Showing posts with label Wanda Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wanda Jackson. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

WOMEN OF ROCK: The 1950s


...with 2 World-Spanning Music Players!
(Part 1 of 7 decades)

Wanda Jackson

RockSex
now brings you the actual, all-inclusive history of Rock'n'Soul music, with Music Players.

Music Player Checklist

WOMEN OF ROCK:
1950s

#1 of 7


This 7-part series with Music Players will cover
every decade of the Women Of Rock,
from the 1950s to today!

Learn the real and inclusive history
you've never heard!

'60s---'70s---'80s---'90s---'00s---'10s


Shortcut links to Music Players:
Women Of Rock: Roots 1920s-'40s
Women Of Rock: 1950s







W O M E N
O F
R O C K:

Roots 1920s-'40s

Bessie Smith


Spotify playlist title=
Women Of Rock: Roots 1920s-'40s
This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.

This Music Player covers Blues, Country, Gospel, and Jazz sounds that led to Rock'n'Roll, from the 1920s through 1949, in chronological order.

(All Bold names are heard on the Player.)





Rock'n'Roll has many parents.>

Culture isn't constant or owned by a pure group. Culture is constantly renewing itself through everyone; it is simply human creativity moving fluidly beyond any delusions of division or difference.

Culture is an intersection of ideas. We refract everything we've taken in. From each other, with each other, for each other.

The many roots that entwine into the evolving trunk of Rock'n'Roll include string structures from Classical, rawboned guitar from Blues, the gallop of Country, jumping chorals from Gospel, heart tales from Folk, brash thrust from Mambo, horn blasts from Swing, greasefire from Bluegrass, the jaunty pep of Cajun, and the evening glow of Torch Song pop.

Mother Maybelle Carter; Memphis Minnie.

Women were innovators from the beginning of the recording industry.

Phonographs brought the world of music into the home in the 1920s and Blues music first lit imaginations and charts with the success of Bessie Smith. Everyone had always played instruments, and from the beginning there were female guitarists. Mother Maybelle Carter of The Carter Family innovated a new playing style that shifted guitars from a rhythm instrument to a lead in their Country sides, and Memphis Minnie recorded the original Blues version of "When The Levee Breaks". Sister Rosetta Tharpe combined Gospel zeal with Blues kick, justly earning historians' credit as the Godmother of Rock'n'Roll.

The International Sweethearts Of Rhythm.

The Boswell Sisters focused Jazz into tight chorals for the radio with tunes like "Rock And Roll" (1934), followed by The Andrews Sisters swaying the Swing into the War '40s. The cosmopolitan International Sweethearts Of Rhythm orchestra belted it 8-to-the-bar with the best. After the War, as orchestras pared to combos, Ella Rae Morse and Dinah Washington lit the sultry Torch in nightclubs and car radios.

Culture is a tryst and shout from everyone, for everyone. Let's rock!





W O M E N
O F
R O C K:

1950s


Sister Rosetta Tharpe.


Spotify playlist title=
Women Of Rock: 1950s
This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.

*(This Player is limited to the first 200 songs.
Hear the unlimited Playlist here.)


This Music Player covers the original women of Rock'n'Roll worldwide, from 1950 through 1959, in chronological order.

(All Bold names are heard on the Player.)

Blues! Country! Mambo!
Jump Jive! Country Boogie! Gospel!
Rockabilly! Doo Wop! World!




Women have been part of every cultural movement since the beginning. If any source tells you different, they are biased
or unaware. This comprehensive Music Player dissolves all of that completely, giving proper due.

Women were always a part of Blues, Country, Swing Jazz, Jump Jive, Gospel, and Mambo, and all of these sounds rolled right into Rock. When anyone says women were rare in Rockabilly, they're flat wrong: thousands of women took as many stabs at fame through indie-pressed '45s as men, as often as they could force their way in. But biased men at the time often blocked their entry, or marginalized their chances, and maintained the cartoon history of his-story-without-her, echoed ever since for generations with rote ignorance.

It's only recently that you hear about Rockabilly queens like Wanda Jackson, and perhaps Janis Martin and Sister Rosetta. But there were legions more, as varied and vital as their brothers.

Big Mama Thornton; Big Maybelle;
Annisteen Anderson.

Many women broadcast the Rock'n'Roll songbook first, like Big Mama Thornton's "Hound Dog" (1953), Big Maybelle's "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" (1955), and Annisteen Anderson "Fujiyama Mama" (1955). ("Hound Dog", the first hit standard penned by Lieber & Stoller, was also quickly interpreted by Esther Phillips and country filly Betsy Gay, well before Elvis.)

Gospel fretted over everyone's soul in these years, with admonishments from Marylin Scott and ambivalence from Lou And Ginnie. But the walls of Jericho couldn't hold back synthesis. Faye Adams' "Shake A Hand" strolls Gospel vocals over New Orleans barrelhouse piano before Fats Domino. And Sister Rosetta Tharpe's vibrant take on the spiritual "99 1/2 Won't Do" anticipates Wilson Pickett's secular rewrite by a decade.

