved form of al-andalous classical music which developed in Constantine, Algeria
• Mambo
• Manaschi – Kyrgyz folk music made by travelling musicians also called manaschi
• Mandarin pop – early Taiwanese pop sung in Mandarin and popular with young listeners
• Manding swing
• Mangulina
• Manikay
• Manila sound – Early 1970s development in Pinoy rock which mixed Tagalog and English lyrics
• Manouche
• Manzuma
• Mapouka
• Mapouka-serré
• Marabi
• Maracatu – African and Portuguese music popular around Recife, Brazil
• Marching music
• Marga – Indian classical music
• Mariachi – pop form of son jalisciense
• Marimba
• Maritime folk
• Marrabenta
• Marrabenta rap
• Maskanda – popularized Zulu-traditional music
• Mass
• Martinetes
• Matamuerte
• Mathcore
• Math rock
• Mazurka
• Mbalax
• Mbaqanga (township jive)
• Mbira (Chimurenga)
• Mbube
• Mbumba
• Medh
• Meditation
• Medieval music
• Mejorana
• Melhoun
• Melhûn
• Melodic Death Metal
• Melodic music
• Melodic trance
• Memphis blues
• Memphis rap
• Memphis soul
• Mento
• Merengue
• Merengue típico moderno
• Merengue-bomba – Puerto Rican fusion of bomba and merengue
• Méringue
• Meringue
• Merseybeat
• Metal
• Metalcore
• Mexican son – a broad group of Mexican folk music
• Meyjana
• Mezwed
• Miami bass (booty bass) (Bass music)
• Microhouse
• Milo jazz
• Mini compas
• Mini jazz
• Minuet
• Missouri harmony
• Miami Sound – a popular form of salsa music
• Milongas
• Min’yo – Japanese folk music
• Mineras
• Mini-jazz – Caribbean jazz
• Minimalist music
• Minimalist trance
• Minstrel show
• Minneapolis sound
• Mirabras
• Mirolóyia
• Modinha
• Modern classical music
• Modern Laika
• Modern rock
• Modinha
• Mohabelo – neo-traditional music from South Africa and Lesotho
• Mor lam – Laotian ensemble music for vocals with accompaniment
• Mor lam sing – popular form of Laotian traditional music developed by Laotians in Thailand
• Momedy
• Morna
• Motown
• Mozambique
• MPB (música popular brasileira) – catch-all term for multiple varieties of Brazilian pop music
• Mugam – classical music of Azerbaijan, featuring sung poetry and instrumental passages
• Muntuno
• Murga – Uruguayan street carnival dance with heavy percussion, also popular in Argentina.
• Musette
• Mushroom Jazz
• Music drama
• Music Hall
• Música campesina – Cuban rural music
• Música criolla – a coastal Peruvian music from the early 20th century, consisting of a variety of Western fusions
• Música de la interior – indigenous folk music from Colombia
• Música llanera – harp-based form of folk music from Los Llanos, Colombia
• Música nordestina – Northeast Brazilian popular music, centered around Recife
• Música tropical – a form of Colombian salsa music
• Musiqi-e assil – Persian classical music
• Musique concrète (also known as electroacoustic music)
• Mutuashi
• Muwashshah
• Muzak (or elevator music)
• Na trapeza – Greek-Turkish slow songs
• Nagauta – Japanese style of shamisen-playing
• Naghmehs
• Nakasi – Taiwanese musical form
• Naked funk
• Nangma – Tibetan dance music
• Nanguan – Taiwanese instrumental music
• Narcocorrido – Spanish for “Drug ballad”, this Mexican music’s theme was equivalent to gangster rap
• Narodna muzika – Serbian folk music
• Nasheed – a capella music closely related with Islamic revival in the 20th century
• Nashville Sound – pop-country music based out of Nashville, Tennessee
• Native American gospel – gospel music performed by Native Americans
• Naturalismo – a term for the 2000s folk movement also referred to as New Weird America or Freak Folk
• Nederpop – popular music of the Netherlands, especially in the Dutch language
• Néo kýma
• Neofolk – a form of folk music that emerged from European ideals and post-industrial music
• Neo Soul (Nu Soul) – late 1990s and early 2000s American fusion of contemporary R&B, 1970s style soul music, hip hop music, jazz, and classical music
• Nerdcore hiphop
• Neue Deutsche Welle – a kind of German New Wave music
• Neue Volksmusik
• New Age music – numerous varieties of music associated with New Age spirituality and culture, especially including atmospheric and natural sounds
• New Beat – a downtempo music style from Belgium, contemporary to Chicago House and Detroit Techno.
