med332 black popular music (1920-1970)

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#med332 Black popular music (19201970)

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Sweeping overview of the blues legacy in rock music and some notable black musical performers

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#med332  Black  popular  music  (1920-­‐1970)  

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The  Great  Depression  1930-­‐1940s  

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Johnnie  Ray  –  ‘Cry’  (1957)  

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Black  popular  culture:  -­‐  Jazz  -­‐  Gospel  -­‐  Rhythm  and  blues  

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Just  as  blacks  were  segregated  from  white  society,  so  R  &  B  music  existed  separately  from  the  pop  music  market.  R  &  B  had  its  own  performers,  record  companies,  and  consumers.  R  &  B  recorders,  oSen  referred  to  as  “race”  records,  sold  within  their  own  disVnct  market.  An  R  &  B  performer  or  record  rarely  crossed  over  into  the  naVonal  pop  market.  -­‐  Stuessy  and  Lispcomb,  2003:  7-­‐8    

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Country  &  Western  Poor  whites,  South,  rural  -­‐  ‘hillbilly’  -­‐  Bluegrass  -­‐  swing  

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The  basic  centre  of  R&B’s  development  was  the  South;  however,  as  the  black  

populaVon  spread  throughout  the  Southwest,  the  Midwest,  and  into  major  metropolitan  centres,  R&B  went  along.  Thus,  although  most  R&B  singers  traced  

their  roots  back  to  New  Orleans,  the  Mississippi  Delta,  Alabama,  Georgia,  Tennessee,  and  Florida,  by  the  1930s  

and  1940s  many  has  relocated  to  other  parts  of  the  country.  

-­‐  Stuessy  and  Lipscomb,  2003:  26-­‐27  

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Robert  Johnson  –  ‘Me  and  Devil  Blues’  (circa  1938)  

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12  bar  blues  

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12  bar  blues  Bars  (aka  measures)  

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12  bar  blues  

Phrases  

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12  bar  blues  

One  blues  chorus  =  12  bars  (48  beats)  

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Noteworthy  R&B  performers:  •  Big  Bill  Broonzy  •  Bessie  Smith  •  Howling  Wolf  (Chester  Burneg)  •  Muddy  Waters  (McKinley  Morganfield)  •  Lightnin’  Hopkins  •  Ma  Rainey  •  Joe  Turner  •  Memphis  Slim  •  T-­‐Bone  Walker  •  Elmore  James  •  OVs  Spann  •  B.B.  King    

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As  a  kid  in  the  fiSies  …  I  was  taught  to  be  ashamed  of  the  blues.  We  thought  of  it  as  plantaVon  darkie  stuff.  And  that  was  miles  from  where  we  wanted  to  be  -­‐  Tennessean  Isaac  Hayes  cited  in  Ward,  1998:  40    

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Good  Golly  Miss    Molly  (1958)   Great  Balls  of  Fire  (1957)  

Roll  ‘em  Pete  (1938)  

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1954-­‐55  crossover  hits  

•  Lloyd  Price  –  Lawdy  Miss  Clawdy  •  The  Crows  –  Gee  •  The  Penguins  –  Earth  Angel  •  The  Orioles  –  Crying  in  the  Chapel    

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Song R&B Chart pos

Pop cover Chart pos

Earth Angel The Penguins 8 Crew Cuts 3

Goodnight Sweetheart Spaniels 24 McGuire Sisters 7

Heart of Stone Charms 15 Fontaine Sisters 1

Shake, Rattle and Roll Joe Turner - Bill Haley 7

Sh-Boom Chords 5 Crew Cuts 1

Sincerely Moonglows 20 McGuire Sisters 1

Ain’t That a Shame Fats Domino 1 Pat Boone 1

Tweedle Dee La Vern Baker 14 Gerogia Gibbs 2

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The  Chords  –  ‘Sh-­‐boom’  (1954)  

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By  the  end  of  1954,  income  from  r&b  records  and  tours  consVtuted  a  $25  million  branch  of  the  industry.  A  growing,  if  sVll  relaVvely  small,  conVngent  of  young  white  fans  had  combined  with  the  black  audience  to  double  the  market  share  claimed  by  r&b  from  5  per  cent  to  10  per  cent  of  the  total  industry  gross  -­‐  Ward,  1998:  20  

