Trisha Shetty (Editor)

2000 in music

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January

  • January 1
  • Canadian post-hardcore band Silverstein formed.
  • In New York City, United States, at precisely midnight, Prince celebrates the new millennium by playing his anthemic "1999", in what he vows is the song's finale.
  • British composer John Tavener is knighted in the New Year's Honours List.
  • January 11
  • Gary Glitter is released from jail, two months before his sentence for sexual offences ends.
  • Sharon Osbourne quits as manager of Smashing Pumpkins after only three months. In a brash press release she announces she had to resign "for medical reasons: Billy Corgan was making me sick."
  • Singer Whitney Houston is caught with 15.2 grams of marijuana in her bag at a Hawaii airport. She boards her flight to San Francisco before police can arrive to arrest her.
  • January 14 – Rolling Stone reveals that the two children of Melissa Etheridge and her partner, Julie Cypher, were fathered by David Crosby.
  • January 18
  • Blink-182 released their single "All The Small Things", which excelled on U.S. Billboard charts: no.1 on Modern Rock Tracks and no.6 on the Billboard Hot 100. The music video was a parody of famous contemporary boybands, pre-eminently Backstreet Boys—it won 'Best Group Video' at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards and was also nominated for 'Video of the Year'.
  • Spencer Goodman is executed by lethal injection in Huntsville, Texas, for the 1991 kidnap and murder of the wife of ZZ Top manager Bill Ham in 1991. Ham is present at the execution.
  • February

  • February 9 – The Million Dollar Hotel, a film co-written by U2 lead singer Bono, premieres at the 50th Berlinale (Berlin International Film Festival).
  • February 11 – Diana Ross divorces Arne Næss, Jr. her husband of 14 years.
  • February 16 – The Silver Tassie, an opera by Mark-Anthony Turnage, receives its première at the London Coliseum, performed by the English National Opera.
  • February 23 – At the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards, Santana wins a record 8 Grammys in one night tying Michael Jackson who won 8 in 1984. Christina Aguilera won Best New Artist.
  • February 24 – Italian motorcycle manufacturing company Aprilia wins a lawsuit filed against the Spice Girls over a sponsorship deal that fell apart when Geri Halliwell left the group.
  • February 28 – AC/DC release Stiff Upper Lip
  • March

  • March 6 – Foxy Brown is injured in a car accident in Brooklyn, New York, in which her car hit a fence. Police discover that Brown was driving with a suspended driver license and order her to appear in court in April. Brown's license was suspended for failing to appear in court for a parking violation.
  • March 11 – 311 (band) holds their first 3–11 Day concert at Tower Records in the French Quarter of New Orleans.
  • March 13 – Blink-182 end their European tour early after guitarist/vocalist Tom DeLonge and drummer Travis Barker succumb to strep throat.
  • March 24 – After violating a prior probation agreement by getting drunk, Ol' Dirty Bastard is ordered to undergo a 90-day diagnostic evaluation at the California Institute For Men in Chino, California.
  • March 27 – *NSYNC sets a new first-week sales record with 2.4 million copies of No Strings Attached sold, smashing the old record of 1.1 million.
  • March 28 – Jimmy Page wins a lawsuit filed against Ministry magazine, which claimed that Page had contributed to the death of Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham by wearing a Satanic robe and chanting spells while Bonham was dying. The magazine apologizes and offers to pay Page's legal bills. Page donates the money received from the case to the Action for Brazil's Children Trust.
  • April

  • April 1 – Ted Nugent angers Hispanic groups in Texas after onstage remarks he makes during a concert at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, in which he says that those who did not speak English should get out of America. He is banned from the venue as a result.
  • April 4 – Mick Jagger attends the opening of an arts center named after him at Dartford Grammar School in southeast England.
  • April 6 – Shawn Colvin, James Taylor, Cyndi Lauper, Richard Thompson, Sweet Honey, Elton John, Cassandra Wilson, Wynonna Judd, k.d. lang, Bryan Adams, and Mary Chapin Carpenter perform in New York as part of a tribute to Joni Mitchell.
  • April 12 – Metallica files a lawsuit against the peer-to-peer service Napster, as well as Yale University, University of Southern California and Indiana University for copyright infringement. Yale and Indiana are later dropped from the suit when they block access to Napster on campus computers.
  • May

