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delta blues artist Robert Johnson and piedmont blues artist Blind Willie McTell .

The music of the United States reflects the country’s multi-ethnical population through a diverse array of styles. Among the country's most internationally-renowned genres are hip hop, blues, country, jazz, barbershop, pop, techno and rock and roll.

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delta blues artist Robert Johnson and piedmont blues artist Blind Willie McTell .

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  1. The music of the United States reflects the country’s multi-ethnical population through a diverse array of styles. Among the country's most internationally-renowned genres are hip hop, blues, country, jazz, barbershop, pop, techno and rock and roll.

  2. After Japan, the United States has the world's second largest music market with a total retail value of 3,635.2 million dollars in 2010 and its music is heard around the world. Since the beginning of the 20th century, some forms of American popular music have gained a near global audience.

  3. Native Americans were the earliest inhabitants of the land that is today known as the United States and played its first music. The Native Americans played the first folk music in what is now the United States, using a wide variety of styles and techniques.

  4. Some commonalities are near universal among American traditional music, especially the lack of harmony and polyphony, and the use of vocals and descending melodic figures. Traditional instrumentations uses the flute and many kinds of percussion instruments, like drums, rattles and shakers.

  5. Since European and African contact was established, Native American folk music has grown in new directions, into fusions with disparate styles like European folk dances and Tejano music. Modern Native American music may be best known for powwow gatherings, pan-tribal gatherings at which traditionally styled dances and music are performed.

  6. Blues is a combination of African work songs, field hollers and shouts. It developed in the rural South in the first decade of the 20th century.

  7. The most important characteristics of the blues is its use of the blue scale, as well as the typically lamenting lyrics.

  8. Blues became a part of American popular music in the 1920s, when classic female blues singers like Bessie Smith grew popular. • delta blues artist Robert Johnson and piedmont blues artist Blind Willie McTell. • A bluesy style of gospel also became popular in the 1950s, led by singer Mahalia Jackson.

  9. Classical Music

  10. The European classical music tradition was brought to the United States with some of the first colonists. The central norms of this tradition developed between 1550 and 1825.

  11. By the beginning of the 20th century, many American composers were incorporating disparate elements into their work, ranging from jazz and blues to Native American music.

  12. Many of the 20th-century composers, such as John Cage, John Corigliano and Steve Reich, used modernist and minimalist techniques. Recent composers and performers are strongly influenced by the minimalist works of Philip Glass, a Baltimore native based out of New York, Meredith Monk and others.

  13. The United States has produced many popular musicians and composers in the modern world. Beginning with the birth of recorded music, American performers have continued to lead the field of popular music.

  14. Most histories of popular music start with American ragtime or Tin Pan Alley; • Other authors typically look at popular music, tracing American popular music to spirituals, minstrel shows and vaudeville, or the patriotic songs of the Civil War. others, however, trace popular music back to the European Renaissance and through broadsheets, ballads and other popular traditions.

  15. The patriotic songs of the American Revolution constituted the first kind of mainstream popular music. These included "The Liberty Tree", by Thomas Paine. • Patriotic songs were mostly based on: • English melodies, with new lyrics; • others, however, used tunes from Ireland, Scotland etc; • did not use a familiar melody. • The song “Hail Columbia" was a major work that remained an unofficial national anthem until the adoption of “The Star-Spangled Banner". How did it all started?

  16. Following the Civil War, minstrel shows became the first distinctively American form of music expression. The minstrel show was a form of American entertainment consisting of comic skits, variety acts, dancing, and music, usually performed by white people in blackface.

  17. The minstrel show was invented by Dan Emmett and the Virginia Minstrels. • Minstrel shows produced the first well-remembered popular songwriters in American music history: Thomas D. Rice, Dan Emmett, and, most famously, Stephen Foster.

  18. In the early 20th century, American musical theatre was a major source for popular songs. The center of development for this style was in New York City, where the Broadway theatresappeared. Theatrical composers and lyricists like the brothers George and Ira Gershwin created a uniquely American theatrical style that used American vernacular speech and music. Musicals featured popular songs and fast-paced plots that often revolved around love and romance.

  19. Jazz is a kind of music characterized by swung and blue notes, call and response vocals, poly-rhythms and improvisation. Jazz has roots in West African cultural and musical expression.

  20. Though jazz had long since achieved some limited popularity, it was Louis Armstrongwho became one of the first popular stars and a major force in the development of jazz, along with his friend pianist Earl Hines. Armstrong, Hines and their colleagues were improvisers, capable of creating numerous variations on a single melody. Armstrong also popularized scat singing, an improvisational vocal technique in which nonsensical syllables are sung. Armstrong and Hines were influential in the rise of a kind of pop big band jazz called swing.

  21. The later 20th century American jazz scene produced some popular crossover stars, such as Miles Davis. • In the middle of the 20th century, jazz evolved into a variety of subgenres, beginning with bebop. • Bebop was developed in the early and mid-1940s, later evolving into styles like hard bop and free jazz. • Innovators of the style included Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.

  22. Country music is a fusion of African American blues and spirituals with Appalachian folk music, adapted for pop audiences and popularized beginning in the 1920s. • Anglo-Celtic tunes, dance music, and balladry were the earliest predecessors of modern country, then known as hillbilly music. • The origins of country are in rural Southern folk music, which was primarily Irish and British, with African and continental European musics.

  23. The earliest country instrumentation revolved around the European-derived fiddle and the African-derived banjo, with the guitar later added.String instruments like the ukulele and steel guitar became commonplace due to the popularity of Hawaiian musical groups in the early 20th century.

  24. Ralph Peer • Chet Atkins • Hank Williams • Johnny Cash

  25. R&B, an abbreviation for rhythm and blues, is a style that arose in the 1930s and 1940s. • Bandleaders like Louis Jordan innovated the sound of early R&B. (w. Harris, J. L. Hooker)

  26. Tina Turner Michael Jackson Prince Whitney Houston

  27. Rock and roll developed out of country, blues, and R&B. Though squarely in the blues tradition, rock took elements from Afro-Caribbean and Latin musical techniques. • Rock and roll first entered popular music through a style called rockabilly. Black-performed rock and roll had previously had limited mainstream success, but it was the white performer Elvis Presley who first appealed to mainstream audiences with a black style of music.

  28. In the 1960s and early 1970s, rock music diversified. What was formerly a discrete genre known as rock and roll evolved into a catchall category called simply rock music, which came to include diverse styles like heavy metal and punk rock. Punk was a form of rebellious rock, that was loud, aggressive and often very simple. American bands in the field included, most famously, The Ramones and Talking Heads.

  29. Hardcore, punk, and garage rock were the roots of alternative rock. • Nirvana • Pearl Jam • Green Day • The Offspring • Rancid • Bad Religion • NOFX

  30. Heavy metal is characterized by aggressive, driving rhythms, amplified and distorted guitars, grandiose lyrics and virtuosic instrumentation. • Blue Öyster Cult • KISS • Aerosmith. The United States was especially known for one of these subgenres, thrash metal, which was innovated by bands like: • Anthrax • Metallica • Megadeth • Slayer.

  31. So, American music is a “fusion vat” while it unites different styles and techniques, bears new directions and develops into an extremely diverse and colourful phenomena. It can always provide something for a person with the most fastidious and unpredictable taste.

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