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Music: An Appreciation 10 th Edition by Roger Kamien Part X Rock 2011 © McGraw-Hill Higher Education.

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Presentation on theme: "Music: An Appreciation 10 th Edition by Roger Kamien Part X Rock 2011 © McGraw-Hill Higher Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 Music: An Appreciation 10 th Edition by Roger Kamien Part X Rock 2011 © McGraw-Hill Higher Education

2 Rock Developed in mid-1950s Common features: Also drew influences from country & western First called rock & roll, later shortened to rock Grew mainly from rhythm & blues Incorporated new technologies as they came available Vocal Hard driving beat Featured electric guitar Made use of heavily amplified sound

3 Early performers included: Ch 1 - Rock Styles 1960s: Chuck Berry Diana Ross & the Supremes, Stevie Wonder, … More English groups followed: The British Invasion Rolling Stones, The Who, … Rock also began to absorb influences from folk 1964: US tour by the Beatles, an English group Bill Haley and His Comets James Brown, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin Motown blended R&B w/ mainstream white music Rock by black performers called soul Little Richard The Platters Rock Around the Clock Elvis (King of Rock & Roll) Many genres: folk rock, jazz rock, acid rock, … Social issues: Environment (Blowin’ in the Wind), Vietnam Beatles most influential group in rock history 1 st rock musical: Hair1 st rock opera: Tommy

4 1970s: Development of Rock Continuation of many 60’s styles Country rock: blend of country music and rock Reggae from the West Indies Funk with electrification & jazz-like rhythms Punk (new wave)—a primitive form of rock & roll Classical rock—rock arrangements of earlier serious music Jazz rock reached wider group than ever before Chicago; Weather Report; Blood, Sweat, & Tears Many veterans continued, many new artists arrived: Revival of early rock & roll Rise of a dance style called disco Linda Ronstadt, Billy Joel, Donna Summer, … Other genres of rock arose:

5 1980s: Development of Rock British new wave bands became popular Increased use of electronic technology Heavy metal--sexually explicit lyrics & costumes Police; Culture Club, Eurhythmics Known as the second British invasion Synthesizers and computers (early sequencers) Metallica; Iron Maiden; Motley Crue; Guns ‘n’ Roses Rap—developed among young urban blacks Began as rhythmic talking accompanied by disk jockey Often depicts anger and frustration Part of hip-hop culture

6 The 80s and into the 90s: Development of Rock Grunge or alternative rock was embraced Grinding guitar sounds & angry lyrics Reaction to the polished sound of mainstream rock bands Direct stylistic influence from 1970’s punk rock Nirvana; Pearl Jam; Soundgarden; Alice in Chains Smashing Pumpkins; Nine Inch Nails; Belly; Hole Heavy metal & rap continue in popularity in 80s-90s Heavy metal continued to reach a mostly white audience Rap adopted devices from other types of music Rap began to attract broader audience African music began to influence mainstream music Paul Simon: Graceland (1986) used an African vocal group

7 Guitar-based, small core performance group Elements of Rock 2 guitars, bass guitar, drum set, keyboards Tone Color Frequent vocal effects (shout, scream, falsetto) Rhythm Almost always in 4/4 meter Simple subdivision of beats Usually a singer/instrumentalist Occasionally other instruments (horns, strings, etc.) Late 70’s & 80’s: more rhythmically complex 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &, 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &, … Result of polyrhythmic influences of African music

8 Two commonly utilized forms: Elements of Rock 12-bar blues form Form, Melody, and Harmony Short, repeated melodic patterns Usually 3 or 4 (or less) chords 32-bar A A B A form Usually built on modes, not major/minor Harmonically simple Often uses chord progressions that were rare in earlier popular music

9 Ch. 2 - Rock in American Society Rock and Recordings Promoted early on by Disc jockeys Rock and Television (MTV) Developed in 1980s Rock video adds a new dimension Rock and Dancing Twist, frug, monkey, shake, mashed potato Discotheques (disco) Break dancing

10 Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds (1967) from Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band by the Beatles Sgt. Pepper was rock setting of unified song cycle (13 songs). Wide range of instruments, influences, & styles. Listening Outline: p. 520 Lucy in the Sky, 3 rd song in cycle, has 3 sections: A & B are gentle in triple meter, while C strongly contrasts and is in quadruple meter. Ch. 3 - The Beatles


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