1930`s Music

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Transcript 1930`s Music

Popular Music and Classical Music
• Write significant features of each type of music and point
out their differences.
Popular Music
• a generic term for music of all ages that appeals to
popular tastes.
• any genre of music having wide appeal (but usually only
for a short time).
Popular Music from 1920’s to 1950’s
1920’s Music
- a mix of jazz, ragtime tunes and Broadway musicals.
Artists: Guy Lombardo and Benny Goodman
1930’s Music
-era of the “Great Depression”. Music was upbeat and
people turned to music for inspiration. In 1936,
President Herbert Hoover made the “Star Spangled
Banner” the national anthem. Jazz and Pop music
were popular.
Artists: Duke Ellington and Ruth
1940’s Music
-Jazz music and Big Band music continued to be
popular. Artists: Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra
1950’s
-There was rock ‘n roll, rhythm and blues, love
songs, jazz music and the beginning of country
and western music.
Artists: Elvis – first rock star;
Bill Haley & the Comets; Ella Fitzgerald
Types of Popular Music
• pop music, pop - music of general appeal to
teenagers; a bland watered-down version of
rock'n'roll with more rhythm and harmony and an
emphasis on romantic love
• jazz - a genre of popular music that originated in
New Orleans around 1900 and developed through
increasingly complex styles
• R and B, rhythm and blues - a combination of
blues and jazz that was developed in the United
States by Black musicians; an important precursor
of rock 'n' roll
• rockabilly - a fusion of black music and
country music that was popular in the
1950s; sometimes described as blues with
a country beat
• rock 'n' roll, rock and roll, rock
music, rock'n'roll, rock-and-roll, rock - a
genre of popular music originating in the
1950s; a blend of black rhythm-and-blues
with white country-and-western; "rock is a
generic term for the range of styles that
evolved out of rock'n'roll."
• ragtime is a musical genre that enjoyed its peak
popularity between 1895 and 1918. Its main characteristic
trait is its syncopated, or "ragged," rhythm. (ex. Maple
Leaf Rag and The Entertainer)
• disco, disco music - popular dance music (especially in
the late 1970s); melodic with a regular bass beat;
intended mainly for dancing at discotheques
• ethnic music, folk music, folk - the traditional and
typically anonymous music that is an expression of the
life of people in a community
• rap music, hip-hop, rap - genre of African-American
music of the 1980s and 1990s in which rhyming lyrics are
chanted to a musical accompaniment; several forms of
rap have emerged