1 / 70

Rock & Roll

Rock & Roll. Origins, Evolution, & Modern Music. “Rock ‘n’ Roll”. “Rock and roll” was black slang for having sex. The term “rock ‘n’ roll” was used as a marketing ploy by DJ Alan Freed in the early 1950s. . Origins of Rock & Roll. Two primary roots Blues Folk Other influences

camden
Download Presentation

Rock & Roll

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. Rock & Roll Origins, Evolution, & Modern Music

  2. “Rock ‘n’ Roll” • “Rock and roll” was black slang for having sex. • The term “rock ‘n’ roll” was used as a marketing ploy by DJ Alan Freed in the early 1950s.

  3. Origins of Rock & Roll • Two primary roots • Blues • Folk • Other influences • Gospel, rhythm & blues, jazz, and country • It’s not “black” or “white” music but an energetic mixture of the two

  4. Origins of Rock & Roll • Initial appeal was to white, middle class teens. • Parents of these teens responded negatively. • “Race music” was censored as being too rebellious, sexual, and anti-social.

  5. Characteristics of Rock & Roll • High dynamic level of sound • Loud • Fast and hard rhythms • Conversational lyrics • Social messages What movie?

  6. Blues Influences • Origins – Slave responsorials • Songs about hard work or hard lives • 3 Line Verse • West Africa • Lead Belly • Huddie Ledbetter

  7. Lead BellyTake this Hammer

  8. West African Influences • Guttural • Call & Response • Talking • Improvisation • Sexuality Sam Cooke

  9. Sam CookeNothing Can Change This Love Radio Version Live in Harlem Square

  10. 1950s • Favorable economic times during the post-war era allowed rock ‘n’ roll to flourish • Leo Fender invented the electric guitar • Dawn of teenage culture defined by purchasing power

  11. Major Label Recording Practices in the 1950s • Rerecord minor hits released by small companies. • Turn them into smash hits by making them less daring and gearing them towards white middle America. Frank Sinatra

  12. 1950s • Rock and Roll was the expression of youth culture • Dancing • Sexual freedom • Rebellion against parents and cultural norms The Coasters – Yakety Yak

  13. Small Labels Strike Back with “Unique” Talent • Chuck Berry • Little Richard

  14. Chuck BerryJohnny B. Goode

  15. Elvis Presley • In 1952, Sam Phillips, of Sun Records, started a search for a “white man who sounds like Howlin’ Wolf” • In 1954, he found Elvis

  16. Elvis PresleyThat’s Alright Mama

  17. Elvis on the Billboard Charts Most Hot 100 Entries • Glee Cast – 137 • Elvis – 108 • James Brown – 91 Most Top 10 Singles • Madonna – 37 • Elvis – 36 • The Beatles – 29 Most Top 40 Hits • Elvis – 104 • Elton John – 56 • The Beatles - 51 Most #1 Hits • The Beatles – 20 • Mariah Carey – 18 • Elvis - 17

  18. Major Labels Strike Back Dick Clark’s American Bandstand

  19. 1960s • Massive changes to American culture • The Baby Boomers • Civil Rights Movement • Cuban Missile Crisis • Women’s Movement • Vietnam • Rock no longer reflected social changes… it influenced them

  20. 1960s • Counterculture • Hallucinogenic drugs • LSD • Psychedelic Experiments • Communal living • Summer of Love - 1967 • Monterey Pop Festival - 1967 • Woodstock - 1969

  21. 1960s - Folk music called for social changes • Music designed to be performed by the masses • Social messages • Woody Guthrie – 30s & 40s • Pete Seeger – 50s • Bob Dylan – 60s

  22. Pete SeegerWaist Deep In The Big Muddy

  23. 1960s – Folk • Bob Dylan • Blowin’ in the Wind • “Freedom songs” in support of civil rights movement • Played at Dr. King’s March in 1963

  24. British Invasion • The Beatles • The Who • The Rolling Stones

  25. The Ed Sullivan Show The Beatles The Rolling Stones

  26. 1960s – Soul • Rock became “white” so black pop music picked a new name • Later soul became funk • Mix of Gospel and R&B • James Brown • Aretha Franklin

  27. Aretha FranklinRespect

  28. 1960s Blues Revisited • Driven by electric guitar • Urban sound • Improvisation • Eric Clapton • The Yardbirds • Cream • Derek and the Dominoes • The Doors

  29. CreamCrossroads

  30. 1960sJazz Revisited • Van Morrison • Steve Winwood • Chicago

  31. Van MorrisonMoondance

  32. 1960s San Francisco Scene • Berkley’s “free speech movement” • Hippies • Haight-Ashbury • Psychedelic drugs • The Grateful Dead • Jimi Hendrix

  33. Jimi HendrixHey Joe

  34. 1970s • The 1970s saw worsening economic conditions (especially in England). • Young people who earlier believed that rock and roll music could be used to fight racism and war became less confident and more introspective. • Rock became part of American culture instead of a force to change it.

  35. 1970sSoft Rock • James Taylor • Simon & Garfunkel • Elton John • Crosby Still & Nash (& Young)

  36. 1970s Soft Rock Elton John Your Song Simon & Garfunkel The Sound of Silence

  37. 1970s – Different Directions • The majority of Americans were listening to folk and soft rock • As in art, some musicians went in a new direction • Hard rock • Art/Progressive rock • Glam rock • Funk • Disco • Punk

  38. 1970s Hard RockLed Zeppelin • “Borrowed” lyrics and tunes from old blues songs • Very loud songs • Their fourth album, Led Zeppelin IV (1971), is the third highest selling album in US history

  39. Led ZeppelinImmigrant Song

  40. 1970sArt Rock (Progressive Rock) • Yes • Genesis • Rush • Pink Floyd • Darkside of the Moon – Third in world album sales • The Wall – Fourth in US album sales • Usually trained in classical or jazz music • Embraced electronic music • Very long songs

  41. Pink FloydMedley from Dark Side of the Moon

  42. 1970SGlam Rock • David Bowie • Alice Cooper • KISS

  43. David BowieZiggy Stardust

  44. 1970sFunk • Music from Motown was too optimistic for many young blacks • New vision of African-American urban life • Sly and the Family Stone • Isaac Hayes • James Brown • George Clinton (Funkadelic)

  45. James BrownI’m Black and I’m Proud

  46. 1970sDisco • Dance music that brought whites and blacks together • Peaked in 1977 with Saturday Night Fever • Soundtrack still in top 25 for US album sales

  47. 1970sDisco • Bee Gees • Village People • Donna Summers

  48. Bee GeesStayin’ Alive

  49. 1970sPunk • Emerged in the UK during disco’s peak • Simple lyrics and songs performed quickly and loudly • Messages spoke out against established authority • Sex Pistols • The Clash • Ramones

  50. Sex PistolsAnarchy in the UK

More Related