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Timeline of music in the United States

 
Wikipedia: Timeline of music in the United States (1950–1969)
Timeline of music in the United States
Music history of the United States
Colonial erato the Civil WarDuring the Civil WarLate 19th centuryEarly 20th century40s and 50s60s and 70s80s to the present

This is a timeline of music in the United States from 1950 to 1969.

Contents

1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969

1950

Early 1950s music trends

1951

1952

1953

  • Alan Freed launches a show called The Biggest Rhythm and Blues Show, a package tour that included Ruth Brown and Wynonie Harris. The show would become the "largest-grossing R&B revue up to that time".[67]
  • Elvis Presley records his first songs, "My Happiness" and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin". These records would introduce Presley to Sam Phillips, who worked for Sun Records.[68]
  • Pete Seeger and Harry Belafonte see a show featuring a performer who goes only by Odetta; the African American singer and guitarist becomes one of the stars of the American folk revival, helped in part by her race, which "bestowed an air of credibility on her music" for some folk audiences, because her style reflected that field's strong inspiration in rural African American music.[69]
  • The Dixie Hummingbirds' "Let's Go Out to the Programs" becomes a major hit, their signature song and a classic piece of gospel.[70]
  • The Music Educators National Conference launches a periodical devoted to the study of music education, entitled Journal of Research in Music Education.[71]
  • Alarmed by the Soviet Union sending cultural figures abroad, the American government creates the United States Information Agency to coordinate cultural activities internationally.[72]
  • George Russell becomes well-known within the jazz community with the publication of Lydian Concept of Total Organization, which offers a "complex system of associating chords with scales organized by their degree of consonance or dissonance".[73]
  • The Spaniels' "Baby, It's You" popularizes the use of nonsense syllables like doo-doo-doo-wop to "add rhythmic accompaniment to romantic songs", imitating the use of the string bass in other rhythm and blues groups; this technique becomes a central part of black vocal harmony groups.[45]
  • The first pan-North American Estonian song festival for male choruses is held in Toronto, and will alternate between there and the United States, usually New York; a similar gathering for female choruses begins the following year.[74]
  • Benny Goodman embarks on a famously disastrous tour with Louis Armstrong's All Stars. Goodman insults Armstrong, an elder statesman of jazz, and Goodman himself is perturbed at the more vaudevillean elements of Armstrong's show. Goodman has a nervous breakdown, and retires from popular music.[75]
  • A score by Alfred Newman for the film The Robe is the first to be released in true stereo sound.[62]
  • The Prisonaires, a vocal group based in the Tennessee State Penitentiary, have a hit with "Just Walkin' in the Rain". The song establishes Sun Records.[76]
  • Radio Liberty begins broadcasting to Russia.[28]
  • The Red Tops, led by Walter Osborne and based out of Vicksburg, Mississippi, begins performing locally, soon becoming one of the most popular blues bands of the mid-South until 1973[77]
  • The Top 40 radio format is introduced by Todd Storz and Bill Stewart of KOWH-AM in Omaha, Nebraska.[78]

1954

  • Elvis Presley records "That's All Right (Mama)" and "Blue Moon of Kentucky", both breakthrough recordings that launched his career and helped bring African American musical techniques to white audiences.[79][80]
  • Jazz musician Miles Davis discovers an "intensely personal sound that was often heard in tightly muted playing, close to the microphone", a trend exemplified by a recording of the blues number "Walkin' with J. J. Johnson, Horace Silver and Kenny Clarke.[81]
  • The Fender Stratocaster, the first electric guitar with three pickups, is introduced by the Fender Electric Instrument Company.[35] It will play a major role in the popularization of rock and roll.[82]
  • The first published bibliography on a specific genre of popular music is Alan Merriam's A Bibliography of Jazz.[83]
  • The Newport Jazz Festival is founded in Newport, Rhode Island, reflecting a growing acceptance for jazz as an art.[84][85]
  • Fender introduces the Stratocaster model of guitar, the first model that came to be viewed as a fashion statement in addition to a musical instrument.[86]
  • The Chords "Sh-Boom" and a subsequent pop cover by The Crew-Cuts help "launch an American fad for amateur black harmony groups" that came to be known as doo wop.[87] By the end of the year, The Penguins' "Earth Angel" established the long-term popularity of doo wop.[88] "Sh-Boom" has also been called the first rock and roll recording.[89]
  • WDIA, an influential and well-studied radio station in Memphis drastically boosts its broadcasting area, helping the group Spirit of Memphis.[90]
  • For the first time, a number of African American performers achieve the Billboard pop charts in the same year: Hank Ballard & the Midnighters' "Work With Me Annie", The Crows' "Gee", The Chords' "Sh-Boom" and The Drifters' "Honey Love". "Sh-Boom" also becomes a hit for a cover band, The Crew Cuts.[43]
  • Bruno Nettl conducts research showing that the "rise", or the inclusion of new or repetitive melodic material at a higher pitch than the opening, is a distinctive feature of all Native American music of California.[91]
  • The Moonglows innovate a new technique in the field of black vocal harmony with their single "Sincerely", in which the singers blow nonsense sounds in the microphone to create a vocal effect.[45]
  • Little Richard and his drummer, Charles Conner, introduce a new rhythm to the field of black popular music in imitation of a train; the beat will be adopted by many rhythm and blues, rock and roll and doo wop groups.[45]
  • Fandango begins broadcasting on KNXT in California, the first TV show to target Mexican American audiences with Spanish language musical performances.[92]
  • Lionel "Chica" Sesma moves the popular Latin Holidays, a ballroom dance-oriented party, to the Hollywood Palladium, where the dances will become an integral part of the Mexican-Californian music scene.[92]
  • Mahalia Jackson becomes the first gospel performer with her own television show, the Mahalia Jackson Show, on CBS.[26]
  • Alex Bradford organizes the first all-male gospel choir.[26]

1955

Mid-1950s music trends
  • Bluegrass music begins moving outside of country audiences to mainstream listeners, including Mike Seeger and Ralph Rinzler, both of whom would go on to play a major role in bluegrass history.[52]
  • The black urban popular music rhythm and blues inspires the white teenage popular music rock and roll.[93]
  • A number of jazz musicians, including pianist Horace Silver, move towards a style known as funk, characterized by the subordination of "melody and harmony to the rhythmic groove".[94]
  • The term bluegrass comes to describe a kind of country-based music, popular especially in rural areas and among those in the urban revival of American folk music.[95]
  • Rockabilly is the most popular form of country music.
  • The Clara Ward Singers begin their period of greatest success with a series of records released by Savoy.[96]
  • Church groups and others begin to denounce rock and roll, "connecting it in an unholy alliance to race, sex and delinquency".[43]
  • Isidro López' band achieves unprecedented commercial success and changes the Tejano big band into a more distinctive and smaller format, influenced strongly by the corrido.[97]

