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GLST 490

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GLST 490 Days 11-12 Soul and Mid-term Review Housekeeping Items I don t think there are any presentations today. We will review soul, then review for mid-term ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GLST 490


1
GLST 490 Days 11-12
  • Soul and Mid-term Review

2
Housekeeping Items
  • I dont think there are any presentations today.
    We will review soul, then review for mid-term on
    Thursday (will not include soul).
  • But first I wanted to share with you some excepts
    from the views of Nazis and Stalinists on jazz
    (their views were similar in some respects in
    that they were threatened by its liberatory
    spirit). The Nazis
  • Pieces in foxtrot rhythm (so-called swing) are
    not to exceed 20 of the repertoires of light
    orchestras and dance bands
  • In this so-called jazz type repertoire,
    preference is to be given to compositions in a
    major key and to lyrics expressing joy in life
    rather than Jewishly gloomy lyrics

3
Housekeeping Items
  • As to tempo, preference is also to be given to
    brisk compositions over slow ones so-called
    blues) however, the pace must not exceed a
    certain degree of allegro, commensurate with the
    Aryan sense of discipline and moderation. On no
    account will Negroid excesses in tempo (so-called
    hot jazz) or in solo performances (so-called
    breaks) be tolerated
  • So-called jazz compositions may contain at most
    10 syncopation the remainder must consist of a
    natural legato movement devoid of the hysterical
    rhythmic reverses characteristic of the barbarian
    races and conductive to dark instincts alien to
    the German people (so-called riffs)
  • Strictly prohibited is the use of instruments
    alien to the German spirit (so-called cowbells,
    flexatone, brushes, etc.) as well as all mutes
    which turn the noble sound of wind and brass
    instruments into a Jewish-Freemasonic yowl
    (so-called wa-wa, hat, etc.)

4
Housekeeping Items
  • Also prohibited are so-called drum breaks longer
    than half a bar in four-quarter beat (except in
    stylized military marches)
  • The double bass must be played solely with the
    bow in so-called jazz compositions
  • Plucking of the strings is prohibited, since it
    is damaging to the instrument and detrimental to
    Aryan musicality if a so-called pizzicato effect
    is absolutely desirable for the character of the
    composition, strict care must be taken lest the
    string be allowed to patter on the sordine, which
    is henceforth forbidden
  • Musicians are likewise forbidden to make vocal
    improvisations (so-called scat)
  • All light orchestras and dance bands are advised
    to restrict the use of saxophones of all keys and
    to substitute for them the violin-cello, the
    viola or possibly a suitable folk instrument.

5
Housekeeping Items
  • The Stalinists
  • The dry knock of an idiotic hammer penetrates
    the utter stillness. One, two, three, ten, twenty
    strikes, and afterwards a wild whistling and
    squeaking as if a ball of mud was falling into
    clear water then follows a rattling, howling
    and screaming like the clamor of a metal pig, the
    cry of a donkey or the amorous croaking of a
    monstrous frog.
  • The offensive chaos of this insanity combines
    into a pulsing rhythm. Listen to this screaming
    for only a view minutes, and one involuntarily
    pictures an orchestra of sexually wound-up
    madmen, conducted by a Stallion-like creature who
    is swinging his giant genitals. Maxim Gorky
  • There were many other insults directed against
    jazz the moaning in the throat of a camel, the
    hiccupping of a drunk, etc.

6
Soul Music
  • As with rock n' roll, soul largely though not
    exclusively originated in the south. Though
    rock was originally a multi-racial music, blacks
    were increasingly forced to the margin and the
    new race music of the 1950s and 60s became
    soul, a not-too-subtle reference to the soul
    brothers and soul sisters who produced it.
  • It emerged from rhythm and blues and gospel,
    especially the latter and, as Palmer says, it
    came to represent a self-consciously 'black'
    idiom, proudly displaying its roots in gospel
    singing and in the rhythm and dynamics of the
    holy dance or shout.
  • In the '50s, gospel singers, like Sam Cooke,
    experimented with bringing more of a pop feel to
    their music, and pop music borrowed more from
    gospel. As Palmer notes, Ray Charles took known
    gospel tunes and changed them from being about
    Jesus to being about women and sex....

7
Soul Music
  • This scandalized some who saw in this an attempt
    to turn God's music into the devil's music.
    Charles was an early practitioner of soul, which
    he fused from gospel, rhythm and blues, jazz and
    even country.
  • Others came out of the gospel tradition as well.
    An early feeder stream was doo wop music with a
    strong emphasis on vocal harmonies which
    emerged on the East Coast and California. And
    Aretha Franklin considered by many to be one of
    the greatest singers of all times grew up
    singing in her father's church in Detroit.
  • Just as rock n' roll had been the soundtrack of
    teenage rebellion in the '50s, soul was partly
    the soundtrack along with protest songs like
    those of Bob Dylan for the 'freedom riders' and
    civil rights marchers of the early to mid-60s who
    sought to desegregate southern society. Although
    most soul was not overtly political, there were a
    few exceptions, like Curtis Mayfield with songs
    such as Keep on Pushing and People Get Ready,
    which had a strong influence on Bob Marley and
    other reggae artists.

8
Soul Music
  • Despite the vast majority of soul artists being
    black, whites played a strong role through such
    studios and companies as Stax/Volt in Memphis and
    Fame in Muscle Shoals (Palmer describes how white
    producer, Rick Hall was assigned to produce music
    by Wilson Pickett, and with an all-white band!).
  • And, at Stax/Volt in Memphis, the house band was
    Booker T and the MGs two white and two black
    musicians who not only backed some of the best
    known soul artists, like Otis Redding, but were
    also very successful as an instrumental band in
    their right, releasing a string of hits beginning
    with Green Onions.
  • Atlantic Records, with Jerry Wexler as producer,
    also played a major role in nurturing Aretha
    Franklin's career.