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In  1957,  the  independent  record  companies  responsible  for  

recording  much  of  this  material  accounted  for  an  astonishing  76  

per  cent  of  the  year’s  hit  singles.  In  1958  more  than  90  per  cent  of  the  

155  records  appearing  on  the  naVonal  Rhythm  and  Blues  charts  during  the  year  also  appeared  on  

the  pop  charts  -­‐  Ward,  1998:  20  

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Bill  Haley  

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Sam  Phillips  on  Elvis:  ‘I  noVced  a  certain  quality  in  Elvis’  voice,  and  I  guessed  he  had  a  feeling  for  black  music.  I  thought  his  voice  was  unique,  but  I  didn’t  

know  whether  it  was  commercial’    -­‐  Cited  in  Palmer,  1976:  205  

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‘sexual  seducVon  of  whites  into  blackness’  ‘new  and  acceptable  aptudes  about  sexuality’    -­‐  Spencer  cited  in  Chadwick,  1997:  114      

 

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Milton  Bearle  Show  

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Steve  Allen  Show  (1956)    

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Ed  Sullivan  Show  

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Milton  Bearle  Show  

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Tup  Frup    (1956)  in  Don't  Knock  The  Rock    

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‘hypnoVc,  like  an  evangelical  meeVng  where,  for  want  of  a  beger  phrase,  Richard  is  the  disciple  and  the  audience  the  flock  that  follows.  I  couldn’t  believe  the  power  of  Ligle  Richard  on  stage.  He  was  amazing’  -­‐  Mick  Jagger  cited  in  White,  1984:  119    

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Chuck  Berry  –  ‘Maybellene’  (1955)  

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Summary  

•  Development  of  rock  and  roll  and  other  off-­‐shoots  of  rock  more  generally  owes  much  to  the  legacy  of  black  popular  musical  forms.  

•  The  success  of  white  musicians  appropriaVng  black  popular  music  acted  to  draw  more  agenVon  to  black  musical  performers  

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Cultural  appropriaVon?  “The  colored  folks  been  singing  it  and  playing  it  just  like  I’m  doin’  now,  man  for  more  years  than  I  know.  They  played  it  like  that  in  the  shanVes  and  in  their  jukee  joints,  and  nobody  paid  it  no  mind  ’Vl  I  goosed  it  up.  I  got  it  from  them.  Down  in  Tupelo,  Mississippi,  I  used  to  hear  old  Arthur  Crudup  bang  his  box  the  way  I  do  now,  and  I  said  if  I  ever  got  to  the  place  where  I  could  feel  like  old  Arthur  felt,  I’d  be  a  music  man  like  nobody  ever  saw.”  -­‐  Elvis  Presley  (1956)  Interview    in  The  CharloDe  Observer  

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Task  

IdenVfy  some  contemporary  examples  of  black  musical  culture  being  appropriated  Add  them  to  the  above  playlist  and  explain  your  selecVon  (briefly)  over  on  the  module  website  

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CriVque?  

Black  musicologist  PorVa  Maultsby  has  described  the  cover  syndrome,  together  with  the  success  of  white  singers  like  Bill  Haley  and  Elvis  Presley  in  obviously  black-­‐influenced  styles,  as  “the  most  wide-­‐spread,  systemaVc  rape  and  uncompensated  cultural  exploitaVon  the  entertainment  industry  has  ever  seen”  -­‐  cited  in  Ward,  1998:  44  

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Tony  Fischer  (2008)  The  Causes  of  The  Great  Depression  /  FDR  Memorial  Site  Kennedy  AssassinaVon  Research  (2007)  Is  This  Tomorrow  James  Vaughan  (2010)  1953  …  Stalin  dies!  Paolo  (2011)  album  figurine  –  revolucion  cubana  Adam  Kuban  (2007)  Tin  Pan  Alley  CommemoraVve  Plaque  Metro  Library  and  Archive  (1938)  Broadway  at  6th  1930s  Laura  Loverday  (2009)  The  original  "Hollywoodland"  sign,  1923-­‐1949  Thomas  ♫  (2010)  Learning  The  Blues  bunky's  pickle  (2009)  Ligle  Richard  &  band,  back  cover  of  Specialty  2103    David  Smith  (2012)  Jagger  Missouri  History  Museum  (2011)  Chuck  Berry