Slave songs -> Gospel -> Ragtime -> Jazz -> Blues -> Rock
and Roll sometime in the 1940’s.
It was largely teenage and black, and underground (much like 1970’s rap).
Most music companies dropped black artists in the wake of WWII for the following reasons - not seen as profitable, hard to keep up with trends, and frankly they didn’t like black people. So Rock and Roll grew on independent labels. Since the music was largely youth music - and youth music is usually trendy, there was no reason to think it would last and persist as it has. It was uncool in the 1960’s to listen to music popular 20 years ago.
Rock and Roll stayed underground until the marketer's dream of white guys who could sound black and thus make the music acceptable to white youth.
First rock-and-roll song? Arguably Bill Haley - Rock Around the Clock (1954). He was a white guy interested in rock.
Early Rock and Roll songs are under 3:30, because radio is the only way to listen to music and they wanted to maximize the amount of songs they could play. Albums largely are not important, and contain mostly filler. The single is dominant.
Rock and Roll is simple, with repetitive chord progressions with bands composed of drums, bass and guitar. Originally it wasn't neccesarily guitar-based, but guitar, or piano, or sax based. But Rock was always simple and danceable.
Most rock-and-rollers who hit it big in this phase are from the south. This included a truck driver named Elvis Aaron Presley. Elvis moving his hips while singing was scary to much of America and he was filmed from the waist up on Ed Sullivan show.
White America in the 50s were most afraid of: Communists, sex and blacks.
Rock and Roll was not political at this point.
Lennon once said “If rock-and-roll could have a name it would be Chuck Berry”. One of first to perform his own material. His songs described “life”, whereas most rock songs were love songs. He also played the guitar, and thus lead the way for guitar rock.
Important to note about 50’s rock-and-roll: Integration hadn't happened (yet). Rock 'n' Roll was able to give black and white youth something in common to relate to. And since the big labels refuse to carry it, so it has an element of rarity and taboo to it.
Another white guy from the south to make a huge impact was Jerry Lee Lewis. He was from Alabama and was a former altar boy. He was quite suggestive in his lyrics and performance. John Lennon called his "Whole Lotta Shakin'" “The quintessential rock-and-roll song”. Jerry Lee Lewis didn't play guitar and instead focused on Piano-based rock.
Historically there had always a distinction between low-brow and high-brow music (French troubadours vs. Bach) Rock and Roll was unquestionable seen as low-brow music.
Buddy Holly and the Crickets in a way attempted to bridge that gap. Buddy Holly was unusually talented. Controlled every aspect of recording (writing, playing, singing, mixing, and producing) Lennon saw a white guy with thick glasses who looked nerdy playing on TV, and, at the age of 16, and thought that he could do that. His first breakthrough hit was “That’ll be the day” and at that point the record company thought Buddy Holly was black from the sound of his band. Holly pioneered a lot of recording techniques used by rock-and-roll recording artists, such as double-tracking, which enhances the quality of the vocals, as evidenced by "Words of Love" Holly also started integrating different kinds of instruments and orchestras into his songs as well. He started expanding the sound of rock and roll while still turning out records that were identifyable as rock 'n' roll.
In Brittain there wasn't any real native Rock 'N' Roll. Instead they had skiffle: Minimalist rock-and-roll, that used washboards to create the rhythm. “Rock Island Line”, by Scottish artist Lonnie Donnegan was the one of the only rock-and-roll songs out of Britain to chart before Beatles. He was essentially the only British rock star of any signifigance before the Beatles. Skiffle bands could be put together easily and cheaply to play a form of rock-and-roll. Because of the government-controlled media in Britain, and the little amount of broadcast time dedicated to it rock was hard to find on the radio in Britain and thus it kept largely underground.
Big Bopper, Buddy Holly and Richie Valens got on a plane in early '59, only to crash minutes later - The day the music died.
Elvis got drafted, and was sent to Germany. Jerry Lee Lewis married his 13-year-old second cousin while still married to his previous wife. Chuck Berry hired a 14-year-old as a waitress, who later claimed he trafficked her across state lines with intent to prostitute her. This took all of these major rock and roll figures out of the scene by 1960.
BMI - licensed rock songs for airplay. ASCAP brought forth an investigation to see whether the DJ’s were paid to play particular singles (payola). Alan Freed and Dick Clark were DJ’s questioned by Congress on this issue.
In the wake of the shakedown Rock and Roll became corporatized to a large
extent.
Corporate rock-and-roll was largely pleasant-sounding, but homogenized,
white, and mostly toothless.
