Popular MusicPopular Music
The music business is a cruel and shallow trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men lie like dogs. There is also a negative side
- Hunter S. Thompson
The Early 20th century Edison invents the Phonograph in 1878 the primary means of disseminating popular
music until the 1920s remained printed sheet music.
The music-publishing business was centralized in New York City, particularly in an area of lower Manhattan called Tin Pan Alley.
With the rise in live performance space like Vaudeville theatres, Nickelodeons and Minstrel shows came a rise in sheet music.
Scott Joplin and Ragtime Music
one of the most important developers of ragtime music
His most famous pieces were “Maple Leaf Rag” and “The Entertainer”.
Ragtime can easily be considered the first form of American Popular music.
Tin Pan’s Golden Age The Golden Age of Tin
Pan Alley occurred during the 1920s and 1930s.
Writers like George and Ira Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II
And Tin Pan moved from “dives” to broadway!
Technological changes rapid spread of commercial radio (1922).
The development of more affordable and better-quality gramophone discs made recordings more popular than sheet music in sales.
The introduction of amplification and electric recording led to the development of crooning, the intimate vocal style perfected by singers such as Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra.
By the mid-1920s, almost 100 million records were produced each year in the United States.
The African American influence on mainstream popular music became stronger during the Jazz Age, which preceded the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Big Band swing dominated pop music!
Popular figures included, Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw and Benny Goodman
Post WWII
Important shifts in popular music tied to social and technological changes.
The massive migration of Southern musicians to urban areas and the introduction of the electric guitar were particularly influential.
These changes set the stage for the hard-edged Chicago blues of Muddy Waters or the honky-tonk, or “hard-country,” style of Hank Williams.
Both of these would, in the mid-1950s, give rise to...
Rock-and-Roll
Blend of “jump band” rhythm and blues.
DJ/Concert Promoter Alan Freed coined the term to describe music recorded by small independent labels.
rock and roll was an unexpected success among a newly affluent teenage audience.
Bill Haley’s “Rock Around the Clock” (1955)
Quickly followed by:– Jerry Lee Lewis– Elvis Presley– Buddy Holly– Fats Domino – Little Richard
With the popularity of Rock n’ Roll, Jazz music was also still popular.
However, in an attempt to distance themselves from the standardized sounds of the 1950’s several jazz musicians began to break the mold.
Miles Davis, John Coltrane & Thelonius Monk were at the vangaurd of the free jazz or modal jazz movement.
Davis would come up with a skeletal basis for songs and invite the best musicians to join him to improvise.
Influencial: Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks
The 1960’s
The early 1960s also saw the development of distinctive regional styles in the United States.
Southern California = Beach Greenwich= Folk Detroit = Motown Suburban America = Garage Rock
The British Invasion Brits raised on the
influences of blues and rhythm and blues invigorated mainstream popular music, in part by reemphasizing long-standing aspects of American music.
1964 with The Beatles others included: The
Who, The Animals, The Rolling Stones, The Kinks & Manfred Mann.
The late 1960s was a period of corporate expansion and diversification in the American record industry. A new youth-oriented popular market was defined by a broad category of music.
San Francisco psychedelia Guitar heroes such as Jimi Hendrix and Eric
Clapton Southern rock (Allman Brothers & Lynard Skynard) Hard rock (Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath & Deep
Purple) Jazz rock (Frank Zappa and The Mothers of
Invention) Folk rock (The Byrds)
Soul Music covered a wide range of styles
gospel-based (Aretha Franklin)
funk (James Brown) soulful political crooning
of Marvin Gaye Raw Southern Soul of
Otis Redding
the music industry consolidated its power and once again sought to mass-produce music styles that had originally been highly individualistic.
Corporate rock! Glamorous superstars playing to massive crowds in
sports arenas defined a new mainstream. Although a number of distinctive styles—disco, glam
rock, punk rock, new wave, reggae, and funk—were pioneered by independent labels and marginalized musicians, the music of the 1970s is generally viewed as less individualized.
Glam Rock
Began in London, England
David Bowie T-Rex Roxy Music Slade Influenced Americans
like Lou Reed, Iggy Pop and KISS
Funk With the assination of
JFK, Malcolm X, Bobby Kennedy, and Martin Luther King…Black Music became militant… deep and aggressive bass lines and lyrics.
James Brown Parliament / Funkadelic even Motown got
aggressive
Disco
Aggressive funk titles like “Black and Proud” were too much for the dance floor.
Producers and session players created dance friendly numbers and business - both record company execs and clubs jumped on board!
Hard Rock
Rock bands like Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple had taken rock to the stadium level.
