Showing posts with label Little Richard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Richard. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2015

1950s Rock, C: The '80s disciples‏


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

(#3 of 6 parts)


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




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 was revived in 1980s music and film!!
Hear an exhaustive music player, with worldwide artists maintaining the '50s styles from 1980 through 1989!

'50s Rock disciples: '80-89
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 1980 through 1989.



Learn the whole history, with Music Players!
Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!
1950s Rock, A: The '60s Disciples
1950s Rock, B: The '70s Disciples

1950s Rock, D: The '90s Disciples
1950s Rock, E: The 2000s disciples
1950s Rock, E: The 2010s disciples




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



𝟭1980s: NEW WAVES
𝟭a • • Punk
𝟭b • • Black is back
𝟭c • • She's Gotta Have It
𝟭d • • Teds
𝟭e • • Psychobilly
𝟭f • • Perennials
𝟭g • • Offspring
𝟭h • • Boogie
𝟭i • • Traditionalists
𝟭j • • Next Wave
𝟭k • • Roots
𝟭l • • Cowpunk
𝟭m • • Iconoclasts
𝟭n • • The Originals
𝟭o • • Screen





𝟭
1980s: NEW WAVES


The original Rock'n'Roll styles of the 1950s -Rockabilly, electric Blues, Honky Tonk, Mambo, Cajun, and Doo Wop- became perennials that never stopped. Even with all the radical mutations of musics that followed, hardcore tribes still kept the original root sounds alive in the '60s and the '70s.

In the '80s, this roots underground became more rampant, propelling a spectrum of artists, from the traditional to the radical.


𝟭a
Punk


The Ramones; Pearl Harbor; The Clash


1950s Rock'n'Roll continued to undercurrent Punk music in the spillover to the '80s. Its reckless rhythms and delinquent sneer (in leather jackets) rumbles all through The Ramones, Subway Sect, Lydia Lunch, Pearl Harbor And The Explosions, X, The Clash, The Fall, and Dead Kennedys.

Since Ska had originally morphed out of Jamaican love of R&B, naturally the Ska Revival bands like The (English) Beat, The Specials, and Madness took it back to the roots at times.

It spread laterally through acolytes like Social Distortion, Husker Du, Joan Jett, The Smiths, The Delmonas, and Jesus And Mary Chain. The style of '50s Rock and the energy of Punk would lead to Psychobilly.



𝟭b
"Black is back /
All in, we're gonna win"


Barrence Whitfield; Howard Huntsberry; The Gories


FM radio formatting (and, initially, MTV) continued to resegregate people out of the music they helped create, with the robot mantra 'Rock=white, Dance=black'.
(Short truth: everybody creates everything.)

Despite this closed-loop ignorance, defiant artists still echoed the sonic heritage they had every right to, with '50s styles glimmering in songs by Donna Summer, Joan Armatrading, The Spinners, Gary U.S. Bonds, and The Neville Brothers, as well as Howard Huntsberry's note-perfect portrayal of Jackie Wilson in the film LA BAMBA (1987).

The BusBoys


If 1970 had been all about cultural inclusion, a decade of enforced division by FM Radio formats had resifted everyone into separate niches. Thus The BusBoys arrived in 1980 into a music system and marketed audience more segregated than any time since 1954. They turned this challenge into a mission to subvert every stereotype from every angle, from their mock-servant persona to their gleeful tear through music styles. In "Johnny Soul'd Out" they channel Chuck Berry> to parody all imposed limitations.

Buzz And The Flyers (photo by Mick Rock);
Colbert Hamilton


At the same time, Dig Wayne and his Rockabilly band, Buzz And The Flyers, sparked New York but lit up the Ted crowds best in the UK. (Dig went on to front the hit new wave/soul band, JoBoxers.>) London's own Colbert Hamilton And The Hell-Razors trysted the cats and kitties with their first single in 1984. By then, Barrence Whitfield And The Savages were rippin' it up and havin' a ball tonight going full-throttle Little Richard on their first album.

Little Richard> himself would team up with Fishbone and Living Colour; and Mick Collins of The Gories transmitted John Lee Hooker.



