Rock

‘n’ Roll & 20th Century Culture Essay, Research Paper


Rock ?n? roll and 20th Century Culture


According to Philip Ennis, rock ?n? roll emerged from


the convergence of social transformations which resulted


from World War II (Ryan 927). Despite its pop culture


origins, rock music is arguably one of the strongest


cultural factors to develop in this century. Artists such as


Lennon, McCartney and Dylan defined the emotions of a


generation and, in the last decade, it as even been


acknowledged by members of the establishment which it hoped


to change as a major influence in the country. In order to


understand how rock went from a sign of rebellion to a


cultural icon, it is necessary to understand where it came


from.


According to Albert Murray, the African-American


musical tradition is ?fundamentally stoical yet affirmative


in spirit? (Star 3). Through the medium of the blues,


African-Americans expressed a resilience of spirit which


refused to be crippled by either poverty or racism. It is


through music that the energies and dexterities of black


American life are sounded and expressed (39). For the black


culture in this country, the music of Basie or Ellington


expressed a ?wideawake, forward-tending? rhythm that one


can not only dance to but live by (Star 39).


Although he later denied that he ever said it, Sam


Phillips-the man who discovered Elvis Presley-is reputed to


have said, ?if I could find a white man who had the Negro


sound the Negro feel, I could make a billion dollars?


(Decurtis 78). Certain radio stations would not play the


work of black artists in the segregated America of the


1950s. But, nevertheless, rock ?n? roll was an art form


created by African-Americans. Little Richard, whose songs


?Tutti Fruitti? and ?Long Tall Sally? became hits only after


white-bread versions were made by Pat Boone, said, ?It


started out as rhythm and blues? (Decurtis 78).


Through Elvis Presley, rock ?n? roll changed the face


of American music, and influenced a whole generation?s


political philosophy. Composer Leonard Berstein once said,


?He introduced the beat to everything and changed


everything-music, language, clothes; it?s a whole new social


revolution-the 60s come from it? (Wattenberg 6B). To his


credit, Elvis embraced rhythm and blues not as a from to be


imitated, but as a form to honored and interpreted


(Wattenberg 6B) and, as such, helped to break down the


barriers between white and black music. Time and again


Presley acknowledged his debt to black artists in public


statements despite the fact that this was a practice which


carried professional risks in the 50s (Wattenberg).


Rock ?n? roll music came of age in the sixties which


was a period in the nation?s history when a young generation


expressed their anguish and sense of alienation to the


country?s social establishments by searching for new answers


to the age-old questions concerning the meaning of life, the


value of the individual, and the nature of truth and


spirituality (Harris 306). The classic rock music which was


created during this period gave form and substance to this


search. Songs such as ?My Generation? by the Who recorded


the keen sense of alienation that young people felt from the


past and the ?Establishment? and it also showed the keen


sense of community they felt among themselves.


Classic albums such as the Beatles? ?White Album,? the


Who?s ?Who?s Next,? Dylan?s ?Highway 61 Revisited, and Pink


Floyd?s ?Dark Side of the Moon? capture what was essential


about the time because they were both a result of that time


and because they helped to produce it by reinforcing the


younger generation?s feelings of alienation and separation.


Although the distinction is somewhat fuzzy, rock music


is not exactly the same as rock and roll. Rock ?n? roll


brings up memories of two-minute, Top 40 ?singles? of the


fifties era. Drawn directly from black rhythm and blues,


these simple songs featured three-chord harmony and a heavy,


pulsating back beat which was produced by accenting the off


beat. It was musically revolutionary and socially


threatening, but the lyrics to these songs were generally


insignificant and usually downright silly (Harris).


In the early sixties, folks musicians began to appear


who were drawing upon a different tradition, namely, protest


singers such as Woody Gutherie and Pete Singer. Artists like


Joan Baez and Bob Dylan created songs with serious lyrics


but without the rhythm, tempo and drive of rock ?n? roll.


Rock music was created when the serious lyrics of folk music


were incorporated into the rhythm, beat,

and tempo of rock


and roll and then used as a vehicle for social commentary.