  • May 1 – A $1.8 million civil fraud lawsuit is filed against Neil Young in Los Angeles Superior Court by a former Village Voice writer. The lawsuit charges that Young broke an agreement to have a biography written about him when he blocked the book's publication.
  • May 3 – 75-year-old tenor Carlo Bergonzi makes his final professional appearance at Carnegie Hall, in a concert performance of Otello. After two acts, he is replaced by an understudy.
  • May 4 – Letters To Cleo play their last concert in Boston; they disband the following month.
  • May 5 – Rod Stewart undergoes an hour-long throat operation at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles to remove a growth on his thyroid, which turns out to be benign.
  • May 6 – John Mellencamp receives an honorary Doctor of Music degree as the commencement speaker for Indiana University's Class of 2000.
  • May 13
  • The 45th Eurovision Song Contest final, held in Stockholm's Globe Arena, is won by Denmark's Olsen Brothers and the song "Fly on the Wings of Love".
  • Dickey Betts is kicked out of The Allman Brothers Band and replaced with Warren Haynes.
  • May 16
  • Britney Spears's second LP, Oops!… I Did It Again sells 1.3 million copies in its debut week and 500,000 on the first day of its release, giving it the highest first-week sales by any solo artist in US history, until Eminem's "The Marshall Mathers LP" a few weeks later. The album sold over 20 million copies becoming the best-selling album by female artist of the decade.
  • Prince announces that he has changed his name back to Prince now that his publishing contract with Warner/Chappell has expired. He had been known as an unpronounceable symbol, since 1993.
  • May 24 – 50 Cent is shot nine times in Queens. After spending time in hospital he returns to recording and performing.
  • May 25 – Eddie Van Halen begins treatment for prevention of tongue cancer at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.
  • May 29 – Michael Jackson and Mariah Carey are named the Best Selling Male and Female artist of the millennium at the World Music Awards in Monaco.
  • May 30 – Eminem's second LP, The Marshall Mathers LP sells 1.76 million copies on its debut week, becoming the fastest selling rap album ever according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Produced by Dr. Dre, the album breaks the previous record of 803,000 copies set by Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle, also produced by Dr. Dre.
  • June

  • June 8 – Sinéad O'Connor comes out as a lesbian in an interview with Curve magazine.
  • June 20
  • Billy Gilman's debut album One Voice was released under Epic Records. The album was certified 2x platinum, making Gilman the youngest artist in music history to perform the feat.
  • Britney Spears begins her Oops!... I Did It Again World Tour, her first world tour, visiting North America, Europe and Brazil in support her sophomore album, Oops!... I Did It Again. The tour was a commercial success and became the second highest-grossing tour by a solo artist on 2000, only behind Tina Turner's Twenty Four Seven retirement tour.
  • June 23-25 – The Experience Music Project, now the EMP Museum, opens in Seattle.
  • June 30 – Nine people are crushed to death during Pearl Jam's set at the Roskilde Festival, in Roskilde, Denmark.
  • July–August

  • July 21-22 – Oasis plays at Wembley Stadium. The first of this night is featured on the double CD and the DVD Familiar to Millions.
  • July 26 – A U.S. district judge orders the Napster to halt the trading of copyrighted music among its users, essentially ordering it shut down. A stay on the injunction is granted two days later, allowing the site to continue operating for the time being.
  • August 8 – A coalition of 28 U.S. states file a lawsuit against the major record labels, accusing them of keeping the prices of CDs fixed at artificially high prices since 1995.
  • August 11 – Madonna gives birth to her second child, son Rocco. Film director Guy Ritchie is the father.
  • August 14 – Outside the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, Rage Against the Machine performs a free concert protesting the two-party system. In a chaotic scene after the performance, police forcibly disperse the crowd and several arrests are made.
  • August 16 – Rapper Eminem files for divorce from wife Kim Mathers.
  • August 20 – Skinny Puppy reunite for a concert at the Doomsday Festival in Dresden, Germany.
  • September

  • September 7 – Rage Against the Machine's Tim Commerford is arrested for climbing on the set at MTV's Video Music Awards after his band lost the award for Best Rock Video to Limp Bizkit. The director of Rage's "Sleep Now in the Fire" video, Michael Moore, suggests Commerford was probably "just bored" by the show. Britney Spears performed her hit single "Oops!...I Did It Again", becoming one of the VMA's most iconic and controversial performances due to her skin-coloured outfit. ★NSYNC performed their hit single "Bye Bye Bye", also becoming one of the VMA's most iconic performances ever.
  • September 12 – Godspeed You! Black Emperor releases Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven
  • September 13 – The first Latin Grammy Awards are held.
  • September 19 – Madonna releases "Music".
  • September 23 – Isaac Stern celebrates his 80th birthday together with his 40th anniversary as President of Carnegie Hall.
  • September 26
  • Pearl Jam releases twenty-five live albums, each taken from a different show on their European tour, as the initial part of the Pearl Jam Official Bootlegs series.
  • Aaron Carter releases his second studio album (first under Jive Records) Aaron's Party (Come Get It)
  • 98 Degrees releases their third studio album Revelation
  • October