However, since in Britain rock remained largely taboo instead of being coopted by corporations, it remainder underground, raw and true to its roots.
To get a much more indepth and accurate story on this, please visit:
http://history-of-rock.com
Richard Starkey: a.k.a. Ringo Starr. Born to a fairly poor family with a father who left very early in June of 1940. He was sickly as a child and constantly in and out of hospitals. He was given a drum set at age 11, and later joined Rory Storm and Hurricanes (at the time, Liverpool's best band).
John Winston Lennon was born on Oct 9, 1940. Born to Julia Lennon, his father, a seaman left when he was very young and surfaced when Lennon was already famous. Julia Lennon was “unbalanced”, left John when he was 5. Given to be raised by his aunt Mimi and his uncle. He was constantly in touch with Aunt Mimi throughout his life.
John was a smart, but rebellious kid, published a humor magazine in school called “Daily Howl”. Also a gifted artist - accepted at age of 16 into Quarry Bank, an art college in Liverpool. At about that point, John’s mother resurfaced and became friends with John. At this time she taught him to play banjo and ukulele which John converted into guitar playing. However, she was soon killed when a drunken off-duty police officer ran over her.
Also, at age of 16, Lennon saw Elvis, then Buddy Holly on TV. Original band name formed with his friend Pete Shotton: Black Jacks (then soon became The Quarrymen in honor of their art college).
June 18th, 1942
Born to a Catholic mother and Protestant mother in their40’s - James Paul
McCartney was born. He had a generally happy life, given a trumpet
at age of 10, then switched to guitar, so he could sing. His father
had a bit of musical history being in swing jazz bands in his past.
Paul never had any formal music lessons. Paul's mother died from breast
cancer at age of 14. Paul also went to Quarry Bank.
First song he wrote was “I lost my little girl”.
Feb 25, 1943
George Harrison was born to a large and fairly poor family of French background.
His father drove the school bus. He didn’t do all that well in school.
His primers covered with pictures of guitars. He practiced the guitar
incessantly once he got one, and played in a small band with his friend, Paul
McCartney.
Most Beatles bought guitars that were guaranteed to not crack (quality!).
Quarrymen - 1956 - 1960
July 6th - 1957 - Performance by Quarrymen, incl. 16-year-old John Lennon at a Liverpool church fete. Paul McCartney was in the audience, and a common friend introduced Paul to John after the show. McCartney was invited to join the band a few days later, on the strength of knowing every line to Twenty Flight Rock from a movie released in 1956 (The Girl Can't Help It).
Quarrymen didn’t have a regular drummer until 1960.
Harrison was let in due to his musical ability in 1958 after this, they desperately tried to land gigs and perform on "star search"-esque programs hoping to make their big break, and mostly succeeded in getting kicked out of jazz clubs when they started playing rock.
Headmaster of Quarry bank: “You will never amount to anything, John Lennon”
First two song demo recorded (in 1958):
That’ll Be the Day
In Spite of All the Danger (Only credited song to McCartney / Harrison)
2 copies originally pressed, one owned by McCartney, other copy unknown.
As a rule, the Beatles didn't start writing many good songs until 1963.
Name evolution: “Silver Beetles” ? “Beetles” ? “Beatles” (due to their
admiration of The Crickets, and them being a Beat group)
John's preferred explanation of their name was that “A man came to him in
a vision, standing on a flaming pie, saying ‘you shall be known as The Beatles
with an A and so it came to be”
A promoter was looking for English rock bands to play in Hamburg - at the time a seedier version of what we think of Las Vegas. But they needed a drummer. They found a drummer named Pete Best, whose qualification was that he owned a drum set.
Bassist (Stuart Sutcliff): He was convinced by Lennon to join the band because he won enough money in an art contest to buy a bass and he was John's good friend. To hide that he couldn’t play, he often played with his back to the audience, which made him appear moody, and got him more girls than the rest of the band.
John Lennon had a long-standing girlfriend from Liverpool, Cythnia. She died her hair blonde to look like Bridget Bardot (a french competitor of Marlyn Monroe for biggest sex goddess in film at the time, whom John adored). However, she was left in England, and Lennon basically cheated on her without abandon.
Hamburg: Tough town, and Harrison isn’t even 18. Beatles had to perform 12-hour sets and had to expand their song repertoire. They covered rock songs they liked, and started adapting songs from other genres making them rock songs.
Originally signed up in a really bad club, with one small room for them to live in, room having rats, and no real blankets. Constantly trying to get into a better club, but they also met a lot of people, including American rock stars who fell out of favor in US, who were also playing Germany, including Little Richard.
