Explain It Like I’m 5

Why Do We Have Music Genres? (And Who Decided Rock Isn’t Jazz?)

9 min · 5. tammi 2026
jakson Why Do We Have Music Genres? (And Who Decided Rock Isn’t Jazz?) kansikuva

Kuvaus

Why do we sort music into genres like rock, jazz, pop, rap, country, classical, K-pop, and EDM—and who decided that rock isn’t jazz? In this episode of Explain It Like I’m 5, Alex turns up the volume on the history and purpose of music genres. We explore why humans love labels and categories, how genres help us organize sound, and how they become part of our identity and community—from “I’m into punk” to “I’m a K-pop stan.” Alex explains that genres didn’t always exist the way we know them today. In ancient times, music was just music—for worship, dance, or storytelling. The idea of formal genres grew alongside printing, sheet music, records, radio, and the music industry, which needed categories like jazz, country, classical, and pop to market to different audiences. We dive into how jazz emerged from African American traditions, how rock ’n’ roll split off with electric guitars and new rhythms, and how critics, record labels, and radio stations quietly drew the line between “rock” and “jazz” without any official rulebook. The episode explores why genres keep multiplying—giving us subgenres like punk rock, indie rock, trap, lo-fi, nu-metal, and more—as artists experiment and listeners create new labels based on sound, vibe, mood, and aesthetic. Alex breaks down the psychology behind genres, how our brains use sound cues to quickly recognize style, and why the music we grew up with often feels like “real music” forever. We also look at how genres blur and blend—rock with rap, country with pop, jazz with hip-hop—creating songs that don’t fit neatly into any one box. Along the way, you’ll hear fun genre stories, from the rise of reggae, EDM, and heavy metal to the way once-rebellious genres become mainstream classics. The episode also highlights the business side of genres—how they shape marketing, radio formats, and streaming algorithms—and why genres matter so much to fans as symbols of belonging, attitude, and culture. In the end, genres turn out to be helpful labels and evolving playlists, not hard laws—guides for navigating the endless world of music.

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