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Wikipedia

African-American music

African-American music is a broad term covering a diverse range of musical genres largely developed by African Americans and their culture. Its origins are in musical forms that developed as a result of the enslavement of African Americans prior to the American Civil War.[1][2] It has been said that "every genre that is born from America has black roots."[3]

White slave owners subjugated their slaves physically, mentally, and spiritually through brutal and demeaning acts.[4] White Americans considered African Americans separate and unequal for centuries, going to extraordinary lengths to keep them oppressed. African-American slaves created a distinctive type of music that played an important role in the era of enslavement. Slave songs, commonly known as work songs, were used to combat the hardships of the physical labor. Work songs were also used to communicate with other slaves without the slave owner hearing. The song "Wade in the Water" was sung by slaves to warn others trying to leave to use the water to obscure their trail. Following the Civil War, African Americans employed playing European music in military bands developed a new style called ragtime that gradually evolved into jazz. Jazz incorporated the sophisticated polyrhythmic structure of dance and folk music of peoples from western and Sub-Saharan Africa. These musical forms had a wide-ranging influence on the development of music within the United States and around the world during the 20th century.[5][6]

Analyzing African music through the lens of European musicology can leave out much of the cultural use of sound and methods of music making. Some methods of African music making are translated more clearly though the music itself, and not in written form.[7]

Blues and ragtime were developed during the late 19th century through the fusion of West African vocalizations, which employed the natural harmonic series and blue notes. "If one considers the five criteria given by Waterman as cluster characteristics for West African music, one finds that three have been well documented as being characteristic of Afro-American music. Call-and-response organizational procedures, dominance of a percussive approach to music, and off-beat phrasing of melodic accents have been cited as typical of the genre in virtually every study of any kind of African-American music from work songs, field or street calls, shouts, and spirituals to blues and jazz."[8]

The roots of American popular music are deeply intertwined with African-American contributions and innovation. The earliest jazz and blues recordings emerged in the 1910s, marking the beginning of a transformative era in music. These genres were heavily influenced by African musical traditions, and they served as the foundation for many musical developments in the years to come.

As African-American musicians continued to shape the musical landscape, the 1940s witnessed the emergence of rhythm and blues (R&B). R&B became a pivotal genre, blending elements of jazz, blues, and gospel, and it laid the groundwork for the evolution of rock and roll in the following decade.[9]

Historic traits edit

 
The Banjo Lesson by Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1893

Most slaves arrived to the Americas from the western coast of Africa.[10] This area encompasses modern-day Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Gambia and parts of Sierra Leone.[10] Harmonic and rhythmic features from these areas, European musical instrumentation, and the chattel slavery forced upon Black Americans all contributed to their music.[11][12][13]

Many of the characteristic musical forms that define African-American music have historical precedents. These earlier forms include: field hollers, beat boxing, work song, spoken word, rapping, scatting, call and response, vocality (or special vocal effect: guttural effects, interpolated vocality, falsetto, melisma, vocal rhythmization), improvisation, blue notes, polyrhythms (syncopation, concrescence, tension, improvisation, percussion, swung note), texture (antiphony, homophony, polyphony, heterophony) and harmony (vernacular progressions; complex, multi-part harmony, as in spirituals, Doo Wop, and barbershop music).[14]

American composer Olly Wilson outlines "heterogeneous sound ideals"[15] that define traditional and common patterns in African Music, such as the use of timbre, pitch, volume and duration, and the incorporation of the body in making music. His findings include uses of call-and-response and the importance of interjections from the audience to express satisfaction or dissatisfaction.[16] These heterogeneous sound ideals are also found in many other types of music.

History edit

18th century edit

In the late 18th century folk spirituals originated among Southern slaves following their conversion to Christianity. Slaves reinterpreted the practice of Christianity in a way that had meaning to them as Africans in America. They often sang the spirituals in groups as they worked the plantation fields. African-American spirituals (Negro Spirituals) were created in invisible churches and regular Black churches. The hymns, melody, and rhythms were similar to songs heard in West Africa. Enslaved and free blacks created their own words and tunes. Themes include the hardships of slavery and the hope of freedom.[17]

Spirituals from the era of slavery are called Slave Shout Songs. These shout songs are sung today by Gullah Geechee people and other African Americans in churches and praise houses. During slavery, these songs were coded messages that spoke of escape from slavery on the Underground Railroad and were sung by enslaved African Americans in plantation fields to send coded messages to other slaves, unbeknownst to the slaveholders.[18]

 
Congo Square African Drum 1819 Latrobe

Slaves also used drums to communicate messages of escape. In West Africa, drums are used for communication, celebration, and spiritual ceremonies. West African people enslaved in the United States continued to make drums to send coded messages to other slaves across plantations. The making and use of drums by enslaved Africans was outlawed after the Stono Rebellion in South Carolina in 1739.[19] Enslaved African Americans used drums to send coded messages to start slave revolts, and white slaveholders banned the creation and use of drums. After the banning of drums, slaves made rhythmic music by slapping their knees, thighs, arms and other body parts, a practice called pattin Juba.[20] The Juba dance was originally brought by Kongo slaves to Charleston, South Carolina, and became an African-American plantation dance performed by slaves during gatherings when rhythm instruments were prohibited.[21][22]

 
Slave dance to banjo, 1780s

Folk spirituals, unlike much white gospel, were often spirited. Slaves added dancing (later known as "the shout") and other body movements to the singing. They also changed the melodies and rhythms of psalms and hymns, by speeding up the tempo, adding repeated refrains and choruses, and replacing texts with new ones that often combined English and African words and phrases. Originally passed down orally, folk spirituals have been central in the lives of African Americans for more than three centuries, serving religious, cultural, social, political, and historical functions.[23]

Folk spirituals were spontaneously created and performed in a repetitive, improvised style. The most common song structures are the call-and-response ("Blow, Gabriel") and repetitive choruses ("He Rose from the Dead"). The call-and-response is an alternating exchange between the soloist and the other singers. The soloist usually improvises a line to which the other singers respond, repeating the same phrase. Song interpretation incorporates the interjections of moans, cries, hollers, and changing vocal timbres, and can be accompanied by hand clapping and foot-stomping.

The Smithsonian Institution Folkways Recordings have samples of African American slave shout songs.[24]

19th century edit

 
William Sidney Mount painted scenes of black and white American musicians. This 1856 painting depicts an African-American banjo player.

The influence of African Americans on mainstream American music began in the 19th century with the advent of blackface minstrelsy. The banjo, of African origin, became a popular instrument, and its African-derived rhythms were incorporated into popular songs by Stephen Foster and other songwriters. Over time the banjo's construction adopted some European traditions such as a flat fingerboard. Some banjos had five strings, in contrast to the West African three-string version. This resulted in the creation of several different types of banjos in the United States.[25]

In the 1830s, the Second Great Awakening led to a rise in Christian revivals, especially among African Americans. Drawing on traditional work songs, enslaved African Americans originated and performed a wide variety of spirituals and other Christian music. Some of these songs were coded messages of subversion against slaveholders, or signals to escape. For example, Harriet Tubman sang coded messages to her mother and other slaves in the field to let them know she was escaping on the Underground Railroad. Tubman sang: "I'm sorry I'm going to leave you, farewell, oh farewell; But I'll meet you in the morning, farewell, oh farewell, I'll meet you in the morning, I'm bound for the promised land, On the other side of Jordan, Bound for the Promised Land."[26][27][28]

During the period after the Civil War, the spread of African-American music continued. The Fisk University Jubilee Singers first toured in 1871. Artists including Jack Delaney helped revolutionize post-war African-American music in the central-east of the United States. In the following years, professional "jubilee" troops formed and toured. The first black musical-comedy troupe, Hyers Sisters Comic Opera Co., was organized in 1876.[29] In the last half of the 19th century, barbershops often served as community centers, where men would gather. Barbershop quartets originated with African-American men socializing in barbershops; they would harmonize while waiting their turn, singing spirituals, folk songs and popular songs. This generated a new style of unaccompanied four-part, close-harmony singing. Later, white minstrel singers stole the style, and in the early days of the recording industry their performances were recorded and sold. By the end of the 19th century, African-American music was an integral part of mainstream American culture.

Early 20th century (1900s–1930s) edit

 
The Slayton Jubilee Singers entertain employees of the Old Trusty Incubator Factory, Clay Center, about 1910

In a groundbreaking moment in 1898, Broadway witnessed the debut of the first musical created by African Americans, courtesy of Bob Cole and Billy Johnson. The musical landscape saw another milestone in 1890 with the first recording by black musicians—Bert Williams and George Walker—highlighting music from Broadway productions. Theodore Drury played a pivotal role in nurturing black talent in opera, establishing the Drury Opera Company in 1900. Despite its short run until 1908, the company left an indelible mark as the pioneer in black participation within opera. Fast forward to 1911, where Scott Joplin's trailblazing ragtime-folk opera, Treemonisha, took center stage, adding a unique and vibrant chapter to the history of African American contributions to the musical realm.[30]

The early part of the 20th century saw a rise in popularity of blues and jazz. African-American music at this time was classed as "race music".[31] Ralph Peer, musical director at Okeh Records, put records made by "foreign" groups under that label. At the time "race" was a term commonly used by the African-American press to speak of the community as a whole with an empowering point of view, as a person of "race" was one involved in fighting for equal rights.[32] Ragtime performers such as Scott Joplin became popular and some were associated with the Harlem Renaissance and early civil rights activists. White and Latino performers of African-American music were also visible. African-American music was often altered and diluted to be more palatable for white audiences, who would not have accepted black performers, leading to genres like swing music.