1956

  • The Wizard of Oz is first shown on television, beginning its transformation into an iconic symbol of American culture.[124]
  • Elvis Presley first performs on network television, on CBS's Stage Show, making him the "hottest act in show business" at the time.[125] His hit "Heartbreak Hotel" becomes "the prototype for a new genre of morbidly self-pitying rock songs".[126] He also appears on The Ed Sullivan Show, but is taped only from the waist up because his hip movements are seen as too risqué for American audiences.[127] Later in the year, after a performance of "Hound Dog" on The Milton Berle Show in which he grabs his crotch and gyrates his hips in a sexually-charged manner, Presley becomes the subject of criticism for what they saw as degenerate moral values.[128] "Hound Dog" would go on to become the biggest selling record of the 1950s,[129] and Presley's performance will play a major role in launching his career.[130]
  • Columbia House becomes the first record club in the United States.[131]
  • Pat Boone, who had released a string of hit cover versions of African American popular songs that sold better than the original, releases a cover of Little Richard's "Long Tall Sally". Boone's version is outsold by Little Richard, an event that Keir Keightley called a "symbolic (and) economic triumph of original rock'n'roll over its putatively inferior and commercial copy".[132]
  • Forbidden Planet becomes the first movie to have an all-electronic music soundtrack. This was the first widespread exposure to electronic music for ordinary Americans. The soundtrack's composers were the husband and wife team Bebe and Louis Barron.[133]
  • My Fair Lady smashes Broadway records, and will run for six years and a total of 2,717 performances.[134]
  • Nat King Cole becomes the first "African American to headline a TV network variety series", The Nat "King" Cole Show.[135]
  • The Clancy Brothers form Tradition, a record label, originally just to record themselves, however, they would go on to record popular folk musicians like Lightnin' Hopkins and Odetta Hopkins.[136]
  • The word bluegrass is first used in print.[95]
  • Cover versions of popular songs by African American artists decline, in large part because the original, African American recording begins to outsell the covers.[43]
  • Members of the Alabama Citizens' Council assault Nat King Cole onstage, leading to massive media attention to the Christian anti-rock and roll movement. Later that year, Louisiana passes a law forbidding interracial social functions, entertainment or dancing of any kind.[43]
  • The Navy School of Music takes over all individual advanced training for military musicians.[7]
  • The Coasters' "Down in Mexico" is the first in a string of hits by that group, popularizing a style of "teenage-oriented productions,... mainly novelty songs (with) comic lyrics and a playful vocal style accompanied by a rhythm and blues combo".[45]
  • "Blue Suede Shoes" by Carl Perkins becomes a massive success and is the "first million-selling triple-play crossover (to move) from the top of the country charts, to those of rhythm & blues, and then pop".[137]
  • Dizzy Gillespie's jazz orchestra becomes the first such group to be officially recognized by the U.S. government, when it is chosen to tour as a goodwill ambassador for the State Department.[138]
  • The Carl Orff method of music instruction is introduced by Arnold Walter at a Music Educators National Conference in St. Louis.[139]
  • The film Rock Around the Clock is the first of many to frame a rock performance as a dramatic account of rock culture. Reports of rioting fuel controversy and help perpetuate the notion that rock is linked to juvenile delinquency. Similar films are released later in the year: Rock, Rock, Rock and The Girl Can't Help It.[102]

1957

1958

Late 1950s music trends
  • Influential composer Milton Babbitt begins experimenting with techniques to produce electronic sound.[153]
  • Middle Eastern culture, in particular belly dancing, is featured on a number of popular albums, most of which are only superficially related to the actual musics of the Middle East. Examples include I Remember Lebanon, Markko Polo Adventurers' Orienta and Music of the Middle East - Port Said featuring Mohammed El-Bakkar.[154]
  • Marian Lush introduces the two-trumpet style of polka, which becomes standard in the field.[155]
  • Nashville cements its position as a major center for the American popular music industry, aided by the great success of the Bradley Film and Recording Studio.[156]
  • Atonal music has developed into "a range of idioms—freely chromatic, twelve-tone, systematically serialized, electronic, chance-based, or combinations thereof—with only atonality in common".[153]
  • The Country Music Association is founded.[157]
  • Miles Davis records with a band led by Gil Evans, embracing the "restrained musical intensity that (John Lewis and the Modern Jazz Quartet) pioneered.[10]
  • The city of Liverpool, England becomes home to a large rock and roll scene, inspired by American rock and rhythm and blues, setting the stage for the British Invasion of the 1960s.[158]
  • College students and other young people grow increasingly interested in American folk music, especially blues and what was then known as hillbilly music.[159]
  • Helped by the American folk revival and endorsements from Earl Scruggs and Pete Seeger, two of the stars of that field, sales of banjos increase by over 500%.[160] The album-oriented folk revival is, in large part, responsible for doubled LP sales between 1956 and 1961,[161]
  • The Hawaiian Renaissance of interest in traditional music and other cultural occurrences begins.[162]
  • Max Mathews of Bell Laboratories pioneers the use of computers in creating sound.[163]
  • The emotional, gospel-influenced soul blues vocal style, the electric bass and organ are introduced to the popular blues.[164]
  • The Irish American music scene comes to be dominated by showband music, wherein bands covered rock songs, especially Elvis Presley, skiffle and other popular styles, including traditionally-inspired Irish tunes.[59]
  • Chicago-style polka becomes dominant on the East Coast, supplanting the ballroom-style that had been popular since the mid-1930s. People like Marion Lush combine the Chicago and Eastern-styles into a form called dyno-style or push-style.[165]
  • Cool jazz musicians begin working on crime shows on television, creating a style sometimes called crime jazz.[166]
  • American Bandstand introduces a number of "cleaned-up versions of the coolest new black dances", promoted in "conjunction with upbeat new songs, often specially recorded just for this purpose. Two of the earliest were The Bop, from "At the Hop", and The Stroll, from "The Stroll".[167] The success of American Bandstand and host Dick Clark turned Philadelphia, the show's home, into a "mecca for music men".[168]
  • "Lonely Teardrops" by Jackie Wilson is a major hit. Producer Berry Gordy perfected the "formula he would exploit for the next decade, producing an unprecedented series of best-selling records with a variety of different black artists".[169] "Lonely Teardrops"' "upbeat arrangement was designed to exploit one of the latest dance fads... called the cha-lypso, a kind of cha-cha done to a modified calypso beat".[170]
  • The second wave of the American folk revival begins, led by the apolitical group the Kingston Trio"[37], and their hit single, "Tom Dooley".[6][109]
  • La Monte Young's Trio for Strings is an early work of experimental West Coast chamber music that began the field of minimalism.[171]
  • Gus Palmer Sr. revives the Black Legs Society, or Tonkonga, of the Kiowa, a society that features song, dance and music.[172]
  • The Chantels' "Maybe" is the first of many songs from the next few years to cross "over into the mainstream and (establish) the commercial viability of 'girl groups' in the music industry".[45]
  • Mantle Hood founds the first gamelan education program in the United States, at the University of California, Los Angeles, with Hardja Susila becoming the first Javanese instructor; Hood will also establish the concept of bi-musicality, in which music students are expected to perform the music they study.[173]
  • Rogers and Hammerstein's Flower Drum Dance becomes the first American musical with an Asian American cast.[98]
  • Alvin Ailey's Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater becomes the first African American resident concert dance company to earn a national reputation.[174]
  • The Country Music Association is formed to promote country music in the United States; its predecessor was the Country Music Disk Jockeys Association.[175][176]
  • Gibson introduces the first twin-necked electric guitar, and the Flying V guitar, the first of many with outlandish shapes.[35]
  • Stereo records are introduced.[177]
  • The Grammy Awards are first instituted to recognize popular performers, as voted on by the United States National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. They will become the most prestigious award in popular music. The name Grammies is chosen in a contest, with the winning entry coming from Jay Danna of New Orleans, who wins twelve LPs as a reward.[178]

