- Music history of the United States (1960s and 70s)
__NOTOC__
The
1960s and1970s were a tumultuous period for theUnited States , with theCold War ,Vietnam War andCivil Rights causing massive public unrest. Music became innately tied up into causes, opposing certain ideas, influenced by thesexual revolution ,feminism ,Black Power andenvironmentalism .Central to this trend was a folk
roots revival that inspired a wave of similar trends acrossEurope and the rest of the world. This stemmed from a revival ofhillbilly music early in the decade, and drew on Appalachian folk-pop pioneersThe Weavers .Singer-songwriter s likeBob Dylan andJoan Baez broke new ground in lyrical approach and personal style in composition, setting the stage for the next wave of lighter, country and R&B influenced singer-songwriters likeJames Taylor ,Elton John ,Carole King andCat Stevens , who began topping the charts in the very early1970s .The 60s began with
soul music topping the charts, including pure soul divas and singers specializing in the new, R&B-gospel fusion with a secular approach. Later specialities in soul cropped up, includinggirl group s,blue-eyed soul ,brown-eyed soul ,Memphis soul ,Philly soul and, most popular,Motown . The last part of the decade saw soul singer-songwriters likeMarvin Gaye inventalbum-oriented soul , and James Brown and his ever-evolving backing band inventfunk .Country music in the 1960s was dominated by the
Nashville Sound untilMerle Haggard changed the national country sound to theBakersfield Sound . For a time, the Bakersfield Sound was the only homegrown music that could compete in sales against an influx of British bands; this was called theBritish Invasion , and it sparked a new wave of music and social activism.Psychedelic rock arose from this subculture, which opposed theVietnam War and supportedcivil rights and other generally leftist causes. While the energy in this scene remained strong for some time, it soon splintered into competing heavy metal, early art-punk rock andprogressive rock .The
1970s saw various forms of pop music dominating the charts. Often characterized as being shallow, 70s pop took many forms and could be seen as a reaction against the high-energy and activist pop of the previous decade. It began with singer-songwriters likeCarole King andCarly Simon topping the charts, while New York City saw a period of great innovation; hip hop,punk rock and salsa were invented in 70s New York, which was also a center forelectronic music , techno anddisco .By the middle of the decade, various trends were vying for popular success.
Sly & the Family Stone 's pop-funk had spawned singers likeRoberta Flack andDonny Hathaway , alongside George Clinton's spacyP Funk extravaganzas.Lynyrd Skynyrd and theAllman Brothers Band led a wave ofcountry rock bands whileDavid Bowie and other British performers sawglam rock gain success. Light progressive-rock bands like Kansas, Journey, Chicago and Styx had long-running popularity.Bruce Springsteen garnered critical acclaim during much of the decade, finally breaking through in a big way very late in the 70s.Disco , especiallyThe Bee Gees , was dominating the charts the last few years of the decade, whilepunk rock and other genres were developing underground.Diversification of pop music
In the early to mid-
1960s , soul music and R&B dominated American audiences.Girl groups (The Angels ("My Boyfriend's Back"),The Shirelles ("Dedicated to the One I Love") andblue eyed soul (The Righteous Brothers ("You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling"),Mitch Ryder ("Devil With a Blue Dress On")) helped to popularize the music as mainstream, as well as polishing it and removing the grit of gospel. With the popularity of Elvis and other white singers (likeGene Vincent ("Be-Bop-A-Lula"),Roy Acuff ("The Wreck on the Highway"),Jerry Lee Lewis ("Great Balls of Fire") andChet Atkins ("Mr. Sandman"), as well as black vocalists likeLittle Richard ("Tutti Frutti "),Chuck Berry ("Johnny B. Goode "),Fats Domino ("The Fat Man") andChubby Checker ("The Twist"), a new generation of teens began playing in their own rock bands. The 1960s also saw the arrival of Mexican-American pop, rock and soul acts that drew uponTejano and other influences. These includeSunny Ozuna ("Talk to Me", "Reina de mi Amor"),Roberto Pulido y Los Clasicos andLatin Breed .White rock music developed primarily in two places: southern California, where musicians like
Dick Dale ("Surfers' Choice ") inventedsurf rock , and Britain, where mod andMerseybeat bands (such asThe Who ("The Who Sings My Generation ") andThe Rolling Stones ) ("The Rolling Stones (England's Newest Hitmakers) ") began playing their own version of rock that drew more heavily upon American blues pioneers likeBo Diddley ("Mona" (aka "I Need You Baby")),Howlin' Wolf ("Evil"),Muddy Waters ("I Be's Troubled") andJimmy Yancey ("The Fives") than their American counterparts, who mostly played a polished form of pop.The early 1960s saw four centers of American musical innovation:
*Southern California surf rock bands likeThe Beach Boys ("Surfin' Safari")
*Detroit -areaMotown acts likeSmokey Robinson &the Miracles ("Shop Around "),Mary Wells ("My Guy "),The Supremes ("Where Did Our Love Go "), andThe Temptations ("My Girl")
*country music's capital,Nashville
