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Origins of Rock and Roll

Origins of Rock and Roll. Appalachian Suite prelude. Ford, Larry. 1971. Origin, evolution, and diffusion of rock and roll music. FOLK AND POPULAR CULTURE Main conclusions 1. Basically Rock emerged as a combination of: -Black: Rhythms & Blues and Gospels -White: Country and Western

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Origins of Rock and Roll

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  1. Origins of Rock and Roll Appalachian Suite prelude

  2. Ford, Larry. 1971. Origin, evolution, and diffusion of rock and roll music. FOLK AND POPULAR CULTURE • Main conclusions 1. Basically Rock emerged as a combination of: -Black: Rhythms & Blues and Gospels -White: Country and Western a. Ethinic groups included: • African Americans spread throughout the South • Scots-Irish in Appalachia • Note “cowboy” music although related to yodeling was not limited by ethnicity but Germanic groups first brought it

  3. FOLK AND POPULAR CULTURE • Main conclusions (cont.) 2. Rock music represented “a revolt by the provinces against the old cultural capital, NYC,” because NYC wasn't filling local needs

  4. B. Concepts • Ford deals with a series of concepts or tools very similar in definition to ones we have talked about and will see in exploring language, religion, agriculture, industry… -Cultural hearth area -Process of diffusion (spread) -Patterns of: -acceptance -rejection

  5. B. Concepts 2. Hearth area (review Rubenstien chapter 1), the question that Ford wishes pursue here is: Why did a particular trait start at a given point and not some other -- what was present there that enabled a critical mass

  6. B. Concepts 3. Spread & Diffusion (again review Rubenstien chap 1), realize that Ford's use of these concepts varies slightly from Rubenstien's but that they are basically the same • Personal Contact (contagious) • Relocation of individuals (relocation) • Objectification for easy transmittal (move from folk to popular – “industrial” input)

  7. 4. Acceptance & Rejection • Satisfaction -- if an origin area is already satisfied then it may not desire to change the status quo: • for example, the Buddha was an Indian Hindu but Buddhism no longer exists in large numbers in India. What about Jesus??? Did all Jews become Christian? • Barriers -- local conditions can prevent acceptance or don't provide necessary conditions to cause components to come together -South, racial segregation prevented groups from interacting -South, also had lower urbanization rates, leads to more conservative outlook and greater social control

  8. 5. Final note -- study concentrates on verbal (vocal) aspect of Rock's evolution

  9. C. White Country & Western Music -- History & Development Isolation of Appalachia • What is the major ethnic group of the Appalachian region? -- Where did they come from? • What is their musical heritage? • Historically, what instrument did they use? How did this change over time? • Does Isolation play a role in this musical type? Explain. Song Sweet William and Lady Margaret Morris Family Old Time Music Festival

  10. 2. Exposure to change -- early 20th century What caused this exposure? Why/how is it continued? Folk

  11. Center/Hearth 3. Need for a center as demand increases (Nashville, TN) How does the hearth area develop? What created the critical mass? What kinds of diffusion were important and how did they interact? Be sure to locate the primary hearth area on a map. Did this folk custom evolve into a pop custom at this time? Explain.

  12. Folk to Pop 4. Market area -- How extensive is the market area in the 1920s and 30s? Functional Region? • Grand ole Oprey on TV for the hicks • Grand ol oprey • Move to mainstream popular Culture

  13. 5. Western music What can be concluded about the ethnic background of this group? Think about yodeling. • Yodeling • Explanation of Yodeling • Jamie Foxx Yodeling

  14. 6. North – Rejection of Country & Western • What did the North think? Why?

  15. D. Black Music -- Gospel & Blues Gospel Blues

  16. D. Black Music -- Gospel & Blues • 1. Gospel -- mainly from southern Baptist and Methodist churches a. Why were African-Americans Christianized during the slave period? What kind of religions were they permitted to join? If this is stated as the interaction of a dominate culture with a non-dominate one which one dominated and what is the process being identified here?

  17. 1. Gospel b. Gospel music arises, and due to the Civil War split of the Baptist and also Methodist churches, plus the establishment of all black congregations in the South, this evolves under social isolation. America’s First Gospel Group: The Fisk Jubilee Singers A group of former slaves started a singing group to keep their school from shutting down - and more than a century later, America's first all-black “hit” singing group is still going strong. http://gimundo.com/news/article/americas-first-gospel-group-the-fisk-jubilee-singers/ Mahalia Jackson--How I got over LIVE Circa 1870s

  18. 2. Blues -- mainly from "field holler" and chant work songs a. What is the historical origin of this music? What was its original purpose? Musical techniques maintained until the present include: statement by individual followed by response from chorus or call and response; falsetto breaks and vocal twists and snaps; and the inclusion of the blue note (flatted third and seventh note to mimic African scale more closely)

  19. Work Song – sanitized • Prison Work Song the real thing • Field & Work Song • Song from a Cotton Field - Bessie Brown Mississippi Delta Mississippi Delta another version

  20. Blues b. What is the "blue note"? Flatted third and seventh notes. What was its purpose? c. Why is the Mississippi delta so important in the development of Blues? Where is the Mississippi delta (locate it on a map)? d. Who was W.C. Handy and why was he important? First African-American to create sheet music using blue note style.

  21. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgogFa_46D8&feature=related

  22. Blues e. How does Memphis fit into this entire development? Beale Street becomes Blue's hearth area for first the sheet music, then later record industry. These records by blacks were referred to as "Race" records and by other terms…

  23. Blues f. Why was the spread of blues so slow in the south? Is there a term that Rubenstien might have used to describe this situation? g. What was White reaction to blues?

  24. Mixing the two – Gospel + Blues • Ray Charles – Georgia On My Mind • Ray Charles – I Can’t Stop Loving You • Ray Charles – I’m Busted

  25. E. New York City 1. Rubenstein details musical development in NYC, where and what occurs here? 2. What is the nation's general reaction to pre-1950 NYC tin pan alley music? Indifferent acceptance.

  26. F. The Midwest Industrial Heartland  1. What brings Country & Western and Blues into the Midwest? 2. What differences occur in the Midwest that hadn't occurred in the South?

  27. G. Birth of Rock and Roll  1. Who was Alan Freed and why is he important? Why was the term "Rock and Roll" coined?  2. How does race and mass communication fit into the development of Rock?  3. Finally, early on why didn't Rock take hold in the South? Why didn't it originally develop in the South?

  28. Rock 4. What was the reaction of the older generation of the middle class to Rock? Does this sound familiar? What will happen when you turn middle aged? Alan Freed’s Rock’n Roll Party

  29. Covers Detroit Hounddog Comeback 2008 take

  30. Additional Notes Where do Folk and Popular Cultures Originate and Diffuse from Be sure you have looked over the examples on Tin Pan Alley, The Amish, and Sports (including piece on Lacrosse) Why is Folk Culture Clustered  Be sure to read the section on US folk house forms

  31. Additional Notes Why is popular culture widely distributed Why does globalization of popular culture cause problems? Read this chapter very carefully. Popular culture is many times synonymous with American culture (but less so in East Asia today). Are we doing a good thing or not in spreading our popular culture?

  32. American Roots • Interested in this area – listen to American Roots a program on NPR

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