1959

1960

Early 1960s music trends
  • Performers like the New Lost City Ramblers, Joan Baez and Odetta "slowly pushed the (American folk revival) towards a new maturity" by "modernizing their approach and repertoire" with elements of popular music; of these performers, Baez becomes simultaneously one of the most commercially successful and popularly respected, both by folk music purists and more casual audiences, artists of the American folk revival, and makes her record label, Vanguard Records, one of the top labels of the era.[195]
  • After years of being intimidated by the anti-Communist McCarthy hearings, balalaika orchestras experience a resurgence; veterans of older orchestras of the same format rejoined the industry, including Mark Selivan, Sergei Larionoff and Luke Bakoota.[11]
  • Bluegrass becomes an integral part of the folk revival scene, and many adherents of that movement form bluegrass bands.[95]
  • The earliest roots of salsa music begin to emerge.[43]
  • Major record labels regain their former market dominance in the field of pop music, having succumbed for a brief time to a surge of success for independent rhythm and blues and rock and roll labels.[43]
  • The earliest roots of salsa music emerge in the Latin, especially Puerto Rican, community of New York City.[43]
  • The three groups of Old Believers, Russian Orthodox Christians who refused to accept liturgical reform in the 17th century, settle in Woodburn, Oregon; each group has their own distinct style of music, though they will soon syncretize, with one style, known as Harbintsi, becoming the most dominant.[61]
  • Many Greek American bands begin playing in a format popularized by Trio Bel Canto, in which vocalists sing in three-part harmony, accompanied by two bouzoukis and a rhythm guitar.[61]
  • Irish American showbands, smartly-dressed performance groups who did popular covers, begin touring the United States, displacing the dance hall band that had long dominated Irish American music[196]
  • Elvis Presley is discharged from the Army and hosts a television show with Frank Sinatra, revitalizing both men's careers.[197]
  • Joan Baez signs to Vanguard, marking that label as "the mover and shaker on the (folk music revival) scene".[198]
  • The 3rd United States Infantry Fife and Drum Corps is formed by the Army to play colonial-era instrumentation, primarily for special official occasions. The Corps' Drum Major is the only person in the Army authorized to salute with his left hand.[7]
  • Beginning in the spring of this year, "We Shall Overcome" becomes an omnipresent part and an unofficial anthem of civil rights demonstrations.[199][200]
  • Stax Records is founded by Jim Stewart and Estelle Axton, soon becoming the home of Otis Redding, Rufus Thomas, Booker T. & the MG's and Sam & Dave, making Stax one of the premier soul labels of the decade.[201]
  • George Robinson Ricks' dissertation "Some Aspects of the Religious Music of the United States Negro: An Ethnomusicological Study with Special Emphasis on the Gospel Tradition" is the first lengthy description of African American gospel music.[202]
  • Ornette Coleman begins performing, causing a "major aesthetic controversy" due to his "dissonant harmonic style and abandonment of chorus structures and fixed harmonic changes as means of organizing improvisation flow". This is the beginning of free jazz.[73][203]
  • Robert E. Brown founds a performance-based world music program at Wesleyan University, which includes instruction in Indonesian traditions; Brown will go on to found many similar programs, as well as the Center for World Music in San Francisco.[173]
  • James Cleveland has his first "smash hit" with "The Love of God", which helps establish him as one of the foremost entertainers in American gospel music.[204]
  • Blues is performed for the first time at the Newport Jazz Festival.[85]
  • Elvis Presley's "His Hand in Mine" is a landmark recording that helps define the field of white gospel.[87]

1961

  • A compilation of Robert Johnson recordings entitled King of the Delta Blues Singers is released, from recordings made in 1936 and 1937. At the time, no photographs of the late blues singer were known, and he was considered a "sort of invisible pop star".[205] The recording turned him into a cultural icon among a "coterie of prominent young musicians", who imitated his style of blues. People like Bob Dylan were inspired by Johnson, drawing on his work as a "source of a tacit ethos, silently transmitted, internationally shared, creating a new mythic example of what rock and roll could be."[206]
  • The police attempt to break up a folk musiciain march and concert in Washington Square, leading to a riot. The event is a signal of the return of politics to folk music, having recovered from the blacklisting and McCarthyism of the 1950s.[207]
  • Alexander Kuchma, Jack Raymond and Mark Selivan form the Balalaika and Domra Society of New York, which helps sustain and inspire the Russian balalaika orchestra tradition in the United States.[11]
  • Composer La Monte Young and Richard Maxfield create a concert series in the loft of Yoko Ono; these are said to have begun the downtown music tradition of New York City.[171]
  • Grace Bumbry becomes the first African American to sing at the prestigious Bayreuth Festival.[208]
  • Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg helps settle a strike of performers at the Metropolitan Opera, perhaps the "first sign of an official governmental policy on the arts".[72]
  • Allan and Sandra Jaffe open Preservation Hall in New Orleans, a music venue that helped revitalize the city's jazz scene, and was the only venue in the city at the time to host the traditional black jazz performers.[209]
  • Hale Smith's Contours for Orchestra is an influential piece, using avant garde, especially the twelve-tone serial technique.[44]
  • Bill Clifton organizes the first bluegrass festival on July 4, which is sparsely-attended, in Luray, Virginia.[210][211]
  • The death of Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic leads to "political and social upheaval" in that country and many immigrants coming to the United States, bringing with them Dominican music.[117]
  • The first training course in the music education method of Zoltan Kodaly is held.[139]
  • Mariachi los Camperos de Nati Cano is founded, and will become one of the longest-lasting, most well-known and influential of American mariachi groups.[92]
  • Celia Cruz leaves Sonora Matancera, an influential group who had popularized Cuban dance music throughout the Americas; Cruz will go on to become perhaps the longest lasting institution of American salsa music.[14]
  • The Famous Ward Singers are the first gospel group to perform in nightclubs.[212]
  • The Modern Jazz Quartet opens up the "concert stage to the jazz ensemble" with an unprecedented performance with the Cincinnati Symphony.[213]
  • The Clancy Brothers are invited to appear on The Ed Sullivan Show, launching their career and garnering newfound respectability for the Irish American showband tradition.[214]
  • The U.S. Navy School of Music is moved to Norfolk, Virginia. During the move, two ships bring bands from Washington D.C. to Norfolk; along the way, they play in honor of George Washington as they pass his grave.[215]
  • The Valadiers become the first white Motown group with their recording of "Greetings, This Is Uncle Sam".[216]