Gleefully, many 1950s women embraced "sins" like sex as a virtue of life that should instead be enjoyed and expressed honestly. Listen to how LaVern Baker converts Gospel guilt into rapt pleasure with "Soul On Fire" ("and I really had my fun"). Others went full-tilt and forthwith, like Julia Lee's impatiant "Gotta Gimme Whatcha Got", Esther Phillips' pouting "I'm A Bad, Bad Girl", Dorothy Ellis' emphatic "Drill Daddy Drill", and Dinah Washington anxious for the "Big Long Slidin' Thing".

Rock'n'Roll had always been a euphemism for sex, with its namesake music naturally rolling every pelvis precisely like Elvis Presley. It takes two to tangle, and tying the naughty chords are Barbara Pittman's brazen "I Need A Man", Janis Martin's point-blank "Bang Bang", Bonnie Lou's brisk "Friction Heat", and Lorrie Collins' flustered gratitude in "Mercy". And John And Jackie's fervidly lascivious "Little Girl" will still make anyone blush.

West Philadelphia High School prom, 1950s.

Straight up, Rock'n'Roll and Rhythm & Blues were the same music at the start, given separate names just to segregate the audience. But looking past face value (ahem) and just listening, your heart and hips know it's the same party. Ruth Brown declared "This Little Girl's Gone Rockin'", Shirley And Lee are correct that "Everybody's Rockin'", and LaVern Baker belts true-blue Rock through and through in "Voodoo Voodoo".

This is our party and everyone is invited, through the front door.

Little Richard, Alis Lesley,
Eddie Cochran on tour (1957).

Rock'n'Roll is a pantheon with no leader where all rock and everyone rules.

Just as there is no central king there is no single queen. Before it were regal rebels like Charlene Arthur clanging the honky tonks while Big Maybelle jumped up the jooks. Joining Wanda and Janis were new heirs to the queendom like Jean Chapel, Ruth Brown, Alis Lesley, Etta James, Sparkle Moore, and Annisteen Anderson.

LaVern Baker; Barbara Pittman; Etta James.

Reality is hybrid and creativity is fluid. Listen to how Mambo swayed rockers like Georgia Gibbs, Fay Simmons, and Tiny Topsy. And how The De Castro Sisters, Marga Benitez, and Gloria Rios ("El Relojito/ Rock Around The Clock"; Mexico, 1956) rocked the rhumba. Then tilt to the lilt between Celia Cruz's "Baila El Rock & Roll" (Cuba) and Eartha Kitt's "Honululu Rock And Roll".

Rock-Olga; Mina; Cherry Wainer.

Rock'n'Roll was almost instantly an international scene, unleashing rockin' women like Amy Anahid, Magali Noel, and Caterine Caps (France); Renee Franke, Hannelore Cremer, and Conny Froboess (Germany); Towa Carson and Rock-Olga (Sweden); The Butterflies and The Fouryos (Netherlands); Alma Cogan (Britain), Hermanas Serrano (Spain), Celly Campello (Brazil), Elena Madera (Cuba), Cherry Wainer (South Africa), and Mina (Italy).

Elizabeth Cotten; Laura Lee Perkins.

Rock impresarios tried to weed female musicians out and doll them up front, but The Chantels were a full band playing their own instruments. Guitarists held their own like Ella Baker, Elizabeth Cotten, Odetta, and the aptly-named Bonnie Guitar. Listen to the duelling Mickey And Sylvia take your head clean off with the brutal instrumental "Shake It Up", or Big Maybelle or Laura Lee Perkins pounding the ivories, or organist Cherry Wainer's "Cerveza". Carol Kaye began her recording career playing guitar on Ritchie Valens' "La Bamba" and Chris Montez's "Let's Dance" before becoming the stellar bassist for The Wrecking Crew session mob.

Retroactive terms like Doo Wop and Girl Group later falsely segregated our perceptions, but in the true reality, it was all '50s Vocal Pop with familial variety; besides the famed male ensembles, there were male-and-female combos (The Platters, The Fleetwoods, The Six Teens, The Skyliners, The Orlons, The Ad Libs, The Demensions, and the boldly-integrated The Crests), and all-female groups like The Chordettes ("Mister Sandman"), The Pre-Teens, The Teen Queens, The Cookies, and The Debs. It spanned the world in songs like Hermanas Navarro's early cover of "Sh Boom (Cancion Pop)" (Spain, 1953) and Los Cinco Latinos' "Mi Oracion (My Prayer)" (Argentina, 1956). And The Storey Sisters' hilarious "Bad Motorcyle" (1958) practically invents Girl Group biker songs years ahead.

The Collins Kids

Country brought in kick from country swing, hillbilly boogie, and bluegrass. The Davis Sisters' (featuring young Skeeter) lip at a ferocious clip in "Rock A Bye Boogie" (1953), belting out Rockabilly's template years before the Johnny Burnette Trio. The Miller Sisters' "Ten Cats Down" hits the high lonesome harmonies before The Everly Brothers. Rose Maddox always swiped the spotlight from the clowny Maddox Brothers. The plucky guitars on Boots Collins' "Mean" (1956) sound for all the world like Merseybeat come early. The Collins Kids, Lorrie and Larry, were dervishes bashing guitars. And Dolly Parton began her career with "Puppy Love".