• New Instrumental
• New Jack Swing (New Jack R&B, Swingbeat) – late 1980s and early 1990s American fusion of hip hop music, R&B, doo wop and soul music
• New Orleans blues – piano and horn-heavy blues from the city of New Orleans, Louisiana
• New Orleans contemporary brass band
• New Orleans jazz
• New Romantic – popular British New Wave from the early 1980s
• New rumba
• New school hip hop – generic term for hip hop music recorded after about 1989
• New Taiwanese Song – modern Taiwanese pop music which combines ballads, rock and roll and hip hop
• New Wave bhangra (Fusion bhangra)
• New Wave of British heavy metal (NWOBHM) – mid- to late 1970s heavy metal coming out of the United Kingdom
• New Wave – melodious pop outgrowth of arty punk rock, also used as description of an emerging sound in any genre (e.g. Alpine New Wave)
• New Weird America – term to defining emerging folk/psychedelia/drone/noize influenced by pre-war country-folk-blues & 1960s counter cultural underground music.
• New York blues – jazzy, urban blues from the early 20th century
• New York House (also known as US Garage)
• Newgrass – progressive bluegrass
• Nganja
• Nhac dan toc cai bien – modernized forms of Vietnamese folk music which arose in the 1950s
• Nhac tai tu – Vietnamese chamber music which accompanies cai luong
• Nha Nac
• Nisiótika – folk songs of the Greek islands
• No Wave – avant-garde late 1970s outgrowth of New Wave and punk rock
• Noh – highly-stylized Japanese theater and music style
• Noise music – style of avant-garde music, most closely associated with Japan
• Noise pop – experimental 1990s outgrowth of punk
• Noise rock – atonal punk rock from the 1980s
• Nongak – Korean folk music played by 20-30 performers on different kinds of percussion instruments
• Norae Undong – Korean rock music with socially aware lyrics
• Nordic folk music Nordic folk dance music
• Nortec – electronic style from Tijuana, Mexico
• Norteño (Tex-Mex) – Modernized corridos pop music of Mexico
• Northern harmony
• Northern Soul – late 1960s variety of soul music from northern England
• Northumbrian smallpipe music
• Nota
• Nova canção – popular 1950s and 60s fado in Portugal and folk-based singer-songwriters in Spain
• Novokomponovana narodna muzika – modernized Serbian folk music
• Nu breaks
• Nu jazz – fusion of late 1990s jazz and electronic music
• Nu metal – fusion of heavy metal music with genres such as hip hop, funk, grunge and electronic music
• Nu-NRG – a harder and faster version of Hi-NRG
• Nu soul (neo soul) – popular fusion of hip hop music and soul music
• Nueva canción – Chilean pop-folk music which influenced by native Chilean and Bolivian forms
• Nyingmapa chanting – form of highly rhythmic and elaborate Tibetan Buddhist chanting
• Obscuro
• Oi! – 1980s style of British punk rock
• Old school hip hop – generic term for hip hop music recorded before approximately 1989
• Old time country
• Old-time – archaic term for many different styles that were an outgrowth of Appalachian folk music and fed into country music
• Olonkho – Yakut epic songs
• Oltului
• Ompa – Music by the Kaizers Orchestra
• Omutibo
• Ondo
• On ikki muqam – Uyghur classical music suite in 12 parts
• Oom pah band
• Opera – theatrical performances in which all or most dialogue is sung with musical accompaniment
• Oratorical calypso
• Oratorio – similar to opera but without scenery, costumes or acting
• Orchestra – a large ensemble, especially one used to played European classical music
• Orchestre
• Organ trio – a style of jazz from the 1960s that blended blues and jazz (and later “soul jazz”) and which was based around the sound of the Hammond organ
• Organic ambient – often acoustic ambient music which uses instruments and styles borrowed from world music
• Organic house
• Organica- A genre music created by SLIPS INTO SPACE in 2007, it is writien without predetemininig the outcome of the overall sound.This music causes audible halusinations.