𝟭c
She's Gotta Have It


Cyndi Lauper; The Pretenders; The Ace Cats


Contrary to sexist narratives, women were a huge force in the original 1950s Rock'n'Roll. They continued on into all the various styles that evolved through the '60s and '70s in ever-exponential numbers, but were often thinned out from the herd of '50s revivalists.

But if someone is held out because of false limits, they will fight back by ignoring them.

In the '80s, rockin' women began reclaiming this aspect of their herstory. Heart and Girlshool had the boogie; The Cosmopolitans sassed from the Garage; Cyndi Lauper first perfected her Buddy Holly hiccup fronting Blue Angel; Chrissie Hynde and The Pretenders never forgot to keep it real; and rockafillies finally infiltrated the Teds movement, and bands like The Ace Cats and The Dead Beats, or flew solo like Rosie Flores and Beverly Stauber.

This turf stake would expand in the '90s, and become a continent in the 2000s.



𝟭d
Teds


Shakin' Stevens; Jimmy Lee Maslon; Gina And The Rockin' Rebels


The late '70s Teddy Boy Revival train kept a-rollin' with Shakin' Stevens, Crazy Cavan, Bonneville, Jimmie Lee Maslon, and -at last- with women like Ravenna And The Magnetix and Gina And The Rockin' Rebels.



𝟭e
Psychobilly


The Cramps


"The Cramps weren't thinking of this weird subgenre when we coined the term 'psychobilly' in 1976 to describe what we were doing. To us all the '50s rockabillies were psycho to begin with."
-Poison Ivy, of The Cramps


The Cramps may've sired Psychobilly sideways, but it quickly metastasized globally with Misfits, The Meteors (England), Guana Batz (England), and Batmobile (Netherlands).


Misfits; Demented Are Go


By the mid-'80s a Psychobilly scene stomped at London's Klub Foot, with home acts like Restless, Frenzy, Styngrites, The Coffin Nails, and Demented Are Go. (Like the initial Teds revival, it started too male, which would gradually change.)

The blistering rush was paralleled by revivalists like Barrence Whitfield, The Milkshakes (with Billy Childish), and The Leroi Brothers; blues blasters The Paladins; and the Garage of The Delmonas (with Ludella Black) and The Gories.



𝟭f
Perennials


David Bowie in 'Absolute Beginners';
Neil Young; The HoneyDrippers


The second wave of rockers still relayed the torch with incendiary numbers by Neil Young, John Fogerty, The Rolling Stones, Bill Wyman's Willie And The Poor Boys, Charlie Watts with Rocket 88. And was run forward by third decade rockers like David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Sylvain Sylvain, Patti Smith, and The Honeydrippers (fronted by Robert Plant, featuring Jimmy Page).

And of course true-school Rock bopped in the solo endeavors of Messrs. Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, and Starr.



𝟭g
Offspring


By now '50s Rock was in the blood, carried on by Billy and Rocky Burnette, Rosanne Cash, Carlene Carter, and Hank Williams, Jr.



𝟭h
Boogie


The boogie was in 'em, and had to come out of Heart, ZZ Top, Spider, Steve Miller Band, Little Feat, and Badfinger.



𝟭i
Traditionalists


Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe;
Marshall Crenshaw; Chris Isaak


Keeping the living traditions viable in new expressions were Rockpile (fronted by Dave Edmunds and Nick Lowe), The Blasters, Marshall Crenshaw, Ry Cooder, and Chris Isaak.



𝟭j
Next Wave


The PoleCats; The BopCats; The TeenCats

But some just wanted the original Rockabilly back as pure as they could distill it. In the early-'80s a legion of coiffed, tattooed, slapbass combos dizzied up the dancehalls. Following in the suede shoes of the Teds and Robert Gordon, they mirrored the zest and flair of the psychobillies but with a more deliberately classic sound.

Carl Perkins once wailed, "Go, cat, go!", and now catalyzed a movement: thus prowled The Blue Cats, The Rhythm Cats, The BopCats, The Polecats (UK), The Teencats (Norway), The Ace Cats (Germany), The Go-Katz, Levi And The Rockats, and The Catmen loud and proud.