Others followed: The Eagles RUSH Emerson, Lake and
Palmer KISS
Punk (NYC)
Annoyed by the $$$ behind popular music a revolt started in NYC in the mid 1970’s
The New York Dolls The Ramones The Talking Heads Patti Smith Richard Hell Television
Punk (London)
Within no time the British are bringing over NYC punk bands to play in London and a new musical revolution is underway.
The Sex Pistols The Clash Buzzcocks Exploited
New Wave
Several bands started to change punk music, but kept the ethics.
This new style forged the way for New Wave in the 1980’s
The Jam Elvis Costello Madness The Undertones
A new urban sound Young African Americans
in NYC combine toasting (speaking over music) with the creative recycling of prerecorded material, later known as sampling.
Gil-Scott Heron (Beat Poets)
Afrika Bambaataa Kool Herc
The 1980’s
A number of factors contributed to an economic revival in the music industry during the mid-1980s.
The Music Video MTV The Compact Disc The Walkman
Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”
As the biggest selling album up until that time it established a pattern by which record companies relied upon a few big hits to generate profits
Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the USA”
Madonna’s “Like a Virgin”
Prince’s “1999”
Rap Continues to rise Grandmaster Flash and
the Furious Five The Sugarhill Gang Both crack the billboard
top 40! But it would take Public
Enemy to use Rap as an important medium in explaining describe in stark terms the way of life in America’s minority-dominated inner cities
Rapping sometimes conveys a stronger message than singing.
Public Enemy release “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back” in 1988
Rap is now a political medium
Others followed with angry attacks on Urban America
NWA, ICE - T & Tribe Called Quest
What happened to it?
Then a split occurred. On one side: Vanilla Ice
& MC Hammer - The commodification of Rap.
On the other side: The emergence of Gangsta Rap - or what has been called The Ghettoization of Black Culture.
The 1990’s By the end of the 20th century it had become
almost impossible to discern the difference between the center and the periphery of American popular music.
Peripheral music always ends up at the centre… Nirvana - First album and EP released on Sub Pop Within three short years they are the centre of a
modern rock phenomenon revolution after revolution taken and commodified
to sound like a cheap fabrication of itself.
The 1990’s – Major artists, but few things that are groundbreaking…
The best-selling recording artists of the 1990s included:
Mariah Carey Garth Brooks Boyz II Men Snoop Doggy Dogg Metallica Red Hot Chili Peppers Britney Spears NSYNC Alanis Morissette Oasis
Today’s music The corporate
commodification of music to a “product” continues.
The Medium is truly the message!
Celebrity
The re-emergence of the independent
Perhaps in reaction to the over commercialization of modern-pop music the “industry” and fans have begun to focus on the anti-thesis of this…the independent musician.
Radiohead
Radiohead’s OK Computer experimented with song structures and incorporated some ambient, avant garde and electronic influences.
Without any “hits” the band went on to be one of the biggest in the world
Then, they left EMI and released their 2007 album “In Rainbows” directly through their website.
The Arcade Fire Debut album
“Funeral” sold 650 000 copies
Opened for David Bowie and U2
2011 Grammy for Album of the Year The Suburbs.
The Biggest band in the world?
Democratization of music The internet means that even unknown
artists can market themselves and gain notoriety.
OK Go
Selling out? It used to be that musicians could rely
on record sales and live music attendance.
Now, in the era of downloading and expanding promotion prices artists need to find other ways to make money.
Allowing the use of their songs in commercials, films and TV shows prove financially rewarding for most bands.
Feist - 1234
Little known Toronto artist becomes “overnight sensation” after Apple pick up this song to market the iPod
Janelle Monae - Tightrope Still (officially
independent) her latest album The ArchAndroid (Suites II and III) gained popularity through the marketing of her songs to products like Chevy.
Auto tuning Used to correct pitch in vocal and instrumental performances. Thus, you no longer have to be able to sing to be a star.
It is used to disguise off-key inaccuracies and mistakes, and has allowed singers to perform perfectly tuned vocal tracks without needing to sing in tune
Mash ups and copyright laws
A mashup is a song or composition created by blending two or more pre-recorded songs.
Legal? The idea here is to juxtapose portions of
other works in order to draw new meaning not contained in the originals.
Rip: A Remix Manifesto
Important technical questions Digital technologies has raised legal and
technological questions which will no doubt shape the course of American popular music for years to come
What kind of rights does a consumer purchase when they buy a copy of a recording?
Is streaming the answer? How will the transformation of music into pure
information affect musicians and how they are compensated?
What will the music industry of tomorrow look like?
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