*the now mainstreamBakersfield sound Invention of psychedelia
In addition, Britain's new generation of blues rock gained popularity in parts of their homeland, especially cities like
Liverpool , and cult fame in the States. The popularity of folk singers likePeter, Paul & Mary ("Puff the Magic Dragon") andBob Dylan ("The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan ") influenced all of these groups as they became more closely aligned with thecounterculture and drugs. The national sound was moving towards an electric, psychedelic version of rock. In 1962 (see1962 in music ),The Beatles ("Please Please Me ") emerged from England and popularized British rock, while The Beach Boys' success brought harmony-laden surf music to the forefront of the American scene. With country and soul musicians unable to maintain their hipness, both faded from mass consciousness.The mid-1960s saw the collapse of The Beach Boys as a result of singer and
songwriter Brian Wilson 's mental problems after releasing one of the most influential rock albums in history, "Pet Sounds ". As theBritish Invasion died down, The Beatles created a radical new look and sound which helped bring the Psychedelic movement to the mainstream. The Psychedelic music was a revolutionary sound heavily influenced by drugs, primarily LSD. With the hippie movement beginning to take center stage and theSummer of Love inSan francisco , Pyschedelic music began to enter the public's knowledge. The first American Band that introduced and even revolutionized the sound wasJefferson Airplane . Their 1967 albumSurrealistic Pillow is considered to be the quintessential album of the movement along withThe Beatles Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band andThe Doors debut album. Another band considered to be founders of the movement werethe Grateful Dead , the firstjam band , and considered to be considered the firstcult act.The Psychedelic scene went into full circle with the
Monterey Pop Festival . Not only did it feature popular acts of the time such asJefferson Airplane andThe Who , but it also introduced two of the greatest rockers of the movement and arguably in rock history:Jimi Hendrix andJanis Joplin (who was the lead singer ofBig Brother and the Holding Company at the Time). The concert ended with a performance byThe Mamas and the Papas whose more pop/folk sound was beginning to be overshadowed by thehard rock bands. Psychedelia-inflected rock dominated black and white audiences. During this period, most of American musical styles for the next forty years began in one form or another, including heavy metal, punk rock, electronic music and hip hop. Perhaps most importantly were two developments. First was the popularization of the LP as a distinct artistic statement. Prior to the early 1960s (and later in most cases), an LP was nothing more than a collection of singles bound together with filler.As the psychedelic revolution progressed, however, lyrics grew more complex and LPs developed to enable the artists to make a more in depth statement than a single song could allow. In addition, rules as to what could be allowed in popular music were lessened -- singles lasted longer than three minutes (Bob Dylan 's "Like a Rolling Stone " was the first of these); singing could be gruff, guttural and not classically beautiful and lyrics could focus on more than simple tales of youth, love songs and ballads to include politically and socially aware lyrics. The idea that popular music could and should change the way one feels and lead social change largely developed during this period, though it was certainly not unheard of before.Funk, gospel and album-oriented soul
Black music in the late 1960s diversified. Soul music had arisen as a secularized form of
gospel music . With the rise of psychedelia and folk, however, artists that had previously been best-sellers found themselves unpopular with the new sound. Many, such as The Supremes and The Miracles, never fully recovered, unable to adjust to the changes in music. Others, like the Temptations andCurtis Mayfield 's The Impressions, abandoned their original sounds almost completely to adapt to new trends, continuing their momentum into the early1970s .Soul music, led at the time by singers like James Brown ("(Get Up I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine"), developed into psychedelia-influenced
funk . Bands like Parliament ("The Mothership Connection "), War ("All Day Music ") andFunkadelic ("One Nation Under a Groove ") merged soul with psychedelic rock to cult acclaim but little popular success. Meanwhile,Sly & the Family Stone ("Stand! ") and similar acts achieved popular success with their mixture of soul and psychedelia.Pure soul adapted to the new face of popular music by expanding beyond the simple lyricism of singles to more cohesive and socially-aware, album-oriented soul. This is usually said to have begun with the success of
Marvin Gaye 's "What's Going On " andCurtis Mayfield 's "Super Fly" soundtrack. They both described the gritty realities of ghetto life with funky, danceable beats and led to the dominant sounds of soul in the1970s , such asKenneth Gamble & Leon Huff 'sPhiladelphia soul .Nonsecularized gospel was still popular, though not near the levels of the 1950s boom.