Stay Cats:

Lee Rocker, Brian Setzer, Slim Jim Phantom

This of course unleashed the massive mainstream success, through MTV exposure, of Stray Cats, featuring Brian Setzer, Lee Rocker, and Slim Jim Phantom; their breakthrough may have arguably done more to revive '50s Rock for the mainstream and cement it as a tradition for the ages than any other act or movement.

Also rockin' the bop till the sock hops sagged dragged and dropped were Les Forbans (France), The Shakin' Pyramids (Scotland), The Sharks, The Rattlers, and The Dead Beats led by Suzy May.



𝟭k
Roots


The Fabulous Thunderbirds; Lucinda Williams; Los Lobos

Meanwhile the main force in '80s music was synth-driven, a gestalt expression of futurism.

Rock has always trysted in the cross-current between the earthy and the alien, the organic and the eerie. One movement insures a parry. But for all the sleek sheen and chrome dreams of the sythethic scene, others pined for rust and dirt and soul.

By the mid-'80s a Roots rebuttal kicked butts with revisals of Blues, Country, Mariachi, and Zydeco. The pulse of '50s Rock throbbed in the veins of The Fabulous Thunderbirds (with Jimmie Vaughan), Joe Ely, Lucinda Williams, Los Lobos, Marcia Ball, Rosie Flores, Dwight Yoakam, Katie Webster, Omar And The Howlers, Buckwheat Zydeco, and Lou Ann Barton.

Abstractly, Paul Simon connected the historical circuit from Township Jive to Doo Wop when he worked with Ladysmith Black Mambazo, as recognition of organic World musics flourished.



𝟭l
Cowpunk


Texacala Jones; Jason And The Scorchers; k.d. lang


Simultaneously, some artists shotgun-wed these roots forms to punk energy, in a trend loosely corralled as Cowpunk.

Bringing some throwdown to the hoedown were Tex(acala Jones) And The Horseheads, The Knitters (X in plain disguise), Lone Justice, The Textones with Carla Olson, Jason And The Scorchers, The Long Ryders, and the early k.d. lang.

Meanwhile, in the wake of Outlaw Country artists like Nelson and Jennings, a new breed of Country upstarts were rejecting the factory pop to re-embrace Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, and George Jones. Thus rose Neotraditionalists like Randy Travis, Dwight Yoakum, Roseanne Cash, Townes Van Zandt, Patti Loveless, Lyle Lovett (who brought in Soul and Jazz), and Steve Earle. Bluegrass caught new fire with Allison Krauss. The spirit of Gram Parsons lived in Emmylou Harris and The Desert Rose Band (with Chris Hillman). And k.d. lang worked with Owen Bradley, Patsy Cline's producer, to redefine herself as a Country torch singer.

These movements set the stage for Alt-Country in the early-'90s.



𝟭m
Iconoclasts


Willie "Mink" DeVille;
Jim Jarmusch and Tom Waits;
Nick Cave

And you know, some people are just crazy. You can't tell 'em nothin'. They're just gonna go right on.

Somewhere in the mania of Mink Deville, Alan Vega, David Byrne, The Gun Club, Tom Waits, The Birthday Party, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, 45 Grave, and the deranged Hasil Adkins, you can darkly parse the distorted shards of '50s Rock.



𝟭n
The Originals.


Chuck Berry's all-star concert film;
Little Richard's biography;
Eric Clapton, Carl Perkins, George Harrison,
Ringo Starr, Dave Edmunds

But you can't beat the real Real.

The original pioneers of Rock'n'Roll got a lot of respect due in the '70s and this reached a peak in the late-'80s.

The Million Dollar Quartet returned in 1985 for a new 30th anniversary album: Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, with Roy Orbison subbing for Elvis. Jerry of course went and got a gun to hunt down a Rolling Stone scribe (because they had accused him of killing one of his wives).

Chuck Berry was celebrated royally by his peers and scion in the concert documentary HAIL! HAIL! ROCK 'N' ROLL (1987), with all-stars led by Keith Richards, including Julian Lennon, Etta James, Linda Ronstadt, and Robert Cray.

A bestselling biography brought the Fourth Coming of Little Richard, who became ubiquitous on chat shows and record cameos.