By the turn of the 20th century African Americans were becoming part of classical music as well. Originally excluded from major symphony orchestras, black musicians could study in music conservatories that had been founded in the 1860s, such as the Oberlin School of Music, National Conservatory of Music, and the New England Conservatory.[33] Black people also formed symphony orchestras in major cities such as Chicago, New Orleans, and Philadelphia. Various black orchestras began to perform regularly in the late 1890s and the early 20th century. In 1906, the first incorporated black orchestra was established in Philadelphia.[34] In the early 1910s, all-black music schools, such as the Music School Settlement for Colored and the Martin-Smith School of Music, were founded in New York.[35]

The Music School Settlement for Colored became a sponsor of the Clef Club orchestra in New York. The Clef Club Symphony Orchestra attracted both black and white audiences to concerts at Carnegie Hall from 1912 to 1915. Conducted by James Reese Europe and William H. Tyers, the orchestra included banjos, mandolins, and baritone horns. Concerts featured music written by black composers, notably Harry T. Burleigh and Will Marion Cook. Other annual black concert series include the William Hackney's "All-Colored Composers" concerts in Chicago and the Atlanta Colored Music Festivals.[36]

The return of the black musical to Broadway occurred in 1921 with Sissle and Eubie Blake's Shuffle Along. In 1927, a concert survey of black music was performed at Carnegie Hall including jazz, spirituals and the symphonic music of W. C. Handy's Orchestra and the Jubilee Singers. The first major film musical with a black cast was King Vidor's Hallelujah of 1929. African-American performers were featured in the musical Show Boat (which had a part written for Paul Robeson and a chorus of Jubilee Singers), and especially all-black operas such as Porgy and Bess and Virgil Thomson's Four Saints in Three Acts of 1934.

The first symphony by a black composer to be performed by a major orchestra was William Grant Still's Afro-American Symphony (1930) by the New York Philharmonic. Florence Beatrice Price's Symphony in E minor was performed in 1933 by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.[37] In 1934, William Dawson's Negro Folk Symphony was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra.[38]

Mid-20th century (1940s–1960s) edit

 
Marilyn Horne and Henry Lewis in 1961, photo by Carl Van Vechten

Billboard started making a separate list of hit records for African-American music in October 1942 with the "Harlem Hit Parade", which was changed in 1945 to "Race Records", and then in 1949 to "Rhythm and Blues Records".[39][40]

By the 1940s, cover versions of African-American songs were commonplace, frequently topping the charts while the original versions did not reach the mainstream. In 1955, Thurman Ruth persuaded a gospel group to sing in the Apollo Theater. This presentation of gospel music in a secular setting was successful, and he arranged gospel caravans that traveled around the country playing venues that rhythm and blues singers had popularized. Meanwhile, jazz performers began to move away from swing towards music with more intricate arrangements, more improvisation, and technically challenging forms. This culminated in bebop, the modal jazz of Miles Davis, and the free jazz of Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane.

African-American musicians in the 1940s and 1950s were developing rhythm and blues into rock and roll, which featured a strong backbeat. Prominent exponents of this style included Louis Jordan and Wynonie Harris. Rock and roll music became commercially successful with recordings of white musicians, however, such as Bill Haley and Elvis Presley, playing a guitar-based fusion of black rock and roll and rockabilly. Rock music became more associated with white artists, although some black performers such as Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley had commercial success.

 
Sister Rosetta Tharpe performing at Cafe Zanzibar

In 2017, National Public Radio wrote about the career of Sister Rosetta Tharpe and concluded with these comments: Tharpe "was a gospel singer at heart who became a celebrity by forging a new path musically ... Through her unforgettable voice and gospel swing crossover style, Tharpe influenced a generation of musicians including Aretha Franklin, Chuck Berry and countless others ... She was, and is, an unmatched artist."[41]

As the 1940s came to a close, other African Americans endeavored to concertize as classical musicians in an effort to transcend racial and nationalistic barriers in the post-war era. In 1968 Henry Lewis became the first African-American instrumentalist in a leading American symphony orchestra, an early "musical ambassador" in support of cultural diplomacy in Europe, and the first African-American conductor of a major American symphonic ensemble in 1968.[42][43][44][45]

The term "rock and roll" had a strong sexual connotation in jump blues and R&B, but when DJ Alan Freed referred to rock and roll on mainstream radio in the mid 50s, "the sexual component had been dialed down enough that it simply became an acceptable term for dancing".[46]

R&B was a strong influence on rock and roll, according to many sources, including a 1985 Wall Street Journal article titled, "Rock! It's Still Rhythm and Blues". The author states that the "two terms were used interchangeably", until about 1957.[47]

Fats Domino was not convinced that there was any new genre. In 1957 he said: "What they call rock 'n' roll now is rhythm and blues. I've been playing it for 15 years in New Orleans".[48] According to Rolling Stone, "this is a valid statement ... all Fifties rockers, black and white, country born and city bred, were fundamentally influenced by R&B, the black popular music of the late Forties and early Fifties".[49] Elvis Presley's recognition of the importance of artists such as Fats Domino was significant, according to a 2017 article: the "championing of black musicians as part of a narrative that saw many positives in growing young white interest in African American-based musical styles".[50] At a press event in 1969, Presley introduced Fats Domino, and said, "that's the real King of Rock 'n' Roll" ... a huge influence on me when I started out".[51]

By the mid-1950s, many R&B songs were getting "covered" by white artists and the recordings got more airplay on the mainstream radio stations. For example, "Presley quickly covered "Tutti Frutti" ...So did Pat Boone", according to New Yorker. "In 1956, seventy-six per cent of top R.&.B. songs also made the pop chart; in 1957, eighty-seven per cent made the pop chart; in 1958, it was ninety-four per cent. The marginal market had become the main market, and the majors had got into the act."[52]

The 1950s marked a significant uptick in the allure of blues, captivating audiences both in the US and across the pond in the UK, reminiscent of early 20th-century styles. Alongside this blues resurgence, Doo-wop center stage, enchanting listeners with its unique blend of vocal group harmonies, playful nonsense syllables, minimal instrumentation, and straightforward lyrics. Doo-wop, often featuring solo artists with backing groups, emphasized lead singers who played a prominent role in the musical arrangement. Simultaneously, a secularized version of American gospel music, known as soul ,emerged in the mid-1950s, led by trailblazers likeRay Charles,[53] Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke.[54] This soulful wave had a profound impact, influencing not only surf music but also paving the way for chart-topping girl groups like The Angels and The Shangri-Las. In a dance revolution, 1959 saw Hank Ballard releasing a song tailored for the new dance craze, "The Twist," which would become a sensation defining the early '60s.[55]

In 1959, Berry Gordy founded Motown Records, the first record label to primarily feature African-American artists, which aimed at achieving crossover success. The label developed an innovative, and commercially successful, style of soul music with distinctive pop elements. Its early roster included The Miracles, Martha and the Vandellas, Marvin Gaye, The Temptations, and The Supremes.[56] Black divas such as Aretha Franklin became '60s crossover stars. In the UK, British blues became a gradually mainstream phenomenon, returning to the United States in the form of the British Invasion, a group of bands led by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones who performed blues and R&B-inspired pop with both traditional and modern aspects. WGIV in Charlotte, North Carolina, was one of a few radio stations dedicated to African-American music that started during this period.

The British Invasion knocked many black artists off the US pop charts, although some, like Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin and a number of Motown artists, continued to do well. Soul music, however, remained popular among black people through new forms such as funk, developed out of the innovations of James Brown.[57] In 1961, 11-year-old Stevland Hardaway Morris made his first record under Motown's Tamla label as Stevie Wonder.[58]

In 1964 the Civil Rights Act outlawed major forms of discrimination towards African Americans and women. As tensions began to diminish, more African-American musicians crossed over into the mainstream. Some artists who successfully crossed over were Aretha Franklin, James Brown, and Ella Fitzgerald in the pop and jazz worlds, and Leontyne Price and Kathleen Battle in classical music.

By the end of the decade, black people were part of the psychedelia and early heavy metal trends, particularly by way of the ubiquitous Beatles' influence and the electric guitar innovations of Jimi Hendrix.[59] Hendrix was among the first guitarists to use audio feedback, fuzz, and other effects pedals such as the wah wah pedal to create a unique guitar solo sound. Psychedelic soul, a mix of psychedelic rock and soul began to flourish with the 1960s culture. Even more popular among black people, and with more crossover appeal, was album-oriented soul in the late 1960s and early 1970s, which revolutionized African-American music. The genre's intelligent and introspective lyrics, often with a socially aware tone, were created by artists such as Marvin Gaye in What's Going On, and Stevie Wonder in Songs in the Key of Life.

1970s edit

In the 1970s, album-oriented soul continued its popularity while musicians such as Smokey Robinson helped turn it into Quiet Storm music. Funk evolved into two strands, a pop-soul-jazz-bass fusion pioneered by Sly & the Family Stone, and a more psychedelic fusion epitomized by George Clinton and his P-Funk ensemble. Disco evolved from black musicians creating soul music with an up-tempo melody. Isaac Hayes, Barry White, Donna Summer, and others helped popularize disco, which gained mainstream success.

Some African-American artists including The Jackson 5, Roberta Flack, Teddy Pendergrass, Dionne Warwick, Stevie Wonder, The O'Jays, Gladys Knight & the Pips, and Earth, Wind & Fire found crossover audiences, while white listeners preferred country rock, singer-songwriters, stadium rock, soft rock, glam rock, and, to some degree, heavy metal and punk rock.

During the 1970s, The Dozens, an urban African-American tradition of using playful rhyming ridicule, developed into street jive in the early '70s, which in turn inspired hip-hop by the late 1970s. Spoken-word artists such as The Watts Prophets, The Last Poets, Gil Scott-Heron and Melvin Van Peebles were some innovators of early hip-hop. Many youths in the Bronx used this medium to communicate the unfairness minorities faced at the time. DJs played records, typically funk, while MCs introduced tracks to the dancing audience. Over time, DJs began isolating and repeating the percussion breaks, producing a constant, eminently danceable beat, over which MCs began rapping, using rhyme and sustained lyrics.[60] Hip-hop would become a multicultural movement in a youthful black America, led by artists such as Kurtis Blow and Run-DMC.

1980s edit

 
Michael Jackson leaving the White House in 1984

Michael Jackson had record-breaking success with his 1980s albums Off the Wall, Bad, and the best-selling album of all time, Thriller. Jackson paved the way for other successful crossover black solo artists such as Prince, Lionel Richie, Luther Vandross, Tina Turner, Whitney Houston, and Janet Jackson (Michael's sister). Pop and dance-soul of this era inspired new jack swing by the end of the decade.[citation needed]

Hip-hop spread across the country and diversified. Techno, dance, Miami bass, post-disco, Chicago house, Los Angeles hardcore and Washington, D.C. Go-go developed during this period, with only Miami bass achieving mainstream success. Before long, Miami bass was relegated primarily to the Southeastern US, while Chicago house had made strong headway on college campuses and dance arenas (i.e. the warehouse sound, the rave). Washington's Go-go garnered modest national attention with songs such as E.U.'s Da Butt (1988), but proved to be a mostly regional phenomena. Chicago house sound had expanded into the Detroit music environment and began using more electronic and industrial sounds, creating Detroit techno, acid, and jungle. The combination of these experimental, usually DJ-oriented, sounds with the multiethnic NYC disco sound from the 1970s and 1980s created a brand of music that was most appreciated in large discothèques in large cities. European audiences embraced this kind of electronic dance music with more enthusiasm than their North American counterparts.[citation needed]

 
DJ Jazzy Jeff pictured in 2002.