Electronic music was already beginning as Bebe and Louis Barron (France) created the entire soundtrack for FORBIDDEN PLANET (1956) out of tape loops and tone modulations.

Jazz vocalese and torch kept pace with the Rockin' upstarts, with Annie Ross' freewheelin' "Twisted" (later covered by Joni Mitchell), Keely Smith's flip sass on Louis Prima's "The Lip", and Peggy Lee's cool jazz tranformation of Little Willie John's fiery "Fever".

And, as the Music Player closes, you can already hear the first waves of Surf> in 1959 songs like The Delicates' "Black and White Thunderbird", The Darby Sisters' "Go Back, Go Back to Your Pontiac", June August's "What Does A Lifeguard Do In The Fall?", and Jo-Ann Campbell's "Beachcomber".


Jean Chapel, with DJ Alan Freed;
Janis Martin.





Rock'n'Roll started with hundreds of female acts, and this became rapidly exponential with each decade.

As this series of Music Players will prove, they dominoed every decade through the '60s, the '70s, the '80s, the '90s, the '00s, and the '10s.

We've had enough of his story, so let's widen the world with the history of her story.


Next:
Women Of Rock: The 1960s




© Tym Stevens




See Also:

Part 1 (of 2):
YOU DON'T OWN ME: The Uprising of the 1960s GIRL GROUPS
Part 2 (of 2):
SHE'S A REBEL: Decades Of Songs Influenced By The GIRL GROUPS


Women Of Rock: The 1960s (2 Music Players)

Coming:
Women Of Rock: The 1970s (2 Music Players)
Women Of Rock: The 1980s (3 Music Players)
Women Of Rock: The 1990s (2 Music Players)
Women Of Rock: The 2000s (2 Music Players)
Women Of Rock: The 2010s (2 Music Players)



The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Music Player Checklist



Monday, March 14, 2016

1950s Rock, E: The 2000s disciples‏


How the original 1950s Rock styles
remained strong through each decade!

(#5 of 6 parts)


...with enormous,
world-spanning
Music Player!


Devil Doll



RockSex
brings you the actual, all-inclusive
history of Rock'n'Soul music,
with essay overviews and Music Players.

History Checklist


Today the story of how '50s Rock'n'Roll thrived more than ever in 2000s music and film!!
Hear a massive Music Player, with worldwide artists maintaining '50s sounds from 2000 through 2009!


'50s Rock disciples: '00-09
by Tym Stevens


This is a Spotify player. Join up for free here.

*(This Player is limited to the first 200 songs.
Hear the unlimited Playlist here.)

All songs in order from 2000 through 2009.



Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!
1950s Rock, A: The '60s Disciples
1950s Rock, B: The '70s Disciples
1950s Rock, C: The '80s disciples
1950s Rock, D: The '90s disciples

1950s Rock, E: The 2010s disciples






C h a p t e r
l i n k s :


Rockabilly solidified into a thriving indie movement in the dawn of the 21st Century.

𝟭2000s: The Train Kept A'Rollin'
𝟭a • • Distribution
𝟭b • • Country Boogie
𝟭c • • Bop Cats
𝟭d • • Swing
𝟭e • • Burnette
𝟭f • • Psychobilly
𝟭g • • Trash Blues
𝟭h • • Mood
𝟭i • • SHE
𝟭j • • WE
𝟭k • • Perennials
𝟭l • • Roots
𝟭m • • Trads
𝟭n • • World
𝟭o • • Screen



𝟭
2000s: The Train Kept A'Rollin'


The original Rock styles of the '50s -Rockabilly, electric Blues, Honky Tonk, Mambo, Cajun, and Doo Wop- became classic forms throughlining the decades that followed; the '60s reflections, the '70s revivals, the '80s redux, and the '90s radicalization. In the 2000's, the forms united a worldwide underground community based on roots reclamation.

While the mainstream became ever more glossy, crass, aimless, and culturally clueless, the underground was revitalizing the future by building on the past.


𝟭a
Distribution




In the 1950s, music distribution was freeform: there were only a few majors labels and countless small ones, hustling 45's on local radio, in jukeboxes, and out of car trunks. This came full circle by the 2000s: after the corporate record industry monopoly was eroded by the internet through direct downloads and pirating, music acts resorted to Do It Yourself tactics like indie labels, website downloads, social media, festival tours, and selling CDs and merch at concerts.

The original Rock'n'Roll sounds had become underground again, not played in the mainstream, but thriving better below that shallow radar in a vital international scene. By this period, music revivals like Rockabilly, Surf, Garage, and Psychedelic could no longer be dismissed as retro anamolies by media flitwits, instead gaining acceptance as timeless and viable traditional forms. '50s styles were part of the musical palette one could choose, abuse, suffuse, and pay dues.

