History of Rock Exam #1
Bessie Smith
"Empress of the Blues" from Chattanooga, TN 1 of greatest female signers of her era, large influence on jazz
Jerry Lee Lewis
"Great Balls of Fire" married his 13 yro cousin
Carter Family
"Hillbilly" music 1st family of country music 1st recorded at "Bristol Sessions"
Gid Tanner and the Skillet Lickers
"Hillbilly" music old time string band 1920s/1930s
Jimmie Rodgers
"Hillbilly" music sometimes called "father of country music" from Mississippi, recored in Bristol, TN
Louis Jordan
"King of the Juke Box"
Big Joe Turner
"My Gal's a Jockey" American blues shouter from Kansas City Rock n Roll not possible w/out him inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987
Payola Scandal
"Pay to Play artists' producers would pay for their popularity
Janis Martin
"The Female Elvis" at RCA with Elvis
Big Mama Thornton
"You Ain't Nothin But a Hound Dog" huge R&B performer #1 on R&B charts
Stephen Foster
"father of popular music" 1st great composer of American music from North, wrote songs from African Americans perspective wrote "Oh Susanna"
Irving Berlin
1 of main Tin Pan Alley writers wrote "God Bless America" & "White Christmas"
Little Richard
1st big record for J&M electric blues sound 1st male performer to wear makeup
Bessie Jones and the Sea Island Singers
1st group of African American singers to travel and sing gospel
Chords
3 or more notes played a the same time
AABA
A-verse, A-verse, B-bridge, A-verse, repeat ("Great Balls of Fire")
The Surf Sound
Beach Boys - influenced by Chuck Berry, Phil Spector's Wall of Sound Brian Wilson - producer, chief songwriter
Spencer Davis Group
British band that performed beat, psychedelic rock, blue-eyed soul
Chuck Berry
Chicago R&B and Rock n Roll "Maybellene" tailored towards teenagers recorded R&B at Chess Records
Hank Williams Sr.
Country and Western singer songwriter from Alabama "pure country" style died young
Reasons for the "Death of Rock n Roll"
Elvis joins the army Little Richard joins ministry Chuck Berry arrested Buddy Holly, Big Bopper, & Ritchie Valens died in a plane crash Rise of Teen Idols
Herman's Hermits
English pop band formed in 1963
King of the Delta Blues
LP that got Robert Johnson recognized as "a master of the blues"
Sun Records
Memphis, TN small, independent record company 1st hit - Rocket 88 primarily black artists before Elvis & Johnny Cash
Pop Rockabilly
Roy Orbison "Only the Lonely" Everly Brothers "All I Have to Do is Dream"
Folk Pop
The Kingston Trio "Tom Dooley"
Elvis Presley
Tupelo, MS played "hillbilly music" originally started out at Sun Records went from Sun to RCA for $35,000 really became a star at RCA played w/ Scotty & Bill Chet Atkins - went w/ Elvis to RCA white boy w/ black sound
Eric Clapton
Yardbirds - Jeff Beck, Jimmy Paige Cream - band he formed in 1966, influential blues-based band, found home in psychedelic rock scheme album - Blind Faith
Blue Notes and Blue Scales
a note sung/played at a slightly lower pitch than normal for expressive purposes "bending the notes"
Call and Response
a succession of 2 distinct phrases usually played by 2 or 3 different groups 2nd group responds to the 1st
The British Invasion
acts from the UK that became popular in the US, started w/ the Beatles
John Mayer
began as singer/songwriter in Atlanta heavily influenced by Buddy Guy & Stevie Ray Vaughn inspired by blues
Martin, Bogan and Armstrong (The Tennessee Chocolate Drops)
blues group started in Knoxville, TN in 1920s recorded in hotel at the end of Market Square performed at hoedowns & square dances moved to Chicago & realized people wanted to hear blues
Brill Building Pop
building in NY with many offices where teams wrote songs primarily focused on young black women new Tin Pan Alley Pop lots of girl groups
Swing
came from Jazz era gave the beat & boogie boogie feel to Rock influential on Tin Pan Alley pop & Rock
Fat's Domino
cross over artist biggest artist before Elvis warm friendly image
British Blues Revival
developed from American blues The Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, Led Zeppelin
Contrasting Verse-Chorus
different music for verse & chorus
Rattle and Buzz
dirtying up the sound (distortion)
Cover Phenomenon
doing songs originally done by black artists
Tin Pan Alley Pop
dominated until 19th century Alley in NY where pop publishing houses were gots its name b/c locals thought their piano playing sound like tin pans "White Music" - most popular song genre where people began writing down music & selling it
Drums/Percussion
establishes foundational "beat" rhythm
Rolling Stones
fascination w/ Muddy Waters named after Muddy Waters song
Equalization
fine tuning lows, mids, & highs of a track or individual instrument
Louis Armstrong
foundational influence in jazz shifted focus to solo performance bent lyrics & melody for expressive purposes skilled at scat singing
Outkast
from Atlanta, influenced early songs Andre 3000 & Big Boi influenced by George Clinton & Prince credited for being "pioneers of southern based hip-hop" draw heavily from R&B and funk incorporated more styles as they went on
Lucinda Williams
from Louisiana 1st album - Blues album in 1979 "Roots Oriented" won 1st grammy in 1994 (total of 3) never quite fit into any genre & won all 3 Grammys in diff. categories Americana category