From about 1986, rap entered the mainstream with Run-D.M.C.'s Raising Hell, and the Beastie Boys' Licensed to Ill. Licensed to Ill was the first rap album to enter the No.1 Spot on the Billboard 200 and opened the door for white rappers. Both of these groups mixed rap and rock, appealing to both audiences. Hip-hop took off from its roots and the golden age hip hop flourished, with artists such as Eric B. & Rakim, Public Enemy, LL Cool J, Queen Latifah, Big Daddy Kane, and Salt-N-Pepa. Hip-hop became popular in the United States and became a worldwide phenomenon in the late 1990s. The golden age scene would end by the early 1990s as gangsta rap and G-funk took over, with West Coast artists Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Warren G and Ice Cube, East Coast artists Notorious B.I.G., Wu-Tang Clan, and Mobb Deep, and the sounds of urban black male bravado, compassion, and social awareness.[citation needed]

While heavy metal music was almost exclusively created by white performers in the 1970s and 1980s, there were a few exceptions. In 1988, all-black heavy metal band Living Colour achieved mainstream success with their début album Vivid, peaking at No. 6 on the Billboard 200, thanks to their Top 20 single "Cult of Personality". The band's music contained lyrics that attack what they perceived as Eurocentrism and racism in America. A decade later, more black artists like Lenny Kravitz, Body Count, Ben Harper, and countless others would start playing rock again.[citation needed]

1990s, 2000s, 2010s, and today edit

 
Lil Wayne is one of the top selling black American musicians in modern history. In 2008, his album sold one million in its first week.

Contemporary R&B, the post-disco version of soul music, remained popular throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Male vocal groups such as The Temptations and The O'Jays were particularly popular, as well as New Edition, Boyz II Men, Jodeci, Dru Hill, Blackstreet, and Jagged Edge. Girl groups, including TLC, Destiny's Child, SWV, and En Vogue were also highly successful.[citation needed]

Singer-songwriters such as R. Kelly, Mariah Carey, Montell Jordan, D'Angelo, Aaliyah, and Raphael Saadiq of Tony! Toni! Toné! were also popular during the 1990s. Mary J. Blige, Faith Evans, and BLACKstreet popularized a fusion blend known as hip-hop soul. The neo soul movement of the 1990s, with classic soul influences, was popularized in the late 1990s and early 2000s by such artists as D'Angelo, Erykah Badu, Maxwell, Lauryn Hill, India.Arie, Alicia Keys, Jill Scott, Angie Stone, Bilal, and Musiq Soulchild. A record review claimed that D'Angelo's critically acclaimed album Voodoo (2000) "represents African American music at a crossroads ... To simply call [it] neo-classical soul ... would be [to] ignore the elements of vaudeville jazz, Memphis horns, ragtime blues, funk and bass grooves, not to mention hip-hop, that slips out of every pore of these haunted songs."[61] Blue-eyed soul is soul music performed by white artists, including Michael McDonald, Christina Aguilera, Amy Winehouse, Robin Thicke, Michael Bolton, Jon B., Lisa Stansfield, Teena Marie, Justin Timberlake, Joss Stone, George Michael, and Anastacia.[citation needed]

Along with the singer-songwriter influence on hip-hop and R&B, there was an increase in creativity and expression through Rap music. Tupac, The Notorious B.I.G. ("Biggie"), N.W.A, Lil' Kim, Snoop Dogg, and Nas broke into the music industry. '90s rap introduced many other subgenres including Gangsta rap, Conscious rap, and Pop rap.[62] Gangsta rap focused on gang violence, drug dealing and poverty.[62] It was also a major player in the East Coast–West Coast hip hop rivalry. Main players in this rivalry were Tupac and Suge Knight on the West Coast and The Notorious B.I.G. and Diddy on the East Coast.

 
Beyoncé

By the early 2000s R&B began to emphasize solo artists with pop appeal, including Usher, Beyoncé, and the Caribbean-born Rihanna. This music was accompanied by creative and unique music videos such as Beyoncé's "Crazy in Love", Rihanna's "Pon de Replay", and Usher's "Caught Up". These videos helped R&B become more profitable and more popular than it had been in the 1990s. The line between hip-hop, R&B, and pop was blurred by producers such as Timbaland and Lil Jon, and by artists like Missy Elliott, T-Pain, Nelly, Akon, and OutKast.[citation needed]

Hip-hop remains a genre created and dominated by African-Americans. In its early years the lyrics were about the hardships of being black in the United States. White-owned record labels controlled how hip-hop was marketed, resulting in changes to the lyrics and culture of hip-hop to suit white audiences. Scholars and African-American hip-hop creators noticed this change. Hip-hop is used to sell cars, cell phones, and other merchandise.[63][64]

 
Edward Ray at Capitol Records

The hip-hop movement has become increasingly mainstream as the music industry has taken control of it. Essentially, "from the moment 'Rapper's Delight' went platinum, hiphop the folk culture became hiphop the American entertainment-industry sideshow."[65]

 
50 Cent in 2006. 50 Cent was one of the most popular African-American rappers of the 2000s.

In the early 2000s, 50 Cent was one of the most popular African-American artists. In 2005, his album The Massacre sold over one million albums in its first week. In 2008, Lil Wayne's album Tha Carter III also sold more than a million copies in its first week.[66]

Within a year of Michael Jackson's unexpected death in 2009, his estate generated $1.4 billion in revenues. A documentary containing rehearsal footage for Jackson's scheduled This Is It tour, entitled Michael Jackson's This Is It, was released on October 28, 2009, and became the highest-grossing concert film in history.[67]

In 2013, no African-American musician had a Billboard Hot 100 number one, the first year in which there was not a number-one record by an African-American in the chart's 55-year history.[68] J. Cole, Beyonce, Jay Z, and half-Canadian Drake, were all top-selling music artists this year, but none made it to the Billboard Hot 100's number one, leading to much debate.[69]

Black protest music went mainstream in the 2010s.[70] Beyoncé, her sister Solange, Kanye West, Frank Ocean, and Rihanna released black protest albums. Beyoncé released her first "black protest" album Lemonade in 2016.

In the late 2010s, mumble rap which originated from African-American vernacular English became popular with artists such as Playboi Carti, Young Thug, and Lil Baby.[71][better source needed][72][better source needed] Mumble rap focuses on the melody of the song rather than on the lyrics, and has a big instrumental base. In a conversation with well-known mumble rapper HipHopDx, Future said: "When I freestyle I know there are bits you don't really understand, but that's what you like it for – that's what its all about to me, that's art."[73]

In the early 2020s, there has been a form of African American music that bursted onto the scene. This genre has gained traction as of recently but has been around since the early 2010s, originating in Chicago. This genre is called Drill Music. There are artists like Lil Durk, B-Lovee, Ice Spice, and many more who came onto the scene expressing themselves and telling there stories through a much unique and much aggressive style of music. Oftentimes the artist would incoporate old and well known background beats from many popular songs in the past and add their twist to it.

Cultural impact edit

Through the hybridization of African, European, and Native American cultural elements, African American music has made itself "a distinctly American phenomenon".[74]

Jim Crow & Civil Rights Eras (early to mid 20th century) edit

The music made during the Jim Crow and Civil Rights era awakened "the passion and purposefulness of the Southern Civil Rights Movement" that "provided a stirring musical accompaniment to the campaign for racial justice and equality".[75] African-American men, women, and children from across the nation came together in social settings such as marches, mass meetings, churches, and even jails and "conveyed the moral urgency of the freedom struggle".[75] African-American music served to uplift the spirits and hearts of those fighting for civil rights.[75] Guy Carawan referred to the Civil Rights Movement as "the greatest singing movement this country has experienced".[76]

"We Shall Overcome" edit

Often called "the anthem of the Civil Rights Movement", "We Shall Overcome" was a hymn from the 19th-century that was used as a protest labor song in a labor strike against American Tobacco in Charleston, South Carolina in 1945–1946.[76][77] It was overheard by Zilhpia Horton in a Tennessee tobacco field on a picket line in 1946, and a worker by the name of Lucille Simmons changed the original wording of "I Will Overcome" to "We Will Overcome", which made it more powerful for the Civil Rights Movement.[76]

In 1947, Horton added some verses to the song and taught Pete Seeger her version.[76] Seeger revised the song from "We will" to "We shall".[77] In April 1960 at Raleigh, North Carolina, folk singer Guy Carawan sang the new version at the founding convention of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), starting its quick spread throughout the Civil Rights Movement.[76] Seeger, Carawan, and Frank Hamilton copyrighted the song to prevent it from becoming a "commercialized pop song".[76]

"We Shall Overcome" continued to spread rapidly as the Civil Rights Movement gained supporters and momentum.[77] Protestors across the nation sang the song as they marched for rights, were beat up, attacked by police dogs, and sent to jail for breaking segregation laws.[77] "We Shall Overcome" and many other protest songs during the Civil Rights movement became its soundtrack.[77] Outside of the U.S., the song has been used in freedom movements around the world.[77] In India, the song is known as "Hum Honge Kaamyaab", which is a song that most school children in India know by heart.[77]

Harlem Cultural Festival (1969) edit

The Harlem Cultural Festival was a series of music concerts held in Harlem's Mount Morris Park in New York City. This festival "celebrated African-American music and culture and promoted the continued politics of Black pride".[78] At 3 PM on Sundays from June 29, 1969, to August 24, 1969, artists would perform to an audience of tens of thousands of people.[78] Such artists that performed were Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, B.B. King, Sly and the Family Stone, The 5th Dimension, Gladys Knight & the Pips, Mahalia Jackson, and many others.[78]