  • October 1 – Midnight Oil perform their single Beds are Burning at the closing of the 2000 Summer Olympics dressed in outfits clearly displaying the word "Sorry" in reference to Prime Minister John Howard's refusal to apologise to the Stolen Generation.
  • October 2 - Radiohead Release their fourth studio album, "Kid A".
  • October 5
  • The Beatles release a hardcover book version of The Beatles Anthology, containing newly published photos and interviews with band members. The book went straight to the top of the New York Times bestsellers list.
  • EMI and Warner Music Group withdraw their application to the European Commission for a proposed $20 billion merger due to regulators' concerns. The merger would have concentrated 80% of the European music business into the hands of just four major labels.
  • October 17 – Limp Bizkit release Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water selling over a million copies in it first week of release, a new record for a rock album.
  • October 18 – Zack de la Rocha leaves Rage Against the Machine saying that the band's decision making process has completely failed.
  • October 24 – Linkin Park's debut album, Hybrid Theory, is released and debuts at number 16 on the Billboard 200, with 47,000 copies sold in its first week. It would later become the best selling album of 2001, and later become certified Diamond by the RIAA in 2005.
  • October 31 – Napster and BMG Music announce a partnership that would change the website into a subscription-based service offering legal downloads.
  • November–December

  • November 5 – The fourth Terrastock festival is held in Seattle.
  • November 7 – The Mark, Tom and Travis Show (The Enema Strikes Back!) is released by Blink-182. It is the first and only live album by the American pop-punk band. It also features the single "Man Overboard" which does relatively well in the charts.
  • November 18 – A new musical adaptation of Georg Büchner's Woyzeck by Robert Wilson and Tom Waits opens in Copenhagen.
  • November 21 – The Backstreet Boys come back with the release of their fourth album Black & Blue
  • December 2
  • Tripp Eisen formerly of Dope replaces Koichi Fukuda in Static-X.
  • The Backstreet Boys debuts with 1.6 million with Black & Blue and becomes the first artists in history to achieve back-to-back million-plus first week sales. It also sells 5 million worldwide and sets a record for the best International Sales Week in History.
  • The Smashing Pumpkins played what was to be their final concert at the Metro Club in Chicago. The band would reunite in 2005.
  • December 22
  • Madonna marries film director Guy Ritchie, at Skibo Castle in Dornoch, Sutherland, Scotland with Gwyneth Paltrow, Stella McCartney, Sting, George Clooney, Jon Bon Jovi, Celine Dion, Bryan Adams, Rupert Everett and others in attendance.
  • The Joel and Ethan Coen film, O Brother, Where Art Thou? is released, with a T-Bone Burnett-produced soundtrack that revives the popularity of traditional American folk music and bluegrass.
  • December 31 – Chris Robinson of The Black Crowes marries actress Kate Hudson.
  • Bands formed

  • See Musical groups established in 2000
  • Bands disbanded

  • All Saints (reformed in 2006)
  • Art of Noise
  • Auto Boys 400
  • Atari Teenage Riot (reformed in 2010)
  • Ben Folds Five (reformed in 2011)
  • Color Me Badd
  • Pezz (legal issue with band name, changed name to Billy Talent)
  • Candlebox (reformed in 2006)
  • dc Talk
  • Demonoid
  • Drain STH
  • The Golden Palominos
  • Hi-Standard
  • Hum
  • Jack Off Jill
  • June of 44
  • Kid Dynamite
  • Knapsack
  • Lifter Puller
  • Luna Sea
  • Luscious Jackson
  • The Make-Up
  • The Paradise Motel (reform in 2007)
  • Phish (hiatus until 2002, disband in 2004)
  • The Posies (reformed in 2004)
  • Primus (hiatus until 2004)
  • Pure
  • Rage Against the Machine (reformed in 2007)
  • Sacred Reich (reformed in 2007)
  • Screaming Trees
  • Seaweed (reformed in 2007)
  • Skunk Anansie (reformed 2009)
  • The Smashing Pumpkins (reformed in 2006)
  • Son of the Castellan
  • Soul Coughing
  • Symposium
  • Urban Dance Squad
  • Bands reformed

  • The Presidents of the United States of America (after 1998 break)
  • Release date unknown

  • Still Standing – Yellowcard
  • Cherry Kicks – Caesars
  • Marvin at the Movies – Hank Marvin
  • Live in Chicago – Kurt Elling
  • Biggest hit singles

    The following songs achieved the highest chart positions in the charts of 2000.