Bob Dylan


Born Robert Zimmerman in 1941, Dylan originally modeled


his music on that of Woody Gutherie. After the debut of his


second album, he emerged as the voice of his generation, and


an emotional critic of racism, injustice and war (Foner;


Garraty, 1991). Dylan?s song ?Blowin? in the Wind? was


practically the unofficial anthem of the sixties? civil


rights struggle. He expressed the terror of a generation


that grew up in the shadow of nuclear destruction in ?A Hard


Rain?s A-Gonna Fall? written just after the Cuban missile


crisis. His lyrics incorporated wild, poetic images-one


piled upon another-using Dylan?s unique phrasing which has


recently gained him notice as a serious poet.


Recently more then 400 fans of Bob Dylan gathered at


Stanford University to hear ten noted experts comparing the


legendary rock composer?s cultural achievements to those of


Keats, Becket, Tennyson, Shakespeare and Milton (Goodman


PG). Dylan began his career as a earnest folk singer in the


early 60s, but ?went electric? in 1965. During his career,


he has written and performed songs whose ?serious subject


matter? has taken popular music into previously uncharted


territory (Goodman PG).


Christopher Ricks, a professor at Boston University and


a T.S. Eliot expert, in analyzing Dylan?s ?Not Dark Yet?


found it ?saturated? with references from Keats? ?Ode to a


Nightingale? (Goodman PG). Ricks concluded his analysis of


Dylan?s work by saying that the 56-year-old composer was


comfortable with notions of his own mortality (PG). Intimate


friends of Dylan feel that the academics ?think too much?


concerning the meaning and literary references of Dylan?s


text (Goodman) and that the music should be taken at face


value.


Rock becomes part of the establishment


One of the last acts of the Reagan administration was


to ?embrace the aging, tattooed body of rock ?n? roll? (Star


39). All through the 1980s, conservative elements in


America?s cultural landscape were assimilating the rock


culture and making it their own. This took many forms such


as the rise of Christian rock, the pilfering of ?Born in the


USA by Bruce Springsteen, and a very well-publicized


Republican enthusiasm for Neil Young (Star 39).


In the 80s, rock completed the transition from


rebellion to being sanctioned by authority. The


establishment?s embrace of rock gave rise to some


interesting scenarios. For example, Willie Nelson got stoned


admiring the view from the White House roof during his visit


during the Carter administration. Nancy Reagan and Michael


Jackson admired each other?s gloves during his visit to the


White House (39).


Starr suggests that the conservative embrace of rock


has to do with the fact that they know a profitable export


when they see one (39). William Bennett, who is reported to


have once dated Janis Joplin, and other conservatives have


expressed the opinion that rock music is the sound track of


American freedom. As if to signal that the transition was


complete, a 21-year-old, punkish MTV v-jay appeared at a


right-wing political action conference in Washington where


she reportedly urged the crowd to ?start beating up the


liberals? (Star 39)


It is ironic that rock music which began as an


expression of a generation?s alienation and rejection of the


society?s established institutions has evolved into a


capitalistic institution itself which has, in turn, been


embraced by the establishment. One would suspect that the


universe is sending a message to a generation of aging


Hippies not to take themselves, or their politics, too


seriously.


Decurtis, Anthony. ?Is Rock ?n? Roll a white man?s game??


Time (1996): April, p. 78.


Foner, Eric; Garraty, John A. (1991) The Reader?s Companion


to American History. New York: Houghton Mifflin


Co.


Goodman, Dean. ?Dylan fans get tangled up in academic


views,? Reuters (1998): February, p. PG.


Harris, James F. ?Listen to the music: the meaning of


classic rock,? The World & I, Vol. 11, 12 Ed.


(1996): December, pp. 306.


Ryan, John. ?The Seventh Stream: The emergency of rock n


roll in American popular music,? (Book reviews)


Social Forces (1994): March, p. 927.


Star, Alexander. ?Hole in Our Soul: The Loss of Beauty and


Meaning in American Popular Music? (book reviews) The


New Republic, Vol. 210. (1994): May, pp. 39-42.


Wattenberg, Daniel. ?Elvis as force for social change has


sadly been forgotten,? Rocky Mountain News. (1997):


August, pp. 6B.

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