Economic impact edit

Record stores played a vital role in African-American communities for many decades. In the 1960s and 1970s, between 500 and 1,000 black-owned record stores operated in the American South, and probably twice as many in the United States as a whole. According to The Political Economy of Black Music By Norman Kelley,"Black music exists in a neo-colonial relationship with the $12 billion music industry, which consist of six record companies." African-American entrepreneurs embraced record stores as key vehicles for economic empowerment and critical public spaces for black consumers at a time that many black-owned businesses were closing amid desegregation.[79] Countless African Americans have worked as musical performers, club owners, radio deejays, concert promoters, and record label owners. Many companies use African-American music to sell their products. Companies like Coca-Cola, Nike, and Pepsi have used African-American music in advertising.[80]

International influence edit

Jazz and hip-hop traveled to Africa and Asia and influenced other genres of African and Asian Music.[81] Many state that without African-American music, there would be no American music.[82] The songs that Africans brought to America created a foundation for American music.[82] The textural styles, slang and African-American Vernacular English influenced American pop culture and global culture. The way African Americans dress in hip-hop videos and how African Americans talk is copied in the American market and the global market.[83][84]

Afrobeat edit

Afrobeat is a Nigerian music genre created by Nigerian artist Fela Kuti. Afrobeat began during the early twentieth century from Nigeria with a combination of Highlife, Yoruba music and jazz.[85] The years between the wars (1918–1939) were a particularly fertile time for the formation of pan-West African urban musical traditions.[86] Kuti fused traditional West African music with African-American music of Jazz, R&B, and other genres of West African and African-American music.[87] James Brown's funk music, dance style, and African-American drumming influenced Afrobeat.[88] In London, Kuti joined jazz and rock bands, and returned to Nigeria, creating Afrobeat by fusing African-American and traditional Yoruba music with Highlife music. In 1969, Kuti toured the United States and became inspired by the political activism of African Americans. He studied the life of Malcolm X and was inspired by his pro-black speeches. This resulted in a change in Kuti's message as he began discussing the political issues in Africa and Nigeria.[89] In contrast, "Afrobeats" is a term applied to a large range of genres popular all over Africa. Music referred to as Afrobeats, in contrast to Kuti, is frequently upbeat, digitally generated, and sung in English, West African, and pidgin languages. Kuti's music was characterized by its political content and orchestral style whereas Afrobeats took influence from many musical themes found in R&B and Hip-Hop/Rap (Love, sex, drugs, money, hard times, fame).[90]

Racial appropriation and insensitivity in K-pop music edit

Hip-hop came to Korea in the 1990s and developed into Korean hip-hop and Korean K-pop music.[91] Some Korean artists have appropriated African-American vernacular and other aspects of Black culture.[92][93] Groups like the girl group MAMAMOO have been known to dress in blackface, and others speak in "blaccents" and wear their hair in ethnic styles. Artist Zico has used the n-word in his music, and has claimed that he has a "black soul."[94] As of 2020, within "K-pop, blackface, mouthing or saying racial slurs, and purely aesthetic uses of Black culture and hairstyles" were still common,[95] without necessarily understanding, honoring or crediting their African-American roots.[94] According to sources cited in a 2020 Guardian article, many K-pop artists do not show support for African-American social justice issues. "[M]any international fans are waiting for the industry to develop a more sensitive, globalized understanding of race."[95] In Korean there are phrases that have been misconstrued to sound like the a racial slur. These include the phrase "because of" (니까), pronounced 'nikka' and the word "you" or "you're" (니가), pronounced 'neega'.[96]

See also edit

References edit

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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Joshua Clark Davis, "For the Records: How African American Consumers and Music Retailers Created Commercial Public Space in the 1960s and 1970s South," Southern Cultures, Winter 2011.
  • Work, John W., compiler (1940), American Negro Songs and Spirituals: a Comprehensive Collection of 230 Folk Songs, Religious and Secular, with a Foreword. Bonanza Books, New York. N.B.: Consists most notably of an analytical study of this repertory, on p. 1–46, an anthology of such music (words with the notated music, harmonized), on pp. 47–250, and a bibliography, on p. 252–256.

External links edit

  • A collection of African-American Gospel Music from the Library of Congress
  • Shall We Gather at the River, a collection of African-American sacred music, made available for public use by the State Archives of Florida
  • in African-American music
  • "Negro Melodies" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • History of African music

