HISTORICAL
DEVELOPMENT
1. Rock
and Roll
The
first type of rock music, rock and roll, originated in the United States in the 1950s, and
was largely derived from music of the American South. In the United States, the affluence
that followed the end of World War II in 1945 and the emergence of a youth culture—based
in part upon the rejection of older styles of popular culture—helped rock and roll to
displace the New York City-based Tin Pan Alley songwriting tradition that had dominated
the mainstream of American popular taste since the late 19th century (see Popular
Music: Early 20th Century). Rock and roll was a combination of the R&B style
known as jump blues, the gospel-influenced vocal-group style known as doo wop, the
piano-blues style known as boogie woogie (or barrelhouse), and the country-music style
known as honky tonk.
During
the 1950s the term rock and roll was actually a synonym for black R&B music.
Rock and roll was first released by small, independent record companies and promoted by
radio disc jockeys (DJs) like Alan Freed, who used the term rock 'n' roll to help
attract white audiences unfamiliar with black R&B. Indeed, the appeal of rock and roll
to white middle-class teenagers was immediate and caught the major record companies by
surprise. As these companies moved to capitalize on the popularity of the style, the
market was fueled by cover versions (performances of previously recorded songs) of R&B
songs that were edited for suggestive lyrics and expressions and performed in the singing
style known as crooning, by white vocalists such as Pat Boone. The most successful
rock-and-roll artists wrote and performed songs about love, sexuality, identity crises,
personal freedom, and other issues that were of particular interest to teenagers.
Popular
rock-and-roll artists and groups emerged from diverse backgrounds. The group Bill Haley
and the Comets, which had the first big rock-and-roll hit with the song “Rock Around the
Clock” (1955), was a country-music band from Pennsylvania that adopted aspects of the
R&B jump-blues style of saxophonist and singer Louis Jordan. The unique style of Chuck
Berry came from his experience playing a mixture of R&B and country music in the
Midwest. The rock-and-roll piano style of Fats Domino grew out of the distinctive sound of
New Orleans R&B, which also influenced singer and songwriter Little Richard.
Rockabilly, a blend of rock-and-roll and country-and-western music, was pioneered by
Memphis producer Sam Philips, who first recorded artists Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis,
and Carl Perkins on his Sun Records label. The earthy style of guitarist Bo Diddley
derived from the blues of the Mississippi Delta region. The standard four-piece
instrumentation of rock bands (drum set and lead, rhythm, and bass guitars) was developed
by Texas musician Buddy Holly, who produced his own studio recordings. From the urban
North came the vocal style of doo wop, which influenced such vocal groups as the Chords,
the Penguins, and the Platters.
The
golden age of rock and roll, which lasted only five years, from 1955 to 1959, is
exemplified by the recordings of Berry, Presley, Little Richard, and Holly. By the early
1960s, the popular music industry was assembling professional songwriters, hired studio
musicians, and teenage crooners to mass-produce songs that imitated late-1950s rock and
roll. In the early 1960s professional songwriters in Manhattan, New York, such as Carole
King and Neil Sedaka, produced numerous hit songs, many of which were recorded by female
ensembles known as girl groups, such as the Ronettes and the Shirelles. Also during this
period, the role of the record producer was expanded by Phil Spector, a producer who
created hits by using elaborate studio techniques in a dense orchestral approach known as
the wall of sound.
Beginning
about 1962, producer Berry Gordy expanded the crossover market (music by black
performers purchased by white youth) with a number of hits for his Motown record company,
based in Detroit, Michigan. Popular Motown groups included the Supremes (see Diana
Ross), the Temptations, and Smokey Robinson and the Miracles (see Smokey Robinson).
Other distinctive regional styles also developed during this period, such as the surf
sound of the southern California band the Beach Boys and the urban folk music of the
Greenwich Village movement—based in that neighborhood in New York City—which included
singer and lyricist Bob Dylan.