9
Soul Music
  • After the assassination of Martin Luther King,
    the racial politics changed, and blacks began to
    elect to work with their own. In the wider
    society, black militance and separatism became
    more prevalent.
  • James Brown, the godfather of soul, began to
    come out with songs like Say It Loud (I'm Black,
    I'm Proud). He also started to encouraged black
    entrepreneurialism and black support for black
    businesses.

source Google Images
James Brown also inspired African musicians, thus
leading to the emergence of Afrobeat, which
migrated back across the ocean in the form of
bands like Antibalas.
10
Soul Music
  • Unlike in the past, black businessmen began to
    try to control the production and distribution of
    some of the music for instance, singer Sam
    Cooke (who was murdered in 1964) and musician and
    songwriter, Curtis Mayfield.
  • But the most successful music mogul of all was
    Berry Gordy, founder of Motown (short for Motor
    City).
  • There were at least two distinguishing
    characteristics of Gordy's approach.

Source Google Images
11
Soul Music
  • First, he used 'assembly-line' techniques
    learned from his experiences working at an auto
    plant to produce records at Hitsville USA.
    There was an intense division of labour with one
    backing band (the Funk Brothers), several
    song-writing and production teams, and different
    artists. Different teams were encouraged to
    compete with one another. 'Quality control'
    meetings were held every week, and only the cream
    of the crop of the material recorded was
    released.
  • Berry not only recorded his artists, he also
    handled the distribution of the resulting records
    which, for the small firm he was in the
    beginning, was quite unusual.
  • A second defining characteristic was that, while
    all his artists were black, with one token
    exception the band Rare Earth he intended his
    music to appeal to people of all races (The
    Sounds of Young America was how he characterized
    it), and it did. It had huge appeal and it still
    does. Even the Beatles were influenced, recording
    at least two Motown songs.

12
Soul Music
  • As the '60s passed into the 70s, soul began to
    evolve into funk, sometimes with rock elements
    (for instance, Sly and the Family Stone). Artists
    like James Brown led the shift and were joined by
    new bands like the Ohio Players and Earth, Wind
    and Fire. Even jazz artists, like Herbie Hancock,
    jumped on the funk bandwagon.
  • Gradually, funk became increasingly blended with
    pop and became disco. Although largely a black
    idiom, disco was successfully cashed in on by
    white artists such as the Bee Gees and KC and the
    Sunshine Band.
  • Disco was noteworthy for its apoliticism, its
    commitment to partying (including sex and drugs),
    and its emphasis on narcissistic
    self-presentation. It eventually evoked a
    reaction, part of it based on racial politics,
    and partly based on a genuine distaste for the
    values expressed by the music.
  • Soul and rhythm blues live on, but in fairly
    formulaic forms.

13
Review of Material We Have Covered So Far
  • Music is universal in human society (specifics?),
    and serves a variety of functions. Some may be
    emphasized more than others from one society to
    another, but what are they are?
  • Why do ethnomusicologists take a relativistic
    approach to music and what does this mean?
  • What is the difference between a maestro
    approach to music vs. music as a participation
    sport, and how are the behaviours associated with
    each different?
  • Nettl divides music into three aspects sound,
    behaviour, and the ideas cultures have about
    music. Use a couple of examples to elaborate on
    these concepts.
  • While we often associate music with pleasant
    sounds, need this always be the case? And, if
    not, why not?
  • How people respond to, and evaluate, music often
    depends on the context. Examples?

14
Review of Material We Have Covered So Far
  • How does the notion of diaspora apply to music
    for instance, with Romany music?
  • What is the role of music in fostering cultural
    cohesion and identity?
  • What is cross-fertilization in music?
  • What were some of the key historical context
    factors that provided the backdrop for the
    emergence and popularization of jazz?
  • What are thought to be some of the reasons for
    the emergence of bebop?
  • How did changes in the blues mirror changes in
    Black life more broadly?

15
Review of Material We Have Covered So Far
  • What was the role of New Orleans' Creoles in the
    emergence of jazz, and what were of some of its
    precedents? Why did New Orleans emerge as
    probably the most important hearth for jazz. What
    were some of the key sub-hearths?
  • What tends to distinguish jazz from other forms
    of music?
  • Name key technical innovations that have had
    significant impacts on music in North America
    over the last 100 years?
  • In what way has jazz become a world music?

16
Review of Material We Have Covered So Far
  • What factors helped induce the major migration
    waves of southern blacks to the north?
  • What relation did r b have to rock n' roll?
  • Why was the south the initial main hearth for
    rock n roll?
  • What role did small, regional studios and record
    companies play in the emergence of rock, and what
    was the response of the majors?
  • What are some of the similarities in the cultural
    backlash generated by both jazz and rock n'roll?
  • How has cultural appropriation played itself out
    in jazz and rock n' roll?

17
Review of Material We Have Covered So Far
  • How was rock n roll, and its associated culture,
    related to the emergence of adolescence as a
    distinct life stage?
  • What factors helped it emerge as the dominant
    sound for youth (apart from hip hop to be
    discussed)?
  • What was the process whereby British rock emerged
    from American influences, and how did it in turn
    re-cross the Atlantic to revolutionize the way
    American musicians approached the genre? What was
    the role of the blues in all of this?
  • In what ways has rock become an international
    genre?
  • What factors have contributed to its diffusion
    throughout the world?
  • What accounts for its staying power (60 years and
    continuing strong)?
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