african, american, music, generalized, discussion, music, people, african, descent, black, music, also, music, united, states, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, mes. For a generalized discussion of music by people of African descent see Black music See also Music of the United States This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources African American music news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is missing information about the influence of African American music outside the United States Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message African American music is a broad term covering a diverse range of musical genres largely developed by African Americans and their culture Its origins are in musical forms that developed as a result of the enslavement of African Americans prior to the American Civil War 1 2 It has been said that every genre that is born from America has black roots 3 White slave owners subjugated their slaves physically mentally and spiritually through brutal and demeaning acts 4 White Americans considered African Americans separate and unequal for centuries going to extraordinary lengths to keep them oppressed African American slaves created a distinctive type of music that played an important role in the era of enslavement Slave songs commonly known as work songs were used to combat the hardships of the physical labor Work songs were also used to communicate with other slaves without the slave owner hearing The song Wade in the Water was sung by slaves to warn others trying to leave to use the water to obscure their trail Following the Civil War African Americans employed playing European music in military bands developed a new style called ragtime that gradually evolved into jazz Jazz incorporated the sophisticated polyrhythmic structure of dance and folk music of peoples from western and Sub Saharan Africa These musical forms had a wide ranging influence on the development of music within the United States and around the world during the 20th century 5 6 Analyzing African music through the lens of European musicology can leave out much of the cultural use of sound and methods of music making Some methods of African music making are translated more clearly though the music itself and not in written form 7 Blues and ragtime were developed during the late 19th century through the fusion of West African vocalizations which employed the natural harmonic series and blue notes If one considers the five criteria given by Waterman as cluster characteristics for West African music one finds that three have been well documented as being characteristic of Afro American music Call and response organizational procedures dominance of a percussive approach to music and off beat phrasing of melodic accents have been cited as typical of the genre in virtually every study of any kind of African American music from work songs field or street calls shouts and spirituals to blues and jazz 8 The roots of American popular music are deeply intertwined with African American contributions and innovation The earliest jazz and blues recordings emerged in the 1910s marking the beginning of a transformative era in music These genres were heavily influenced by African musical traditions and they served as the foundation for many musical developments in the years to come As African American musicians continued to shape the musical landscape the 1940s witnessed the emergence of rhythm and blues R amp B R amp B became a pivotal genre blending elements of jazz blues and gospel and it laid the groundwork for the evolution of rock and roll in the following decade 9 Contents 1 Historic traits 2 History 2 1 18th century 2 2 19th century 2 3 Early 20th century 1900s 1930s 2 4 Mid 20th century 1940s 1960s 2 5 1970s 2 6 1980s 2 7 1990s 2000s 2010s and today 3 Cultural impact 3 1 Jim Crow amp Civil Rights Eras early to mid 20th century 3 1 1 We Shall Overcome 3 2 Harlem Cultural Festival 1969 4 Economic impact 5 International influence 5 1 Afrobeat 5 2 Racial appropriation and insensitivity in K pop music 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistoric traits edit nbsp The Banjo Lesson by Henry Ossawa Tanner 1893Most slaves arrived to the Americas from the western coast of Africa 10 This area encompasses modern day Nigeria Ghana Ivory Coast Senegal Gambia and parts of Sierra Leone 10 Harmonic and rhythmic features from these areas European musical instrumentation and the chattel slavery forced upon Black Americans all contributed to their music 11 12 13 Many of the characteristic musical forms that define African American music have historical precedents These earlier forms include field hollers beat boxing work song spoken word rapping scatting call and response vocality or special vocal effect guttural effects interpolated vocality falsetto melisma vocal rhythmization improvisation blue notes polyrhythms syncopation concrescence tension improvisation percussion swung note texture antiphony homophony polyphony heterophony and harmony vernacular progressions complex multi part harmony as in spirituals Doo Wop and barbershop music 14 American composer Olly Wilson outlines heterogeneous sound ideals 15 that define traditional and common patterns in African Music such as the use of timbre pitch volume and duration and the incorporation of the body in making music His findings include uses of call and response and the importance of interjections from the audience to express satisfaction or dissatisfaction 16 These heterogeneous sound ideals are also found in many other types of music History edit18th century edit See also Work song African American work songs In the late 18th century folk spirituals originated among Southern slaves following their conversion to Christianity Slaves reinterpreted the practice of Christianity in a way that had meaning to them as Africans in America They often sang the spirituals in groups as they worked the plantation fields African American spirituals Negro Spirituals were created in invisible churches and regular Black churches The hymns melody and rhythms were similar to songs heard in West Africa Enslaved and free blacks created their own words and tunes Themes include the hardships of slavery and the hope of freedom 17 Spirituals from the era of slavery are called Slave Shout Songs These shout songs are sung today by Gullah Geechee people and other African Americans in churches and praise houses During slavery these songs were coded messages that spoke of escape from slavery on the Underground Railroad and were sung by enslaved African Americans in plantation fields to send coded messages to other slaves unbeknownst to the slaveholders 18 nbsp Congo Square African Drum 1819 LatrobeSlaves also used drums to communicate messages of escape In West Africa drums are used for communication celebration and spiritual ceremonies West African people enslaved in the United States continued to make drums to send coded messages to other slaves across plantations The making and use of drums by enslaved Africans was outlawed after the Stono Rebellion in South Carolina in 1739 19 Enslaved African Americans used drums to send coded messages to start slave revolts and white slaveholders banned the creation and use of drums After the banning of drums slaves made rhythmic music by slapping their knees thighs arms and other body parts a practice called pattin Juba 20 The Juba dance was originally brought by Kongo slaves to Charleston South Carolina and became an African American plantation dance performed by slaves during gatherings when rhythm instruments were prohibited 21 22 nbsp Slave dance to banjo 1780sFolk spirituals unlike much white gospel were often spirited Slaves added dancing later known as the shout and other body movements to the singing They also changed the melodies and rhythms of psalms and hymns by speeding up the tempo adding repeated refrains and choruses and replacing texts with new ones that often combined English and African words and phrases Originally passed down orally folk spirituals have been central in the lives of African Americans for more than three centuries serving religious cultural social political and historical functions 23 Folk spirituals were spontaneously created and performed in a repetitive improvised style The most common song structures are the call and response Blow Gabriel and repetitive choruses He Rose from the Dead The call and response is an alternating exchange between the soloist and the other singers The soloist usually improvises a line to which the other singers respond repeating the same phrase Song interpretation incorporates the interjections of moans cries hollers and changing vocal timbres and can be accompanied by hand clapping and foot stomping The Smithsonian Institution Folkways Recordings have samples of African American slave shout songs 24 19th century edit nbsp William Sidney Mount painted scenes of black and white American musicians This 1856 painting depicts an African American banjo player The influence of African Americans on mainstream American music began in the 19th century with the advent of blackface minstrelsy The banjo of African origin became a popular instrument and its African derived rhythms were incorporated into popular songs by Stephen Foster and other songwriters Over time the banjo s construction adopted some European traditions such as a flat fingerboard Some banjos had five strings in contrast to the West African three string version This resulted in the creation of several different types of banjos in the United States 25 In the 1830s the Second Great Awakening led to a rise in Christian revivals especially among African Americans Drawing on traditional work songs enslaved African Americans originated and performed a wide variety of spirituals and other Christian music Some of these songs were coded messages of subversion against slaveholders or signals to escape For example Harriet Tubman sang coded messages to her mother and other slaves in the field to let them know she was escaping on the Underground Railroad Tubman sang I m sorry I m going to leave you farewell oh farewell But I ll meet you in the morning farewell oh farewell I ll meet you in the morning I m bound for the promised land On the other side of Jordan Bound for the Promised Land 26 27 28 During the period after the Civil War the spread of African American music continued The Fisk University Jubilee Singers first toured in 1871 Artists including Jack Delaney helped revolutionize post war African American music in the central east of the United States In the following years professional jubilee troops formed and toured The first black musical comedy troupe Hyers Sisters Comic Opera Co was organized in 1876 29 In the last half of the 19th century barbershops often served as community centers where men would gather Barbershop quartets originated with African American men socializing in barbershops they would harmonize while waiting their turn singing spirituals folk songs and popular songs This generated a new style of unaccompanied four part close harmony singing Later white minstrel singers stole the style and in the early days of the recording industry their performances were recorded and sold By the end of the 19th century African American music was an integral part of mainstream American culture Early 20th century 1900s 1930s edit nbsp The Slayton Jubilee Singers entertain employees of the Old Trusty Incubator Factory Clay Center about 1910In a groundbreaking moment in 1898 Broadway witnessed the debut of the first musical created by African Americans courtesy of Bob Cole and Billy Johnson The musical landscape saw another milestone in 1890 with the first recording by black musicians Bert Williams and George Walker highlighting music from Broadway productions Theodore Drury played a pivotal role in nurturing black talent in opera establishing the Drury Opera Company in 1900 Despite its short run until 1908 the company left an indelible mark as the pioneer in black participation within opera Fast forward to 1911 where Scott Joplin s trailblazing ragtime folk opera Treemonisha took center stage adding a unique and vibrant chapter to the history of African American contributions to the musical realm 30 The early part of the 20th century saw a rise in popularity of blues and jazz African American music at this time was classed as race music 31 Ralph Peer musical director at Okeh Records put records made by foreign groups under that label At the time race was a term commonly used by the African American press to speak of the community as a whole with an empowering point of view as a person of race was one involved in fighting for equal rights 32 Ragtime performers such as Scott Joplin became popular and some were associated with the Harlem Renaissance and early civil rights activists White and Latino performers of African American music were also visible African American music was often altered and diluted to be more palatable for white audiences who would not have accepted black performers leading to genres like swing music By the turn of the 20th century African Americans were becoming part of classical music as well Originally excluded from major symphony orchestras black musicians could study in music conservatories that had been founded in the 1860s such as the Oberlin School of Music National Conservatory of Music and the New England Conservatory 33 Black people also formed symphony orchestras in major cities such as Chicago New Orleans and Philadelphia Various black orchestras began to perform regularly in the late 1890s and the early 20th century In 1906 the first incorporated black orchestra was established in Philadelphia 34 In the early 1910s all black music schools such as the Music School Settlement for Colored and the Martin Smith School of Music were founded in New York 35 The Music School Settlement for Colored became a sponsor of the Clef Club orchestra in New York The Clef Club Symphony Orchestra attracted both black and white audiences to concerts at Carnegie Hall from 1912 to 1915 Conducted by James