Also, they met up Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, and their drummer, Ringo Starr who would occasionally "sit in" on sessions with them. Bought leather coats and jelled their hair to look like Elvis. But Stuart Sutcliff found a girl and fell in love with an existentialist artist (who took a lot of famous pictures and convinced them to wear the mop top haircut) and decided to move permanently to Germany.
They also had their first real exposure with drugs in Hamburg, taking strong stimulants in order to have the stamina to perform 10-12 hour sets. (at the time the drug was legal most places, and was regularly prescribed to housewives trying to lose weight)
Deported, due to Harrison being underage, after a burning condom incident. There was little danger of the concrete room burning, but the club owner was furious about losing the band to a club the Beatles had been trying to get into so the club owner called the police.
When they returned to Liverpool, they billed themselves as a German band, and were finally able to play the Cavern club, where they were rejected from before their trip.
Losing Sutcliff meant McCartney was drafted to play bass.
Going back to Germany in 1961, an American rock star Tony Sheridan recruited them to play backup on a rocked up version of the old standard "My Bonnie (lies over the ocean)". They were also allowed to record two songs of their own, including Ain’t She Sweet (Lennon on lead vocals) and Cry for a Shadow (instrumental).
My Bonnie release was important, since it was a Liverpool band that was on record.
Brian Epstein, a record storeowner, after a girl requested that recording, researched them. He wasn't a fan of their music, but loved their charisma. Soon, he convinced them to get out of the leather jackets, and into suits, and he packaged them and shopped them to record labels. Arguably he was making them into a boy band and they went along with it.
On New Year’s day, 1962 - 45 minutes of music was recorded in an hour at Decca’s rehearsal studios. They played rocked-up Broadway tunes, humor tracks, covers, hard rock and original songs to show off their versatility.
Result: Rejected. “Guitar bands are on their way out”. -Decca Records executive. (Ha.)
As a rule of thumb, the person who wrote the balance of a song, sang it.
Epstein did shop the tape around to every label that was willing to listen to it.
In late 50’s, John/Paul entered in an agreement where for publishing purposes the songs would be credited as McCartney/Lennon, and for song writing credits were credited as Lennon/McCartney. While Yesterday had little if anything to do with Lennon, and Give Peace a Chance didn’t have to do anything with McCartney, those were also credited to Lennon/McCartney.
Beatles got their first spot on BBC in 1962 on the radio - first time they got nationwide coverage.
Epstein got to them to rehearse in June 1962 for an obscure classical EMI label called Parlophone in Abbey Road studios 2, with George Martin, a producer of Peter Sellers humor records and classical music.
While in Germany and Liverpool and before the boys sometimes would call out “Where are we going, Johnny?” to which John would reply “To the toppermost of the poppermost!”
George Martin - “Get rid of Pete Best”. (due to his erratic playing
during the tryout in June) Best fired, Ringo Starr brought in as their new
drummer.
There were a few protests: “Ringo - never, Pete Best forever”
Martin also brought in Alan White, a professional drummer. By accident, the version with Ringo Starr on drums was the single, but the Alan White version was on the album. But Ringo was quite hurt to be brought into the band and immediately asked to step aside in the recording studio, though this would not happen again.
Controversy: Reached #17, but Brian Epstien was rumored to have bought 10,000 copies.
Lennon wrote a song Please Please Me. Based on the vocal styling of Roy Orbison. Originally, Martin wanted them to release a song he found called How Do You Do It, but Beatles refused to release it, releasing Please Please Me, re-recording it as a faster, rockier tune. On 2 of the 3 music charts in Britain at the time, Please Please Me hit #1.
How Do You Do It later hit #1 by another band that George Martin produced and brought the song to.
They already had 4 tracks available when they went in to record the album from the previous 2 singles. So, they recorded ten songs on the day in the studio. Please Please Me wound up with 8 original songs and 6 covers – It is notable that 8 songs are original because it is unusual for a rock’n’roll band at that time.
Most tracks were recorded with few if any overdubs, very much how they sounded live.
Where most albums of the time would include filler, the non-single tracks off of the first album included I Saw Her Standing There, Twist and Shout, and the album at approx 35 minutes was longer than 22-23 minutes typical for US albums of that time.
Beatles are touring incessantly, and they are happy about their fame, jazzed about the fan letters.
March 5, 1963: Beatles go in recording studio to record the third single.