Roy Orbison's "In Dreams" haunted David Lynch's BLUE VELVET (1986). (The film's eerie evocation of a late-'50s/early-'60s-esque variant of the present day, with dream pop music, would be the template for 'Twin Peaks>.) It brought Roy back in a lavish relaunch album and special supported by famous acolytes, including U2, Jeff Lynne, Tom Waits, Bonnie Raitt, and Elvis Costello.

Carl Perkins likewise got the all-star treatment with a concert TV special featuring George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Dave Edmunds, Lee Rocker and Slim Jim Phantom, and Roseanne Cash.

The Traveling Wilburys

This led to the tongue-in-cheek supergroup, The Traveling Wilburys, with George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, and Roy Orbison.



𝟭o
Screen


'Back To The Future' (art by Drew Struzan);
Lou Diamond Phillips as Ritchie Valens;
Youki Kudoh and Masatoshi Nagase in 'Mystery Train'

The '70s had remembered the '50s directly in films and shows, whether heartfelt or half-baked.

The '80s reflected the '50s more abstractly.

HEART BEAT (1980) simplified the true love triangle of Kerouac and the Cassadys. STREETS OF FIRE (1984) collaged all the styles from the '50s to the '80s into one parallel world. ABSOLUTE BEGINNERS (UK, 1986), featuring David Bowie, achieved the same through anachronisms about '50s Britain.

Conservative Americans in the '80s lived in a suburban sitcom fantasy of the 50's revived, that ignored the real tumult of either decade and specifically the progress of the '60s and '70s between. Hence Reagan and BACK TO THE FUTURE. (Relax, I'm not knocking your favorite movie, I like it, too. Bear with me.)

This clever time-travel movie connects 1985 to 1955 in an ancestral causal loop. Yes, we all like the movie..., (spoiler critique:) but saying a suburban '80s kid inspired Chuck Berry to invent Rock'n'Roll by way of Van Halen is a crime against culture on too many levels. No. Luckily, this bogus butterfly effect got its wings clipped when HAIL! HAIL! ROCK 'N' ROLL arrived in time soon to restore reality.

Just as Buddy Holly> was immortalized for new fans with THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY (1978), the same happened for his friend Ritchie Valens with LA BAMBA (1987); the biopic featured Marshall Crenshaw (as Buddy Holly), Brian Setzer (as Eddie Cochran), and Howard Huntsberry (as Jackie Wilson), with a hit soundtrack ghosted by Los Lobos.

If the spectres of '50s gang pulps and films echoed in Francis Ford Coppola's adaptions of THE OUTSIDERS (1982) and RUMBLE FISH (1983), then the era was reflected directly with the magic realist timetrip of PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED (1986).

And if the '50s had haunted the decade askance, then the ghost of Elvis literally haunts the modern Memphis of Jarmusch's MYSTERY TRAIN (1989), featuring Screaming Jay Hawkins, Rufus Thomas, and Joe Strummer.





With the overground success of Stray Cats, and all the underground experimentation beyond the margins, the '80s broadened the scope and depth of the '50s revival. In the '90s, these seeds would flourish in a new landscape of support for proud Revival acts.


Next:
1950s Rock, D: The 1990s disciples



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

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, D: The '90s Disciples

1950s Rock, E: The 2000s disciples

1950s Rock, E: The 2010s disciples


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



Monday, February 23, 2015

LITTLE RICHARD: The Voice of Rock and His Disciples


...with 2 piano-smashing
Music Players!


Little Richard, by Tim O'Brien



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

History Checklist


Today, the sanctified Little Richard, the full-throttle throat of Rock!
Hear 2 massive music players, one of Richard and one of all his disciples from the 1950s to today!

Music Player quick-links:
𝟭 Little Richard
𝟮 Little Richard's disciples: 1950s-Today




Buddy Holly and Little Richard



𝟭
RIP IT UP:
The Music of Little Richard


LITTLE RICHARD
by Tym Stevens

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




"and rose incarnate in the ghostly clothes of jazz in
the goldhorn shadow of the band and blew the
suffering of America's naked mind for love into
an eli eli lamma lamma sabacthani saxophone
cry that shivered the cities down to the last radio"


- Allen Ginsberg, HOWL (1956)


All of his life one exultant declaration.