Reese Europe and William H Tyers the orchestra included banjos mandolins and baritone horns Concerts featured music written by black composers notably Harry T Burleigh and Will Marion Cook Other annual black concert series include the William Hackney s All Colored Composers concerts in Chicago and the Atlanta Colored Music Festivals 36 The return of the black musical to Broadway occurred in 1921 with Sissle and Eubie Blake s Shuffle Along In 1927 a concert survey of black music was performed at Carnegie Hall including jazz spirituals and the symphonic music of W C Handy s Orchestra and the Jubilee Singers The first major film musical with a black cast was King Vidor s Hallelujah of 1929 African American performers were featured in the musical Show Boat which had a part written for Paul Robeson and a chorus of Jubilee Singers and especially all black operas such as Porgy and Bess and Virgil Thomson s Four Saints in Three Acts of 1934 The first symphony by a black composer to be performed by a major orchestra was William Grant Still s Afro American Symphony 1930 by the New York Philharmonic Florence Beatrice Price s Symphony in E minor was performed in 1933 by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra 37 In 1934 William Dawson s Negro Folk Symphony was performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra 38 Mid 20th century 1940s 1960s edit nbsp Marilyn Horne and Henry Lewis in 1961 photo by Carl Van VechtenBillboard started making a separate list of hit records for African American music in October 1942 with the Harlem Hit Parade which was changed in 1945 to Race Records and then in 1949 to Rhythm and Blues Records 39 40 By the 1940s cover versions of African American songs were commonplace frequently topping the charts while the original versions did not reach the mainstream In 1955 Thurman Ruth persuaded a gospel group to sing in the Apollo Theater This presentation of gospel music in a secular setting was successful and he arranged gospel caravans that traveled around the country playing venues that rhythm and blues singers had popularized Meanwhile jazz performers began to move away from swing towards music with more intricate arrangements more improvisation and technically challenging forms This culminated in bebop the modal jazz of Miles Davis and the free jazz of Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane African American musicians in the 1940s and 1950s were developing rhythm and blues into rock and roll which featured a strong backbeat Prominent exponents of this style included Louis Jordan and Wynonie Harris Rock and roll music became commercially successful with recordings of white musicians however such as Bill Haley and Elvis Presley playing a guitar based fusion of black rock and roll and rockabilly Rock music became more associated with white artists although some black performers such as Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley had commercial success nbsp Sister Rosetta Tharpe performing at Cafe ZanzibarIn 2017 National Public Radio wrote about the career of Sister Rosetta Tharpe and concluded with these comments Tharpe was a gospel singer at heart who became a celebrity by forging a new path musically Through her unforgettable voice and gospel swing crossover style Tharpe influenced a generation of musicians including Aretha Franklin Chuck Berry and countless others She was and is an unmatched artist 41 As the 1940s came to a close other African Americans endeavored to concertize as classical musicians in an effort to transcend racial and nationalistic barriers in the post war era In 1968 Henry Lewis became the first African American instrumentalist in a leading American symphony orchestra an early musical ambassador in support of cultural diplomacy in Europe and the first African American conductor of a major American symphonic ensemble in 1968 42 43 44 45 The term rock and roll had a strong sexual connotation in jump blues and R amp B but when DJ Alan Freed referred to rock and roll on mainstream radio in the mid 50s the sexual component had been dialed down enough that it simply became an acceptable term for dancing 46 R amp B was a strong influence on rock and roll according to many sources including a 1985 Wall Street Journal article titled Rock It s Still Rhythm and Blues The author states that the two terms were used interchangeably until about 1957 47 Fats Domino was not convinced that there was any new genre In 1957 he said What they call rock n roll now is rhythm and blues I ve been playing it for 15 years in New Orleans 48 According to Rolling Stone this is a valid statement all Fifties rockers black and white country born and city bred were fundamentally influenced by R amp B the black popular music of the late Forties and early Fifties 49 Elvis Presley s recognition of the importance of artists such as Fats Domino was significant according to a 2017 article the championing of black musicians as part of a narrative that saw many positives in growing young white interest in African American based musical styles 50 At a press event in 1969 Presley introduced Fats Domino and said that s the real King of Rock n Roll a huge influence on me when I started out 51 By the mid 1950s many R amp B songs were getting covered by white artists and the recordings got more airplay on the mainstream radio stations For example Presley quickly covered Tutti Frutti So did Pat Boone according to New Yorker In 1956 seventy six per cent of top R amp B songs also made the pop chart in 1957 eighty seven per cent made the pop chart in 1958 it was ninety four per cent The marginal market had become the main market and the majors had got into the act 52 The 1950s marked a significant uptick in the allure of blues captivating audiences both in the US and across the pond in the UK reminiscent of early 20th century styles Alongside this blues resurgence Doo wop center stage enchanting listeners with its unique blend of vocal group harmonies playful nonsense syllables minimal instrumentation and straightforward lyrics Doo wop often featuring solo artists with backing groups emphasized lead singers who played a prominent role in the musical arrangement Simultaneously a secularized version of American gospel music known as soul emerged in the mid 1950s led by trailblazers likeRay Charles 53 Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke 54 This soulful wave had a profound impact influencing not only surf music but also paving the way for chart topping girl groups like The Angels and The Shangri Las In a dance revolution 1959 saw Hank Ballard releasing a song tailored for the new dance craze The Twist which would become a sensation defining the early 60s 55 In 1959 Berry Gordy founded Motown Records the first record label to primarily feature African American artists which aimed at achieving crossover success The label developed an innovative and commercially successful style of soul music with distinctive pop elements Its early roster included The Miracles Martha and the Vandellas Marvin Gaye The Temptations and The Supremes 56 Black divas such as Aretha Franklin became 60s crossover stars In the UK British blues became a gradually mainstream phenomenon returning to the United States in the form of the British Invasion a group of bands led by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones who performed blues and R amp B inspired pop with both traditional and modern aspects WGIV in Charlotte North Carolina was one of a few radio stations dedicated to African American music that started during this period The British Invasion knocked many black artists off the US pop charts although some like Otis Redding Wilson Pickett Aretha Franklin and a number of Motown artists continued to do well Soul music however remained popular among black people through new forms such as funk developed out of the innovations of James Brown 57 In 1961 11 year old Stevland Hardaway Morris made his first record under Motown s Tamla label as Stevie Wonder 58 In 1964 the Civil Rights Act outlawed major forms of discrimination towards African Americans and women As tensions began to diminish more African American musicians crossed over into the mainstream Some artists who successfully crossed over were Aretha Franklin James Brown and Ella Fitzgerald in the pop and jazz worlds and Leontyne Price and Kathleen Battle in classical music By the end of the decade black people were part of the psychedelia and early heavy metal trends particularly by way of the ubiquitous Beatles influence and the electric guitar innovations of Jimi Hendrix 59 Hendrix was among the first guitarists to use audio feedback fuzz and other effects pedals such as the wah wah pedal to create a unique guitar solo sound Psychedelic soul a mix of psychedelic rock and soul began to flourish with the 1960s culture Even more popular among black people and with more crossover appeal was album oriented soul in the late 1960s and early 1970s which revolutionized African American music The genre s intelligent and introspective lyrics often with a socially aware tone were created by artists such as Marvin Gaye in What s Going On and Stevie Wonder in Songs in the Key of Life 1970s edit See also Progressive soul and Hip hop music In the 1970s album oriented soul continued its popularity while musicians such as Smokey Robinson helped turn it into Quiet Storm music Funk evolved into two strands a pop soul jazz bass fusion pioneered by Sly amp the Family Stone and a more psychedelic fusion epitomized by George Clinton and his P Funk ensemble Disco evolved from black musicians creating soul music with an up tempo melody Isaac Hayes Barry White Donna Summer and others helped popularize disco which gained mainstream success Some African American artists including The Jackson 5 Roberta Flack Teddy Pendergrass Dionne Warwick Stevie Wonder The O Jays Gladys Knight amp the Pips and Earth Wind amp Fire found crossover audiences while white listeners preferred country rock singer songwriters stadium rock soft rock glam rock and to some degree heavy metal and punk rock During the 1970s The Dozens an urban African American tradition of using playful rhyming ridicule developed into street jive in the early 70s which in turn inspired hip hop by the late 1970s Spoken word artists such as The Watts Prophets The Last Poets Gil Scott Heron and Melvin Van Peebles were some innovators of early hip hop Many youths in the Bronx used this medium to communicate the unfairness minorities faced at the time DJs played records typically funk while MCs introduced tracks to the dancing audience Over time DJs began isolating and repeating the percussion breaks producing a constant eminently danceable beat over which MCs began rapping using rhyme and sustained lyrics 60 Hip hop would become a multicultural movement in a youthful black America led by artists such as Kurtis Blow and Run DMC 1980s edit nbsp Michael Jackson leaving the White House in 1984Michael Jackson had record breaking success with his 1980s albums Off the Wall Bad and the best selling album of all time Thriller Jackson paved the way for other successful crossover black solo artists such as Prince Lionel Richie Luther Vandross Tina Turner Whitney Houston and Janet Jackson Michael s sister Pop and dance soul of this era inspired new jack swing by the end of the decade citation needed Hip hop spread across the country and diversified Techno dance Miami bass post disco Chicago house Los Angeles hardcore and Washington D C Go go developed during this period with only Miami bass achieving mainstream success Before long Miami bass was relegated primarily to the Southeastern US while Chicago house had made strong headway on college campuses and dance arenas i e the warehouse sound the rave Washington s Go go garnered modest national attention with songs such as E U s Da Butt 1988 but proved to be a mostly regional phenomena Chicago house sound had expanded into the Detroit music environment and began using more electronic and industrial sounds creating Detroit techno acid and jungle The combination of these experimental usually DJ oriented sounds with the multiethnic NYC disco sound from the 1970s and 1980s created a brand of music that was most appreciated in large discotheques in large cities European audiences embraced this kind of electronic dance music with more enthusiasm than their North American counterparts citation needed nbsp DJ Jazzy Jeff pictured in 2002 From about 1986 rap entered the mainstream with Run D M C s Raising Hell and the Beastie Boys Licensed to Ill Licensed to Ill was the first rap album to enter the No 1 Spot on the Billboard 200 and opened the door for white rappers Both of these groups mixed rap and rock appealing to both audiences Hip hop took off from its roots and the golden age hip hop flourished with artists such as Eric B amp Rakim Public Enemy LL Cool J Queen Latifah Big Daddy Kane and Salt N Pepa Hip hop became popular in the United States and became a worldwide phenomenon in the late 1990s The golden age scene would end by the early 1990s as gangsta rap and G funk took over with West Coast artists Dr Dre Snoop Dogg Warren G and Ice Cube East Coast artists Notorious B I G Wu Tang Clan and Mobb Deep and the sounds of urban black male bravado compassion and social awareness citation needed While heavy metal music was almost exclusively created by white performers in the 1970s and 1980s there were a few exceptions In 1988 all black heavy metal band Living Colour achieved mainstream success with their debut album Vivid peaking at No 6 on the Billboard 200 thanks to their Top 20 single Cult of Personality The band s music contained lyrics that attack what they perceived as Eurocentrism and racism in America A decade later more black artists like Lenny Kravitz Body Count Ben Harper and countless others would start playing rock again citation needed 1990s 2000s 2010s and today edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2021 nbsp Lil Wayne is one of the top selling black American musicians in modern history In 2008 his album sold one million in its first week Contemporary R amp B