1962

1963

1964

1965

Mid-1960s music trends
  • The 82nd Airborne Division Band is part of the forces which occupy the Dominican Republic. Later in the year, in order to boost morale and support from the locals for the Americans, the Band participates in a parade. Bandsmen carry rifles on their backs during the parade to remind the populace of the strength and power of the American military.[215]
  • The federal government begins funding composers through the National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, later the National Endowment for the Arts, which is "roughly modeled on the British Arts Council".[47][72][267][268]
  • The Beatles' "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)", the first popular recording to include a sitar, which is played more like a Western instrument than an Indian one. Many bands of the British Invasion and American psychedelic rock groups begin using a sitar elements of Indian music, to add a touch of exoticism to their recordings, creating a field sometimes called raga rock.[154]
  • Bob Dylan's performance with a rock and roll band at the Newport Folk Festival is a controversial landmark event in the American roots revival and the development of folk-rock,[239] with many commentators pointing to it as a landmark in the decline of the American folk revival.[269][270] The show carries Dylan into the "openly commercial arena of the popular sphere, where a family of idioms soon to be known as 'rock' music was developing out of rock and roll.[271] This year also saw the departure of folk band The Byrds for a more rock-oriented style.[272]
  • Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" is a breakthrough single, notable for its length of over six minutes, in contrast to the standard pop single of no more than about three minutes.[273]
  • James Brown's "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" is a breakthrough recording that showcases Brown's move from "conventional song structures and toward a new emphasis on movement and dance", paving the way for the development of funk".
  • Jam band the Grateful Dead begin their career, as The Warlocks, performing at an acid test in San Francisco.[274]
  • Drawing on Judy Henske's High Flying Bird the previous year, Judy Roderick and Fred Neil release their respective breakthrough albums, Woman Blue and Bleecker and MacDougal, heralding a new form of folk music that drew on more diverse influences, while Bob Gibson's Where I'm Bound and Bob Camp's Paths of Victory used "unusual chords... that opened up melodic riches unknown in the three-chord world of folk".[275]
  • The Fugs release The Fugs First Album, combining folk, rock and country with other unusual influences. Their work was unique at the time, and has led the band to be referred to as a "prototype punk band".[276]
  • John Coltrane records Om, a pioneering album that incorporated African and Asian musical techniques and instruments into his work.[13]
  • The first bluegrass festival is held.[95]
  • Muhal Richard Abrams creates the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, an organization that helped Chicago regain prominence as a center for innovative jazz. The organization will eventually produce such luminaries as Ed Wilkerson, Anthony Braxton, Roscoe Mitchell and Henry Threadgill.[27]
  • A disastrous performance of Milton Babbitt's Relata I is the "most famous example of the problems musicians" face in playing his music.[171]
  • Barry McGuire's "Eve of Destruction" becomes a "hugely popular" protest song.[23]
  • Country Joe & the Fish release "I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die-Rag", the "most memorable anti-war song of the decade".[23]
  • Steve Halpern begins studying the "healing effects of music"; he will go on to pioneer New Age music.[43]
  • The Left Bank Jazz Society begins holding weekly concerts featuring major jazz musicians; the tapes will become a "treasure trove" for jazz aficionados, but do not begin to be officially released until 2000.[277]
  • The 1965 Immigration Act eliminates quotas based on national origin for immigrants, leading to a surge in immigration from Taiwan and Hong Kong, further diversifying the Chinese American musical community; similarly, more diversity in immigration from India, Pakistan and the Middle East results in fractured and more specialized music scenes among immigrants from those areas.[15][264][278]
  • Duke Ellington presents the first jazz concert in a major church, Grace Cathedral Church of San Francisco, California.[47] This concert, and several subsequent ones, contribute "largely to the growing movement for making the music of the worship service more relevant to the times".[279]
  • Charles Radcliff, in the UK periodical Anarchy, is the first person to denounce the phenomenon of the white blues performer.[280]
  • Good News becomes the first Christian folk musical.[281]
  • The Federal Communications Commission rules that owners of both the AM and FM stations in an area must offer different programming on each, leading to the ruse of underground album rock radio.[282]
  • Nortronics introduces the eight-track head and an endless-loop cartridge machine.[283]

1966

1967

1968

Late 1960s music trends
  • Pulitzer Prizes are given to works by a number of composers from academic environments, including Leslie Bassett's Variations for Orchestra, Leon Kirchner's String Quartet No. 3, George Crumb's Echoes of Time and the River and Karel Hausa's String Quartet No. 3.
  • Light comedies featuring popular music performers become a major part of American television programming, most prominently including The Monkees, The Partridge Family and The Archies.[130]
  • Some composers begin working with music that draws on older European styles, a field called New Romanticism; these include Lukas Foss, George Rochberg, George Crumb, Jacob Druckman, William Bolcom and David del Tredici.[304]
  • Alex Bradford emerges at the forefront of modern gospel, one of a number of influential singer-songwriters to emerge at this time.[305]
  • The Pinewoods Morris Men, based out of Pinewoods Camp near Plymouth, Massachusetts, performs in the streets of Cambridge. This is followed by a number of similar public performances in the region.[306]
  • Rock bands begin incorporating more sophisticated and complex elements of music into their album-oriented music, creating progressive rock. This is primarily a British phenomenon, but has American practitioners and fans, and will become more well-established in North America in the next decade.[43]
  • Several Native American ethnomusicologists begin to publish works on the musics of the indigenous peoples of the Southeast United States, including Edwin Schupman's study of Creek music, David Draper on Choctaw music, and Marcia Herndon and Charlotte Heth on Cherokee music.[307]
  • Clubs catering to African American gay men in New York City begin to play an uninterrupted stream of Latin, soul and funk music; this is the origin of disco music.[308]
  • Mariachi grows in popularity among Mexican-Americans, buoyed by the institution of school programs in Texas, Arizona and California, and the pioneering of the first nightclub where mariachi is "presented on stage as a dinner show" in Los Angeles.[117]
  • Carlos Santana begins recording, quickly becoming the first major innovator in the field of Latin rock.[117]
  • A resurgence in popularity for the conjunto begins among Tejanos.[97]
  • The Haitian community in New York is large enough to support a significant music industry based around small dances and small bands called mini-djaz, known for a mixture of Haitian, American and Latino musics.[309]
  • The British Invasion leads to the prominence of British bands like The Beatles, Rolling Stones and The Who throughout the United States.[310]
  • W. A. Mathieu begins working with the Dances of Universal Peace, creating new compositions for mixed chorus and instrumental ensembles for that movement.[265]
  • The Black Power movement inspires a wave of research centers and performance ensembles dedicated to African American music, among the most influential being Dominique René de Lerma's Black Music Center at Indiana University.[244]
  • A number of bands begin producing music with feminist- or lesbian-oriented lyrics, including the New Harmony Sisterhood Band, Miss Saffman's Ladies Sewing Circle and the Chicago Women's Liberation Rock Band.[311]
  • A number of geographers begin investigating the relationship between music, place and space, largely drawing upon the idea of the cultural hearth - a homeland from which a particular aspect of culture diffuses - first described by Carl Sauer and Berkeley School of cultural geography.[312]
  • Rock comes to be seen as distinct from pop music, and is felt by many to be more authentic due to its roots in American folk music, more artistic and to better express the feelings of its audience.[313]
  • Death becomes a common subject for popular music, drawing on recent hits like The Shangri-Las' "Leader of the Pack" and songs in tribute to stars that had died. Many popular songs from this period and beyond begin using an aeolian chordal progression, which is otherwise most commonly associated with classical requiems, such as "All Along the Watchtower" by Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix - this technique, which gives a recording a morbid or spooky theme, had been used since at least 1949, with Vaughn Monroe's "(Ghost) Riders in the Sky".[250]
  • The hippie cultural movement, which includes music as an integral part, reaches its peak of popularity and influence.[314]
  • Rock albums begins to be released with fold-out posters, stickers and lyric sheets, rather than simple album covers.[315]

