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Explore the evolution of popular music in the USA, from the mass distribution of sheet music to the rise of phonographs and gramophones. Discover the influence of minstrel music, the Lost Generation, the Jazz Age, and the swing era. Witness the transformation of music as a form of rebellion and the emergence of symphonic jazz. Learn how black musicians shaped the music scene during the swing era.
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Popular Music • Music with a broad appeal • Music recorded for commercial consumption • Often oriented towards a youth market • Often intended to encourage dancing
Early Pop Music • Mass distribution needed to be considered pop music • 1st way music distributed to a wide audience? • Sheet music- many Americans sang and played music in own homes • Most sheet music sold in 19th century- opera, classical music, marches, minstrel music Now playing: Esprit du Corps John Phillip Sousa
Minstrel Music • White singers in blackface exaggerating the styles of African-American song and movement • Had existed in US almost since Europeans encountered Africans • Made most popular form of mass entertainment in 19th century by Thomas Rice, who saw a crippled black stable hand named Jim Crow doing a song and dance called Jumping Jim Crow. • Rice bought the man's clothes and learned the song and dance and made it a stage routine
Changing technology- The phonograph • Thomas Edison the father of recording industry • Invented the phonograph (musical cylinder) in 1877 • Music recorded on wax and later plastic cylinders • Dominant form of mass production from 1880s-1910 • Brought professional musicians into homes for first time
Changing technology- The gramophone (record player) • 1887- Emile Berliner invents the gramophone • Played a flat record- cheaper to mass produce, easier to store • Gramophone was in millions of homes by the early 20th century Now playing: Red Red Robin Al Jolson
Pop Music in early 1900s tended to be: • Mostly European in style (USA still looked to Europe for approval) • Enjoyed by old and young alike (phonograph / gramophone sat in centre of home controlled by head of household) Now playing: California Here I Come Al Jolson
The Lost Generation • Young men disillusioned by the horrors of WW1 began to reject the values of the elder generation • Young women fought stereotypical gender roles and adopted the “flapper” lifestyle • Known as the “Lost Generation”, youth in the 1920s began to rebel against the values of the Victorian era
The Generation Gap • A disconnect between members of one generation and members of the next based on the later generation developing habits, attitudes, and preferences inconsistent with the experience of the former • Before the 1920s, culturally there was not a significant generation gap • During the Roaring 1920s, the musical tastes of the young and old began to diverge- generation gap in music has been significant since then
The Jazz Age • Nickname for the 1920s • Jazz music was developed by African Americans in the Jim Crow south (New Orleans was the centre of the jazz music scene) • Came North as Black musicians tried to escape Southern oppression, particularly during the Great Migration- Chicago & New York became centres for Jazz music Now playing: St. Louis Blues Louis Armstrong
Jazz- Music of Rebellion Young, white, Americans embraced jazz music as form of rebellion because: • Roots in Black culture • Loud, fast, wild, improvised sound much different than traditional pop music • Dance that accompanied it seen as too sexual • Played at illegal speakeasies during prohibition Now playing: Hotter than ‘Ell Fletcher Henderson
Slumming • Name given to the practice of affluent, whites going to black neighbourhoods, like Harlem, to go to jazz clubs • Went to find authentic “jungle music” and for the thrill of doing something disreputable Now playing: Jumpin’ Jive Cab Calloway
Tin Pan Alley & the White Washing of Jazz • Tin Pan Alley- the New York City-centered music industry that dominated the popular music of the United States in the late 19th century and early 20th century • Saw the popularity of jazz music and wanted to make it more acceptable to wider society to increase sales
Symphonic Jazz • Effort to get rid of elements of jazz that offended older generation • Music was more arranged & orderly, played in concert halls instead of speakeasies, played by classically trained white musicians. Now playing: Valencia Paul Whiteman Orchestra
Stock Market Crash = Jazz Crash • During the early 1930s, popularity of jazz waned due to unpopularity of symphononic jazz; some blamed jazz age for Depression • “Crooners” singing sad songs most popular music in these years • Record sales, attendance at clubs falls dramatically during the early years of Depression Now playing: Pennies from Heaven Mel Torme
Swing Music • During mid-1930s, new form of jazz, “Swing”, became popular. • Mixed improvisation, up-tempo beat, danceability of hot jazz; and big bands and organization (led by a band leader) of symphonic jazz • Swing became mainstream pop music- most popular genre of its time Now playing: Sing Sing Sing Benny Goodman
Black Musicians During Swing Era • Many Black musicians enjoyed considerable popularity during Swing Era ( e.g. Duke Ellington, Count Basie) • However, the white musicians were the most marketable and highest paid swing artists (Benny Goodman, Glen Miller, Artie Shaw) • Faced racism or were not allowed to perform at Southern venues Now playing: Jumpin at the Woodside Count Basie
Bop or Bebop Jazz • Genre created in 1940s • Some believe it was created for musical reasons- gave musicians more freedom to improvise, be creative than swing • Others believe black musicians created to protest that they were not being compensated as well as white swing artists Now playing: Groovin’ High Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gilespie
Avant-Garde Jazz • Eventually, jazz became even less of a dance or pop music, more of a musicians music • Avant-garde jazz did not fit style or structure of more popular forms of jazz • End of jazz as a popular form of music (1950s)- replaced by R&B and Rock Now playing: A Love Supreme John Coltrane
Overall Impact of Jazz • Initiated the Generation Gap in Pop Culture • First music of American origin to become popular world wide- US becomes leader in world pop culture • Cultural product with African-American origins and played widely by Black musicians became popular in white society- breaking down of racial barriers Now playing: Take the A Train Duke Ellington