the post disco version of soul music remained popular throughout the 1980s and 1990s Male vocal groups such as The Temptations and The O Jays were particularly popular as well as New Edition Boyz II Men Jodeci Dru Hill Blackstreet and Jagged Edge Girl groups including TLC Destiny s Child SWV and En Vogue were also highly successful citation needed Singer songwriters such as R Kelly Mariah Carey Montell Jordan D Angelo Aaliyah and Raphael Saadiq of Tony Toni Tone were also popular during the 1990s Mary J Blige Faith Evans and BLACKstreet popularized a fusion blend known as hip hop soul The neo soul movement of the 1990s with classic soul influences was popularized in the late 1990s and early 2000s by such artists as D Angelo Erykah Badu Maxwell Lauryn Hill India Arie Alicia Keys Jill Scott Angie Stone Bilal and Musiq Soulchild A record review claimed that D Angelo s critically acclaimed album Voodoo 2000 represents African American music at a crossroads To simply call it neo classical soul would be to ignore the elements of vaudeville jazz Memphis horns ragtime blues funk and bass grooves not to mention hip hop that slips out of every pore of these haunted songs 61 Blue eyed soul is soul music performed by white artists including Michael McDonald Christina Aguilera Amy Winehouse Robin Thicke Michael Bolton Jon B Lisa Stansfield Teena Marie Justin Timberlake Joss Stone George Michael and Anastacia citation needed Along with the singer songwriter influence on hip hop and R amp B there was an increase in creativity and expression through Rap music Tupac The Notorious B I G Biggie N W A Lil Kim Snoop Dogg and Nas broke into the music industry 90s rap introduced many other subgenres including Gangsta rap Conscious rap and Pop rap 62 Gangsta rap focused on gang violence drug dealing and poverty 62 It was also a major player in the East Coast West Coast hip hop rivalry Main players in this rivalry were Tupac and Suge Knight on the West Coast and The Notorious B I G and Diddy on the East Coast nbsp BeyonceBy the early 2000s R amp B began to emphasize solo artists with pop appeal including Usher Beyonce and the Caribbean born Rihanna This music was accompanied by creative and unique music videos such as Beyonce s Crazy in Love Rihanna s Pon de Replay and Usher s Caught Up These videos helped R amp B become more profitable and more popular than it had been in the 1990s The line between hip hop R amp B and pop was blurred by producers such as Timbaland and Lil Jon and by artists like Missy Elliott T Pain Nelly Akon and OutKast citation needed Hip hop remains a genre created and dominated by African Americans In its early years the lyrics were about the hardships of being black in the United States White owned record labels controlled how hip hop was marketed resulting in changes to the lyrics and culture of hip hop to suit white audiences Scholars and African American hip hop creators noticed this change Hip hop is used to sell cars cell phones and other merchandise 63 64 nbsp Edward Ray at Capitol RecordsThe hip hop movement has become increasingly mainstream as the music industry has taken control of it Essentially from the moment Rapper s Delight went platinum hiphop the folk culture became hiphop the American entertainment industry sideshow 65 nbsp 50 Cent in 2006 50 Cent was one of the most popular African American rappers of the 2000s In the early 2000s 50 Cent was one of the most popular African American artists In 2005 his album The Massacre sold over one million albums in its first week In 2008 Lil Wayne s album Tha Carter III also sold more than a million copies in its first week 66 Within a year of Michael Jackson s unexpected death in 2009 his estate generated 1 4 billion in revenues A documentary containing rehearsal footage for Jackson s scheduled This Is It tour entitled Michael Jackson s This Is It was released on October 28 2009 and became the highest grossing concert film in history 67 In 2013 no African American musician had a Billboard Hot 100 number one the first year in which there was not a number one record by an African American in the chart s 55 year history 68 J Cole Beyonce Jay Z and half Canadian Drake were all top selling music artists this year but none made it to the Billboard Hot 100 s number one leading to much debate 69 Black protest music went mainstream in the 2010s 70 Beyonce her sister Solange Kanye West Frank Ocean and Rihanna released black protest albums Beyonce released her first black protest album Lemonade in 2016 In the late 2010s mumble rap which originated from African American vernacular English became popular with artists such as Playboi Carti Young Thug and Lil Baby 71 better source needed 72 better source needed Mumble rap focuses on the melody of the song rather than on the lyrics and has a big instrumental base In a conversation with well known mumble rapper HipHopDx Future said When I freestyle I know there are bits you don t really understand but that s what you like it for that s what its all about to me that s art 73 In the early 2020s there has been a form of African American music that bursted onto the scene This genre has gained traction as of recently but has been around since the early 2010s originating in Chicago This genre is called Drill Music There are artists like Lil Durk B Lovee Ice Spice and many more who came onto the scene expressing themselves and telling there stories through a much unique and much aggressive style of music Oftentimes the artist would incoporate old and well known background beats from many popular songs in the past and add their twist to it Cultural impact editThrough the hybridization of African European and Native American cultural elements African American music has made itself a distinctly American phenomenon 74 Jim Crow amp Civil Rights Eras early to mid 20th century edit The music made during the Jim Crow and Civil Rights era awakened the passion and purposefulness of the Southern Civil Rights Movement that provided a stirring musical accompaniment to the campaign for racial justice and equality 75 African American men women and children from across the nation came together in social settings such as marches mass meetings churches and even jails and conveyed the moral urgency of the freedom struggle 75 African American music served to uplift the spirits and hearts of those fighting for civil rights 75 Guy Carawan referred to the Civil Rights Movement as the greatest singing movement this country has experienced 76 We Shall Overcome edit Often called the anthem of the Civil Rights Movement We Shall Overcome was a hymn from the 19th century that was used as a protest labor song in a labor strike against American Tobacco in Charleston South Carolina in 1945 1946 76 77 It was overheard by Zilhpia Horton in a Tennessee tobacco field on a picket line in 1946 and a worker by the name of Lucille Simmons changed the original wording of I Will Overcome to We Will Overcome which made it more powerful for the Civil Rights Movement 76 In 1947 Horton added some verses to the song and taught Pete Seeger her version 76 Seeger revised the song from We will to We shall 77 In April 1960 at Raleigh North Carolina folk singer Guy Carawan sang the new version at the founding convention of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC starting its quick spread throughout the Civil Rights Movement 76 Seeger Carawan and Frank Hamilton copyrighted the song to prevent it from becoming a commercialized pop song 76 We Shall Overcome continued to spread rapidly as the Civil Rights Movement gained supporters and momentum 77 Protestors across the nation sang the song as they marched for rights were beat up attacked by police dogs and sent to jail for breaking segregation laws 77 We Shall Overcome and many other protest songs during the Civil Rights movement became its soundtrack 77 Outside of the U S the song has been used in freedom movements around the world 77 In India the song is known as Hum Honge Kaamyaab which is a song that most school children in India know by heart 77 Harlem Cultural Festival 1969 edit The Harlem Cultural Festival was a series of music concerts held in Harlem s Mount Morris Park in New York City This festival celebrated African American music and culture and promoted the continued politics of Black pride 78 At 3 PM on Sundays from June 29 1969 to August 24 1969 artists would perform to an audience of tens of thousands of people 78 Such artists that performed were Stevie Wonder Nina Simone B B King Sly and the Family Stone The 5th Dimension Gladys Knight amp the Pips Mahalia Jackson and many others 78 Economic impact editRecord stores played a vital role in African American communities for many decades In the 1960s and 1970s between 500 and 1 000 black owned record stores operated in the American South and probably twice as many in the United States as a whole According to The Political Economy of Black Music By Norman Kelley Black music exists in a neo colonial relationship with the 12 billion music industry which consist of six record companies African American entrepreneurs embraced record stores as key vehicles for economic empowerment and critical public spaces for black consumers at a time that many black owned businesses were closing amid desegregation 79 Countless African Americans have worked as musical performers club owners radio deejays concert promoters and record label owners Many companies use African American music to sell their products Companies like Coca Cola Nike and Pepsi have used African American music in advertising 80 International influence editJazz and hip hop traveled to Africa and Asia and influenced other genres of African and Asian Music 81 Many state that without African American music there would be no American music 82 The songs that Africans brought to America created a foundation for American music 82 The textural styles slang and African American Vernacular English influenced American pop culture and global culture The way African Americans dress in hip hop videos and how African Americans talk is copied in the American market and the global market 83 84 Afrobeat edit Afrobeat is a Nigerian music genre created by Nigerian artist Fela Kuti Afrobeat began during the early twentieth century from Nigeria with a combination of Highlife Yoruba music and jazz 85 The years between the wars 1918 1939 were a particularly fertile time for the formation of pan West African urban musical traditions 86 Kuti fused traditional West African music with African American music of Jazz R amp B and other genres of West African and African American music 87 James Brown s funk music dance style and African American drumming influenced Afrobeat 88 In London Kuti joined jazz and rock bands and returned to Nigeria creating Afrobeat by fusing African American and traditional Yoruba music with Highlife music In 1969 Kuti toured the United States and became inspired by the political activism of African Americans He studied the life of Malcolm X and was inspired by his pro black speeches This resulted in a change in Kuti s message as he began discussing the political issues in Africa and Nigeria 89 In contrast Afrobeats is a term applied to a large range of genres popular all over Africa Music referred to as Afrobeats in contrast to Kuti is frequently upbeat digitally generated and sung in English West African and pidgin languages Kuti s music was characterized by its political content and orchestral style whereas Afrobeats took influence from many musical themes found in R amp B and Hip Hop Rap Love sex drugs money hard times fame 90 Racial appropriation and insensitivity in K pop music edit Hip hop came to Korea in the 1990s and developed into Korean hip hop and Korean K pop music 91 Some Korean artists have appropriated African American vernacular and other aspects of Black culture 92 93 Groups like the girl group MAMAMOO have been known to dress in blackface and others speak in blaccents and wear their hair in ethnic styles Artist Zico has used the n word in his music and has claimed that he has a black soul 94 As of 2020 within K pop blackface mouthing or saying racial slurs and purely aesthetic uses of Black culture and hairstyles were still common 95 without necessarily understanding honoring or crediting their African American roots 94 According to sources cited in a 2020 Guardian article many K pop artists do not show support for African American social justice issues M any international fans are waiting for the industry to develop a more sensitive globalized understanding of race 95 In Korean there are phrases that have been misconstrued to sound like the a racial slur These include the phrase because of 니까 pronounced nikka and the word you or you re 니가 pronounced neega 96 See also edit nbsp Music portal nbsp United States portalAfrican American culture African American dance African American musical theater Groove Afro Caribbean music Blackface Cultural appropriation Culture of Africa Culture of the United States Culture of the Southern United States Gandy dancer Juke joint List of musical genres of the African diaspora Music of Africa Music of the African diaspora Cajun music Creole music Indie soul Neo soul Music of Baltimore Music of Detroit Music of Georgia U S state Music of New Orleans Music of the United States Jewish music Mexican music National Museum of African American Music Romani musicReferences edit Tamberrino Responses to African American Music During the Civil War Virginia Lucas Poetry Scrapbook Department of English at Virginia Tech Retrieved June 25 2022 Smithsonian Staff Slave Shout Songs from the Coast of Georgia The McIntosh County Shouters Smithsonian Folkways Recordings Smithsonian Institution Retrieved May 23 2021 Eaglin Maya February 21 2021 The soundtrack of history How Black music has shaped American culture through time NBC News NBC News Retrieved December 17 2021 MORRIS GEORGE July 2017 Unspeakable cruelty Former slaves tell their stories in Southern University online listings The Advocate Retrieved November 28 2022 Samuel Floyd 1996 The Power of Black Music Interpreting Its History from Africa to the