Reverend James Cleveland was the most influential artist of the period; he introduced choirs to gospel with1962 's "Peace Be Still ", recorded with theAngelic Choir of Nutley fromNew Jersey . Six years later he founded the annualGospel Music Workshop of America , which have spread across the world.Edwin Hawkins ("Oh Happy Day") was another major artist of the period. Beginning with artists likeRay Repp in1964 , a slicksoft rock and gospel fusion calledChristian Contemporary Music (or "CCM") became popular, which helped lead the way for future rock Christian artists including light country starAmy Grant and Christian heavy metal pioneersStryper .Progressive, punk and heavy metal
A few bands popular among only a small crowd of devoted followers emerged in the late 1960s.
The Nice ("The Nice") andThe Moody Blues ("Days of Future Passed ") (both British) began releasing a series of complex, classical tingedconcept album s that began a sound known asprogressive rock . Other British bands likeLed Zeppelin ("Led Zeppelin") andBlack Sabbath ("Paranoid") emerged with a form of hard-edged electric blues that came to be known asheavy metal music . American bands likeThe Velvet Underground ("White Light/White Heat "),Blue Cheer ("Vincebus Eruptum "),Patti Smith ("Horses") andThe Stooges ("Raw Power ") also emerged with fatalistic, artsy lyrics and a fast-driving energetic sound; this was the beginning ofpunk rock .Country, newgrass and folk
In the 1960s, the
Bakersfield Sound began its rise to mainstream, led byMerle Haggard . Bands likeMuleskinner andOld and in the Way invented a progressive form of bluegrass that came to be known as newgrass. Though this never achieved much mainstream success, newgrass has become a major part of the American country scene. New forms, includingspacegrass andsupergrass , arose in the 80s, and remained low-key.The rise of the Bakersfield Sound was a popular example of a
roots revival in folk music, in which artists and audiences revitalize the traditional music forms of their ancestors, generally as a reaction against dilution of the original culture for mainstream acceptance. In the 1960s and 70s, roots revivals occurred across the globe. The United States saw Appalachian folk music, blues and jazz adapt to rock and roll, forming heavy metal, psychedelia and progressive rock. Other folk forms were also popularized as part of a 1960s roots revival, including Cajun and Hawaiian folk. Cajun music entered the national mainstream for the first time (mostly in the form of cover songs called "swamp pop "), becoming a fixture at the influentialNewport Folk Festival .CoDoFiL ("Council for the Development of French in Louisiana"), founded in1968 , helped to lead this trend, establishing theFestivals Acadiens andZydeco Festival , for example. Cajun artists during this period included theBalfa Brothers ,D. L. Menard ,Eddie LeJeune ,Michael Doucet 'sBeausoleil andBarry Jean Ancelet .1970s
In the early
1970s ,singer-songwriter s likeJames Taylor ("Fire and Rain") andCarole King ("Tapestry") topped the charts while prog rock, heavy metal and punk began to differentiate themselves from mainstream music. While most singer-songwriters drew on Anglo folk roots, some drew on their Native American origins, following in the path of pioneers likeBuffy Sainte-Marie ("Now That the Buffalo's Gone"); other Native American bands like XIT ("Plight of the Redman ") and Redbone, fused Native American and rock influences. The mid-1970s saw the development ofpower pop , the marriage of glam and heavy metal to formglam metal and the emergence ofdisco . By the late 1970s, disco, an electronically-baseddance music , dominated the sound of the US, aided by the breakthrough success of "Saturday Night Fever ". Originally associated with urban blacks and gay white males, disco spent a few years at the top of the charts just ascountry rock and prog rock achieved their greatest mainstream success. Country rock bands likeLynyrd Skynyrd ("Second Helping ") and pop-prog bands like Chicago ("Chicago II ") and Styx ("Kilroy Was Here") dominated the portion of the market not listening to disco with long, bizarre progressive pieces and electric blues based southern rock. At the time,outlaw country artists likeWillie Nelson ("The Red Headed Stranger ") andDavid Allan Coe ("You Never Even Called Me By Name") dominated the country music charts with tales of cowboys and rebels.The