• Organum – Middle Ages polyphonic music
• Oriental Foxtrot
• Oriental metal – Israeli fusion of death and doom metal
• Orovela – eastern Georgian work songs
• Orgel (Organ Orgue) – keyboard instrument with/without pedals
• Orquestas Tejanas
• Ottava rima – Italian rhyming stanzas
• Outlaw country – late 1960s and 70s form of country music with a hard-edged sound and rebellious lyrics
• Outsider music – generic term for music performed by outsiders
• Özgün
• Ozwodna
• P-Funk – 1970s fusion of funk, heavy metal and psychedelic rock, most closely associated with the bands Funkadelic and Parliament, who shared many members collectively known as P-Funk
• Pagode – Brazilian style of music which originated in the Rio de Janeiro region
• Padams
• Paisley Underground – 1980s style of alternative rock that drew heavily on psychedelia
• Palm wine – fusion of numerous West African, Latin American and European genres, popular throughout coastal West Africa in the 20th century
• Palos
• Panambih – tembang sunda that uses metered poetry
• Panchai baja – Nepalese wedding music
• Panchavadyam – Temple music from Kerala, India
• Pansori – Korean folk music played by a singer and a drummer
• Parisian soukous
• Parranda – Afro-Venezuelan form of music
• Parody – humorous renditions of various songs
• Payada de contrapunto
• Pambiche (Merengue estilo yanqui)
• Paranda – Garifuna music of Belize
• Parang – Trinidadian Christmas carols
• Partido alto
• El pasacalle
• Paseo (music)
• Pasillo
• Peace Metal
• Peace Punk
• Pedo punk
• Pelimanni music – Finnish folk dance music
• Pennywhistle jive
• Peroveta anedia
• Petenera
• Peyote Song – a mixture of gospel and traditional Native American music
• Phil – noisy noise from the 2000s where noise from Saskatoon met noise from France
• Philadelphia soul – soft 1970s soul that came out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
• Phleng luk tung
• Piano blues
• Piano rock
• Piedmont blues
• Pineal Polka
• Pinoy rock – rock and roll sung in Tagalog from the Philippines
• Pinpeat orchestra
• Piphat – ancient form of Thai classical ensemble
• Pirekaus – traditional love songs of the Purépecha of Mexico
• Pisiq – Greenlandic folk song
• Pixiefunk – fusion of funk,afrobeat,celtic balad,pop-rock,drum’n’bass and jungle. Usually performed live and free style. Origin:London
• Piyyutim
• Plachi – melancholic Russian folk songs
• Plainchant (Gregorian chant)
• Plena
• Pleng phua cheewit – Thai protest rock
• Pleng Thai sakorn – a Thai interpretation of Western classical music
• Poco-poco – Indonesian modern music which fuses disco with eastern Indonesian dance music
• Polihet
• Political Grindcore
• Polka
• Polo
• Polonaise
• Pols – Danish fiddle and accordion dance music
• Polska
• Pong lang
• Pop folk
• Pop-makossa
• Pop melayu – Malay pop music with dangdut overlay
• Pop mop – Mongolian pop music
• Pop music
• Pop Progressive – Pop accompanied by guitar/bass riffs and speedy drum patterns
• Pop punk
• Pop rai
• Pop sunda – Sundanese mixture of gamelan degung and pop music structures
• Popular music
• Porngroove – A variation on Funk-Hop with a distinctive emphasis on ‘Bow Chicka Bow Wow’ pioneeredby Northwood Hills super group GGNXTMAP
• Pornocore
• Porro – Colombian big band music
• Portuguese Shangaan – South African and Mozambiquan mixture of traditional Tsonga and Portuguese music
• Post-hardcore
• Post-Jam Next Wave Jambands like the Slip, Lotus, STS9 and The Duo. Electronic and Indie Rock stylings.
