1 / 32

The Beatles and the British Invasion

chapter 4. The Beatles and the British Invasion. British pop between 1964 and 1966. American business taken by surprise in early 1964 by the Beatles An American fad for British music ensued Two important strains of the story Chronicle of British pop Influence of British pop on American pop.

edolie
Download Presentation

The Beatles and the British Invasion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. chapter 4 The Beatles and the British Invasion

  2. British pop between 1964 and 1966 • American business taken by surprise in early 1964 by the Beatles • An American fad for British music ensued • Two important strains of the story • Chronicle of British pop • Influence of British pop on American pop

  3. British pop from WWII to 1963 • Prior to 1964 British music was considered inferior in America • In contrast, American Culture was interesting to Britons • Result of American involvement in WWII • British labels licensed music from American independents • Facilitated the spread of American black pop

  4. British pop from WWII to 1963 • History of British interest in American music includes folk and jazz • “Trad” jazz • Skiffle • Cliff Richard, early rock

  5. Lonnie Donegan

  6. The Beatles, 1960-1962 • Early years • Formed out of the skiffle-based Quarrymen • Among the first generation of musicians who listened to rock as youth • Began performing live actively in 1960

  7. The Beatles, 1960-1962 • Hamburg • Played six and seven hour evenings • Refined performing skills and repertoire

  8. Beatles at the Cavern Club, 1961

  9. The Beatles, 1960-1962 • Liverpool • Played at the Cavern nearly 300 times through 1962 • Met future manager Brian Epstein in 1961 • Secured Parlophone recording contract in 1962 • First single (“Love Me Do”) goes to 17 on British charts

  10. Beatles at the Cavern Club, 1963

  11. The Beatles, 1960-1962 • Influences • Beatles learned from cover songs performed in early period • Songs performed at Star Club and BBC, 1962-1965 • American pop dominates • Elvis, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Carl Perkins, Lieber and Stoller, Spector, Motown

  12. The Beatles 1963-1966 • Success in England in 1963 • Two high-profile television performances • Four consecutive hits • Led wave of British-based hits in England

  13. Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show

  14. The Beatles 1963-1966 • Success in America in 1964 • Performed on Ed Sullivan in February • 30 Top Ten pop hits between 1964 and 1966 • All studio albums went to number 1 in both UK and U.S. • Feature films • Hard Day’s Night (1964) • Help! (1965) • Controversy over “bigger than Jesus” remark in 1966 • Final public concert in San Francisco, August 1966

  15. The Beatles 1963-1966 • Musical development, 1964-1966 • Imitated and extended American models in early music • Used songwriting techniques from Brill Building, 1963-1964 • Found variety in solving compositional “problems” • “I Want To Hold Your Hand” • Moved from craft to artistic approach, 1964-1966 • Experimented with studio effects, stylistic juxtapositions, and timbre, and structure • “Tomorrow Never Knows”

  16. The Beatles 1963-1966 • Importance of lyrics • Teenage love in early years • Unconventional in later music • Self-confidence • Sexual frustration • Alienation • Stylistic range • Widens in 1965 with “Help!” • Novel instrumentation • Stylistic eclecticism

  17. The British Invasion • Beatles led the surge of British music in the United States in 1964 • Groups were British, played guitars, and had long hair • Broad stylistic range • Had many hits on the U.S. charts between 1964 and 1966 • Two strains modeled after Beatles and Stones

  18. The British Invasion (Beatles-type) • Charming, cute, friendly • First wave, 1964 • Gerry and the Pacemakers • Dave Clark Five • Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas • Searchers

  19. Gerry and the Pacemakers

  20. The British Invasion (Beatles-type) • Second wave, 1965 • Herman’s Hermits • Freddy and the Dreamers • Hollies

  21. The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type) • Bad boys, in contrast to the Beatles-type image • Followed the lead of the Rolling Stones • Drew on tradition of Chicago electric blues from 1950s • Spawned a wave of enthusiasm for collecting and performing American blues

  22. Rolling Stones, Zurich, 1967

  23. The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type) • Rolling Stones, 1962-1966 • Formed by guitarist Brian Jones as a blues band • Managed by Andrew Loog Oldham and Eric Easton, 1963 • Started move toward pop in 1963 • Early recordings • Covered songs by American artists • “I Wanna Be Your Man” by Lennon and McCartney • Jagger and Richards achieve success as songwriters in 1964 • Did not achieve widespread success in America until 1965 • Preferred contrasting verse-chorus rather than AABA

  24. The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type) • Yardbirds • Guitarists included Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page • Used studio musicians on early records • Recorded in Chicago at Chess

  25. Yardbirds

  26. The British Blues Revival (Stones-Type) • Animals • Reputation from wild stage act • “House of the Rising Sun” (1964) • Bassist Chas Chandler became manager for Jimi Hendrix in 1966 • Spencer Davis Group

  27. Animals (Eric Burdon)

  28. The British Blues Revival • Other British groups did not fit into Beatles/Stones categories • Kinks • Formed in 1963 • Aggressive pop approach • “You Really Got Me” (1964) • Mirrored the Beatles move into artistic songwriting, 1965

  29. The Kinks

  30. The British Blues Revival • Who • Not influential until the late 1960s • Never made the U.S. Top 40 during the mid-1960s • Representative of the Mod subculture in London

  31. The Who, 1967

  32. Transformation of American Popular Music • Rise of the Beatles transformed popular music • Opened doors for British acts within the UK • Opened new opportunities for British acts outside the UK • British Invasion established a cross fertilization between U.S. and UK

More Related