Hard rock sound that was formed in the late1960s dominated the decade.Led Zeppelin became a worldwide phenomenon with albums likeLed Zeppelin IV . FormerPsychedelic rockersPink Floyd began experimenting with different musical sounds and philosophical lyrics and went on to be one of the most critically and commercially successful bands of the decade. Their influential albumDark Side of the Moon is one of the best selling records in music history. Former blues bandFleetwood Mac , began to change their sound to rock and added American musiciansStevie Nicks andLindsey Buckingham . They went on to become one of the most popular and successful bands of the decade and released the legendaryRumours in 1977, which spent weeks on top of the charts. Another former psychedelic rocker who achieved commercial success in the decade wasSteve Miller whose albumFly Like An Eagle topped the charts in the mid 70's. The decade also introduced theBlue Öyster Cult who achieved mainstream success with their hit singleDon't Fear the Reaper . Other rock bands who were influential and popular in the time includeAerosmith , Heart, andVan Halen , all of whom found further success in the next decade.Underground trends
Heavy metal bands like KISS ("
Alive! ") began to attract mainstream attention, while punk influenced the developingglam rock scene. Taking its cue from the energetic, dirty psychedelia ofThe Doors , glam musicians likeDavid Bowie ("The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars ") rose to prominence among segments of the population in the early1970s .Jamaican immigrants, most notably including
DJ Kool Herc , moved toNew York City and brought with them the practice of speaking over isolated percussion breaks from popular songs during long dance parties called block parties; this was the beginning of hip hop. Meanwhile,Cuba n and Puerto Rican musicians drew on mambo and other Cuban genres to formsalsa music . Early artists includedHéctor Lavoe andWillie Colón .Jewish-American musicians launched a revival of
klezmer music in the mid-1970s , led byBerkeley, California 'sThe Klezmorim , Boston'sKlezmer Conservatory Band , and New York'sHenry Sapoznik who formed theArchive of Recorded Sound at theInstitute for Jewish Research inNew York City and founded theKlezKamp festival, where stars likeHowie Lees ,Max Epstein andSid Beckerman taught and played.The roots of
world music , a fusion of rock, pop and other Western music with traditional folk from around the world, arose in the1970s . Taj Mahal's "Happy to Be Just Like I Am " (1972),Joni Mitchell 's "The Hissing of Summer Lawns " (1975) andRy Cooder 's 1976 "Chicken Skin Music " (withFlaco Jiménez andGabby Pahinui ) helped to launch the genre, which was solidified in1981 with David Byrne andBrian Eno 's "My Life in the Bush of Ghosts".The late 1970s also saw the coalescence of what eventually became known as punk music. Arty singers like
Patti Smith ("Horses") and grungy bands likeThe Ramones ("The Ramones") emerged from New York, based out of the popular clubCBGB's . Just asThe Clash ("The Clash") and theSex Pistols ("Nevermind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols ") defined and popularized the sound of punk in the UK, a similar scene was developing throughout the US. In the early 1980s, disco died a quick death. The popular reaction against disco was swift and final, and the music had ended its reign of commercial influence by1982 (see1982 in music ). New Wave filled in as the dominant American sound. It had developed out of arty punk bands like theTalking Heads ("More Songs About Buildings and Food "), and was popularized byDepeche Mode ("Speak and Spell"),Duran Duran ("Rio") and others.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.