From Me To You – written to the fans to thank them for the letters
In the song, Beatles used (or if you believe the press releases at the time “discovered”) a different chord (minor). Single was an unqualified smash and solidly hit #1.
Beatles were soon very popular in Britain. BBC wanted to play Beatles, even though they didn’t play much rock, and they gave them their own show. From 1962 to 1965 - A few hundred appearances on BBC, each one recording new music. Because of BBC rules, they had to make unique recordings for broadcast on their shows, which lead them to record hundreds of songs only for the BBC.
The show gave them an entrance to every teenager’s house once a week. Releasing records at an amazing rate, 3 singles in 6 months. So, even with singles and records being relatively expensive for the average teenager, everyone got to hear them.
John had a girlfriend named Cynthia. In April ’63, he was forced to marry her (she gave birth to Julian Lennon). Not a lot of people knew about the wedding at Brian Epstein’s insistence, which allowed John to cheat on his wife incessantly.
Up until now, every Beatles song is very straightforward, with simple,
first-person narrative. She Loves You was one of their first songs
to be told from a third-person perspective, and was more complex, lyrically,
and musically than their previous single. However, the “Yeah, Yeah,
Yeah” refrain served to draw the people into the single, although Beatles
were mocked for that. The song was assembled out of 18 edits, with
advanced for it time studio techniques.
Also, the bass line was more prominent and musical (rather than just a rhythm
marker)
This was the biggest selling single in British history, until that record was broken in 1977 by McCartney
From this point on, their songs began to slowly, but surely become more and more difficult to perform live as they were starting to develop sounds in the studio that were increasingly difficult to perform live.
After conquering Britain, Beatles went on to sell well in surrounding countries, and toured there.
Beatles, at that point, are bigger than Lonnie Donogan.
November ’63: More impressive than She Loves You – The Beatles were invited to play for the Queen of England.
Beatles were one of the first bands to not lose their regional accent – which made Lennon say that they were the first band to stay “working class” – although they were millionaires by that time.
By Fall of 1963, they had to release another album. They had more than 10 hours to record this one, though, so out went 14 songs, all brand new, and none of them were singles. Beatles put out just the album, once again with 8 originals and 6 covers.
Album also featured George Harrison’s first song, Don’t Bother Me, which he wrote while sick, and in bed. He wrote 4 other songs in the next two years.
Six months after having so few songs, Beatles had a plethora of good songs, so they were giving them away. Rolling Stones positioned themselves as the louder, grungier, bluesier version of Beatles. When the two met, Beatles offered to write a song for the Stones. John and Paul went off in the corner, and, ten minutes later, came back with I Wanna Be Your Man, which was the first top-20 hit for the Stones.
Having have conquered Europe, Beatles wanted to conquer the ‘States.
First Hendrix tour was opening for the Monkees (note: this happened several years later, but it serves to illustrate the point). Beatles didn’t want to go to the US until they had a #1 hit, to avoid this.
I Want to Hold Your Hand: This was their first song recorded on a 4-track machine (previously all EMI sessions were recorded on twin-track decks) This allowed more complex recordings and the ability to use more advanced overdubbing techniques.
I Want to Hold Your Hand was backed by This Boy, which featured the most advanced harmony on a Beatle record yet.
In the US, from From Me To You through She Loves You, George Martin tried to get Capitol records (which was owned by EMI) to release the Beatles’ albums and singles, to be refused. Thus, George Martin had to release these early hits on very small labels, to have them flop in the US.
With I Want To Hold Your Hand, Capitol records finally relented, and agreed to release it with a $70,000 promotional budget for US.
While touring France: 5th single, first one Paul wrote, Can’t Buy Me Love. Recorded in France, February 1964.
Ed Sullivan, mainstay of American culture, was in Europe. Overhearing the fervor of the Beatles, he decided to invite them over (this was before the Beatles got the news they wanted).
When they arrived, there was a horde of screaming fans waiting for them. This was one of the biggest TV audience ever.
Beatles were able to come out in the US with 4 albums in 6 months. (because of all the music that they had released in the UK that essentially had never been heard in the US)
March 1964: Beatles had 4 of the top 5 positions in Billboard. This is an accomplishment that has never since been repeated. Competing against themselves – the only thing to knock out a Beatles song was another Beatles song.
Beatles then did their first picture, “Hard Day’s Night”. Dick Lester, a hot young director, was brought in. The writing was amazingly clever (trying to imitate a day in the life of Beatles). Still given lines, but they were true to form. Film wound up bigger than the sum of its parts.
Roger Ebert has taught an entire course, shot-by-shot, about Hard Day’s Night.