    Contents

  • "Aaron's Party (Come Get It)" – Aaron Carter
  • "Absolutely (Story of a Girl)" – Nine Days
  • "Adam's Song" – Blink-182 (September 5)
  • "Again" – Lenny Kravitz (November 14)
  • "Against All Odds" – Westlife and Mariah Carey (UK)
  • "All the Small Things" – Blink-182 (January 18)
  • "American Pie" – Madonna (March 3)
  • "A Mil Por Hora" – Lynda Thomas
  • "A Puro Dolor" – Son by Four
  • "Around the World (La La La La La)" – ATC (May 9)
  • "Babylon" – David Gray
  • "Back Here – BBMak
  • "Bang Bang Boom" – The Moffatts
  • "Bayern" - Die Toten Hosen
  • "BEP Empire" - The Black Eyed Peas
  • "Be With You – Enrique Iglesias (March 7)
  • "Beautiful Day" – U2
  • "Bent" – Matchbox Twenty (July 4 [US])
  • "Bohemian Like You" – The Dandy Warhols
  • "Boyz-N-The-Hood" – Dynamite Hack
  • "Breathe" – Faith Hill
  • "Bye Bye Bye" – NSYNC (January)
  • "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" – Eiffel 65
  • "Californication" – Red Hot Chili Peppers (June 19)
  • "The Call" – Backstreet Boys
  • "Can I Get A" – Jay-Z Featuring Ja Rule
  • "Can't Fight the Moonlight" – LeAnn Rimes (August 22)
  • "Case of the Ex" – Mýa (November 14)
  • "Castles in the Sky" – Ian van Dahl
  • "Change (In the House of Flies)" – Deftones
  • "Come On Over (All I Want Is You)" – Christina Aguilera (September 26)
  • "Coming Around" – Travis (June 5)
  • "Crazy for This Girl – Evan and Jaron
  • "Day & Night" – Billie Piper (May 15)
  • "Don't Give Up" – Chicane ft. Bryan Adams
  • "Don't Say You Love Me" – M2M (January 2000)
  • "Drive" - Incubus
  • "Everything You Want" – Vertical Horizon
  • "Faded" – SoulDecision
  • "Feel the Beat" – Darude
  • "Fly on the Wings of Love" - Olsen Brothers
  • "Fool Again" – Westlife
  • "Forgot About Dre" – Dr. Dre featuring Eminem
  • "Freestyler" – Bomfunk MC's
  • "From the Bottom of My Broken Heart" – Britney Spears (February 1 [US] – February 22 [Aus])
  • "Graduation (Friends Forever)" – Vitamin C (July 4)
  • "The Great Beyond" – R.E.M. (November 1999 (US), January 24, 2000 (UK))
  • "He Wasn't Man Enough" – Toni Braxton
  • "Higher" - Creed
  • "Hit or Miss" - New Found Glory
  • "I Think I'm in Love with You" – Jessica Simpson (May 18)
  • "I Try" – Macy Gray (September 27, 1999 (UK), January 25, 2000 (US))
  • "I Turn To You" - Melanie C
  • "If You're Gone" – Matchbox Twenty
  • "Independent Women Part I" – Destiny's Child (September 4)
  • "It Wasn't Me" – Shaggy feat. Rikrok
  • "It Feels So Good" – Sonique ( re-released May 2000)
  • "It's Gonna Be Me" – NSYNC
  • "It's My Life" – Bon Jovi (May 23)
  • "It's So Hard" – Big Pun (April 17)
  • "Kids" – Robbie Williams and Kylie Minogue (October 9)
  • "Komodo (Save a Soul)" – Mauro Picotto
  • "Kryptonite" – 3 Doors Down (August 29)
  • "Lady (Hear Me Tonight)" – Modjo
  • "Last Resort" – Papa Roach (September 18)
  • "Leader of Men" – Nickelback (March 4)
  • "Life Is a Rollercoaster" – Ronan Keating (July 10)
  • "Little Things" - Good Charlotte
  • "Loser" – 3 Doors Down
  • "Lucky" – Britney Spears (August 4 (UK), August 15 (US))
  • "Make Me Bad" – KoЯn
  • "Makes No Difference" – Sum 41
  • "Mama Told Me Not to Come" – Tom Jones and the Stereophonics
  • "Man Overboard" - Blink-182
  • "Maria Maria" – Santana (January 25)
  • "Minority" – Green Day (October 31)
  • "Moi... Lolita" – Alizée (July 4, 2000)
  • "Mr. E's Beautiful Blues" – Eels (February 14 (UK))
  • "Music" – Madonna (August 21)
  • "My Generation" – Limp Bizkit (September 2000)
  • "My Love" – Westlife
  • "Never Be The Same Again – Melanie C
  • "On a Night Like This" – Kylie Minogue
  • "One Step Closer" – Linkin Park
  • "The One" – Backstreet Boys (May 16) (Millennium album)
  • "Oops!... I Did It Again" – Britney Spears (April 25 [US], May 1 [UK])
  • "Original Prankster" – The Offspring (October 24)
  • "Otherside" – Red Hot Chili Peppers (January 11)
  • "Pinch Me" – Bare Naked Ladies (August 29)
  • "Please Stay" – Kylie Minogue (December 11)
  • "Private Emotion" – Ricky Martin featuring Meja
  • "Pure Shores" – All Saints (February 26)
  • "The Real Slim Shady" – Eminem (May 16)
  • "Responsibility" - MxPx
  • "Rise" – Gabrielle (January 24(UK) May 2(U.S.))
  • "Rock DJ" – Robbie Williams (July 31)
  • "Rollin' (Air Raid Vehicle)" – Limp Bizkit (September 2000)
  • "Say My Name" – Destiny's Child (February 29 [US], May 16 [UK])
  • "Sex Bomb" – Tom Jones featuring Mousse T.
  • "7 Days" – Craig David
  • "17 Again" – Eurythmics (January 2000)
  • "Shape of My Heart" – Backstreet Boys (October 31)
  • "Shine" – Vanessa Amorosi (June 2000)
  • "Show Me The Meaning of Being Lonely" – Backstreet Boys (Millennium album)
  • "Something Deep Inside" – Billie Piper (September 18)
  • "Spinning Around" – Kylie Minogue (June 2000)
  • "Stan" – Eminem featuring Dido (December)
  • "Stronger" – Britney Spears (November 13 [EUR] December 4 [UK], November 30 [US])
  • "Teenage Dirtbag" – Wheatus
  • "Thank God I Found You" – Mariah Carey featuring Joe and 98 Degrees (January 25 (U.S.), February 28(UK))
  • "Thank You for Loving Me" – Bon Jovi (December)
  • "There She Goes" – Sixpence None the Richer
  • "Try Again" – Aaliyah (February 29)
  • "Untitled (How Does It Feel)" – D'Angelo (January 1)
  • "Wait and Bleed" – Slipknot (February)
  • "Warning" – Green Day (December 11)
  • "The Way I Am" – Eminem
  • "Weekends" - The Black Eyed Peas
  • "Who Let the Dogs Out?" – Baha Men (July)
  • "With Arms Wide Open" - Creed
  • "Yellow" – Coldplay (June 26)
  • "You're No Rock n' Roll Fun"- Sleater-Kinney
  • Top 5 Selling Albums of the Billboard Year