Kindling this eternal flame were a host of indie labels like Norton, Nervous, and Bear Family (Germany). Trashabilly acts spun donuts through Yep Roc, Voodoo Rhythm, El Toro, Bloodshot, Swami, Tail (Sweden), and Crazy Love (Denmark). Roots acts, particularly in the wake of the huge success of the "O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?" Americana soundtrack, hickory-smoked in hollars like Blind Pig, Rounder, Hightone, and Crosscut (UK).

Roots festivals, like the annual genre-bending Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco, became a detox to audiences tired of mainstream schlock-pop, and Rockabilly festival circuits continued to host bands globally.



𝟭b
Country Boogie


Big Sandy; Lil' Linn And The Lookout Boys


Country Swing, Boogie, and Honky Tonk were mentors of early Rock'n'Roll.

Continuing the line dance from pioneers like Bob Wills were new steppers like Big Sandy, Bop Shack Stompers, Slim Slip And The Sliders, Carl And The Rhythm All Stars (France), and Lil' Linn And The Lookout Boys (Sweden).



𝟭c
Bop Cats


Kitty, Daisy, And Lewis


Go, cat, go!

Rockin' the bop till they scorched their socks were Kim Lenz And Her Jaguars, Ronnie Nightingale And The Haydocks, Bill Fadden And The Silvertone Flyers, The Thunderbirds, Wild Wax Combo, The Head Cat (Lemmy, Slim Jim Phantom, and Danny B. Harvey), Dan Sultan, and Kitty, Daisy, And Lewis.

All around the the world, Rock'n'Roll was here to stay with Nine Below Zero (UK), The Slapbacks (Austria), and Stressor (Russia).



𝟭d
Swing


Blue Harlem


Making that jive jump and wail were Mitch Woods And His Rocket 88's, John "juke" Logan, Blue Harlem, and Billy Bros. Jumpin' Orchestra (Italy).



𝟭e
Burnette




Johnny Burnette And The Rock N Roll Trio were a firebomb in early Rock that still charred music in the present. Dorsey and Johnny Burnette's frenzied gallop, lashed by Paul Burlison's hard-clanging guitar, propelled such classics as "Train Kept A Rollin'", "Honey Hush", "Lonesome Train", and "Rock Billy Boogie".

Haunted George, Nicotyna


Their bracing rhythmic clang sound still rampages rampant in the new century in songs by Barbara Burnette (who adopted the name with the sound), Eddy And The Backfires, Haunted George, Rhythm Bound!, Carl And The Rhythm All Stars, Jack Rabbit Slim, and The Starkweather Boys. It rebounds in sounds equater-round with Mars Attacks (Austria/Swiss), Screaming Kids (France), Eva Eastwood (Sweden), Los Raw Meat (Spain), and Nicotyna (Mexico).

That train will keep a'rollin' even more in the next decade.



𝟭f
Psychobilly


Hyper and hoarse, jerk-eyed and jittery, here come the psychos with Speed Crazy, The Peacocks, Restless, Psycho Charger, Os Catalepticos (Brazil), Aikka Hakala (Finland), The Young Werewolves, Asmodeus (Netherlands), and Tokyo Cramps (naturally, a Japanese Cramps homage).

Thee Merry Widows; Gito Gito Hustler


The tributaries of women in Psychobilly through the '90s finally flooded free with Kathy X, Horrorpops, Arsen Roulette, Thee Merry Widows, Mad Marge And The Stonecutters, Bridget Handley, Creepshow, Eve Hell And The Razors (Canada), Rocket To Memphis (Australia), Kamikaze Queens (Germany), As Diabatz (Brazil), Gito Gito Hustler (Japan), and Hellsonics (Belgium).



𝟭g
Trash Blues


Mr. Airplane Man


Trashabilly and corroded blues rattled rusty shacks with lightning, as heard in varied acts like Black Eyed Snakes, Mr. Airplane Man, James "Blood" Ulmer, The Black Keys, Pearline, Heavy Trash (with Jon Spencer), Tom Waits, The Detroit Cobras, Black Diamond Heavies, T-Model Ford, The Juke Joint Pimps, Ty Segall, Chris Duarte, Blue Mountain, Grinderman (with Nick Cave), and The Stone Foxes.

The Black Keys; T-Model Ford


Noize nomads scraped nerves worldwide, like Lyle Sheraton, Reverend Beat-Man, Knucklebone Oscar, Battle Of Ninjamanz (Japan), Haunted George, and The Wildebeests.

Howling and hiccuping after midnight were The Hillbilly Moon Explosion, The Raveonettes, and The Phantom Chords (alias The Damned).



𝟭h
Mood


Rocket To Memphis


Somewhere wandering bleary and aimless under a "Harlem Nocturne" looking for Link Wray's "Rumble" were moodscape misfits like Speedball Baby, Devil Doll, Miss Derringer, Rocket To Memphis, and Jace Everett.