• Post-minimalism
• Post punk
• Post-rock
• Post-romanticism
• Power electronics
• Power metal
• Power noise (or rhythmic noise)
• Power pop
• Pow-wow – Native American dance music
• Ppongtchak – Korean pop music developed during the Japanese occupation
• Praise song
• Pre-Computer
• Prison metal
• Program symphony
• Progressive Acoustic Urban Math Folk
• Progressive electronic music
• Progressive house
• Progressive metal
• Progressive bluegrass
• Progressive rock
• Progressive trance
• Protopunk
• Psychedelic music
• Psych folk or Psychedelic folk
• Psychedelic trance (Psy-trance)
• Psychobilly
• Psychosomatic trance
• Psych-pop
• Punjabi thumri – a type of thumri from Punjab
• Punk
• Punk blues – a US music genre that developed in the 1980s, which mixes elements of blues with the aggressive sound of punk.
• Punk Cabaret – a fusion of musical theater and cabaret style music with the aggressive, raw nature of punk rock.
• Punk rock
• Punta
• Punta rock – 1970s Belizean music
• Puke-a-Billy – genre created by Nathan Payne in the late 1990s. Mix of rock-a-billy, punk, country, and blues.
• Quan ho – Vietnamese vocal music which originated in the Red River Delta
• Qasidah – Epic religious poetry accompanied by percussion and chanting
• Qasidah modern – Qasidah updated for mainstream audiences
• Qawwali – Sufi religious music updated for mainstream audiences, was originated in India
• Quadrille
• Queercore
• Quiet Storm
• Rada
• Raga rock – Swiss soul, rock and Indian music fusion
• Ragas
• Raggamuffin (Ragga)
• Ragga-chutney
• Ragga-soca
• Ragga-zouk – a fusion of reggae, dub music and zouk
• Ragtime
• Rainbow Rave
• Rai – Algerian folk music now developed into a popular style
• Rake-and-scrape – Bahamanian instrumental music
• Rambutan
• Ramkbach
• Ramvong
• Ranchera – pop mariachi from 1950s film soundtracks
• Random dance
• Rap
• Rap dogba
• Rapcore
• Rapso
• Rara
• Rare groove
• Rasiya
• Rateliai
• Rave
• Rebetiko
• Rebita
• reel
• Reggae
• Reggae highlife
• Reggaeton
• Reinlender
• Rekilaulu – Finnish rhyming sleigh songs
• Rembetiko
• Renaissance music
• Requiem
• Retro Acoustic Steel Guitar
• Rhapsody
• Rhyming spiritual – Bahamanian hymns
• Rhythm and blues (R&B)
• Rhythmic noise (or power noise)
• Ricercar
• Rímur – Icelandic heroic epic songs
• Ring Bang – the Barbadian sound of soca
• Riot grrl
• Rock
• Rock opera
• Rock and roll
• Rock en español
• Rockabilly
• Rocknoir
• Rocksteady
• Rococo
• Rodeo music
• Rokon fada
• Romantic period in music
• Romeras
• Rondeaux
• Ronggeng – a folk music from Malacca, Malaysia
• Roots reggae
• Roots rock
• Roots rock reggae
• Ruem trosh – Cambodian traditional music
• Rumba
• African Rumba
• Cuban Rumba
• Flamenco Rumba also known as Gypsy rumba
• Rumba gitana – French Gypsy music
• Runddan
• Runolaulu – Finnish folk songs
• Runo-song – Estonian folk music
• Sabar – drumming style found in Senegal
• Sacred Harp
• Sadcore
• Saeta
• Saibara
• Saiyidi – folk music of the upper Nile Delta
• Sakyapa chanting – form of Tibetan Buddhist chanting
• Salegy
• Salsa – fusion of multiple Cuban- and Puerto Rican-derived pop genres from immigrants in New York City
• Salsa erotica – lyrically explicit form of salsa romantica
• Salsa gorda
• Salsa romantica – a soft, romantic form of salsa music
• Saltarello
• Salve
• Samba – form of Brazilian popular music
• Samba-reggae – a genre of samba with a choppy, reggae-like rhythm. samba and reggae fusion
• Samba de breque – traditional samba with social humorous comentaries and characterized by a silence break (hence, “breque”) of 2 compass or more, while the singer keeps the lyrics*
• Samba-canção – traditional samba in slow tempo and with romantic lyrics. influenced by bolero
• Samba de enredo(or Samba-enredo) – Samba played during Carnival celebrations in fast tempo
• Samba de pagode – popular dance-oriented samba. (pagode is an informal gathering of neighbours and relatives in spare time for dance and meal).