    1. Eminem – The Marshall Mathers LP
    2. Britney Spears – Oops!... I Did It Again
    3. Faith Hill – Breathe
    4. NSYNC – No Strings Attached (Currently holds the record for Best-selling Album sold in a single week (2.41 million), and the most sold in one day (over 1 million).)
    5. Santana – Supernatural

    Top 20 selling albums of the year (Soundscan)

    1. NSYNC – No Strings Attached, 9,936,104 copies
    2. Eminem – The Marshall Mathers LP, 7,921,107 copies
    3. Britney Spears – Oops!... I Did It Again, 7,893,544 copies
    4. Creed – Human Clay, 6,587,834 copies
    5. Santana – Supernatural, 5,857,824 copies
    6. The Beatles – 1, 5,068,300 copies
    7. Nelly – Country Grammar, 5,067,529 copies
    8. Backstreet Boys – Black & Blue, 4,768,441 copies
    9. Dr. Dre – 2001, 3,992,311 copies
    10. Destiny's Child – The Writing's on the Wall, 3,802,165 copies
    11. 3 Doors Down – The Better Life, 3,800,515 copies
    12. Christina Aguilera – Christina Aguilera (album), 3,768,441 copies
    13. Limp Bizkit – Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, 3,744,561 copies
    14. Dixie Chicks – Fly, 3,520,469 copies
    15. Sisqó – Unleash the Dragon, 3,493,269 copies
    16. Lil' Kim – The Notorious K.I.M., 4,365,926 copies
    17. Britney Spears – ...Baby One More Time
    18. Various Artists – Now That's What I Call Music, Volume 5 (U.S. series), 3,155,083 copies
    19. DMX – And Then There Was X, 3,093,579 copies
    20. Kid Rock – Devil Without a Cause, 2,804,158 copies