1969

  • The American blues roots revival peaks.[321]
  • The funeral of gospel singer Roberta Martin is attended by fifty-thousand people in Chicago, without any national media coverage; this event comes to be seen as a "symbol of black gospel music's place in American life: a blend of acceptance and obscurity".[322]
  • The Stonewall riots forces mainstream Americans to recognize the existence of homosexuality, and gay men begin making a musical "impact felt beyond their immediate communities", especially in the field of disco.[323]
  • Edwin Hawkins' "Oh Happy Day" is a surprise crossover gospel hit, a "jolt of energy that cut through the static and the airwaves in the spring of 1969".[324] It "ushered in the contemporary gospel era", and was innovative in its use of horns, bongoes and the Fender bass.[87][112] The song is the first true hybrid of rhythm and blues and gospel.[121]
  • Ovation creates a pioneering electric-acoustic hybrid guitar by adding amplification to a plastic-backed acoustic guitar.[35]
  • Jim Morrison of The Doors is arrested for public indecency after controversially flashing his genitalia onstage in Miami.[325]
  • The first explicitly lesbian-oriented popular song is released, "Angry Athis" by Maxine Feldman.[326]
  • Influential gospel label Malaca Records is founded.[327]
  • The first Christian rock album is Larry Norman's Upon This Rock.[281]
  • Phyl Garland's The Sound of Soul is an influential publication, focusing on the social context behind the emergence and acceptance of African American soul music in the United States.[202]
  • The Gospel Music Association begins issuing the Dove Awards, to reward gospel artists.[328]
  • The Institute for Jazz Research begins publishing Jazzforschung/Jazz Research, a German and English periodical and one of the earliest popular music journals.[329]
  • The James Cleveland Gospel Music Workshop of America is founded, the largest gospel convention of the time, with more than 20,000 annual attendees.[112][330]
  • After performing at the Newport Jazz Festival with several rock bands, Miles Davis records Bitches Brew,an influential recording that fuses jazz and rock.[73][296]
  • Phyl Garland's The Sound of Soul is an influential study of African American that shapes the future of academic research on soul music.[244]
  • Recordings by Sly & the Family Stone are an innovative step in the development of funk, which used elements of rock, such as the fuzz box, wah-wah pedal, vocal distortion and the echo chamber, in soul-based music. In hits like "Hot Fun in the Summertime", "Stand!" and "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Again)", bassist Larry Graham created a unique style on the bass guitar, using "pulling, plucking, thumping and slapping" to "produce a distinctive percussive style".[331]
  • The Songwriters Hall of Fame is founded.[175]
  • The first Tamburitza Extravaganza is held by the Tamburitza Association of America.[61]
  • A fan is stabbed to death by one of the Hell's Angels, who had been hired by the Rolling Stones to provide security for a concert at Altamont.[250]
  • The Woodstock Music and Arts Fair is held in New York. It is considered a defining event for the era which helped shape the hippie movement and the counterculture.[295][296]
  • The Wally Heider Recording Studio is founded by Wally Heider, quickly becoming the standard recording facility for San Francisco's psychedelic rock scene.[332]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Miller, pg. 39
  2. ^ Miller, pg. 46
  3. ^ Miller, pgs. 48–49
  4. ^ Miller, pgs. 187–188: This claim is in quotes in Miller, but is not specifically cited.
  5. ^ Lankford, pg. xii
  6. ^ a b c Mitchell, pg. 70
  7. ^ a b c d U.S. Army Bands
  8. ^ Laing, Dave. "Jukebox". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 513–515. 
  9. ^ Crawford, pg. 709
  10. ^ a b Crawford, pg. 764
  11. ^ a b c Livingston, Tamara E. and Katherine K. Preston, "Snapshot: Two Views of Music and Class", pgs. 55–62, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  12. ^ a b c Wolfe, Charles K. and Jacqueline Cogdell DjeDje, "Snapshot: Two Views of Music, Race, Ethnicity, and Nationhood", pgs. 76–86, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  13. ^ a b c Rycenga, Jennifer, Denise A. Seachrist and Elaine Keillor, "Snapshot: Three Views of Music and Religion", pgs. 129–139, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  14. ^ a b c Loza, Steven. "Latin Caribbean". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 790–801. 
  15. ^ a b c Zheng, Su. "Chinese Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 957–966. 
  16. ^ a b Mitchell, pg. 62
  17. ^ Bird, pg. 45, Bird calls this the "urbanization" of traditional blues
  18. ^ Lankford, pg. 54
  19. ^ a b Atton, Chris. "Fanzines". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 226–228. 
  20. ^ Lankford, pg. 67
  21. ^ Darden, pg. 215
  22. ^ Sanjek, David and Will Straw, "The Music Industry", pgs. 256–267, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  23. ^ a b c d Cornelius, Steven, Charlotte J. Frisbie and John Shepherd, "Snapshot: Four Views of Music, Government, and Politics", pgs. 304–319, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  24. ^ Chase, pg. 519
  25. ^ Chase, pg. 555
  26. ^ a b c d Southern, pg. 485
  27. ^ a b Bird, pg. 235
  28. ^ a b c Halper, Donna. "Radio Free Europe". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 464–465. 
  29. ^ Laing, Dave. "Sun Records". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 760–761. 
  30. ^ Laing, Dave. "Word". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 774–775. 
  31. ^ a b Crawford, pg. 737
  32. ^ Crawford, pg. 725
  33. ^ Crawford, pgs. 739–740
  34. ^ Miller, pg. 42
  35. ^ a b c d e f Bacon, Tony. "Electric guitars". New Grove Dictionary of Music. pp. 27–29. 
  36. ^ Miller, pgs. 53–54; quotes around dynamic obsolence in Miller
  37. ^ a b Miller, pg. 188
  38. ^ Mitchell, pg. 63
  39. ^ a b c d e Kassabian, Anahid, "Film", pgs. 202–205, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  40. ^ Darden, pg. 206
  41. ^ Darden, pg. 231
  42. ^ Darden, pg. 291
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ho, Fred, Jeremy Wallach, Beverly Diamond, Ron Pen, Rob Bowman and Sara Nicholson, "Snapshot: Five Fusions", pgs. 334–361, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  44. ^ a b c d e Wright, Jacqueline R. B.. "Concert Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 603–613. 
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Maultsby, Portia K.. "R&B and Soul". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 667–679. 
  46. ^ The New York Times: Janet Collins, 86; Ballerina Was First Black Artist at Met Opera
  47. ^ a b c d e f Southern, pgs. 361–364
  48. ^ a b c d Schrader, Barry. New Grove Dictionary of American Music. pp. 30–35. 
  49. ^ Crawford, pg. 703
  50. ^ Koskoff, pg. 255
  51. ^ Crawford, pg. 707
  52. ^ a b Crawford, pg. 741
  53. ^ Miller, pg. 59
  54. ^ Miller, pg. 66
  55. ^ Lankford, pg. 40
  56. ^ Wells, Paul F.. "Folkways Records]].". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 721–722. 
  57. ^ Kearns, Williams. "Overview of Music in the United States". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 519–553. 
  58. ^ a b c d e Cornelius, Steven. "Afro-Cuban Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 783–789. 
  59. ^ a b c Miller, Rebecca S.. "Irish Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 842–846. 
  60. ^ Gedutis, pg. 40
  61. ^ a b c d e Levy, Mark. "Eastern European Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 908–918. 
  62. ^ a b c d Steiner, Fred; Martin Marks. "Film music". New Grove Dictionary of Music, Volume II: E - K. 
  63. ^ Paul C. Echols. "Early-music revival". The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, Volume II: E-K. pp. 2–6. 
  64. ^ Coleman, pg. 71
  65. ^ Hansen, pg. 271
  66. ^ Laing, Dave. "Rack Jobber". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 562. 
  67. ^ Miller, pg. 61
  68. ^ Miller, pgs. 69–73
  69. ^ Lankford, pg. 81
  70. ^ Darden, pg. 236