Monkees: Created to act like the Beatles in Hard Day’s Night, since the Beatles refused to take part in a TV show.
4th album: Exclusively on 4-tracks. The songs were all original, and all Lennon/McCartney. This was more than a little unusual for a Rock record.
Title came from a Ringo line, as they were tired after a day’s filming, and Ringo made a passing comment, which was adopted.
Byrds: One of the groups credited with starting the folk rock movement
by playing Dylan songs electric, were influenced by the fadeout of Hard
Day’s Night, played on a 12-string Rickenbacker guitar, so they used it almost
exclusively on their first album.
Merchandising: Beatles merchandised anything and everything (bedsheets, boots, anything they could merchandise)
Beatles had a cartoon series - aproximatly from 1964 to 1966. Cheesy Saturday morning cartoons where they get into shenanigans in an attempt to make a song
Ever since John Lennon was a boy in school had a habit of writing weird stuff (Today is muggy, tomorrow is tuggy, then wuggy, thuggy, etc)
In 1964 John Lennon published a book called "In His Own Write"
Lennon's writing was really dense, have to read each line 7-8 times to get each pun. There were also inklings of possible political messages.
1964: The fans screaming at live shows begins in earnest. Some of the shows were recorded - Beatles could hardly hear themselves sing, as even the soundboard (mikes + instruments) recording has screaming from the audience that often is louder than the music itself.
Concerts are lasting 30 minutes with crappy PA systems (by today's standards).
During Australian leg of the tour - Ringo becomes ill. While he's in the hospital, bring in Jimmy Nichols to play. When he got better, he was gladly welcomed back by the band.
John Lennon was a big fan of Robert Zimmerman (aka Bob Dylan). At the time, John was listening to his famous The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, a folk album of Dylan's with political messages that Beatles couldn't have.
Dylan thought Beatles had drug references in their songs, but they didn't. He also introduced them to pot.
In late 1964 they went back into the studio to record a new record: Beatles for Sale. Unlike previous album (13 originals), this one had 8 originals and 6 covers. On it you had some of the first Dylan inspired songs from John Lennon. For example, I'm a Loser - Lennon attempts to write in a more lyrically complex manner, and it also features the harmonic prominently in a manner similiar to how Bob Dylan uses it.
John later called the era from mid 1964 through the end of 1965 as his "fat Elvis" period, and his songwriting of the period often reflects this. (Fat Elvis being a reference to Elvis Presley in his last years when he was overweight and having severe problems with relationships and drugs)
Lennon's songs of this time could be arguably misogynist, but by 1967 or so that had largely changed.
The covers were pretty good, including a Chuck Berry cover of "Rock and Roll Music" that arguably bests the original. The album also included "Eight Days A Week", a song that was to be the single for the album, until John Lennon wrote "I Feel Fine".
For the song "I Feel Fine", the Beatles intentionallyused guitar feedback for the opening of the song. Took a bass guitar, placed it next to the mike AND an amp - so that when guitar was strummed, the sound reverberated between the microphone and the amplifier, getting louder and louder.
While not the first use of feedback, (Chuck Berry did use the technique in the 50's), this was quite unusual for 1964, and very influential.
1965: George and Ringo marry this year (not each other).
The next single, Ticket to Ride, was promoted as being from the film Eight Arms to Hold You (Released as Help!)
Also notable for the development of drums as a more important instrument than just a method of keeping the rhythm. Unlike Pete Best, Ringo can handle changes of rhythm.
Album notable for a few tracks - You've Got to Hide Your Love Away - first all-acoustic Beatles track, first outside musician (flute).
Rumor and Legend: McCartney asleep, woke up with this melody in his head. He asked others whether they've heard it, but no one did. So, he assumed he wrote it.
George Martin brought in a string quartet to fill out the acoustic sound. Only Beatles song to be performed by just on Beatle (McCartney).
Yesterday - Most covered song in history.
Beatles succeeded marvelously with Hard Day's Night - liked even by the critics, and even people who didn't like Beatles music, liked their personalities from the film, and thus the Beatles were given wide latitude for the followup film.
New movie promoted as "The Beatles - in Color!". It was also directed by Richard Lester (who directed "A Hard Day's Night"). On a whim, Beatles decided to go skiing for the film so they headed over to the Alps. The footage of them in the Alps is the first time they ever tried skiing.
The Beatles later admitted they were stoned while filming most of the movie. During one scene, where Beatles are curling, and a bad guy substitutes a curling stone with a bomb. "Look, it's a fiendish thingy!" Paul and Ringo were due to run off-camera, but they kept running until they were far away, and out of breath, at which point they lit a joint….
