1 / 11

Chapter 6

Chapter 6. “In the Mood” : The Swing Era, 1935-1945. Chapter 6 (outline). Swing Music and American Culture Benny Goodman: “The King of Swing” Duke Ellington in the Swing Era Kansas City Swing: Count Basie Superstar of Swing: Glenn Miller

gerd
Download Presentation

Chapter 6

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 6 “In the Mood” :The Swing Era, 1935-1945

  2. Chapter 6 (outline) Swing Music and American Culture Benny Goodman: “The King of Swing” Duke Ellington in the Swing Era Kansas City Swing: Count Basie Superstar of Swing: Glenn Miller Country Music in the Swing Era: Roy Acuff, Singing Cowboys, and Western Swing Latin Music in the Swing Era ASCAP, the AFM, and the Decline of the Big Bands

  3. “…like the left hand of God…” • Riffing (short, repeated patterns) • Clarence “Pine Top” Smith (1904-1929)“Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” (1928) [1st published use of term]Ex. pinetop's boogie woogie 1928 - YouTube • Albert Ammons (1907-1949), Chicago“Boogie Woogie Stomp”Ex. Boogie Woogie Stomp - Albert Ammons - YouTube • Meade “Lux” Lewis (1905-1964), Chicago“Honky Tonk Train Blues”Exs. HONKY TONK TRAIN BLUES - Meade Lux Lewis – YouTube- Keith Emerson & Oscar Peterson - Honky Tonky Train Blues - YouTube • Pete Johnson (1904-1967), Kansas City“Roll ‘em Pete” (w/ Big Joe Turner) (1938)Ex. Big Joe Turner - Pete Johnson 1938 ~ Roll 'Em Pete - YouTube

  4. “Territory Bands” • Kansas City and the Southwest • 12-bar Blues forms, 4 strong beats, faster tempo • Walter Page and Blue Devils (Oklahoma City-Wichita)“Blue Devil Blues” (1929)Ex. Walter Page's Blue Devils - Blue Devil Blues (1929) - YouTube • Bennie Moten (Kansas City)“Moten Swing” (1933)Ex. Bennie Moten's Kansas City Orchestra - Moten's Swing (Moten Swing) Victor 23384 1933 - YouTube • Andy Kirk and his Twelve Clouds of Joy(Dallas, then Kansas City)“Take It and Git” (First # 1 on Harlem Hit Parade, 1942)Ex. Andy Kirk And His Twelve Clouds Of Joy-Take It And Git (Decca 4366) - YouTube

  5. William “Count” Basie (1904-84) • Local NJ piano, organ player • Harlem “stride” piano • Touring (stuck in KC) • Bennie Moten’s Band (1929-35) • Forms own band (1935-36) • Heard by John Hammond • Brought to NYC • Battles Chick Webb’s band to “tie” • House Band at Famous Door • The leading “swing band” after 1938 ExamplesShoe Shine Boy (w/ Lester Young) JONES-SMITH INC. (COUNT BASIE) SHOE SHINE BOY 78RPM - YouTubeOne O’Clock JumpOne O'Clock Jump - Count Basie – YouTube (Textbook LG, p. 172-3)

  6. Glenn Miller(1904-1944?) • Most successful band (commercial, 1939-44) • Disciplined arrangements • Lost in WW II • Exs.- Glenn Miller - In The Mood [HQ] – YouTube (textbook, p. 173-4)- Glenn Miller - Chattanooga Choo Choo - Sun Valley Serenade (1941) HQ – YouTube- Moonlight Serenade By The Glenn Miller Orchestra - YouTube

  7. “Duke” Ellington (1899-1974) • Cotton Club (1926-31) • Touring from 1931 on- never disbands • Eclipsed in popularity by others • Ellington as Composer- long-term stability in band- interest in small groups- Billy Strayhorn (co-arranger) • “Beyond category” • Exs.- “Caravan” Duke Ellington - Caravan – YouTube (Textbook LG, p. 169-70)-“Take the ‘A’ Train” Duke Ellington Orchestra "Take The A Train" 1943 - YouTube “Fate is being kind to me.Fate doesn't want me to be famous too young.”- declining Pulitzer Prize in 1965 (awarded posthumously in 1999)

  8. Country Music • Expanding markets in the Swing Era (1935-45) • Southerners moving north (urban industries) • Growth of non-Southern audiences - Clear channel radio (50,000 watt signals) - BMI (see next slide) - World War II (“Victory Discs”) • General decline of Big Bands (war shortages)

  9. Music Licensing • American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP, founded 1914) - Controlled 90% of Tin Pan Alley songs - demanding higher fees from radio • Broadcast Music Inc (BMI) - founded by radio broadcasters - open door policy for all songwriters • “Petrillo Ban” – no new recordings (1942-3) (American Federation of Musicians) • New Agreements (& unemployed musicians)

  10. Roy Acuff (1903-1992) • Singer, Fiddler, Promoter • 1st appearances – mid-1930s • National Figure by 1940s - Opry • “King of Country Music” • WW II Japanese : “…to hell with Roosevelt, Babe Ruth, Roy Acuff…” • Acuff-Rose Publishing- founded 1942 for own music - becomes THE leading music publisher for all performers • Exs.- Roy Acuff - Great Speckled bird – YouTube (textbook, pp. 179-80)- Roy Acuff - Wabash Cannonball - Grand Ole Opry Classics - YouTube

  11. Singing Cowboys • “Westerns” replace “hillbillies” • Gene Autry as first media “cowboy”(radio, movies, TV, recordings, etc.) • EXS.- Git Along Little Dogies (1937) GENE AUTRY – YouTube (opening & 10:30)- Mule Train - Gene Autry – YouTube (songs: 33:00, 38:00 & 1:10:00) • “American” values: freedom, integrity, wholesomeness, etc.Gene Autry's Cowboy Code • Popular songs (Exs.)- Gene Autry - Here Comes Santa Claus (1947) – YouTube(1947: # 5 Country, # 9 Pop)- Gene Autry - Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer (1953) – YouTube(# 1 – Christmas 1949) Gene Autry (1907-1988)“The Singing Cowboy”

More Related