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How did rock and roll impact society in the 1950s?
I like this response from Adam Begun, Musician/Composer
“Teenagers screamed.
Adults held their ears.
College-age young adults scratched their heads.
School dances doubled the amount of chaperones.
Drive-in movies became a (literal) petting zoo.
White adults were terrified that their kids would forever be corrupted and never let into Heaven if that “Black” garbage-music was played in their vicinity.
Many, many kids started their own bands.
Movies featured more Rock And Roll songs and less Jazz or Show Tunes.
Parents became afraid of movies and TV shows that featured Rock And Roll.
Some feared the end of “society” and “civilization” as we know…er…knew it.
Yeah…
…that sure didn’t happen.
Actually, Rock And Roll is just a confluence of styles.
Take Country & Western, electrify it and you get Rockabilly.
Take Rhythm & Blues, combine it with Rockabilly and you get (very) early Rock And Roll…all the right instruments but the solos are usually on saxophone…which is more R&B than R&R.
Stop writing “explicitly” about sex and more “metaphorically” about…er…sex. (cars, the sky, etc.) and get White people to play it so White people will want to buy it.
Give the solos to the guitar or piano and phase the sax out entirely.
Have events which create “new” legends (explain thatone) like Buddy Holly dying or Elvis wiggling his hips on TV.
Then, like any new “craze”, exploit the Hell out of it to make as much money as possible before people go back to listening to Lawrence Welk and Mitch Miller.
The tangible effect on society was this:
Rock And Roll was something new to make a lot of money from…upset your parents and teachers with…confuse your older, Jazz loving siblings…destroy segregation (oh, the HORRORS!}…
…and for all I know was the start of Attention Deficit Disorder and Hell on Earth for all mankind. (they said that about Jazz too…and Stravinsky…*arrgh*)
Bottom Line:
MONEY! LOTS AND LOTS (and lots) OF MONEY…made from financially empowered teenagers (the 1950’s was like that).
At least today we can say…that…uh…um…hmm…
…nope. It’s still all about money. (still will be in 50 years time, too.)”
All I can add is how fortunate we are to have the MLT with their healthy passion for and respect for music creation without money being the bottom line!
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