  71. ^ Campbell, Patricia Sheehan and Rita Klinger, "Learning", pgs. 274–287, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  72. ^ a b c d Bergey, Barry, "Government and Politics", pgs. 288–303, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  73. ^ a b c d e Monson, Ingrid. "Jazz". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 650–666. 
  74. ^ Levy, Mark; Carl Rahkonen and Ain Haas. "Scandinavian and Baltic Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 866–881. 
  75. ^ Clarke, pg. 210
  76. ^ a b Hilts, Janet; David Buckley and John Shepherd. "Crime". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 189–196. 
  77. ^ Bird, pg. 90
  78. ^ Garner, Ken. "Playlist". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 449. 
  79. ^ Crawford, pg. 729
  80. ^ Miller, pgs. 79–80
  81. ^ a b Crawford, pg. 765
  82. ^ Bastian, Vanessa. "Instrument Manufacture". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 526–529. 
  83. ^ Horn, David. "Bibliographies". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 7–11. 
  84. ^ Crawford, pg. 766
  85. ^ a b c Southern, pg. 504
  86. ^ Miller, pgs. 42–43
  87. ^ a b c Moore, pg. xv
  88. ^ Miller, pg. 73–74, 78
  89. ^ Southern, pg. 518
  90. ^ Darden, pg. 224
  91. ^ Keeling, Richard. "California". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 412–419. Herzog, George (1928). "The Yuman Musical Style". Journal of American Folklore 41 (160): 183–231. doi:10.2307/534896.  and Nettl, Bruno (1954). North American Indian Musical Styles. Philadelphia: American Folklore Society. 
  92. ^ a b c d Loza, Steven. "Hispanic California". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 734–753. 
  93. ^ Crawford, pg. 762
  94. ^ Crawford, pg. 767
  95. ^ a b c d e f Post, Jennifer C., Neil V. Rosenberg and Holly Kruse, "Snapshot: How Music and Place Intertwine", pgs. 153–172, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  96. ^ Darden, pg. 208
  97. ^ a b c Reyna, José R.. "Tejano Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 770–782. 
  98. ^ a b c d e Hyphen: Music Moments
  99. ^ Crawford, pg. 734
  100. ^ Miller, pg. 88
  101. ^ Southern, pg. 520
  102. ^ a b Strachan, Robert; Marion Leonard. "Popular Music in Film". Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 318–322. 
  103. ^ Miller, pg. 98
  104. ^ Miller, pg. 105
  105. ^ Miller, pgs. 110–113
  106. ^ Miller, pgs. 114–118
  107. ^ Miller, pg. 123
  108. ^ Miller, pgs. 123–126
  109. ^ a b Lankford, pg. xiii
  110. ^ Lankford, pg. 15
  111. ^ Lankford, pg. 79
  112. ^ a b c Burnim, Mellonee V.. "Religious Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. 
  113. ^ Southern, pg. 412
  114. ^ Levine, Victoria Lindsay; Judith A. Gray. "Musical Interactions". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 480–490. , Howard, James H. (1955). "The Pan-Indian Culture of Oklahoma". Scientific Monthly 18 (5): 215–220. 
  115. ^ Reyes, Adelaida. "IDentity, Diversity, and Interaction". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 504–518. Baker, Theodore (1881). Über die Musik der nordamerikanischen Wilden. Leipzig: Breitkopf u. Härtel. 
  116. ^ a b Horn, David. "Histories". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 31–38. 
  117. ^ a b c d e Sheehy, Daniel; Steven Loza. "Overview". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 718–733. 
  118. ^ Chase, pg. 606
  119. ^ PlayBillArts: Robert McFerrin Sr., First Black Male Soloist at Metropolitan Opera, Dies at 85
  120. ^ Bird, pg 354
  121. ^ a b Southern, pg. 607
  122. ^ Horn, David. "Encyclopedias". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 20–25. 
  123. ^ Marlowe, Robert J.. "Tally Recording Studio". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 676. 
  124. ^ Crawford, pgs. 685–686
  125. ^ Crawford, pg. 732
  126. ^ Miller, pg. 130
  127. ^ Cohen, Sara; Marion Leonard. "Gender and Sexuality". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 231–237. 
  128. ^ Miller, pgs. 132–133
  129. ^ Miller, pg. 137
  130. ^ a b Laing, Dave; Olivier Julien and Catherine Budent. "Television Shows". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 474–476. 
  131. ^ Laing, Dave. "Record Clubs". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 563–564. 
  132. ^ Keightley, Keir. "Cover Version". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 614–616. 
  133. ^ Hinkle-Turner, pg. 15
  134. ^ Crawford, pg. 774
  135. ^ Miller, pg. 158
  136. ^ Lankford, pg. 66
  137. ^ Spitzer, Nick. "The 100 most important American musical works of the 20th century". NPR 100. National Public Radio. http://www.npr.org/programs/specials/vote/list100.html. Retrieved May 10, 2008. 
  138. ^ Southern, pg. 490
  139. ^ a b c d e f g Colwell, Richard; James W. Pruett and Pamela Bristah. "Education". New Grove Dictionary of Music. pp. 11–21. 
  140. ^ Crawford, pg. 743
  141. ^ Crawford, pg. 769
  142. ^ Crawford, pgs. 770–771
  143. ^ Miller, pgs. 140–142
  144. ^ Miller, pgs. 145–146; Miller attributes the statement "that teenage pop listeners... for television programs" to "ABC programming vice president Ted Fetter".
  145. ^ Miller, pg. 160
  146. ^ Laing, Dave. "Oldie". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 557. 
  147. ^ a b Cockrell, Dale and Andrew M. Zinck, "Popular Music of the Parlor and Stage", pgs. 179–201, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  148. ^ Darden, pgs. 231–232
  149. ^ a b c Stillman, Amy Ku'uleialoha. "Polynesian Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 1047–1053. 
  150. ^ Chase, pg. 518
  151. ^ Garofalo, Reebee. "American Bandstand". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 440. 
  152. ^ Southern, pg. 481
  153. ^ a b Crawford, pg. 697
  154. ^ a b Adinolfi, Francesco. "Exoticism". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 220–223. 
  155. ^ Pruter, Robert; Paul Oliver and The Editors. "Chicago". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. http://www.continuumpopmusic.com/vols34sam2.asp. Retrieved July 9, 2008. 
  156. ^ Rumble, John W.. "Bradley Film and Recording Studios/Bradley's Barn". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 650–651. 
  157. ^ Malone and Stricklin, pg. 130
  158. ^ Crawford, pg. 799
  159. ^ Lankford, pg. 27
  160. ^ Lankford, pg. 94
  161. ^ Lankford, pg. 96
  162. ^ a b c d e Kealiinohomoku, Joann W. and Mary Jane Warner, "Dance", pgs. 206–226, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  163. ^ a b c Pegley, Karen and Rob Haskins, "Snapshot: Two Forms of Electronic Music", pgs. 250–255, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  164. ^ Evans, David. "Blues". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 637–649. 
  165. ^ a b Levy, Mark. "Central European Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 884–903. 
  166. ^ Peterson, Richard; Will Straw and Dave Laing. "Television". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 471–474. 
  167. ^ Miller, pg. 147
  168. ^ Miller, pg. 149
  169. ^ Miller, pg. 161
  170. ^ Miller, pg. 162
  171. ^ a b c d Haskins, Rob, "Orchestral and Chamber Music in the Twentieth Century", pgs. 173–178, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  172. ^ Gooding, Erik D. (440–450). "Plains". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. 
  173. ^ a b c Diamond, Beverly; Barbara Benary. "Indonesian Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 1011–1023. 
  174. ^ a b Southern, pg. 566
  175. ^ a b Buckley, David. "Halls of Fame/Museums". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 29–31. 
  176. ^ Laing, Dave; John Shepherd. "Trade Organizations". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 569–570. 
  177. ^ Théberge, Paul. "Mono". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 437. 
  178. ^ Laing, Dave. "Awards". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 533–535. 
  179. ^ Crawford, pg. 705
  180. ^ Crawford, pg. 744
  181. ^ Crawford, pgs. 794–795
  182. ^ Fitzgerald, Jon. "Motown (Tamla Motown)]]". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 742–743. 
  183. ^ Hinkle-Turner, pg. 16
  184. ^ a b Miller, pg. 164