The humor was largely patterned after a Monty Python precursor called The Goon Show.
Also, had a James Bond-style story where Ringo is to be sacrificed by a very fake Indian cult.
Help! - Second song in a row that Beatles released as a single that was a downer. Took him a while to admit it was rather autobiographical of how Lennon felt. Also, for the first time for a Beatles single (with the possible exception of "From Me To You"), the song is NOT about a girl!
Help!, the album was a partial return to the form of "A Hard Day's Night" in that it only had two covers.
In 1965 the Beatles were awarded MBE's (Members of the British Empire). There was a bit of controversy of whether or not the Beatles should be given such an hour (and even further controversy over whether or not it was that big of an honor) When they went to Buckingham Palace, they were nervous, and they slipped into the bathroom and, possibly, smoked a joint. It is unclear if this really happened or is legend though.
Of the Beatles, only McCartney has been knighted. Harrison was never knighted, Starr - not yet. Lennon returned his MBE in protest of the British colonial practices in 1969.
Officially Lennon claimed he wasn't knighted because his single, Cold Turkey wasn't doing well in the charts (joke answer)
To go from 30 minutes to 25 minutes per concert, Beatles played louder and faster. Notable event: Invited to play Shea Stadium in New York. 75,000 people - biggest rock concert ever. Beatles were NERVOUS. Aside: Sting claimed that when the Police played Shea Stadium, he knew they were finally big.
They also met Elvis. Although they were bigger than him, it was touted as the summit of the rock gods.
On an outtake of the song I'm Down from the "Help!" sessions, Paul made a comment afterwards of "Plastic soul" (a comment on how the song was arguably white-washed soul)
This line was changed to "Rubber Soul" for their next album, which was rushed to get it manufactured in time for Christmas shopping season
"Norwegian Wood" - MAY be slang for marijuana. Also, first admission from John about having an affair.
They needed a new sound for the song. Ironically, the really fake Indian mysticism from "Help!" introduced George Harrison to real Indian mysticism. Friends soon introduced George to the music of Ravi Shanahar, who was a master sitar player. Harrison bought a cheap sitar, but didn't know what to do with it.
Harrison played something resembling chords on his sitar for Norwegian Wood. The lyrics were increasingly abstract. The track does represent the first use of the sitar on a rock and roll record.
One track was left over from the Help! sessions which they added a few overdubs to for Rubber Soul, as they were completely out of time.
Final day - They were one song shy of the album. John Lennon asked to be left alone for a while, wrote Girl on the spot, and the album was finished just in time.
The backing vocal on the track is actually a three letter slang term for the human femal mammary gland. (this is a g-rated website, so that's as explicit as it gets)
In My Life - originally written as an autobiographical song. They needed something in the middle of the song, but they didn't know what. George Martin suggested playing a Bach-like melody on piano and harpsichord (which is part of why the song could never be performed live)
Nowhere Man was a song John wrote about him having writer's block.
This album heavily influenced Brian Wilson, front man of the Beach Boys. The US version, almost all-folk (no rockier songs, some folk tunes from the Help! era).
Beatles, instead of going on TV shows to perform their newest single ("Day Tripper"/"We Can Work It Out"), released footage of them performing - precursor of music videos.
Like the lecture, these notes are WOEFULLY inadequate to explain everything that was going on. I am mainly focusing on the points you will need to know for the midterm, and anything else of importance.
