As rock and roll got bigger so did its fan base. Many teens started listening to is and the impact it would have over them would be enormous. Rock ‘n’…
Looking at the influential power of rock ‘n’ roll, Glenn C. Altschuler, in his book, concentrates on the abrupt social change and developments in America during the 1940s to 1960s through the lens of popular music. Altschuler argues rock ‘n’ roll was a pivotal moment, it changed the youth culture of America and encouraged everyone to be more accepting of people of all races, ages and sexualities. The power of music was certainly influential and aided as a catalyst to change, but he grants rock ‘n’ roll too much authority over social change in that era. Altschuler failed to look outside of his perspective and elaborate on other variables that contributed to change like the mass media and technological advances.…
and the most famous change in music was caused by Woodstock. Woodstock helped rock music…
Music is much like the ocean. The ocean waves transport products across continents; and, for many, it is a source of relaxation and comfort. Music spreads ideas across populations and is an outlet for strong emotions. Although the ocean and music have positive effects on society, both the ocean with its tsunamis and hurricanes and music with controversial, dark messages can be destructive to small towns and young people. Music influences us in our daily lives. Our actions, thoughts, and emotions can all be affected by the music we listen to, therefore one should be mindful of their exposure to potentially corrupting music. In their song “The Middle,” Jimmy Eat World encourages positive thinking about a person’s self image and actions,…
Rock and roll has been an integral part of American culture since the 1950s. Throughout the decades, Rock and Roll has contributed to the vast array of sounds and musical styles in the pantheon of musical genres. Rock and roll has also influenced the creation of other musical subgenres, including alternative, metal, hardcore, punk, and grunge. Inspired by the emergence of blues and jazz, and the popularization of country, rock ‘n’ roll strived to imprint a deeper legacy into U.S. society and culture. Rock and Roll has also been very important in popularizing the genre of music. Key players in the Rock and Roll have transformed the genre into something that is now ingrained within our culture…
Originated in the early 1950’s, rock ‘n’ roll was known to be the world’s most popular and multicultural form of music. Therefore, Rock being a mixture of all the American music that came before it, then dominated the music industry but also extremely influenced everything from politics to social norms. This suggests music had moved away from its roots in Blues and country music and grew into something bigger known simply as rock. Rock ‘n’ roll lost much of the rebelliousness that had initially given it its power but then spread popularity internationally since it became increasingly accepted over time. For example, white musical traditions became integrated with black performers, ultimately encouraging the desegregation movement itself. The…
The premise of this work is that rock 'n' roll matters, and that it means what it says. It seems that rock 'n' roll music has seldom been given its due as an art form, that it is somehow relegated to a category of less "mature" or "serious" artistic pursuits by the media and the intellectual community. Some critics use the generic term "Pop" to refer to any popular music, including all contemporary rock musicians, as if the fact of rock 'n' roll's immense commercial success implies that it cannot really be taken seriously alongside, say, classical music, or even Jazz. Beyond artistic circles, rock 'n' roll is usually given even less credibility; the ideas and feelings and beliefs expressed and reflected in rock songs tend to be dismissed by…
“You’ve got to listen to the heavens, you got to try to understand. The greatness of their movement is just as small as it is grand.” Most young adults of my generation do not know who The Grateful Dead are, but they unknowingly dawn the apparels and slang created in the counterculture of the bands following the Deadheads. The band, The Grateful Dead, became popular in the 60s and carried out wide spread recognition and fame into the 80s. Their calming, peace-promoting music became popular because it ‘transported’ people, it took them away from whatever they were going through in their life and set them on a new path. Fans of the band described the feeling of being at a Grateful Dead concert as being high even without drugs. This is what sparked many fans to follow the band around on tour, stopping at every venue to enjoy the experience of a Grateful Dead show. However, the influence of the dead spread way beyond the walls of the concert. The music of the Grateful Dead inspired a completely new counterculture, which stretched beyond the concerts and the albums, and affected people outside of the band’s fan base.…
factors in music deepened gradually, and eventually changed the connotation of Rock and Roll. Most…