  185. ^ Strachan, Robert; Marion Leonard. "Film and Television Documentaries". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 26–29. 
  186. ^ Laing, Dave; John Shepherd. "Plugging". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 560–561. 
  187. ^ Lankford, pg. 74
  188. ^ Stanbridge, Alan. "Englewood Cliffs Studios". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 659–660. 
  189. ^ Lankford, pg. 86
  190. ^ Southern, pg. 515
  191. ^ Norfleet, Dawn M.. "Hip-Hop and Rap". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 692–704. 
  192. ^ Trimillos, Ricardo D.. "Filipino Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 1024–1027. 
  193. ^ Chase, pgs. 519–520
  194. ^ Komara, pg. 442
  195. ^ Lankford, pg. 71–73
  196. ^ a b Gedutis, pg. 160
  197. ^ Miller, pg. 168–170
  198. ^ Lankford, pg. 67, emphasis in original
  199. ^ Lankford, pg. 123
  200. ^ Southern, pg. 472
  201. ^ Bird, pg.52
  202. ^ a b c d Maultsby, Portia K.; Mellonee V. Burnin and Susan Oehler. "Overview". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 572–591. 
  203. ^ Koskoff, pg. 333
  204. ^ Chase, pg. 629
  205. ^ Miller, pg. 185; This claim is in quotes in Miller, but is not specifically cited.
  206. ^ Miller, pg. 185; Emphasis in original.
  207. ^ Lankford, pg. 116
  208. ^ TELEVISION/RADIO; Opening the Gates for Black Opera Singers
  209. ^ Bird, pg. 32
  210. ^ Malone and Stricklin, pg. 149
  211. ^ Bogdanov, pg. 153
  212. ^ Southern, pgs. 481–482
  213. ^ Southern, pg. 498
  214. ^ Gedutis, pg. 200
  215. ^ a b U.S. Army Bands
  216. ^ Allmusic: The Valadiers
  217. ^ Laing, Dave. "A&M Records". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 683. 
  218. ^ Crawford, pg. 698
  219. ^ Crawford, pg. 795
  220. ^ Lankford, pg. 111, Emphasis in original
  221. ^ Lankford, pgs. 125–126
  222. ^ Lankford, pgs. 131–132
  223. ^ Cohen, pg. 265
  224. ^ Lankford, pg. 138–139
  225. ^ Lankford, pg. 145
  226. ^ Darden, pg. 270
  227. ^ a b Riis, Thomas L.. "Musical Theater". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 614–623. 
  228. ^ a b Caldwell Titcomb (Spring 1990). "Black String Musicians: Ascending the Scale". Center for Black Music Research - Columbia College Chicago and University of Illinois Press. pp. 107–112. http://www.jstor.org/stable/779543. Retrieved May 17, 2008. 
  229. ^ Southern, pg. 516
  230. ^ Murray, pg. 265
  231. ^ Linehan, Andrew. "Soundcarrier". Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 359–366. 
  232. ^ a b Théberge, Paul. "Amplifier". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 505–506. 
  233. ^ Koskoff, pg. 131
  234. ^ Crawford, pg. 788
  235. ^ Crawford, pg. 797
  236. ^ Lankford, ix-x
  237. ^ Lankford, pgs. 147–148
  238. ^ Lankford, pg. 149
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  240. ^ Lankford, pg. 158
  241. ^ Lankford, pg. 165
  242. ^ Courlander, Harold (1956). Negro Folk Music of Alabama. Folkways Records FE 4417. 
  243. ^ Darden, pg. 271
  244. ^ a b c Maultsby, Portia K.; Isaac Kalumbu. "African American Studies". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 47–54. 
  245. ^ Neal, Mark Anthony. "Black Studies". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 56–59. 
  246. ^ a b Lindberg, Ulf; Gestur Gudmundsson, Morten Michelsen and Hans Weisethaunet. "Popular Music Criticism". Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 304–308. 
  247. ^ Slobin, Mark. "Jewish Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 933–945. 
  248. ^ Southern, pg. 430
  249. ^ Southern, pg. 482
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  251. ^ Crawford, pg. 800
  252. ^ Miller, pgs. 227–228; emphasis in original
  253. ^ Lankford, pg. 162
  254. ^ Malone and Stricklin, pg. 123
  255. ^ Koskoff, pg. 266
  256. ^ Chase, pg. 520
  257. ^ Laing, Dave. "Agent". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 532–533. 
  258. ^ Crawford, pg. 745; Emphasis in original.
  259. ^ Bird, pg. 419
  260. ^ a b c Crawford, pg. 809
  261. ^ Crawford, pg. 825–826; Quote is cited to Philip Glass from Duckworth, William (1995). Talking Music: Conversations with John Cage, Philip Glass, Laurie Anderson, and Five Generations of American Experimental Composers. Schirmer. 
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  263. ^ Darden, pg. 247
  264. ^ a b c Arnold, Alison. "Indian and Pakistani Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of Music. pp. 980–987. 
  265. ^ a b Sonneborn, D. Atesh. "Snapshot: Sufi Music and Dance". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 1042–1046. 
  266. ^ Buckley, David; John Shepherd. "Drugs and Addiction". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 210–213. 
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  268. ^ Koskoff, pgs. 31–32
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  279. ^ Southern, pg. 388
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  281. ^ a b Cusic, pg. 127
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  283. ^ a b Borwick, John. "Eight-Track Cartridge". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 510. 
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  289. ^ Miller, Terry E.. "Overview". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 948–956. 
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  293. ^ Crawford, pg. 807
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  296. ^ a b c W. Willett, Ralph. "Music Festivals". Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 281–284. 
  297. ^ Miller, pg. 261
  298. ^ Miller, pg. 262
  299. ^ Miller, pgs. 289–290
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  301. ^ Maultsby, Portia K.. "Funk". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 681. "The quote is from Fred Wesley, in an appearance on a British television special, Lenny Henry En De Funk" 
  302. ^ Laing, Dave. "Bootleg". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 481. 
  303. ^ Bird, pg. 389
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  306. ^ Cowdery, James R. and Anne Lederman, "Blurring the Boundaries of Social and Musical Identities", pgs. 322–333, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  307. ^ Levine, Victoria Lindsay. "Southeast". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 466–471. 
  308. ^ Fikentscher, Kai. "Disco and House Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 687–691. 
  309. ^ a b Averill, Gage. "Haitian and Franco-Caribbean Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 802–807. 
  310. ^ Goertzen, Christopher. "English and Scottish Music". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 831–841. 
  311. ^ Cohen, Sara; Marion Leonard. "Feminism". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 74–76. 
  312. ^ Leyshon, Andrew. "Geography". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 78–80. 
  313. ^ Leonard, Marian; Robert Strachan. "Authenticity". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 164–166. 
  314. ^ Shepherd, John; Franco Fabbri and Marion Leonard. "Style". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 417–419. 
  315. ^ Keightley, Keir. "Album Cover". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 613–614. 
  316. ^ JBHE Foundation, pg. 122
  317. ^ Darden, pg. 10
  318. ^ Chase, pg. 540
  319. ^ Bird, pg. 287
  320. ^ Bird, pg. 28, Bird actually calls it "the premier music festival in the United States" (emphasis in original)
  321. ^ Crawford, pg. 747
  322. ^ Crawford, pg. 751
  323. ^ Krasnow, Carolyn H. and Dorothea Hast, "Snapshot: Two Popular Dance Forms", pgs. 227–234, in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
  324. ^ Darden, pg. 274
  325. ^ "Alcohol". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 149–152. 
  326. ^ Peraino, pg. 290
  327. ^ Darden, pg. 294
  328. ^ Tribe, pg. 14
  329. ^ Strachan, Robert; Marion Leonard. "Popular Music Journals". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World. pp. 42–43. 
  330. ^ Southern, pg. 487
  331. ^ Maultsby, Portia K.. "Funk". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. pp. 681–686. 
  332. ^ Dawson, Jim. "Wally Heider Recording Studio". The Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music. pp. 679–680. 

