Folk / Americana / Roots

The roots-music umbrella: Americana, contemporary folk & singer-songwriter, indie folk, bluegrass, old-time/Appalachian, folk rock, folk blues, gospel roots, protest folk, Celtic, dark/gothic Americana, regional roots, and more. Cross-links Country, Rock, Blues, and Gospel rather than duplicating them.

31 families494 sub-genres
Click a family to fan out its sub-genres · dashed = cross-listed
12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031FolkAmericanaRoots

1Americana / Roots Americana

The main front door for contemporary roots music: country, folk, rock, blues, soul, gospel, and bluegrass influences blended into a modern roots-oriented sound.

Americana / Roots Americana

The main front door for contemporary roots music: country, folk, rock, blues, soul, gospel, and bluegrass influences blended into a modern roots-oriented sound.

Contemporary Folk / Singer-Songwriter

Modern lyric-first folk: acoustic guitar or piano, personal storytelling, plainspoken vocals, poetic detail, emotional directness, and songs that feel written before they feel produced.

Indie Folk / Folk-Pop

The most modern and streaming-friendly folk lane: soft vocals, intimate production, indie texture, acoustic guitars, warm harmonies, and pop-accessible hooks.

Folk Rock / Acoustic Rock

The major bridge between Folk and Rock: acoustic songwriting, electric guitars or band arrangements, harmonies, social commentary, roots textures, and adult-alternative energy.

Bluegrass / Newgrass / Jamgrass

Acoustic string-band virtuosity: banjo, fiddle, mandolin, guitar, upright bass, fast picking, high harmonies, mountain roots, and instrumental fire.

Country-Folk / Alt-Country / Roots Country

The country side of the roots portal: country storytelling and instruments with folk intimacy, Americana seriousness, and less mainstream Nashville polish.

Traditional Folk / Folk Revival

The recognizable "folk music" core: acoustic songs, oral tradition, revival performance, ballads, work songs, protest songs, and songs learned or preserved through community transmission.

Old-Time / Appalachian / String Band

The older acoustic mountain and string-band lane: fiddle, banjo, ballads, square-dance tunes, front-porch feel, and Appalachian roots.

Folk-Pop / Soft Acoustic Pop

The most accessible folk-pop lane: gentle acoustic guitars, simple emotional writing, clean hooks, harmony vocals, and pop-friendly arrangements.

Roots Rock / Heartland / Bar-Band Americana

Roots music with a rock-band engine: guitars, drums, road songs, working-class storytelling, bar-band warmth, and Americana sensibility.

Folk Blues / Country Blues / Roots Blues

Acoustic and roots-blues overlap: fingerpicked guitar, slide guitar, blues phrasing, country-blues storytelling, gospel-blues colors, and rural grit.

Gospel / Sacred Roots

Faith, testimony, harmony, sacred lyrics, hymns, spirituals, church-rooted singing, and acoustic roots arrangements.

Protest / Political / Labor Folk

Message-first folk: social critique, labor songs, civil-rights songs, anti-war songs, movement choruses, and community singing.

Celtic / British-Irish / Anglo Folk

The Anglo-Celtic branch: ballads, reels, jigs, sea songs, fiddle tunes, British folk revival, Irish/Scottish/Welsh traditions, and Celtic fusion.

Dark Folk / Gothic Americana / Murder Ballads

The shadow side of roots: murder ballads, haunted banjos, minor-key acoustic music, Southern Gothic imagery, death, ghosts, judgment, betrayal, and rural noir.

Southern / Swamp / Gulf Roots

Southern and Gulf Coast roots textures: swamp grooves, Cajun/Creole color, blues, gospel, soul, country, fiddle, accordion, second-line feel, and humid regional storytelling.

Red Dirt / Texas / Heartland Americana

Texas/Oklahoma and heartland roots: independent songwriting, country-folk grit, road songs, bar-band energy, regional identity, and Americana/country crossover.

Regional American Roots

Regional roots traditions that belong in the broader American Roots portal, especially when they are not simply Country, Blues, Jazz, Latin, or Pop.

Western / Cowboy / Frontier Folk

Western storytelling outside the stricter Country tree: cowboy songs, trail ballads, campfire music, ranch life, open-range imagery, and frontier folklore.

Sea / Maritime / Work Song Folk

Work, travel, water, labor, and communal rhythm: sea shanties, maritime ballads, occupational songs, prison songs, field hollers, and chant-based folk.

Chamber / Baroque / Art Folk

Auteur folk with refined arrangements: strings, woodwinds, harp, literary lyrics, unusual harmony, delicate vocals, and chamber-like production.

Dream / Ambient / Pastoral Folk

Soft, atmospheric folk: reverb, drones, delicate acoustic instruments, nature imagery, slow tempos, and meditative space.

Psychedelic / Freak / Experimental Folk

Strange, surreal, and exploratory folk: altered acoustic textures, drones, tape effects, unconventional vocals, mystical lyrics, and nonstandard structures.

Jam / Festival / Improvisational Roots

Roots music built for live performance, festivals, long instrumental sections, string-band improvisation, and genre-fluid sets.

Global Folk / World Roots / Folk Fusion

The broader non-US folk and roots portal: traditional and contemporary folk forms from outside the American roots frame, plus global folk fusions.

Campfire / Family / Communal Folk

Folk as participation: sing-alongs, children's songs, camp songs, lullabies, simple chord progressions, communal choruses, and family-friendly acoustic music.

Novelty / Comedy / Character Folk

Folk defined by humor, persona, satire, character performance, parody, or intentionally old-time theatricality.

Seasonal / Holiday / Ritual Roots

Roots and folk music tied to seasons, ceremonies, holidays, community rituals, sacred calendars, or local customs.

Poetry / Spoken-Word / Storytelling Roots

Roots music where narrative, recitation, poetry, oral history, or spoken delivery is central.

Era / Scene Labels

Use these as filters, not primary sound-homes. Attach them to the song's main family.

Fingerstyle / American Primitive Guitar

Solo instrumental guitar folk — from John Fahey's American Primitivism and British folk baroque to modern percussive fingerstyle.

American Primitive GuitarFingerstyle FolkFolk BaroqueGuitar SoliPercussive Fingerstyle GuitarNew AcousticCeltic Fingerstyle GuitarSlack-Key GuitarFingerstyle BluesFingerstyle Ambient