    Complete 200

    Classical music

  • Thomas Adès – Piano Quintet, op. 20
  • John Coolidge Adams – El Niño (opera-oratorio)
  • John Luther Adams – The Light That Fills the World, for orchestra
  • Julian Anderson – Alhambra Suite, for chamber orchestra
  • Milton Babbitt
  • Little Goes a Long Way, for violin and piano
  • Pantuns, for soprano and piano
  • Leonardo Balada – Music for Flute and Orchestra
  • Chen Yi – KC Capriccio, for wind ensemble and mixed choir
  • Edward Cowie
  • Bad Lands Gold, for tuba and piano
  • Concerto for oboe and orchestra
  • Dark Matter, for brass ensemble
  • Elysium IV, for orchestra
  • Four Frames in a Row, for high voice and baroque ensemble
  • The Healing of Saul, for violin and harp (or piano)
  • Several Charms, for violin and piano
  • Peter Maxwell Davies
  • Symphony No. 7
  • Symphony No. 8 Antarctica
  • Peter Eötvös – Paris–Dakar, for ensemble
  • Lorenzo Ferrero
  • Glamorama Spies, for flute, clarinet, violin, violoncello, and piano
  • Rastrelli in Saint Petersburg, for oboe and string orchestra
  • Tempi di quartetto, for string quartet
  • Stefano Gervasoni – Rigirio
  • Frans Geysen
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 1, for orchestra
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 2, for string quartet
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 3, for string quartet
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 4, for keyboard instrument
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 5, for keyboard instrument
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 6, for string quartet
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 7, for four-part mixed choir (or string quartet, or trumpet, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon)
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 8, for keyboard instrument
  • Alles heeft zijn tijd 9, for 4 trumpets
  • Alles komt terug 2, for three-part choir
  • Alles komt terug 3, for SSATB choir
  • Alles komt terug 4, for carillon
  • Alles komt terug 5, for keyboard instrument
  • Benadering van de kern, for keyboard instrument
  • Muziek voor toetsenbord 2, for piano
  • Toetsing, for keyboard instrument
  • Philip Glass
  • Tirol Concerto, for piano and orchestra
  • Concerto Fantasy, for two timpanists and orchestra
  • Alexander Goehr
  • Piano Quintet, op. 69
  • Suite, for two pianos, op. 70
  • Friedrich Goldmann –
  • Augenblick für Stimme, for mezzo-soprano, flute, oboe, clarinet, trombone, percussion, electric guitar, keyboard, viola and cello
  • Etudes (3) for piano
  • Quartet, for oboe, violin, viola, and cello
  • 7 x 10 Takte für Dieter Schnebel, for flute and clarinet
  • Ilja Hurník
  • Con brio, for orchestra
  • Symphony in C
  • Karl Jenkins – Adiemus IV: The Eternal Knot
  • Nigel Keay – Viola concerto ([1])
  • Meyer Kupferman – Icon Symphony
  • Mario Lavista
  • Estudio, for four marimbas
  • Mater dolorosa, for organ
  • Tres Miniaturas, for guitar,
  • György Ligeti – Síppal, dobbal, nádihegedüvel
  • Magnus Lindberg
  • Corrente – China Version
  • Jubilees, for piano
  • James MacMillan – Mass, for choir and organ
  • Mesías Maiguashca – El Tiempo, for 2 flutes, 2 clarinets, 2 cellos, 2 percussionists, and electronics
  • Tomás Marco – América (cantata)
  • Donald Martino – Romanza, for violin solo
  • Robert Morris
  • In Concert, for ten instruments
  • Still, for piano
  • Bayan Northcott – Alma Redemptoris Mater, for three tenors, op. 7, no. 2
  • Gérard Pape – Tantric Transformations, eight-channel electronic music and digital video
  • Henri Pousseur
  • Anneaux du soleil, for piano
  • Navigations, for harp
  • Seize Paysages planétaires, ethno-electroacoustical music
  • Wolfgang Rihm
  • Auf einem anderen Blatt, for piano
  • Concerto (Dithyrambe), for string quartet and orchestra
  • Deus passus (Passions-Stücke nach Lukas), for soprano, mezzo-soprano, alto, tenor, baritone, mixed chorus, and orchestra
  • … fleuve V (omnia tempus habent), for mezzo-soprano, baritone, distant ensemble (2 trumpets, 3 percussion), and large orchestra
  • Frage, for coloratura soprano, English horn, A-clarinet (+ bass clarinet), harp, viola, cello, double bass, piano, and percussion
  • Im Anfang, for large orchestra
  • In Frage, for English horn, bass clarinet, harp, viola, cello, double bass, piano, and percussion
  • Rilke: Vier Gedichte, for tenor and piano
  • Stilles Stück (text by Hermann Lenz), for baritone and 2 string quartets
  • Vers une symphonie fleuve IV, for large orchestra
  • Vier Male (Stücke), for A-clarinet
  • Peter Ruzicka – Traces, for clarinet and orchestra
  • Peter Sculthorpe
  • Djilile, for string quartet
  • From the River, for violin, viola, cello, double bass, and piano
  • Harbour Dreaming, for piano (originally titled Between Five Bells)
  • New Norcia, for brass and percussion
  • Parting, for viola and piano
  • Quamby, for chamber orchestra
  • Reef Singing, for clarinet and piano
  • Saibai, for unison voices and drums
  • Song for a Penny, for solo piano (shorter and longer versions)
  • Tailitnama Song, for viola and piano, or viola solo
  • Three Shakespeare Songs, for voice and piano (Text: William Shakespeare)
  • Roger Smalley – String Quartet No. 2
  • Juan Maria Solare
  • Blockartig, for three recorders (TTB)
  • Constelación (Nueva Suite Modal) [Constellation (New Modal Suite)], five pieces for flute and clarinet
  • de capa caída, tango for two pianos
  • Utopía caminante [Walking Utopia], for trombone and cello
  • Viejo Fueye Deconstruido [Old, deconstructed bag (bellows)], postmodern tango for tenor saxophone, bandoneon, double bass, and piano
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen
  • Engel-Prozessionen (from Sonntag aus Licht)
  • Refrain 2000
  • John Tavener – Song of the Cosmos
  • Eric Whitacre - October
  • Charles Wuorinen
  • Fourth String Quartet
  • Cyclops 2000, for twenty players
  • Opera