Born bonepoor Georgia, starved skinny and 'little', wanting bigger. A Deacon father -alias bootlegger -also nightclub owner. One leg shorter but always two steps ahead of his surroundings. Running with the girls and mischief and make-up, shunned by men and beaten and scorned.

Deep soul forged in smolder, singed but singing, a blues heart a gospel throat. Like a minister you must love administer, sort out the sinister, writhe out pain adorn all in light. Hear inner word, give outer voice.

Calling up the crowds via alto saxophone transmission brawk squawk bleat squee, upjump crowds, fervor nerves, pound floorboards, sweat fire, amass joy.

Opening for Sister Rosetta Tharpe at fourteen 1947 gospel chorus boy, swaying secular with swingjive tours, drag king in vaudeville and circus. Show biz early '50s, pancaked and floodlit, pizazz pulpit, the volt dynamo.



Absorbing boogie piano from Esquerita 1951, burning through record labels and blues tours and mentors. In punk spirit bands together The Upsetters blazing rhythm rock 1953.

Specialty Records 1955, New Orleans club improv "Tutti Frutti", too profane! sanitize the insane but revolution remains, a wax attack in guerilla grooves, flaming young hearts all around the world. Standing at or on piano, footloose and finally free stomping keys kicking out all divisions, integrating dancing ears hearts souls in tune A WOP BOP A LOO BOP A LOP BAM BOOM!

Little Richard and The Upsetters
in THE GIRL CAN'T HELP IT (1956)


He wrought in Rock the androgyny the wild the theatrical the cinematic the uninhibited the omnisexual. The go-getter the upsetter the upender the offender the end of pretenders the blender. Bane to klan and The Man and the ban and the banal, bane to the youth and the uncouth and tall-taling upscaling of the truth.

Feral firebrand become consumptive fireball "Good Golly, Miss Molly/ You sure like to ball!" coming apart in a carnality carnivale. Best-dressed on the excess express deranged duressed unrest need blest. 18 hits three years on a ripping tear unabashed, a canon fired from circus cannons, a fastblast era moving too fast to control all a blearing smear a coming crash.

He saw the fireball in the sky above (1957 Sputnick), he saw the ministry as a grounding. Felt he'd lost God for gold, threw away his rings and his royalties in sacral loyalty, the man who fell to earth to reach out to heaven.

All of his life one exultant declaration.







𝟮
ALL AROUND THE WORLD!:
The Disciples of Little Richard


Little Richard meets The Beatles, Hamburg, 1962


LITTLE RICHARD: Disciples 1950s-Today
by Tym Stevens

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


All songs in order from the 1950s to today.

19 hours and seven decades of music
influenced by Little Richard, including:

Etta JamesElvis PresleyBuddy Holly
EsqueritaWanda JacksonLaVern Baker
Carl PerkinsJohnny OtisEddie Cochran

James BrownLos Teen TopsMarvin Gaye
The SonicsEverly BrothersSam Cooke
Laurel AitkenThe BeatlesJackie Wilson
The KinksTom JonesWilson Pickett
Mitch RyderThee MidnitersStevie Wonder
Otis ReddingCreedenceJoe Cocker

MC5Fleetwood MacThe Band
Deep PurpleDavid BowieJohnny Winter
Canned HeatMott The HoopleELP
Rolling StonesThe StoogesNilsson
Elton JohnRocky HorrorJohn Lennon
Led ZeppelinBTOELOElvis Costello
RezillosWaylon JennningsFrank Zappa
Bob SegerPatti SmithElvis Costello

The DamnedMotorheadHeartRamones
Cheap TrickThe BusBoysXStray Cats
Emmylou HarrisTom WaitsQueen
AerosmithAerosmithLos Lobos

Paul McCartneyLiving ColourThe Gories
Yusef LateefThe A-BonesTeengenerate
Iggy PopJetNoisettesTy Segall

Detroit CobrasGuitar WolfThe Dirtbombs
OutkastLos LobosHot Damn!
JetNoisettesTy Segall

Barrence WhitfieldBruno MarsDel Moroccos
Los FabulocosJD McPhersonLittle Rachel
The CoathangersKing SalamiFleshtones
ThunderbitchDeath GripsEzra Furman
and many, many more!