During the 1960’s and 1970’s rock music took the nation by storm, again. With its new wave of music, evident in the more dynamic tempos and uplifting sound, rock and roll had a much more impactful message to spread than it had in the 1950’s. In the 1950’s the music was simply made for fun, whilst in the 60’s and 70’s, although the music was still fun, in was proving a much more specific criticism on racial disputes. There was a notable spilt in the industry between black rock and roll and white rock and roll. Many youth grew obsessed with the new Rock’n’Roll music. Rock and Roll represented a loud and fun way to express people’s disapproval of anything. The new anthems of the young society were ones that were yearning for change and uproar.…
Rock soon began to articulate that separate sensibility that youth wished to express, a world view that rejected the values of establishment and embraced a new. (Jennings Brewster 392) People wanted a change in the rules and establishment. But they believed things werent going to get any better. So they had to make them seem better, or completely forget about them. Thats where the drugs came into play. It was commonly believed that the governments drug enforcement apparatus was an instrument of repression and a truly democratic society would legalize drugs. (Brewster Jennings 392)The lifestyle of many musical phenoms resulted in tragic deaths (300) that had a huge impact on the listeners. Stars like Jim Morrison never even made it into their thirties. Because their rock…
This way of life confused the older generations. As a result of protest music, we had led to what became known as “the British invasion,” which included The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and many more. And a period that some might call the greatest time for music. This…
And then there were none. This short sentence sums up the entirety of the grunge rock era in the early 1990s. No musical genre in history has found greatness so quickly and then raced into oblivion as fast as grunge did and few genres have relied so heavily on just a handful of artists. In the early 1990s there was a new type of music that was taking the masses by storm. There had been nothing new in the pop music world for a number of years and generation X was coming of age and demanded some kind of change. The days when Michael Jackson 's style of pop and Metallica 's methodical hair/death metal ruled the airwaves were just about to end. Generation X needed more relevance in their music even if it was not as cheery and magical as pop had sounded for some time. Madonna, ZZ Top, Rick Astley nor any other of the day 's pop or rock singers could fill this void. The band that could be most closely considered in the realm of the message of grunge would have been Pink Floyd. The band has always incorporated a very real and sober message in the music they have produced. Nothing else mainstream was similar in any way. That is where the story gets fascinating because the original grunge band members never intended to be mainstream. The majority of the bands created music to play at underground shows and the music was intended only to be played for people who really wanted to hear and feel it. The popularization of the music and the bands that received the grunge label gave way to both the rise and the undoing of the genre, the bands and the band members themselves. This paper will concentrate on the short but very eventful life of the grunge genre. A focus will be on two of the pioneer bands, Nirvana and Alice In Chains, which were both from the Seattle, Washington, area and share an epic journey through the early 1990s.…
Because there are so many changes in the history of the music I will focus on Grunge Rock for this portion of the essay. "Grunge music is generally characterized by "dirty" guitar, strong riffs, and heavy drumming. The "dirty" sound resulted both from a stylistic change in the standard method of playing punk rock, and from the common use of guitar distortion and feedback", is the description of the music offered by answers.com. This music was started by bands from the north-west of the United States such as Nirvana, from a town near Seattle, Washington. Nirvana was around from 1991 to 1994 which was around the same time that Grunge music was popular. It began with Nirvana's "Smells like Teen Spirit" becoming a hit among fans and the music soon escalated into a mainstream endemic. Many bands such as Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains, Emerged over those years and sold many records though. Suddenly, Kurt Cobain allegedly killed himself by shooting up with 3 times the lethal amount of Heroin and shooting himself. He was found the next day in the greenhouse of his home in Los Angeles. There is a theory among Nirvana fans, however, that Courtney Love, Cobain's wife, paid someone to kill him. However, the Los Angeles Police refused to reopen the case after his death was ruled a suicide. From there the music lost momentum and soon slipped back into…
All Shook Up: How Rock ‘N’ Roll Changed America by Glenn C. Altschuler states that rock ‘n’ roll music influenced post American culture through race, sexuality and generational conflict. In order for blacks to profit during the rock ‘n’ roll era performers and promoters “bleached the music, and promoted white rock ‘n’ rollers” (p 35). American culture was sexualized by rock ‘n’ roll music and it influenced men and women’s values. Americans were also convinced that rock ‘n’ roll music reinforced “antagonism to authority and expectations;” and “conformity to peer-group norms” in teenagers (p 99). American culture is defined by rock ‘n’ roll music and race, sexuality and generational conflict was a major factor in culture definition.…