• Sambai
• Sangeo – Afro-Venezuelan form of percussion music
• Sanjo – Korean instrumental folk music
• Sanjuanitos
• Sarandunga
• Sardinian polyphonic chanting
• Sato kagura
• Sawahili – folk music from the Mediterranean coast of Egypt
• Sawt – urban music from Kuwait and Bahrain
• Sax jive
• Sayas – Bolivian dance music which was popularized as lambada in the 1980s
• Sazdohol
• Scandinavian metal (Viking metal)
• Schottisch
• Scottish Baroque music
• Schranz
• Screamo
• Scrumpy and Western – folk music from West Country of England
• Sea shanty
• Sean nós
• Second Viennese School
• Sega music
• Seggae
• Seis
• Semba
• Semi-tone calypso (Half calypso)
• Sephardic music
• Serialism
• Serrana
• Set dance
• Sevdalinka – Bosnian urban popular music
• Sevillana
• Shabab
• Shabad
• Shalako – Armenian folk dance
• Shan’ge – Taiwanese Hakka mountain songs
• Shango
• Shape note
• Sharkan – American Christian chanting
• Shawm and drum – Instrumental pairing common in Gypsy music
• Shlager
• Shibuya-kei
• Shidaiqu – Hong Kong-based form of traditional music updated for pop audiences and sung in Mandarin
• Shima uta – a form of Okinawan dance music
• Shin-min’yo – a modernized form of min’yo, or folk music
• Shoegaze
• Shoka – Japanese songs written during the Meiji Restoration to bring Western music to Japanese schools
• Shomyo – Japanese Buddhist chanting
• Showtunes
• Sica
• Siguiriyas
• Silat – Malaysian mixture of music, dance and martial arts
• Sinawi – Korean religious music meant for dancing; it is improvised and reminiscent of jazz
• Sinhalese Sri Lankan
• Singers & Standards
• Singer-songwriter
• Single tone calypso
• Sinjonjo
• Sizhu – folk ensembles from southern China
• Ska
• Ska punk
• Skacore (third wave of ska)
• Skald
• Skate punk
• Skiffle
• Skotsploech – traditional Frisian ensemble music
• Skillingstryk
• Skronk – popular music originating in Charleston, South Carolina, USA in the late 1990s having elements of ska, rock, and funk.
