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Group questions

Group questions. What is the difference between rock ‘n’ roll and rock? How has the role of recordings and performance changed with rock in comparison to other styles? Make a list of rock music subject matter. Can you name any examples of altruism?

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Group questions

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  1. Group questions • What is the difference between rock ‘n’ roll and rock? • How has the role of recordings and performance changed with rock in comparison to other styles? • Make a list of rock music subject matter. Can you name any examples of altruism? • Describe the basic makeup of the rock band. Instruments/voices…. • Describe the vocal styles of rock singers.

  2. What is the difference between rock ‘n’ roll and rock? • rock ‘n’ roll • essentially white music coming out of black rhythm-and-blues • essentially music to dance to • early-mid 1950s to late 1960s • rock • umbrella term covering many types of music • encompasses a broad spectrum of performing and arranging styles • outgrowth and expression of urban life and values [as country is of rural life and values]

  3. How has the role of recordings and performance changed with rock in comparison to other styles? • Recording has taken precedence over the performance of the work. • Performances are now used to promote the recording. • The recording itself becomes the end product, the work of art.

  4. Rock Subject Matter • Love, Romantic, Real-Life, and Altruistic • What are some examples of altruism in rock that have occurred since the 1980s? • Band Aid (1984) to raise money for the starving in Ethiopia • We Are the World album (1985) for the starving in Africa • “The Concert for New York City” (October 20, 2001) for the victims of the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks • Others?

  5. Other subject matter… Sex • censored and disguised in early rock ‘n’ roll • Overtly sexual lyrics were reintroduced by young British groups (e.g. Rolling Stones) in the 1960s, groups heavily influenced by American blues music and lyrics. Dissent • expressions of revolt not uncommon • identity as a vehicle of protest • Vietnam War songs of the 1960s and early 1970s • conditions of ghetto life

  6. The Basic Makeup of the Rock Band • What three components make up rock’s signature sound? • human voice (amplified with microphone) • guitar(s) (nearly always electric); electric bass guitar • drum set • Optional: keyboard, saxophone, other

  7. Vocal Styles • Rock singing is highly individual, but the heritage of the blues can be heard in the following vocal styles. • the shout • the cry • the groan • the use of falsetto • the mumbled slur

  8. Rock’s Ties to Rhythm and Blues • “Good Rockin’ Tonight” performed by Wynonie “Blues” Harris (vocal) and his group. • an example of rhythm-and-blues that would have been played on black radio stations in large cities • recorded in 1947

  9. What rhythm and blues elements can you identify in “Good Rockin’ Tonight”? • boogie-woogie bass • honking blues saxophone • shouting style of singing • backbeat (marked here with the clapping hands) • What is a backbeat? • heavy emphasis on beats two and four of every measure

  10. Comparison • Compare “Good Rockin’ Tonight” (rhythm and blues) and “Rock Around the Clock” (rock and roll) • In both: rhythm and blues elements, twelve-bar blues form, boogie-woogie bass, backbeat, and saxophone • Who first recorded “Rock Around the Clock”? • Bill Haley and His Comets in 1954

  11. What makes one song rhythm and blues and another rock ‘n’ roll? • audience • R&B: marketed to a black audience • R&R: marketed to a white audience

  12. evolution from rhythm-and-blues to rock • Pre-1946 • Rock and roll is a common slang term in blues lyrics to refer to sexual intercourse. • 1946 • Billboard used the term to describe a record by Joe Liggins and His Honeydrippers, a Los Angeles rhythm-and-blues band. • 1951 • Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed began programming black rhythm-and-blues among white adolescents. • His early radio program was called “Moondog and the Rock and Roll Party.” • 1954 • Freed moved to New York. He begins referring to the music itself as rock ‘n’ roll. • By 1954 white groups were covering popular black rhythm-and-blues recordings. • White group Bill Haley and His Comets first record “Rock Around the Clock” in April. • Elvis Presley records “That’s Alright Mama,” covering black musician Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup’s song. Elvis’s version combined country with rhythm-and-blues contributing to the development of the rockabilly sound. • 1955 • Hollywood film Blackboard Jungle opened with “Rock Around the Clock” helping Haley to sell 17 million copies of the single. The song became a symbol of teenage rebellion. • 1956 • Elvis Presley covers “Hound Dog,” a Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton song. • Texan, Roy Orbison has an early hit with “Ooby Dooby.” • 1957 • Texan, Buddy Holly and the Crickets have their first of a string of hits with “That’ll Be the Day.” • 1964 • February 9, Beatles appear on the Ed Sullivan Show.

  13. Reaching White Audiences Which two important mediums brought the music of largely segregated black Americans to white Americans? • radio • television Who was Allan Freed? • white disc jockey on Cleveland radio station WJW • credited as the first person to use the term “rock and roll” for music that was essentially rhythm and blues • brought the music of black Americans into the homes of white audiences What was the name of Freed’s radio show? • Moondog Rock ‘n’ Roll Party By 1956 there were 400 “black appeal radio stations.” Two of the most famous were: • WDIA (Memphis) • WLAC (Nashville)

  14. The Influence of Country Music Early rock ‘n’ roll was virtually synonymous with rhythm and blues. What influences added to rock ‘n’ roll around the mid-1950s contributed to its emerging distinctiveness? • White country music What country music influences can be heard in Elvis Presley’s early recordings? • All five of his first releases on Sun Records (1954-1955) all combined one rhythm and blues song with one country song. • In the country songs, Elvis added rhythm and blues elements • In the rhythm and blues songs he added country and pop elements. • simple, unobtrusive strumming • absence of a heavy backbeat and rhythmic complexity

  15. “That’s All Right” - a country-inflected rhythm and blues number. • What are the rhythm and blues elements? • the emotion-laden bluesy inflections in the voice • the occasional flourish on the electric guitar • the hint of a boogie-woogie bass in the background

  16. Trends from the 1960s to the Present • Rock becomes an umbrella term for a broad variety of amplified musics marketed for young white audiences. What are some examples? • Folk rock, bubblegum rock, psychedelic rock, punk rock The Early 1960s • Emergence of “teen idols” exemplifying a groomed and packaged, wholesome, clean-cut look promoted or marketed as the new face of rock

  17. What was the “British Invasion”? • American blues and rhythm-and-blues were cultivated by British youth and essentially reintroduced to America. • Beatles • February 1964: appearance on Ed Sullivan Television Show • Influences: • Chuck Berry • Carl Perkins • Buddy Holly • Rolling Stones • The survivors. • Influences: • Bluesmen Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf

  18. The Beach Boys • Who formed the Beach Boys? • Brian Wilson (b. 1942) • What evidence suggests that the Beach Boys were one of the most experimental groups of the 1960s? • Pet Sounds (1966) • may be rock’s first concept album • an album conceived as an interrelated whole • “Good Vibrations” (1966) • has been called “one of rock music’s greatest masterpieces” contrasting soundscapes (NOT twelve-bar blues form) • instrumentation atypical of pop or rock: • organ, flutes, and theremin

  19. What is a theremin? • electronic instrument invented by the Russian Leon Theremin (1896-1993) • a box with projecting antennas that are “played” by moving the hands closer or farther away, but never touching them The Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” contrasting soundscapes polished vocal harmonies theremin

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