𝟭i
SHE


Tura Satana made her claim to infamy strutting as the lead menace Varla -all leather, bangs, judo, and sneer- in the Russ Meyer sexploitation classic, FASTER, PUSSYCAT! KILL! KILL! (1965). By the 2000s, the confluence of the pin-up and burlesque revivals along with Rockabilly and hot rod culture crystallized in the 'Varla' fashion, a tattooed devil doll of retro style and punk spirit. There was even a VARLA magazine which continues now as a webzine. In sum, Rockabilly women had assimilated all changes and become iconic.

Tura Satana in FASTER, PUSSYCAT! KILL! KILL!


Women have been a part of every permutation of Rock since the beginning, fighting a ridiculously long battle from marginalization to peer status. But the ranks of women in the retro scene had reached such critical mass exponentially by the new millennium that they were undeniable.

Boppin' the billies and fillies were Josie Kreuzer, Jean Vincent (hmmm), Little Rachel, Dawn Shipley And The Sharp Shooters, Miss Mary Ann And The Ragtime, The Honeybees, Lisa George, The Informants, and Candye Kane.

Josie Kreuzer; Little Rachel; Miss Mary Ann

Whirling the boys and girls 'round the world were Toini And The Tomcats (Dutch), Eva Eastwood (Finland), Sue Moreno (Dutch), Lil' Esther And Her Tinstars (Dutch), Maibell And The Misfires (Finland), Sweet Jeena And Her Sweethearts (Finland), and Cherry Tess And Her Rhythm Sparks (Sweden).

Riding the lone prairie were country rustlers like Cari Lee And The Saddle-Ites and Ruby Dee And The Snake Handlers.

Swaying some jazzy Swing into that thing were Roxanne Potvin (Canada) and Blue Harlem (UK).

Greasefiring the Garage were The Detroit Cobras, The Del-Gators, Tina And The Total Babes, The Malamondos, and Thee Tumbitas (Spain).

Bringing the Noize were abrasive firebrands like The Short Fuses, Devil Doll, Baby Horror (Spain), Danger*Cakes, and The Husbands.

Maibell And The Misfires, Thee Tumbinas, The Husbands



𝟭j
WE


Anyone who tries to discount brown faces from Rock'n'Roll is an assclown. Here from jump, here for the long!

Jet Harris, Little Richard, Gene Vincent, Sam Cooke


Creativity is all about inclusion over exclusion.

Traditions can become a stasis, but living culture is fluid. Where tradition draws a line, creative culture is instead borderless. Boundaries -like nations, classes, money, and separate races>- are delusions, generic and false impositions that define no one and separate everyone.

In truth, there is only commonality between individual personalities through emotion and experience. Live, feel, share. Every new idea is a relay baton that anyone can run with, arrive somewhere unexpected, and hand off. In fact, creativity is literally why we exist, since the abstract thinking used by the San tribe to explore out of Africa seeded the planet with our total family, the Human Race (singular).>>

The human soul and mind can't be curtailed anymore than currents or winds.


Eddie "The Chief" Clearwater, The Black Stripe,
King Salami


This is our party and everyone is invited. Rockin' it right were favored guests, heard on the music player, like Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater, James "Blood" Ulmer, T-Model Ford, Deborah Coleman, Chris Thomas King, Nathaniel Mayer, Lady Bianca, The Black Stripe (PJ Higgins, styling herself as the 'sister of The White Stripes, daughter of Elvis'), George Clinton, Lady Bianca, Dig Wayne And The Chisellers (Dig Wayne fronted Buzz And The Flyers and JoBoxers in the '80s), Noisettes, King Salami, and the unstoppable Barrence Whitfield.

And keeping it likewise tight were Pep Torres, Gatos Locos, Los Mentas, Star Mountain Dreamers, Truly Lover Trio, Raul Malo, Nu Niles (Spain), and Brioles (Spain).


𝟭k
Perennials


Original Rockers from the first wave like Link Wray, Ronnie Dawson, Wanda Jackson, Janis Martin, Speedo And The Cadillacs, Sleepy LaBeef, Billy Lee Riley, Dion, and Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins brought roots Rock'n'Roll into the 21st Century. Wanda Jackson was also honored with a tribute album featuring acolytes like Rosie Flores and Asylum Street Spankers.

Disciples like Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Electric Light Orchestra (with guests George Harrison and Ringo Starr), The Who, Moe Tucker, Tom Waits, Ry Cooder, and John Fogerty kept the roots party rolling.

Revivalists like Hank C. Burnette (Sweden), Joe Strummer, The Blasters, Brian Setzer, Lee Rocker, Los Lobos, The Pretenders, and James Intveld conducted new currents.

Wanda Jackson, Brian Setzer, Shemekia Copeland


But what's a retrobilly to do when every '50s classic has been covered so much? Well, do '50s-style covers of post-'50s classics by The Beatles, The Doors, The Monkees, Steppenwolf, CCR, Led Zeppelin, John Lennon, Sex Pistols, Ramones, Nick Lowe, Generation X, The Blasters, The Undertones, Devo, X, Golden Earring, and Stray Cats, of course. And so many covered The Clash that it filled a tribute album.