• Slack-key guitar (kihoalu) – Hawaiian form invented by retuning open strings on a guitar
• Slängpolska
• Slide
• Slow airs
• Slowcore
• Sludge metal
• Smooth jazz
• Snugglemo
• S’o wa mbe
• Soca
• Soca-bhangra
• Soca-funk
• Soft ambient
• Soft rock
• Solea (soleares)
• Sombient
• Son
• Son-batá (batá rock)
• Son montuno – Cuban folk music
• Sonata
• Songo – a mixture of changuí and son montuno
• Songo-salsa – a mixture of songo, hip hop and salsa
• Sonido
• Soukous
• Soul blues
• Soul jazz
• Soul music
• Soundtrack
• Southern Harmony
• Southern hip hop
• Southern rock
• Southern soul
• Space age pop
• Space music
• Space rock
• Spacesynth
• Spazzjazz
• Spectralism
• Speedcore
• Speed garage
• Speed metal
• Spirituals
• Spouge – Barbadian folk music
• Square dance
• St. Louis blues
• St. Louis soul
• Stambolovski orkestri
• Staroprazske pisnieky – pub songs from Prague
• Steelband
• Stev – short, often improvised, Norwegian folk songs
• Stoner metal
• Straight edge
• Strathspeys
• Street songs – bawdy adolescent chants of unknown authorship
• Stride
• String – 1980s Thai pop music
• String quartet
• Stubenmusik – Bavarian string ensembles
• Suite
• Suomirock
• Suomitrance
• Super Eurobeat
• Surf ballads
• Surf instrumental
• Surf music
• Surf pop
• Surf rock
• Surgery metal
• Sutartines
• Swahili sound
• Sway
• Swamp blues
• Swamp pop
• Swingbeat (New Jack Swing, New Jack R&B)
• Swing music
• Sygyt – type of xoomii (Tuvan throat singing), likened to the sound of whistling
• Symphonic black metal
• Symphonic poem
• Symphony
• Synth pop
• Synth rock
• Synthpunk
• Syrtó
• Taarab
• Tættir
• Tai tu – Vietnamese chamber music
• Taiwanese pop – early Taiwanese pop music influenced by enka and popular with older listeners
• Tala – a rhythmic pattern in Indian classical music
• Tamborito – Panamanian dance music
• Tambu
• Tamburitza
• Tamil Christian keerthanai – Christian devotional lyrics in Tamil
• Tamil keerthanai – Devotional songs
• Tamil tiruppukazh
• Táncház – Hungarian dance music
• Tango – Argentinian dance music that became internationally popular in the 1920s
• Tango-canción – the first wildly popular form of tango in Argentina
• Tango flamenco
• Tanguk – a form of Korean court music that includes elements of Chinese music
• Tanjidor – traditional, instrumental music from Indonesia with various brass intruments, usually played in processions
• Talempong – a distinct Minangkabau gamelan music
• Taibubu
• Tapany maintso
• Tappa
• Tarabu
• Tarana – form of vocal music from northern India using highly rhythmic nonsense syllables
• Tarannum
• Tarantella
• Tarantolati – Calabrian folk healing ritual
• Taranto
• Tassou – Senegalese rapping
• Tawshih
• Tchink-system
• Tchinkoumé
• Tech house
• Techno
• Techno-tribal
• Technoid
• Tembang sunda – Sundanese sung free verse poetry
• Teen pop
• Tejano music or “Tex-Mex”, sometimes confused with norteño
• Television themes
• Texas blues
• The Birmingham Sound
• Thrash metal
• Thresher
• Thumri – a type of popular Hindustani vocal music
• Tibetan pop – pop music heavily influenced by Chinese forms, emerging in the 1980s
• Tientos
• Thillana – form of vocal music from South India using highly rhythmic nonsense syllables
• Timbila – form of folk music in Mozambique
• Tin Pan Alley
• Tina
• Tinga
• Tis távlas – drinking songs from Epirus
• Togaku
• Tonas
• Toeshey – Tibetan dance music
• T’ong guitar – acoustic guitar pop music of Korea
• Township jive (Mbaqanga)
• Toziych
• Traditional pop music
• Trallalero – Genoese urban songs
• Trampská hudba – Czech urban folk music
• Trance
• Travesty
• Tribal house
• Trip-hop
• Triple R – the best music on earth
• Trikitixa – Basque accordion music
• Troista-country
• Troll metal
• Trop Rock
• Tropicalia
• TRT
• Truck-driving country
• Tsámiko
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