Further reading

  • Becker, Howard (1963). Outsiders: Studies in the Sociology of Deviance. Chicago: Free Press of Glencoe. 
  • Chase, Gilbert (1955). America's Music: From the Pilgrims to the Present. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-00454-X. 
  • Cooper, David (1975). International Bibliography of Discographies: Classical Music and Jazz & Blues, 1962–1972. Littleton, Colorado: Libraries Unlimited. 
  • Early, Gerald Lyn (1995). One Nation Under a Groove: Motown and American Culture. Hopewell, New Jersey: Ecco Press. 
  • Feather, Leonard (1955). The Encyclopedia of Jazz. New York: Horizon Press. 
  • Garland, Phyl (1969). The Sound of Soul. Chicago: H. Regnery Co.. 
  • Hayes, Cedric J.; Robert Laughton. Gospel Records 1943–1969: A Black Music Discography. London: Record Information Services. 
  • Jepsen, Jorgen Grunnet (1963–1970). Jazz Records 1942–1962. Copenhagen: Nordisk Tidskrift and Karl Emil Knudsen. 
  • Jones, Leroi (1963). Blues People: Negro Music in White America. Imamu Amiri Baraka. New York: William Morrow & Co.. 
  • Hoffman, Frank. The Literature of Rock, 1954–1978. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press. 
  • Leadbitter, Mike; et al.. Blues Records, 1943–1970: A Selective Discography. London: Record Information Services. 
  • Malone, Bill C. (1968). Country Music U.S.A.. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. 
  • Merriam, Alan (1954). A Bibliography of Jazz. Philadelphia: American Folklore Society. 
  • Smith, Suzanne E. (1999). Dancing in the Street: Motown and the Cultural Politics of Detroit. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 

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