- International trends
- The Beatles (A Hard Day's Night, ...Introducing the Beatles, Meet the Beatles) continue to dominate the charts, along with The Beach Boys ("I Get Around"), The Zombies ("She's Not There"), The Kinks ("You Really Got Me") and The Animals (The Animals, "The House of the Rising Sun"). Their chart success heralds the arrival of the British Invasion in the United States, Australia, Switzerland, New Zealand and other countries
- Chris Blackwell's Island Records in the United Kingdom releases Millie Small's "My Boy Lollipop", which helps to bring ska and the Jamaican music scene to international audiences
- Music of Algeria
- Belkacem Bouteldja's mainstream fame begins, leading the wave of rai performers that soon dominate Algeria
- Music of Australia
- Music of Brazil
- A new brand of politically aware bossa nova emerges from Brazil; musicians like Geraldo Vandré respond to the reality of the time with populist songwriting
- Music of Canada
- Music of the Czech Republic
- Pete Seeger, an American folk singer, tours in the Czech Republic, revitalizing the folk music scene there
- Music of Estonia
- Leiko, a choir from Värska, is formed as part of an attempt by the Soviet government to encourage local folk music
- Music of Jamaica
- Music of Kenya
- Music of Mali
- Music of Nigeria
- Ebenezey Obey forms the International Brothers, soon to become one of the two biggest bands in the country
- Music of Puerto Rico
- Music of Tanzania
- State-run patronage systems begin to dominate the Tanzanian music scene with the formation of the Nuta Jazz Band
- Music of the United Kingdom
- Music of the United States
- International trends
- The Beatles endure the heights of Beatlemania while the British Invasion peaks
- Many of the bands that are later important in psychedelia begin performing, including Pink Floyd, The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and The Byrds; Bob Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man", often considered the first psychedelic recording, is released
- Colin M. Turnbull publishes a study of the Pygmy people of central Africa, bringing them to worldwide attention; some of his recordings of their music are commercially released
- Recordings by Robbie Basho ("Seal of the Blue Lotus"), The Byrds ("Eight Miles High") and The Kinks ("Till the End of the Day"), along with George Harrison's sitar on "Norwegian Wood", are the beginning of major mainstream success for rock influenced by Indian music
- Calypso jazz, a fusion of jazz and calypso, arises in the Caribbean, centered around Barbados and Trinidad
- Music of Angola
- Music of Bolivia
- Los Jairas, who fuse native Aymara and Quechua rhythms with Western forms, emerge from La Paz
- Music of Brazil
- Music of Bulgaria
- Music of Canada
- Music of Chile
- Music of Guinea
- Bembeya Jazz travels to Cuba, where the popular singer Abelardo Barroso is so moved by their performance that he cries; Cuban influences are brought back to Guinea, where they leave a lasting influence on the popular music scene
- Music of Iceland
- Music of Indonesia
- Jaipongan, a complex form of pop-dance music, appears in Sunda, using only native instruments; this is partially led by artists like Gugum Gumbira, reacting to new laws banning rock and other forms of imported music
- Music of Ireland
- Music of Spain
- Concha Velasco "La Chicha Ye-Yé" is the first major hit for the Ye-Yé scene in Spain; Rosalia's "Flamenco" introduces a more distinctively Spanish sound in Ye-Yé
- Music of Sri Lanka
- Music of Turkey
- Music of the United Kingdom
- Music of the United States
- International trends
- Early psychedelia from The Who (A Quick One) and The Moody Blues (The Magnificient Moodies) is popular, along with bands that begin to merge these more progressive sounds with pop, like The Beatles (Revolver), Shadows of Knight (Gloria), The Troggs (Wild Thing), The Mamas & the Papas (If You Can Believe Your Eyes and Ears) and, most influentially, The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, including "Good Vibrations", one of the innovative songs of the era
- King Sunny Ade begins performing; he will eventually become one of the most popular African performers
- Pete Seeger's "Guantanamera" popularizes Cuban guajira internationally
- San Francisco becomes the mecca for hippies and psychedelic rock, where bands like Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane launch the "Summer of Love"
- Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention release Freak Out! the first rock double album
- Long jams are found on several popular singles, including Bob Dylan's "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands", The Seeds' "Up in Her Room", Rolling Stones' "Going Home" and The Fugs' "Virgin Forest"; the last is an innovative mixture of collage techniques with rock and early world music
- Holy Modal Rounders are the most well-known exponents of a new style called acid-folk
- Music of Barbados
- Music of Colombia
- Music of the Czech Republic
- The Porta Festival of folk singer-songwriters occurs for the first time
- Music of Greece
- Music of Ireland
- Music of Jamaica
- Rocksteady, the earliest form of reggae, emerges as a genre with the success of performers like Alton Ellis. The hit single "Get Ready - Rock Steady" is arguably the first rocksteady recording; its stylistic uniqueness is due to the bassist not showing up for the recording session, necessitating the keyboardist to play the bass part
- Music of Kenya
- Music of the Lesser Antilles
- Music of New Zealand
- Music of Nigeria
- King Sunny Ade begins performing and recording with limited success; his innovations, however, bring new, more pop-oriented elements to juju
- Music of Russia
- Music of Togo
- Bella Bellow represents her country at the Dakar Arts Festival, beginning a career that will make her perhaps the most beloved musician in Togo's modern history
- Music of the United Kingdom
- Music of the United States
- Music of Zimbabwe
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