Or you could write new songs about Elvis Presley (like Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Joan Baez, The Who, Black Stripe, Patti Scialfa), Gene Vincent (Jean Vincent), Johnny Cash (Gary Allan), Carl Perkins (Drive-By Truckers), Chuck Berry (Mikabomb), Sister Rosetta Tharpe (Noisettes, Sam Phillips), and Bo Diddley (Seasick Steve).

Then again, you could be actual Rock royalty carrying on the lineage like Billy Burnette, Lisa Marie Presley, John Lee Hooker Jr., and Shemekia Copeland.



𝟭l
Roots


Sue Foley, Debbie Davies, Carolyn Wonderland


Rock'n'Roll distilled from a gumbo of roots musics, and those traditions still sustained.

Blues boiled with Deborah Coleman, Fernest Arceneaux, Marcia Ball, Sue Foley, Lucinda Williams, Debbie Davies, Carolyn Wonderland, and Janiva Magness.

Country kicked with Bastard Sons Of Johnny Cash (no relation), Gillian Welch, Junior Brown, The Bellefuries, Lynette Morgan And The Backwater Valley Boys, The Lucky Stars, Lonesome Spurs, k.d. lang, The Stumbleweeds, Caroline Casey And Her Stringslingers, and The Figs, and boogied with Rockin' Bonnie And The Rot Gut Shots (Italy).

And upgraded the hoedown with the Cajun of Pine Leaf Boys and the Tejano of Flaco Jimenez.



𝟭m
Trads


Keeping the spirit of the era alive as a pliable living tradition were James Hunter, Lester Peabody, T-Bone Burnette, Tokyo Tramps (Japan), and the evergreen Chris Isaak.



𝟭n
World


Rock'n'Roll is typecast as an invention of the United States. This is shortsighted, because it comes from roots musics imported in by all of its immigrants; musicoligists have tracked its origins back through Europe, the Middle East, South America, and Africa...plus. All nations helped birth Rock, and all of them echoed it back as soon as it took off in the '50s.

Gatos Locos


Rock'n'Roll is intrinsically rooted internationally, and it's natural, not a strange fluke, that it is reflected so strongly by acts like Gatos Locos (Spain), Baby Horror (Spain), Les Sexereenos (Canada), Os Catalepticos (Brazil), Aikka Hakala (Finland), and Sugar Lady (Taiwan). (As well as many other acts already listed.)



𝟭o
Screen


As decades passed, filmmakers often rolled through ruminations on their childhood. Where reflections of the '50s dominated films of the '70s, by now the screen were transmuting the '60s (THE INCREDIBLES, OCEANS 11, DREAMGIRLS, HAIRSPRAY, ACROSS THE UNIVERSE, TAKING WOODSTOCK, PIRATE RADIO); and the '70s (KILL BILL, ZODIAC, MILK, FROST/NIXON, BLACK DYNAMITE); and some of the '80s (GRINDHOUSE, WATCHMEN, George W. Bush).

The '50s figured as a backdrop, contrasting conformity with the unconventional, in films like A BEAUTIFUL MIND (2001) and BIG FISH (2003). THE INVASION (2007) attempted to satirize contemporary conformity in the Bush-era in the fourth and weakest screen-telling based on Jack Finney's book, "Invasion Of The Body Snatchers" (1955).

Gary Clark, Jr. in HONEYDRIPPER


But the 1950s maintained its strongest presence for our purposes in musical dramas. From the TV-movie LITTLE RICHARD (2000) and Ray Charles bio-pic RAY (2004), to the Bobby Darin bio-pic BEYOND THE SEA (2004) and the Johnny Cash bio-pic WALK THE LINE (2005), to NOWHERE BOY (2009), where the young John Lennon and Paul McCartney first meet. Two films in 2008 chronicled the Chess Records story; CADILLAC RECORDS, with Beyonce and Adrian Brody, and WHO DO YOU LOVE?, starring guitarist Robert Randolph (as Bo Diddley) and David Oyelowo (as Muddy Waters). Similarly, New Orleans guitar sensation Gary Clark Jr belted out the backwoods blues as star of John Sayles' fictional HONEYDRIPPER (2007).





If the massive success of CDs in the '90s had filled label coffers, archived the past fresh for new ears, and sparked genre music revivals, then the decline of CDs because of the internet in the 2000s could have been a black hole in the cultural tub.

Instead, the decentalization of the record monopolies freed artists, forcing them into using the new digital platforms to reach more listeners in new guerilla indie ways. There were now more vital acts in all the classic styles than ever, and a determination to keep the roots of Rock'n'Roll eternal into its second century.

Next:
1950s Rock F: The 2010s Disciples




© Tym Stevens




See Also:

The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Manifesto, A Handy Checklist

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!

1950s PUNK: Sex, Thugs, and Rock'n'Roll!