  • Michael Abels – Homies and Popz
  • John Coolidge Adams – El Niño (opera-oratorio)
  • Harrison Birtwistle – The Last Supper
  • Peter Maxwell Davies – Mr Emmet Takes a Walk
  • Carlisle Floyd – Cold Sassy Tree
  • Cristóbal Halffter – Don Quijote
  • Jake Heggie – Dead Man Walking
  • Michael Nyman – Facing Goya
  • Poul Ruders – The Handmaid's Tale
  • Kaija Saariaho - L'Amour de loin
  • Sheila Silver – The Thief of Love
  • Richard Thomas – Tourette's Diva
  • Musical theater

  • Aida - Broadway production opened at the Palace Theatre and ran for 1852 performances
  • The Dead - Broadway production opened at the Belasco Theatre and ran for 120 performances
  • The Full Monty - Broadway production opened at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre and ran for 770 performances
  • Jane Eyre - Broadway production opened at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre and ran for 209 performances
  • The Music Man (Meredith Willson) – Broadway revival
  • Seussical - Broadway production opened at the Richard Rodgers Theatre and ran for 198 performances
  • The Sapphire Necklace - Midway Village premiere
  • Musical film

  • Almost Famous
  • Dancer in the Dark, starring Björk
  • Darling Darling
  • The Filth and the Fury
  • Kandukondain Kandukondain
  • Nuvvu Vastavani
  • The Road to El Dorado (animation)
  • The Tigger Movie released February 10
  • The Fantasticks released September 22, starring Joel Grey
  • Thenkasipattanam
  • Turn It Up
  • Births

  • April 9 – Jackie Evancho, classical crossover singer.
  • October 31 – Willow Smith, singer & daughter of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith.
  • Deaths