United States Oxford University Press p 208 ISBN 978 0 19 510975 7 Price Tanya 2013 Rhythms of Culture Djembe and African Memory in African American Cultural Traditions Black Music Research Journal 33 2 227 247 doi 10 5406 blacmusiresej 33 2 0227 JSTOR 10 5406 blacmusiresej 33 2 0227 S2CID 191599752 Black Music Alexander Street part of Clarivate search alexanderstreet com Retrieved November 29 2022 Wilson Olly 1974 The Significance of the Relationship between Afro American Music and West African Music The Black Perspective in Music 2 1 6 doi 10 2307 1214144 JSTOR 1214144 Maultsby Mellonee V Burnim Portia K 2014 African American Music An Introduction Routledge ISBN 9781317934424 a b Southern Eileen 1997 The Music of Black Americans A History W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 03843 9 Robinson 2015 The Healing Element of the Spirituals PDF Journal of Pan African Studies 8 7 Retrieved September 23 2023 Smithsonian Staff Roots of African American Music Smithsonian Music Smithsonian Institution Retrieved December 21 2021 Seldon Spiritual Awakening Exploring South Carolina s Official State Music Discover South Carolina South Carolina Department of Parks Recreation and Tourism Retrieved May 13 2022 Stewart Earl L 1998 African American Music An Introduction 1st ed Belmont CA Cengage Learning formerly Schirmer Books London Prentice Hall International pp 5 15 ISBN 9780028602943 Wilson Olly The Heterogeneous Sound Ideal in African American Music PDF Avorgbedor Daniel Pyne James October 1 1999 Voiced noise The heterogeneous sound ideal as preferred acoustic environment in selective sub Saharan African instruments and ensembles The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 106 4 2169 Bibcode 1999ASAJ 106 2169A doi 10 1121 1 427227 ISSN 0001 4966 Blassingame John 1980 The slave community Oxford University Press p 138 ISBN 978 0 19 502563 7 Twining Mary Arnold 1985 Movement and Dance on the Sea Islands Journal of Black Studies 15 4 471 doi 10 1177 002193478501500407 JSTOR 2784212 S2CID 143507385 UN Staff Drums and Slavery Department of Public Information United Nations United Nations Retrieved December 18 2021 NPS Staff Performing Culture in Music amp Dance African American Heritage amp Ethnography National Park Service Retrieved December 18 2021 Holloway Joseph E March 3 2019 Africanisms in American Culture Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253217493 page needed Vlach 1990 The Afro American Tradition in Decorative Arts The University of Georgia Press pp 20 28 ISBN 9780820312330 Maultsby Portia A History of African American Music Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Retrieved August 14 2012 Smithsonian Staff Slave Shout Songs from the Coast of Georgia The McIntosh County Shouters Smithsonian Folkways Recordings Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Staff How has the Banjo Changed Over Time Smithsonian Folkways Recordings Smithsonian Music Retrieved December 20 2021 Larson Kate 2009 Bound for the Promised Land Harriet Tubman Portrait of an American Hero Random House Publishing Group pp 82 83 101 187 188 ISBN 9780307514769 The Superpower of Singing Music and the Struggle Against Slavery The National Park Service Retrieved January 12 2024 Wade Phyllis Signal Songs of the Underground Railroad PDF Smithsonian Associates Retrieved January 12 2024 Southern 221 Southern 221 2 294 Race Music St James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture by Matthew A Killmeier 01 29 02 2002 Brackett David The Pop Rock and Soul Reader Southern 266 Southern 291 Southern 288 9 Southern 285 292 American Symphony Orchestra Symphony No 1 in E minor 1932 americansymphony org Southern 361 The Elvic Oracle Did anyone invent rock and roll New Yorker November 16 2015 Retrieved February 22 2021 pop country and Western and a new term replacing race music rhythm and blues Bronson Fred June 12 1993 Songs soul and fusion stage a comeback as A amp R hops aboard the 70s love train Billboard Vol 105 no 24 Nielsen Business Media p 47 Retrieved July 17 2011 Forebears Sister Rosetta Tharpe The Godmother Of Rock N Roll NPR August 24 2017 Retrieved February 22 2021 Appiah Kwame Anthony 2005 Africana The Encyclopedia of the African amp African American Experience Oxford University Press p 563 ISBN 978 0195170559 Brown Emily Freeman 2015 A Dictionary for the Modern Conductor Scarecrow Press pp 197 211 240 311 ISBN 978 0 8108 8401 4 New Music New Allies Amy C Beal University of California Press Berkeley 2006 P 49 ISBN 9780 520 24755 0 Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra 1952 1962 performing works by Roy Harris Morton Gould and Leroy Anderson on https books google com Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra praised throughout Europe on https books google com The unexpected origins of music s most well used terms BBC October 12 2018 Retrieved February 22 2021 its meaning covering both sex and dancing Redd Lawrence N March 1 1985 The Black Perspective in Music Wall Street Journal 13 1 31 47 doi 10 2307 1214792 JSTOR 1214792 Leight Elias October 26 2017 Paul McCartney Remembers Truly Magnificent Fats Domino Rollingstone com Retrieved March 15 2021 Palmer Robert April 19 1990 The 50s A Decade of Music That Changed the World Rollingstone com Retrieved March 15 2021 Champion or copycat Elvis Presley s ambiguous relationship with black America The Conversation August 14 2017 Retrieved March 15 2021 Remembering Fats Domino The Beatles Elvis Presley and the real king of rock n roll National Post October 26 2017 Retrieved March 15 2021 ut rock n roll was here a long time before I came along Let s face it I can t sing like Fats Domino can I know that The Elvic Oracle Did anyone invent rock and roll New Yorker November 16 2015 Retrieved February 22 2021 Ray Charles interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1969 Gilliland John 1969 Show 17 The Soul Reformation More on the evolution of rhythm and blues Part 3 audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries African American Song Library of Congress Retrieved February 25 2019 Motown artists interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1969 Soul Reformation artists interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1970 African American Song Library of Congress Retrieved February 22 2019 Gilliland John 1969 Show 53 String Man audio Pop Chronicles University of North Texas Libraries THE ROOTS OF HIP HOP RM HIP HOP MAGAZINE 1986 Globaldarkness com Retrieved June 23 2012 Review of Voodoo NME 42 February 14 2000 a b The Cause amp Effect of 90 s Hip Hop Black Music Scholar Retrieved November 16 2022 Kopano T Brown 2014 Soul Thieves The Appropriation and Misrepresentation of African American Popular Culture Palgrave Macmillan pp 9 10 35 40 ISBN 9781137071392 Blackshear Janise Marie 2007 Understanding the White mainstream appeal of hip hop music Is it a fad or is it the real thing PDF MA thesis University of Georgia OCLC 319404361 Tate Greg January 4 2005 Hip hop Turns 30 Whatcha Celebratin For Village Voice Seabrook III Robby March 3 2020 Here Are the Biggest First Week Hip Hop Album Sales over the Years XXL Michael Jackson s wealth soars after death Retrieved February 7 2014 Color Blind No African American Artists Had a No 1 Hit in 2013 Time January 10 2014 Retrieved January 21 2014 Gordon Taylor January 12 2014 No African American Artists Topped Billboard s Hot 100 But What Does That Really Mean Atlanta Black Star Retrieved November 16 2022 Corry Kristin November 11 2019 The 2010s Were the Decade when Black Protest Music Went Mainstream Vice Rossen B July 4 2018 The role of emotion in AAVE pronunciation Mumble Rap as a phenomenon of Language Evolution BA thesis Radboud University Nijmegen Drew Ashley S April 1 2019 Changes in Hip Hop A Look at Mumble Rap Capstone project University of California Riverside What is Mumble Rap Features MN2S May 14 2020 Retrieved December 5 2022 Lewis Steven September 2016 Musical Crossroads African American Influence on American Music a b c Ward Brian March 23 2012 People Get Ready Music and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s a b c d e f Voices of Struggle The Civil Rights movement 1945 to 1965 Smithsonian Folkways Recordings Retrieved December 5 2022 a b c d e f g We Shall Overcome The Kennedy Center Retrieved December 5 2022 a b c The Harlem Cultural Festival is Held African American Registry Retrieved December 5 2022 Joshua Clark Davis For the Records How African American Consumers and Music Retailers Created Commercial Public Space in the 1960s and 1970s South Southern Cultures Winter 2011 Blair M Elizabeth Hatala Mark N 1992 The Use of Rap Music in Children s Advertising ACR North American Advances NA 19 Nettle Bruno 2016 Excursions in World Music Seventh Edition Taylor and Francis ISBN 9781317213741 page needed a b Musical Crossroads African American Influence on American Music Smithsonian Music September 22 2016 Retrieved November 16 2022 Keyes Cheryl 2003 The Aesthetic Significance of African American Sound Culture and Its Impact on American Popular Music Style and Industry The World of Music 45 3 105 129 JSTOR 41699526 Kopano T Brown 2014 Soul Thieves The Appropriation and Misrepresentation of African American Popular Culture Palgrave Macmallin pp 35 41 58 ISBN 9781137071392 MasterClass July 15 2021 Guide to Afrobeat Music A Brief History of Afrobeat MasterClass Retrieved November 16 2022 Stewart Alexander 2013 Make It Funky Fela Kuti James Brown and the Invention of Afrobeat American Studies 52 4 99 118 ISSN 0026 3079 JSTOR 24589271 Sturman Janet ed 2019 The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Music and Culture Sage Publications ISBN 9781506353371 page needed Stewart Alexander 2013 Make It Funky Fela Kuti James Brown and the Invention of Afrobeat American Studies 52 4 101 108 doi 10 1353 ams 2013 0124 JSTOR 24589271 S2CID 145682238 Fela Kuti Nigerian musician and activist Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved December 20 2021 C J Mankaprr Conteh Nelson Conteh Mankaprr C J Nelson January 12 2022 How Afrobeats is Making the World Listen Rolling Stone Retrieved November 16 2022 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Anderson Crystal 2020 Soul in Seoul African American Popular Music and K pop University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781496830111 page needed Gardner Hyniea 2019 The Impact of African American Musicianship on South Korean Popular Music Adoption Appropriation Hybridization Integration or Other MLA thesis Harvard Extension School Retrieved March 25 2023 Joyce Mickaela February 8 2021 Black Voices K pop is influenced by Black culture but lacks Black representation Indiana Daily Student Indiana University Retrieved December 20 2021 a b The Commercialization of Black Hip Hop and Rap Culture in K Pop Five Cent Sound Retrieved November 16 2022 a b Luna Elizabeth de July 20 2020 They use our culture the Black creatives and fans holding K pop accountable the Guardian Retrieved December 3 2022 Joseph April 5 2020 Korean Conjunctions Basic Sentence Connectors 90 Day Korean Retrieved December 12 2022 Sources edit Southern Eileen 1997 The Music of Black Americans A History W W Norton amp Company 3rd edition ISBN 0 393 97141 4 Stewart Earl L 1998 African American Music An Introduction ISBN 0 02 860294 3 Cobb Charles E Jr Traveling the Blues Highway National Geographic Magazine April 1999 v 195 n 4 Dixon RMW amp Godrich J 1981 Blues and Gospel Records 1902 1943 Storyville London Hamilton Marybeth In Search of the Blues Leadbitter M amp Slaven N 1968 Blues Records 1943 1966 Oak Publications London Ferris William Give My Poor Heart Ease Voices of the Mississippi Blues University of North Carolina Press 2009 ISBN 0 8078 3325 8 ISBN 978 0807833254 with CD and DVD Ferris William Glenn Hinson The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Volume 14 Folklife University of North Carolina Press 2009 ISBN 0 8078 3346 0 ISBN 978 0 8078 3346 9 Cover photo of James Son Thomas Ferris William Blues From The Delta Da Capo Press revised edition 1988 ISBN 0 306 80327 5 ISBN 978 0306803277 Gioia Ted Delta Blues The Life and Times of the Mississippi Masters Who Revolutionized American Music W W Norton amp Company 2009 ISBN 0 393 33750 2 ISBN 978 0393337501 Harris Sheldon Blues Who s Who Da Capo Press 1979 Nicholson Robert Mississippi Blues Today Da Capo Press 1999 ISBN 0 306 80883 8 ISBN 978 0 306 80883 8 Palmer Robert Deep Blues A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta Penguin reprint 1982 ISBN 0 14 006223 8 ISBN 978 0 14 006223 6 Ramsey Jr Frederic Been Here And Gone 1st edition 1960 Rutgers University Press London Cassell UK and New Brunswick NJ 2nd printing 1969 Rutgers University Press New Brunswick NJ University Of Georgia Press 2000 Wilson Charles Reagan William Ferris Ann J Adadie Encyclopedia of Southern Culture 1656 pp University of North Carolina Press 2nd edition 1989 ISBN 0 8078 1823 2 ISBN 978 0 8078 1823 7Further reading editJoshua Clark Davis For the Records How African American Consumers and Music Retailers Created Commercial Public Space in the 1960s and 1970s South Southern Cultures Winter 2011 Work John W compiler 1940 American Negro Songs and Spirituals a Comprehensive Collection of 230 Folk Songs Religious and Secular with a Foreword Bonanza Books New York N B Consists most notably of an analytical study of this repertory on p 1 46 an anthology of such music words with the notated music harmonized on pp 47 250 and a bibliography on p 252 256 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to African American music A collection of African American Gospel Music from the Library of Congress Shall We Gather at the River a collection of African American sacred music made available for public use by the State Archives of Florida 20 historical milestones in African American music Negro Melodies New International Encyclopedia 1905 History of African music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African American music amp oldid 1199930885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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