Jump Blues / Rhythm & Blues
gritty Chicago blues, swing beat, boogie boogie, electric guitar catch all category for blacks hated by white families
Rhythm Guitar/Keyboard
harmony
Ballads
historically used for storytelling in Africa some violent, some sweet/romantic from European roots usually 16 or 32 bars long & AABA form
Tempo
how fast or slow the music is pulsating
Dynamics
how loud or soft the music is at a particular moment
Meter
how we organize the beats, where emphasis & accents are
J&M Recording Studios
in New Orleans on Rampart Street (in corner of Matassa's family shop) opened by Cosimo Matassa recorded Fat's Domino, Little Richard, Ray Charles
Buddy Holly
influenced by Elvis inspired the Beatles "That'll Be the Day"
African Musical Traits
influenced music b/c of the slave trade 3 Influential Ports - New Orleans, Richmond VA, & Charleston SC
Simple Verse
instrumental verse, vocal verse, instrumental verse no contrasting chorus
Syncopation
involves a variety of rhythms which are unpacked & make a piece/song off-beat putting accent anywhere except downbeat
The Who
known as High Numbers mostly played R&B covers manager decided to market them modernly - set stage for heavy metal
Marquee Club
located on Oxford Street in London known for jazz & skiffle The Rolling Stones 1st performance
Shift Dynamics
loud to soft or vice versa
Reverb
makes a voice/instrument sound like its in a large room or concert hall
Improvisation
making it up as you go
Brian Epstein
manager of the Beatles
Johnny Cash
married into the Carter family to create "1st family of country music" success w/ Sun Records & Rockabilly style
Rockabilly
mix of rock & country
Harmony
more than 1 pitch/note playing at the same time
Alexis Korner
musician & radio broadcaster "founding father of the British blues"
Urban Blues
musicians moved to North (Chicago) added drums & electric guitar to music
Robert Johnson
not famous during lifetime made 20ish songs that weren't released from a big record label died at 27 (part of "27 club") played slide guitar
Beatles
originally were The Quarrymen John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Ringo Starr Albums - A Hard Day's Night, Rubber Soul
Mixing
overall balancing of the different elements of a song (volumes, panning, effects)
Stereo Placement
panning different tracks to the left or right speaker
Black String Bands
played bluegrass, country, and blues
Muddy Waters
played southern rural style blues in North, added electric guitars/sound --> developed Chicago Blues became "King of Chicago Blues" influenced the Rolling Stones "I Can't Be Satisfied" & "Hooch Coochie Man"
The Kinks
pre-punk band, grew out of blues revival Ray and Dave Davies "You Really Got Me"
Tone Color
quality of the sound (Timbre)
Carl Perkins
recorded at Sun Records "Blue Suede Shoes"
Echo
repeats the note & bounces around in the mix
Alan Freed
responsible for naming Rock n Roll white DJ
Simple Verse-Chorus
same music for verse & chorus
Bing Crosby
sang "White Christmas" 1st crooner in pop music era had more #1 hits than any other 20th century performer, nominated for 3 Oscars 1st American singer to actively invent a persona
Chord Progression
series of chords that make up a song; works together with melody
Melody
series of notes & pitches (rate of vibration)
Phil Spector
somewhat of a genius in his time mentor of girl groups authoritative producer Wall of Sound - duplicate instruments playing same parts, very thick heavy sounding
Wilco
started by Jeff Tweedy, a former member of Uncle Tupelo influenced by the Beatles & Indie-Rock referred to as American Radiohead by some Yankee Hotel - big album record company didn't like it so eventually gave them the rights
DooWop
started on the streets crucial in crossing black artists over to the pop charts The Crows - 1st black band to cross over Orioles - another crossover group
WC Handy
started writing down blues - big for sheet music industry
Skiffle
style that blends folk music w/ up tempo rhythmic feel & American textual themes Lonnie Donegan
Compression
takes audio signal & brings up lower parts & lowers the loud parts to an even level REMOVES dynamics
George Martin
the drummer changed his name to Ringo Starr
Rhythm
time element of the music
12-Bar Blues
uses the I, IV, & V chords; divided into 3 separate four bar segments
Dick Dale
w/ the Del-Tones King of the Surf Guitar
Bill Haley
white cover artist Bill Haley & the Comets covered "Shake Rattle & Roll" by Joe Turner covered "Rock Around the Clock"
Pat Boone
white cover artist descendant of Daniel Boone had 32 top 40 hits covered "Tutti Frutti" by Little Richard
Minstrel Shows
white musicians appropriating black musical styles used banjos/violins incorporated "black face" led to music being bought as sheet music
Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller
white songwriters who lived across from the Brill Building
Rebellion
white teenagers listening to R&B turning point when they started listening to what was considered black music new audience for recorded music
Eddie Cochran
wrote his own songs "Summertime Blues"
Jerry Goffin and Carole King
wrote pop hits together in early 1960s in Brill Building