It is always perilous to try and suss out the origins of Rock 'N Roll. If you say some aspect was first - first electric guitar or first back-beat - or pivotally influential, someone is sure to immediately find an earlier example, or lengthy interviews with early rockers who all point to a particular artist as an influence. The discussions can deteriorate into vagueness, or one-upmanship, or both. "Well, what about jump music?" "Well, what about Dixieland/jive/boogie/jug band?"
Andrew Hickey is reportedly writing a five-volume history of R&R and I wish him well. It must be a labor of love, because he is going to have to spend the entire time talking with posers who are trying to prove him wrong and showing off the stray facts that they know, claiming them as authoritative proofs. Not me. I know my stray facts are just that and others know much more.
However, being the Assistant Village Idiot, I do have some observations that I think helpful so long as you don't regard them as full explanations of...well, of anything.
Rock descends from many ancestors, including some surprises. I once looked with some disdain at a person who told me that polka music influenced rock-n-roll. Yet he made a clear case quickly. Did I think that Western Swing influenced rock? Well, yes, there's that whole Bill Haley/Buddy Holly strain, sure. Did I hear how polka influenced Western Swing? Okayyyy...sure...but was the influence the part that went on into rock? Yes, he asserted. It's the back-beat, hitting the 2nd and 4th beats of the measure. Very polka. I also thought but didn't want to say aloud because I thought this was already out of hand, also very oompah band. I read once that it was the sound of trains on tracks, the sound of freedom and adventure, that resonated with so many people. Could be. But with a train, how the hell do you know where the beginning of the measure is?
The back beat was in many styles growing up in the early to mid 20th C. The lines between genres were porous, and musicians would play a wide variety of songs. A guy's gotta make a living, and it was the 60s kids who got into being purist and authentic about whatever style they favored. What we perceive in our day as a very different style might only be a difference in instrumentation. The song is very much the same, but this one has a fiddle and that one has horns and that one has an accordion. Rock music doesn't have accordions, and yet...sometimes you can make the switch in your head and hear the lack of difference. Drum/no drum. Electric bass/upright. Steel guitar/accordion. The feel is different, but...
So there are rabbit holes everywhere. I reject few or none, but do think it is worth having perspective. Bob Wills might say what he was playing in 1957 wasn't any different than what he was playing in 1937, and there are some "truth elements" as we say about that, he was mostly just being a prick and it's not true.
The lead-in influences were themselves hybrids, more often based on marketing than on similarity. Country music and Western music had some mutual influence, but it was mostly a product of record labels and the effect of the early 40s ASCAP/BMI conflict. They were different. Country (and folk) did not influence rock all that much. Western Swing a whole lot. Rhythm & Blues became a style of mutual influence, but it got its name because people were no longer comfortable calling it "race music." Record labeling and concert venues again. "Rhythm" was a catch-all for all those jives and jumps and hokum and "blues" was - it's own history, maybe as complicated as rock's. Not the same, but the same people produced their records, because those were the folks who would touch that.
So R&B&Western Swing all together here each of those based on other styles in their turn, performed about four years earlier than this (1946) at minimum. But Rock 'N Roll supposedly didn't come along until 1952, 1954. Sometimes it's not just the musical style solidifying, it is our understanding of the style that lags behind the innovation.
Don't believe me? After you pick up the beat and the tune, start humming "When the clock strikes two, three, and four, If the band slows down we'll yell for more."
"It is always perilous to try and suss out the origins of Rock 'N Roll. If you say some aspect was first - first electric guitar or first back-beat - or pivotally influential, someone is sure to immediately find an earlier example, or lengthy interviews with early rockers who all point to a particular artist as an influence."
ReplyDeleteJust to tie this to another of your recent posts, here's "Rhapsody Rabbit." Check the 3 minute mark.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzeFyKiPHZ8
Now I was sure when I first saw that bit that it was a clear parody of Jerry Lee Lewis, "The Killer." It's got the rock'n'roll piano, the devilish manner (tongue sticking out, shoulders hunched), even the violence. It's obviously him.
But "Rhapsody Rabbit" is from 1946, when Jerry Lee Lewis was 11 years old. So there must have been someone earlier, who was doing proto-rock on the piano in the manner that Lewis later perfected. I don't know who it was, but they must have existed.
The common thread through American music is the piano. It starts with ragtime piano, to the blues, to boogie-woogie, to rock. There were plenty of flamboyant boogie-woogie piano players, and as with ragtime, showmanship was part of the proficiency quotient for any aspiring pianist.
ReplyDeleteAn old-timer I once worked with in Florida had seen Fats Waller play in Atlanta, as a young man (both of them were young men at the time). He said Fats started with a nearly-full bottle of whiskey on the top of the upright piano, and by the time it was empty the piano was bouncing on the wooden stage from Fat's playing.
I've played ragtime since I was a kid, love the idiom. Pianos pre-dated radios and television as the staple of entertainment in households across the nation. Mechanical pianos became all the rage as home entertainment centers. There were dozens of manufacturers across the country, many of them building high-quality products - my own piano is an 'upright grand' from the late 1800's.
Although the guitar is usually considered the quintessential folk instrument in popular imagination, I read an essay that argued it was really the piano. They were everywhere for well over a century, in every school and sometimes every classroom; in every church no matter how small and often many pianos there; in every bar, every theater, every summer camp and in a huge number of homes - and even apartments to the 70th floor. So it was "portable" in an indirect way, even though no one could carry one around, and the variety of styles that could be played varied more than what could be done on guitar.
ReplyDeleteWeird Al Yankovich uses an accordian.
ReplyDeleteThe Strausses of Vienna, and their contemporaries, composed a lot of railroad-themed dances.
ReplyDeleteSheet music for piano constituted a YUGE proportion of the publishing industry before about 1920.
...and of course it goes without saying, that the primary tool of nearly all composers and orchestrators is the keyboard - because it facilitates the structuring of chords, syncopation, and counterpoint of multiple voices in the most facile way.
ReplyDeleteIf you want some fun, listen to the two-CD set of Gershwin piano rolls - I think you can still find it on Amazon MP3. Gershwin, always an ambitious wage earner in addition to being a composer, cut a series of rolls that showcased his talent as a pianist, playing popular tunes of the times. The first are entirely his compositions (Rhapsody in Blue, American in Paris, Etudes, etc.), and the second CD is entirely of popular tunes of the times. The beauty of the rolls were that player pianos were pervasive, and a compliment to the Victrola; they had a much bigger sound, much higher fidelity by comparison - and the roll format allowed the performer to overlay his primary performance with additional notes as embellishment. It sounds like the guy had at least three hands and 18 fingers, when you listen to it.