  • January 2 – Nat Adderley (68), jazz cornet and trumpet player
  • January 16 – Gene Harris (67), jazz pianist
  • January 19
  • Irra Petina (91), operatic contralto
  • Josh Clayton-Felt (32), singer-songwriter (choriocarcinoma)
  • January 22 – Carlo Cossutta (67), operatic tenor
  • February 3 – Alla Rakha (80), tabla player
  • February 4 – Doris Coley (59), vocalist (the Shirelles)
  • February 7
  • Big Punisher (28), rapper (heart attack)
  • Dave Peverett (56) (Foghat)
  • February 11 – Lord Kitchener (77), calypsonian
  • February 12
  • Screamin' Jay Hawkins (70), U.S. vocal artist
  • Andy Lewis (33), Australian bass player (The Whitlams) (b. 1967)
  • Oliver (54), U.S. singer (b. 1945)
  • February 19 – Marin Goleminov (91), violinist and composer
  • February 23 – Ofra Haza (42), singer
  • February 29 – Dennis Danell (38), guitarist (Social Distortion) (brain aneurysm)
  • March 4 – Walter Dana (97), polka-music promoter
  • March 5 – Alexander Young (79), operatic tenor
  • March 7 – Pee Wee King (86), country musician and songwriter (heart attack)
  • March 20 – Gene "Eugene" Andrusco (38), actor and singer (brain aneurysm)
  • March 27 – Ian Dury (57), English rock musician (liver cancer)
  • April 25 – Niels Viggo Bentzon (80), Danish composer
  • April 27 – Vicki Sue Robinson (45), US disco singer (cancer)
  • May 2 - Sundar Popo (56), Indo-Trinidadian chutney musician (heart an kidney ailment relating to diabetes)
  • May 13 – Cesare Valletti (77), operatic tenor
  • May 20 – Jean-Pierre Rampal (78), flautist
  • May 31 – Johnnie Taylor (66), singer
  • June 1 – Tito Puente (77), Afro-Cuban jazz and salsa musician
  • June 7 – James Moore (44), gospel singer
  • June 14 – Paul Griffin (62), pianist
  • July 5 – Lord Woodbine (Harold Adolphus Philips) (71), calypsonian
  • July 6
  • Ľudovít Rajter (93), Slovak composer and conductor
  • Władysław “Władek” Szpilman (88), Jewish-Polish pianist who survived the Holocaust
  • July 11 – Jaroslav Filip (51), Slovak musician, actor
  • July 15 – Paul Young (53), English singer and percussionist of Sad Café and Mike + The Mechanics (heart attack)
  • July 24 – Oscar Shumsky (83), violinist
  • July 28 – Jerome Smith (KC and the Sunshine Band)
  • August 10 - Suzanne Danco (89), operatic soprano
  • August 13 – Nazia Hassan (34), iconic Pakistani singer (lung cancer)
  • August 25
  • Jack Nitzsche (63), arranger, producer, songwriter and composer
  • Allen Woody (44), bass guitarist
  • September 12 – Stanley Turrentine (66), jazz saxophonist
  • September 21 – Bengt Hambraeus (72), composer for organ
  • September 26 – Carl Sigman (91), songwriter
  • October 1
  • Robert Allen (73), American pianist and composer (b. 1928)
  • Cub Koda (51), singer, guitarist and songwriter (Brownsville Station)
  • October 3 – Benjamin Orr (53), bassist, vocalist of The Cars
  • October 17 – Joachim Nielsen (36), Norwegian rock singer in Jokke & Valentinerne
  • October 18 – Julie London (74), US singer and actress
  • October 21 – Frankie Crocker, radio DJ
  • October 27 – Winston Grennan (56), Jamaican drummer
  • October 28 – Carlos Guastavino (78), composer
  • October 30 – Steve Allen (78), comedian, composer, talk show host, author
  • November 8
  • Brian Boydell (83), Irish composer
  • Dick Morrissey (60), UK tenor saxophonist (cancer)
  • November 12 – Stanley Turrentine (64), US tenor saxophonist (stroke)
  • November 16
  • DJ Screw (29), hip-hop DJ (codeine overdose)
  • Joe C. (26), rapper
  • November 30 – Scott Smith (45), bassist (Loverboy) (lost at sea)
  • December 17 – Harold Rhodes (89), inventor of Rhodes piano
  • December 18 – Kirsty McColl (41), English singer songwriter (speedboat accident)
  • December 19
  • Rob Buck (42), guitarist (10,000 Maniacs) (liver disease)
  • Milt Hinton (90), jazz double bassist
  • Pops Staples (85), gospel and R & B musician
  • December 24 – Nick Massi (65), bass singer in The Four Seasons
  • Awards

  • The following artists are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Eric Clapton, Earth, Wind & Fire, The Lovin' Spoonful, The Moonglows, Bonnie Raitt and James Taylor
  • Inductees of the GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame include Shirley Caesar, and The Oak Ridge Boys
  • Grammy Awards

  • Grammy Awards of 2000
  • Eurovision Song Contest

  • Eurovision Song Contest 2000
  • Mercury Music Prize

  • The Hour of Bewilderbeast – Badly Drawn Boy wins.
  • MTV Video Music Awards

  • 2000 MTV Video Music Awards
  • Triple J Hottest 100

  • Triple J Hottest 100, 2000
  • References

    2000 in music Wikipedia