CHUCK BERRY: The Guitar God and His Disciples

BO DIDDLEY: The Rhythm King and His Disciples

BUDDY HOLLY: Rock's Everyman and His Disciples

LITTLE RICHARD: The Voice of Rock and His Disciples

JIMMY REED: The Groover of Rock, From Motown To Sesame Street



1950s Rock, A: The '60s Disciples

1950s Rock, B: The '70s Disciples

1950s Rock, C: The '80s disciples

1950s Rock, D: The '90s disciples


1950s Rock, F: The 2010s disciples




Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!


...with massive
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1950s ROCK'n'ROLL REVOLUTION
by Tym Stevens


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Let's start with the Big Bang itself, 1950s Rock'n'Roll.





The Revolution of 1950s Pop


Until 1955, radio belonged to the adults in America.

The Popular Music charts were mainly somnolent syrup lulling war-weary elders into a saccharine trance. Music was the loll of reassurance and restraint. But small record labels, jukeboxes, and night owl radio waves changed that. The youth heard crazy voices whispering from this alien ether and acted on them. Overnight the word 'Pop' became a whole new universe, a joyful free-for-all, where everything combined and recombined in endless new shapes. What had been became everything that would be, blendered in the restless energy of the young.

What were the seeds of this cultural revolution?

Sax and electric guitar were a new jolt to Jazz in the decade before, leaping in and carousing like a drunk crasher. Their raunchy edge whipped the crowds crazy into communal spasms like the modern age had never seen. Swing Jazz orchestras pumped the war years up with brassy horn sections and liquid crystalline guitar. But war shortages pared the big bands down to quartet combos, easier to fit in a car and feed. In the late 40's these trimmed-back troubadours pounded out Jump Jive and Boogie Woogie to kids from coast to coast. The primal pulse was that Boogie. It shook hips without shame from juke joints to hoedowns nationwide. To this raw rhythm was added the refined sound of electric guitar. Les Paul and his cohort Mary Ford reeled off lightning licks so complex, mercurial, and high-pitched they sounded like they were chiming in from another world. And every kid with a twanger for thirty years would take notice.

Gutbucket Blues framed the skeleton of Rock. That wrestle with the Devil, with conscience, with life, all with laughing abandon. And that hard clang, that terse swagger, that moody intonation. Blues was the edge, the truth. It infects blazers like Big Mama Thornton's "Hound Dog", LaVern Baker's "Jim Dandy", and Chuck Berry's "Reelin And Rockin" with its ambivilent zest.

Country hit a hard-twanging gallup in the early-'50s with Honky Tonk music. While many blues masters scowled terse chords, hillbilly sages barnstormed the hayrides with blue streak riffs honed out of Bluegrass. It was the heady mix of blues fuel with country wildfire that ignited Rockabilly. Country riffs are rife throughout songs like Chuck Berry's> "Too Much Monkey Business", Joe Clay's "Duck Tail", Carl Perkins' "Put Your Cat Clothes On", Ricky Nelson's "Believe What You Say", Little Jimmy Dickens' "I Got a Hole In My Pocket", and the hypersonic string wizardry of Joe Maphis and his 13-year-old accomplice, Larry Collins.



But Rock'n'Roll was no chess game, no black and white, not just Country and Blues.

It's a shock, I know, but listen up. Or rather, just listen to those records again, and look closer at the people making them. Like all actual culture, it was a jigsaw puzzle. Simultaneously it was splicing strings from Classical, slide from Hawaii, syncopation from Cuban Jazz, two-step from Tex-Mex, eerieness from Electronic music, and Folk strains from all immigrant traditions.

Culture isn't constant or owned by a pure group. Culture is constantly renewing itself through everyone.

It is an intersection of ideas. We refract everything we've taken in. From each other, with each other, for each other.

Country kids (such as my Dad) hid radios under their pillows to taste all of the flavors of the world beyond and then became radio beacons made flesh. Soundwaves bypass all boundaries, whether on maps, in cultures, or in one's head.

Kindergarten activists who knock Elvis for singing a Blues song miss the point; he also sang Bluegrass, Pop, and Gospel songs in the same breath, and channeled them without the barriers. He made further music out of the music that he lived and breathed. Using a separatist model of colonialism on him would be ludicrous and oversimplified. Similarly, but unnoted, Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley> made their breakthroughs based on Country songs simultaneously.

Elvis, like his generation, was the fruition of tearing down all separations. Rather than a King, he was part of a pantheon of young men and women rethinking the future. There was no ruler because there were no more rules. Everyone was king and queen, if only for a performance, a 45, a school dance, a love affair, a night ride, a new idea shared.

The 40's Jump Jive music and Jitterbug dances unleashed the shared Rock revolution.

The '50s was a smorgasbord, with sooo many flavors to choose from. Fats Domino tickling Crescent City piano rolls. The Big Bopper possessed by Jump Jive. The Five Satins converting Gospel chorals into soaring teen lust. Little Richard> roaring out barrelhouse Blues past the speed of tongue. The Coasters trajecting the Marx Brothers through Rhythm and Blues. The Drifters wafting over epic string sections. Ronnie Self sneering wanton through Honky Tonk. The mighty Howlin' Wolf gargling gravel and electric Blues. The Everly Brothers countrifying the celtic hymn tradition. Santo And Johnny and The Ventures sailing out into the first ripples of Surf to come, with Mediterranean, Hasidic, and other worldly melodies churning beneath.