"It was if, in a single instant, the world changed from monochrome to Technicolor."

- Keith Richards, on hearing "Tutti Frutti"


And the Rock faithful heard the word horde and saw the floodlights.

Little Richard, the bedrock of their bedlam, canon of their carols, artisan of their attitude, the verve of their voice.

Ray Charles and Little Richard seduced gospel stars to secular Soul> like Sam Cooke, the Womacks, Johnny Taylor, Aretha Franklin, Al Green (and like him they swayed back and forth).

He is the jump and grit of James Brown and Otis Redding. His shattering shout is the voice of Garage Rock> and Punk and Metal.

His early '60s second coming galvanized The Beatles in Hamburg (who befriended his organist, Billy Preston). The Rolling Stones were his amen chorus opening for him in '63. Jimi Hendrix was his harpist in '64 ("I Don't Know What You Got"). His songs were the psalms of the British Invasion>.

Little Richard and Jimi Hendrix


As Rock went roots and rough in the late '60s, his third coming graced the festival circuit with Chuck Berry> and Bo Diddley>, a revival that will summon Glam and Pub Rock> and Punk and Psychobilly>.

His paint-peeling howl possesses Etta James, James Brown, Tina Turner, Paul McCartney, Otis Redding, The Sonics, Wilson Pickett, Jim Morrison, The Outcast (Japan), Creedence Clearwater Revival, MC5, Rod Stewart, Steven Tyler of Aerosmth, Motorhead, Bon Scott and Brian Johnson of AC/DC, Barrence Whitfield, The Lime Spiders, Tom Waits, The A-Bones, Guitar Wolf, and Alexis Saski.

His world ministry amens in Los Teen Tops' "La Plaga" and Los Gibson Boys' "Lucila" (Mexico) and The Black Dynamites' "Send Me Some Lovin'" (Netherlands) and Masaaki Hirao's "Lucille" (Japan) and Moustique's "Good Golly, Miss Molly" (France) and Adriano Celentano's performance of "Ready Teddy" in Fellini's LA DOLCE VITA (Italy, 1960).

David Bowie; Freddy Mercury; Boy George


His pagentry, Pancake 31, and punch is the creator of Glam Rock and New Romantic, his theatre a launching stage for David Bowie and Freddie Mercury and Suzi Quatro and Siouxsie Sioux and Lou Reed and Jayne County.

His erotic ambiguity and androgyne edge sired Grace Jones, Michael Jackson, Annie Lennox, Boy George, Prince, Lady Gaga, and Janelle Monae.

Little Richard; Grace Jones; Prince; Janelle Monae


His "Ooh! My Soul" begat Ritchie Havens' "Ooh! My Head" which begat Led Zeppelin's "Boogie With Stu". His spin on "Keep A-Knockin'" begat Eddie Cochran's "Somethin' Else" and the intro drums of Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll". His canon begat Deep Purple's "Speed King".

His spirit catalyzed The Beatles' "I Saw Her Standing There", "I'm Down", and "She Came In Through The Bathroom Window"; and CCR's "Travelin' Band"; and The Rolling Stone's "Rip This Joint"; and Elton John's "Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting"; and Bob Seger's anthem "Old Time Rock and Roll". Listen anew.

His "The Rill Thing" begat the drum samples on 60 hiphop songs alone.

His fourth comeback after a bestselling bio in the '80s led him to new music, talk shows, and Fishbone and Living Colour.

His "Tutti Frutti" was voted #1 in Mojo's "The Top 100 Records That Changed The World".

Yes, verily, to all and whom,
A WOP BOP A LOO BOP A LOP BAM BOOM!


Amen.


The Minister of Rock'n'Roll



© Tym Stevens
(except Ginsberg's "Howl")





See Also:

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

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


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



Tuesday, January 20, 2015

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


...with massive
Music Player
!


24 hours of
international Rock'n'Roll music,
in order from 1947 to 1960!




1950s ROCK'n'ROLL REVOLUTION
by Tym Stevens


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(The Player is limited to the first 200 songs.
Hear the unlimited 600-song Playlist here.)





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

History Checklist


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!

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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!