Phil Spector - In the early 1960s, he was the most important rock and roll producer with his trademark "Wall of Sound" production technique he leant to every record he produced at the time. The technique was to use a lot of instruments (including orchestral instruments) play a lot of them at once, and add a lot of echo and reverb to create a very very thick sounding sound to each record (the proverbial wall in the "wall of sound"). His style heavily influenced Brian Wilson. (see below)
The Beach Boys were formed from a nucleus of the Wilson family, a suburban white family from the LA suburb of Hawthorne. The three boys, Brian, Dennis and Carl (in descending order of age) grew up with a pretty abusive father, Murray. Murray had designs to make his boys, especially Brian into a musical act. The father would make his boys to sing songs at night. Brian had a real knack at harmonies though and would be the leader of the band. Add into these three brothers, their nearby cousin, Mike Love, and a college friend, Al Jardine, and you have the "classic" lineup of the Beach Boys. The sound of the Beach Boys was designed to be a combination of the vocal harmonies of the "Four Freshman" with the guitar style of "Chuck Berry." Dennis was the only one of the three who ever surfed, and it was his interest in this that encouraged Brian to write songs based around surfing. It was their 3rd single, "Surfin' USA" that was the one that made the Beach Boys stars. The song was essentially a rewrite of Chuck Berry's hit "Sweet Little Sixteen" and because of that Berry was co-credited as having written the song. Soon the Surf music fad was fading, and the hot-rod culture then took predominance in pop music, and the Beach Boys followed soon writing lots of hot-rod songs. By 1963 they were the biggest rock band in America. Brian soon moved from using the Beach Boys in the studio playing the instruments to studio pros working under Brian's control. Brian would call this group of pros his "wrecking crew". Brian also worked on ridding the band of the influence of his father. However, the strain of making the records, dealing with his father, and dealing with touring soon got to Brian, and he suffered a nervous breakdown while on a flight in 1964. At that point he quit touring and focused solely on recording the records. The upside was that the studio records soon improved. When Brian heard "Rubber Soul" he was inspired to create his 1966 album, "Pet Sounds". For the album he brought in Tony Asher, an advertisement writer, to write the lyrics. The album was essentially a song-cycle describing a relationship from the happy start to the bitter end. The album featured incredibly ornate instrumentation, and amazingly complex vocal harmonies, and was well received by the critics and his peers. Paul McCartney called the album "necessary to anyone's musical education" and called one track off of it, "God Only Knows", "the greatest love song ever written." The album heavily influenced the Beatles records "Revolver" and "Sgt. Pepper's." The album however failed to sale well. However, those who liked the album liked it a lot. At one point a record executive from a DIFFERENT record company bought a one-page ad extolling the virtues of the album. Immediately Brian went to work on his follow-up album. He worked on something he described as a "teen aged symphony to God", which eventually took on the title "Smile". The album was even more complex than Pet Sounds, with most songs recorded in few second segments, with dozens or hundreds of segments recorded for each song, to be later pieced together by Brian in a jigsaw like fashion. "Good Vibrations" comes from these sessions, and took 8 months to record. The song hit #1. The album was designed to be half-Americana, half-about the elements (earth, wind, water, and fire). He hired an avant-garde poet, Van Dyke Parks, to handle the lyrics this time. The record company, Capitol, wary that the last album had not done well, and frustrated at how long this album was taking to record (Brian worked on it for over a year) soon put pressure on Brian to produce. Brian was also taking heavy drugs. In addition, the group members did not quite "get" what Brian was doing and were anxious due to the poor reception of "Pet Sounds" by the buying public. In May of 1967 Paul McCartney visited Brian, and performed on the song "Vega-Tables" (he chewed carrots for a rhythm track) and played Brian some of the finished "Sgt. Pepper's" tracks. A week later Brian scrapped the album altogether. The Beach Boys were to headline the legendary 1967 Monterey Jazz festival in the summer of '67, but pulled out due to the deteriorating mental state of Brian.
Bob Dylan was born Robert Zimmerman in 1942 in Minnesota. He took the last name Dylan later in tribute to a favorite poet of his: Dylan Thomas. He was originally a folk single in the mold of Woody Guthrie, the famous folk singers from the 30s who wrote such songs as "This Land Is Your Land". In 1962 Dylan released his 2nd album, a folk album titled "The Freewheeling' Bob Dylan." This album was extremely influential on John Lennon and featured such songs as "Blowin' In The Wind". Unlike the Beatles, Dylan WAS political. His songs did not mince words. He also wrote romantic songs, and abstract songs and stream-of-conciousness songs. However, like Lennon, Dylan had a very wicked sense of humor that he often let show on his songs. In late 1964 Dylan released a song "Subterranean Homesick Blues", which featured an electric band backing him up. In early 1965 he followed up the single with the album "Bringing It All Back Home" which was half-acoustic and half-electric. His folk-purist fans did not take kindly to his conversion. In 1965 at the Newport Folk Festival, he played the first half of his set acoustic, and then switched to electric for the second half. The folk purists, which had the closer seats, booed him and heckled him during the second set. This phenomenon continued through 1966 and he was often called "Judas" by the folk purists. In 1965 he also released a groundbreaking single, "Like A Rolling Stone", which at over 5 minutes was considerably longer than the 3:30 normal limit of singles. Dylan definitely changed views as to what was an appropriate kind of voice for a rock star, and he helped bring more complex, abstract and poet lyrics to the genre. However, his rocked songs were rarely anywhere near as political as his "pure folk" songs of his earlier career.