And the personalities. The smooth spacefaring glee of Mary Ford. The smoldering satisfaction of Ruth Brown. The cocksure Bo Diddley. The ethereal Platters, wings to the archangel Tony Williams. Lascivious Presley. The ever charming Carl Perkins. That hellion Wanda Jackson, so fair and fierce. The riotous theatrics of The Coasters and Don And Dewey. The eerie dreamscape of The Flamingos. The intense urgency of the seeming everyman Buddy Holly>. The startling virtuosity of Jackie Wilson's performance of "Lonely Teardrops". And sweet Gene Vincent, blasting headlong and hardscrabble.

The Big Bang of Rock'n'Roll detonated ideas, debunked constrictions, fractured the status quo, burst past borders, blasted revelation, and birthed revolutions. Even as US politicians, bonfires, and disc jockeys moved to contain the shock, its waves already rebounded through the world.

Creativity is crossroads. Rock'n'Roll is a tryst of combined intimacies that deepen the soul and expand the mind. Boogie and Mambo (Cuarteto Don Ramon, Celia Cruz, Fay Simmons, Georgia Gibbs), Boogie and Country-Western (Merle Travis, Skeeter Davis, Big Joe Turner), Honky-Tonk and Boogie Blues (Forrest Sykes, Hank Williams, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, Bill Doggett), Rock and Gospel (Sister Rosetta Tharpe), along with Cha-Cha-Cha (Richard Berry's original "Louie Louie", Rene Touzet, Tiny Topsy) and Cajun (Hank Williams, Chiemi Eri, Dave Bartholomew) and Jazz (Peggy Lee, John Barry, King Curtis, Margie Anderson) everywhere. Human arts flow from heart to heart, and leave delusional limits in the dust.

Doo Wop came out of the Gospel quartet tradition, but went lateral lickety-split. Las Hermanas Navarro from Mexico were covering "Sh...Boom (Cancion Pop)" in 1954. There were many other all-female Doo Wop acts like The Debs, Gay Charmers, and Vikki Nelson. There were female-and-male acts like The Six Teens, The Platters, and Los Cincos Latinos (Argentina). The Crests ("16 Candles") had one female, one Italian-, one Puerto Rican-, and three African-American members.

The Crests

Segregation in the USA was a repressive martial law that went against the inclusive, diverse core of the immigrant nation, and it was already being overthrown in the music and on the dance floors. And around the world.

From 1956 onward, there was Rock music in Mexico (Los Rebeldes del Rock, Los Teen Tops), Canada (The Diamonds), Jamaica (Laurel Aitken), Cuba (Perez and Brana), Brazil (Celly Campello), Spain (Los Estudiantes), Africa (Jimmy Masuluke), England (Tommy Steele, John Barry), France (Johnny Hallyday, Catarine Caps), Germany (Little Gerhard), Sweden (Owe Thornqvist, Rock-Olga), Italy (Adriano Celentano), New Zealand (Max Merritt, Johnny Devlin), Australia (Johnny O'Keefe), South Korea (Shin Jung-hyeon), and Japan (Billy Morokawa, The Peanuts).

The Chantels

And, as in all things, women were straight there with it, just as strong for the long with every song. Big Mama Thornton, Ella Mae Morse, Ruth Brown, Wanda Jackson, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Janis Martin, LaVern Baker, Lorrie Collins, Etta James, and The Chantels, a singing band who played their own instruments. Emancipation exclamation.

These voices gave voice to all the un-adults, to their dreams, pains, schemes, and refrains. It lit the secret night like a clarion call only they could hear and act upon. It understood the addled essence of adolescence, the comedy of errors that was their lot. It promised them a world without constriction where anything could happen, if they took up the call...

In 1955, the future belonged to the young.


© Tym Stevens




See also:

The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Manifesto, A Handy Checklist

1950's PUNK: Sex, Thugs, and Rock'n'Roll!, with Music Player!

CHUCK BERRY: The Guitar God and His Disciples, with 2 Music Players!

BO DIDDLEY: The Rhythm King and His Disciples, with 2 Music Players!

BUDDY HOLLY: Rock's Everyman and His Disciples, with 2 Music Players!

LITTLE RICHARD: The Voice of Rock and His Disciples, with 2 Music Players!

JIMMY REED: The Groover of Rock, From Motown To Sesame Street, with 2 Music Players!

_________________________


1950s Rock, A: The '60s Disciples, with Music Player!

1950s Rock, B: The '70s Disciples, with Music Player!

1950s Rock, C: The '80s disciples‏, with Music Player!

1950s Rock, D: The '90s disciples‏, with Music Player!

1950s Rock, E: The 2000s disciples, with Music Player!

1950s Rock, F: The 2010s disciples, with Music Player!