Blues

Delta, Chicago, country blues, electric, jump blues, boogie-woogie, Texas, Piedmont, soul-blues, blues rock, gospel blues.

33 families491 sub-genres
Click a family to fan out its sub-genres · dashed = cross-listed
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1Electric / Contemporary Blues

Modern default blues: electric guitar, bass, drums, solos, expressive vocals, shuffles, slow blues, blues-club energy, and polished contemporary production.

Electric / Contemporary Blues

Modern default blues: electric guitar, bass, drums, solos, expressive vocals, shuffles, slow blues, blues-club energy, and polished contemporary production.

Blues Rock / Rock-Blues

The biggest crossover lane between Blues and Rock: distorted guitar, heavier drums, blues scales, extended solos, power-trio energy, and rock-stage arrangements.

Chicago Blues

Urban, amplified blues: electric guitar, harmonica, drums, piano, bass, club band format, and strong post-war city energy.

Delta / Mississippi Blues

Raw, foundational Southern blues: acoustic guitar, slide, haunting vocals, sparse arrangements, field-holler feeling, and deep storytelling.

Country / Acoustic Blues

Rural, acoustic, folk-rooted blues: fingerpicking, slide guitar, front-porch vocals, traveling-song themes, and pre-electric blues traditions.

Texas Blues

Guitar-forward blues with big tone, swagger, swing, shuffles, and strong electric lead playing. Can be raw, slick, jazzy, or rock-heavy.

Soul-Blues / R&B-Blues

Blues that leans into soul singing, R&B grooves, horns, gospel influence, romantic pain, and Southern soul feeling.

Jump Blues / Early R&B

Uptempo, horn-driven, danceable blues that bridges swing, jazz, boogie, and early rhythm & blues.

Gospel / Spiritual Blues

Faith, lament, testimony, redemption, spiritual struggle, sacred melody, call-and-response, and church-rooted blues feeling.

Memphis / St. Louis / Urban Blues

Urban and regional blues lanes that connect pre-war blues, soul, early R&B, piano blues, and city-band blues.

British Blues

UK blues and British blues-rock traditions: electric guitar focus, blues revival energy, rock-band formats, and transatlantic reinterpretation of American blues.

Boogie / Shuffle Blues

Groove-first blues: walking bass, shuffle rhythm, piano boogie, guitar boogie, danceable swing, and barroom propulsion.

Piano / Boogie-Woogie Blues

Piano-centered blues: left-hand patterns, rolling bass, barrelhouse energy, ragtime influence, boogie figures, and saloon/juke-joint feel.

West Coast / California Blues

Smoother, jazzier, sometimes horn-driven blues associated with California scenes, polished electric tone, swing, and post-war R&B influence.

Swamp / Louisiana Blues

Moody, humid, groove-heavy blues: tremolo guitars, lazy backbeat, Cajun/Creole edges, bayou atmosphere, and Southern soul overlap.

Piedmont / East Coast Blues

Fingerpicked, ragtime-influenced, lighter-swinging East Coast blues: alternating bass, syncopated guitar, melodic detail, and folk-song structure.

New Orleans / Louisiana City Blues

New Orleans rhythm, piano, second-line feel, early jazz connection, R&B, soul, and carnival energy.

Hill Country / Trance Blues

Mississippi Hill Country groove blues: hypnotic riffs, fewer chord changes, droning vamps, call-and-response, and deep pocket rhythm.

Slide / Resonator / Guitar Blues

Technique-centered blues built around slide, bottleneck, resonator guitars, open tunings, bends, and expressive guitar tone.

Harmonica Blues

Blues centered on harmonica/harp: amplified harp, train rhythms, call-and-response with guitar, Chicago club energy, and raw vocal phrasing.

Jazz-Blues / Swing Blues

Blues with jazz harmony, swing feel, horn arrangements, improvisation, and sophisticated changes.

Folk / Americana / Roots Blues

Blues as part of the broader roots ecosystem: acoustic storytelling, revival folk stages, singer-songwriter influence, Americana, old-time, and protest traditions.

Classic / Vaudeville / Early Recorded Blues

Early commercial blues, vaudeville stage influence, classic female blues singers, theatrical delivery, jazz bands, and early recording-era arrangements.

Vocal / Ballad Blues

Blues where the vocal performance, lyric pain, romance, heartbreak, or testimony carries the song more than groove or guitar fireworks.

Blues-Funk / Groove Blues

Blues with funk, soul, dance, and groove emphasis: bassline-forward, syncopated, jam-friendly, often closer to R&B/Funk or live-band festival blues.

Modern Roots / Americana Blues

Contemporary roots-blues: festival-friendly, Americana-adjacent, acoustic/electric hybrid, often polished but earthy.

Blues Pop / Crossover Blues

Blues phrasing and harmony shaped into pop, adult contemporary, radio, or singer-songwriter structures.

Blues Hip-Hop / Sample Blues

Blues elements inside hip-hop/rap: blues samples, guitar loops, moaning vocal chops, Delta imagery, dusty grooves, and lyrical blues themes.

Dark / Gothic / Noir Blues

Minor-key, haunted, cinematic, death-haunted, occult, Southern Gothic, or smoky late-night blues.

Global / Regional Blues

Blues outside the standard U.S. regional frame, or blues fused with global traditions.

Political / Work Song / Prison Blues

Blues as labor, lament, protest, testimony, oppression, survival, field holler, prison song, or social document.

Instrumental / Guitar Showcase Blues

Blues as instrumental performance: guitar tone, soloing, improvisation, jam format, instrumental hooks, and player-focused records.

Era / Scene Labels

These should usually be filters, not primary sound-homes.