In 1962 an aspiring musician named Brian Jones found a Mick Jagger, and Keith Richards (friends since elementary school) and then soon added bassist Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts to form the Rolling Stones. Mick Jagger was at the time an economics student at college in south England, and Keith Richards was an aspiring guitar player. The band was signed to Decca records at the end of 1962 (the same label that had rejected the Beatles at the start of that year). The band was soon marketed as a tougher alternative to the Beatles. They played hard blues standards, and rarely wrote their own songs initially. Their first single was a cover of Chuck Berry's "Come On", and their first hit was their version of the Lennon/McCartney song "I Wanna Be Your Man." By legend in 1963, their manager one day locked Jagger & Richards in a room until they came out with a song of their own. This yielded their first original song, "Tell Me." Very soon in Britain the Rolling Stones were the main competition on the charts to the Beatles. Shortly after the Beatles invaded America, the Stones followed suit. In 1965 Keith Richards woke up with a weird horn riff playing in his head. He wrote it down and the next day showed it to Mick. The two reached an interesting conclusion that the song would work best if they used a guitar to emulate the sound of the horn (since horns weren't really in the Stones' style). The song of course was "Satisfaction," a major hit for the Stones in 1965. In late 1965 the Rolling Stones were preparing to release an album, tentatively titled "Could You Walk On Water?" For obvious (religious) reasons their record company refused to release the album and delayed the album until the Stones were willing to go with the far less controversial title, "Aftermath." Two songs recorded during these sessions are notable (for the sake of this class). On the track "Paint it Black", Brian Jones brought in the sitar, which had been recently used by the Beatles in "Norwegian Wood." Another track "Mother's Little Helper" was a song directly referencing drugs. (unlike the Beatles which would only hint at drugs and/or drug usage in their song). "Mother's Little Helper" was written about the phenomenon of housewives in Britain and the US taking stimulants. (meth) At the time, it was legal, and indeed often prescribed by doctors for housewives wanting to lose weight. In 1967, Brian Jones' desire to expand the Rolling Stones' sound yielded arguably the two oddest albums in the Rolling Stones' catalog. On their first album of the year, "Between The Buttons", the Rolling Stones incorporated a vastly mellower style that often included "vaudeville" and instruments and lyrics that vastly differed from anything previous. On their album released at the tail end of 1967 "Their Satanic Majesties Request", they followed the Beatles into the then hot realm of psychedelic. Their album's cover even mimicked the Beatles' cover for "Sgt. Pepper's." This direction was short lived, and by 1968, the Rolling Stones famously returned to "roots rock" and reverted to their blues influences.
Jimi Hendrix was a black guitar player born in Seattle, who developed his blues-influenced guitar playing while serving in the military. When he returned from the service, he found an American rock and roll industry that did not feel comfortable with him as the lead of a band and would only really hire him as a guitar player for studio work. However, at this time the British invasion was as hot as could be imagined, and he came upon a brilliant idea of going to Britain to gain a following, then return to America as a British act. When in Britain he soon found a good bassist and drummer, and formed his band, The Jimi Hendrix Experience. His first album, released early 1967, "Are You Experienced" melded hard blues-based rock with the psychedelic sound that was being developed in London at the time. He also proved with songs like "The Wind Cries Mary" that hard rock could also be poetic. Jimi Hendrix soon took full control over all aspects of recording, and started to use the studio electronics to create new sounds from the guitar and other instruments, and influenced every one since him greatly. In 1967 Jimi Hendrix and The Who took the Monterey Pop Festival by storm (this was the show that the Beach Boys were to headline before Brian Wilson's breakdown). Both acts involved destruction of their instruments. The Who wrecked their instruments after their set, while Jimi Hendrix famously set his guitar on fire while playing it during his performance.
Other important groups and notes:
In another British group, The Kinks, released "You Really Got Me" in 1964, which has since been called the "first heavy-metal song." The aggressive song used what are known as "power chords" that would form the basis of most heavy metal songs in the years to come.
In 1967 the Doors released their first, self-titled LP which combined psychedelic with hard rock, jazz and strange poetic lyrics from its front-man, Jim Morrison.
Also in 1967, being recorded at the same time, and in the same studios
as the Beatles were recording "Sgt. Pepper's", a London band, Pink Floyd,
recorded their first LP, "Piper's At The Gates Of Dawn." While "Sgt.
Pepper's" was arguably toned town psychedelic, Pink Floyd's was full-out
psychedelia incorporating space themes and lyrics often inspired by Tolkein's
book "The Hobbit."