The Making of a Songwriter. works of the great popular songwriters. Popular music has proven to be considerably

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Making of a Songwriter. works of the great popular songwriters. Popular music has proven to be considerably"

Transcription

1 The Making of a Songwriter Few American lives in the 20 th or early 21 st centuries have remained untouched by the works of the great popular songwriters. Popular music has proven to be considerably more than an adornment to everyday life; it has become a barometer of taste, personal philosophy and social thought for millions of people. The listening choices made by countless individuals have reflected and sometimes influenced their ideas about fashion, politics, social relationships and perhaps mostly importantly their emotional responses to the events of their everyday lives. Over the last several decades, popular music became not just a mere embellishment to the emotional life of the people who experienced it but a prompter and shaper of that emotional life. While thousands of composers and lyricists contributed to the common repertoire of western popular music on various levels of sophistication, and hundreds might be said to have made significant contributions, there is a small, select group of popular music composers and lyricists who stand above the rest in terms of the enduring quality and quantity of their best work. In the first half of the 20 th century, this list includes Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern (working with various lyricists including Oscar Hammerstein II), George Gershwin (working extensively with his brother Ira as lyricist), Cole Porter, and Richard Rodgers (working primarily with lyricists Larry Hart and Hammerstein). In the second half of the century, John Lennon and Paul McCartney (working both collaboratively and individually), Elton John, Stevie Wonder and the songwriting team of Gerry Goffin and Carole King must be considered to be among the most significant. While some of these are known as much or more for being performers as for being

2 2 songwriters, each has made distinctive contributions to the popular song repertoire, contributions that transcend a particular performance or the interpretation of a particular performer (including their own). Early Life and Musical Training Any examination of the lives of the great popular songwriters of the twentieth century quickly reveals that there is no common source for the unique form of creativity that both composers and lyricists have possessed. There is neither a central wellspring of inspiration nor any predictable patterns in respect to circumstances of birth, background, education, training or career profile for the great composers or lyricists. The great songwriters of the 20 th century emerged from a wide variety of economic and social backgrounds and life circumstances, some of them quite colorful and others rather mundane. One of the most colorful early backgrounds belongs to Irving Berlin who, along with his father, mother and siblings, immigrated to the United States in 1893 to avoid religious persecution only to huddle in poverty for years in the Lower East Side Jewish ghetto of New York City. While Berlin s father was unable to pursue his career of cantor in New York, he passed on his love of music and the skill of his voice to Irving who, inspired by the singing waiters in the ubiquitous taverns, left home at the age of fourteen to try to earn a living with his voice. Devoid of significant piano skills, he eventually managed to secure a job as a boomer, a vocal song plugger who was paid to spontaneously erupt into song with the newest would-be hits of the day during the intermission of a movie or theatre performance. From there, Berlin used his largely untutored musical abilities and wits in equal proportion to make his way up the ladder of success, eventually landing a job with a ragtime publishing firm.

3 3 Despite his reputation as one of the most prolific tune-writers who ever lived, Berlin was notoriously limited in his technical abilities. He learned to play piano by picking out melodies on the black keys (playing almost exclusively in the key of F-sharp major) and, while his pianistic skills were to improve in later years, he never achieved any significant performance ability on the instrument. His primary songwriting technique involved dictating melodies to his musical secretary and picking out the harmonies from options provided by this musical assistant. Circumstances were somewhat different for George and Ira Gershwin, although Moisha Gershowitz, his Jewish father, had emigrated from Russia at about the same time as the Berlin (originally Baline ) family. The family settled first in Brooklyn, moving soon afterwards to the East Side where George in particular was an active participant in the rough and tumble street life of the district. Still, the family was relatively secure financially and, like many Jewish families from the period, surrounded themselves with music as much as possible, exposing both George and Ira to recordings of Gilbert and Sullivan and other light classical music at an early age. As soon as possible (1920), the family acquired a piano for which the younger brother, George, immediately showed a remarkable propensity, although he was not provided with formal lessons until he turned twelve. Nevertheless, George s mother, also a pianist, remained highly interested in George s music education and he was subsequently enrolled with a series of piano teachers. The third of these, Charles Hamblitzer, was particularly taken by his young student s talent, referring to the fourteen-year old George as a genius in letters to his sister. However, Gershwin was by no means merely an accomplished technician; he also showed a penchant for creative improvisation and melodic elaboration that veered into

4 4 the popular idioms of the day. Nevertheless, Hamblitzer insisted on grounding the young man in the classical repertoire and Gershwin was frequently in attendance at classical concerts even as he continued his interest in the popular music of the day. Young George was particularly smitten with Russian classical composers with whom he felt a strong sense of identity, more clearly so than in respect to his Jewish ancestry. Gershwin s next teacher, Edward Kilenyi, a music degree candidate at Columbia University, provided George with his first systematic training in harmony and counterpoint, employing the standard textbooks of the day. But George s interest in popular music remained strong and his music notebooks from the period contain occasional sketches for his earliest popular songs as well as free exercises in harmony and orchestration. Despite the apparent conventionality of young Gershwin s training under Kilenyi, his teacher s distinctive theories about harmony and part-writing were to make a significant and long-lasting impact on George s compositional style. Gershwin also studied briefly with Rubin Goldmark, a student of Dvorak who was firmly established in the highest echelons of New York s classical music world and who later served as a mentor for the young Aaron Copland. But Gershwin did not find Goldmark s approach particularly inspiring, and their time together seemed to have produced little if any permanent mark on George s musical personality. While Gershwin was arguably one of the most thoroughly musically-educated among the early 20 th century popular songwriters (and the only one to handle many of his own orchestrations in his more ambitious projects), Gershwin nevertheless continued to feel a strong need to improve himself through formal musical education in later years. Even after his list of musical accomplishments was formidable, Gershwin occasionally

5 5 expressed insecurity about his knowledge of harmony and musical form and sought instruction from others, most notably Joseph Schillinger, the inventor of a formulabased approach to composing, whose influence was particularly strong in George s symphonic and classical works and his later songs. Gershwin also studied briefly with American experimental composer Henry Cowell and twelve-tone composer Wallingford Riegger with less apparent impact on his musical style. Still, while Gershwin sought the guidance of classically-oriented teachers and was later to become famous for his attempts to synthesize classical music with popular music and jazz, his earliest intentions were not to compose classical music but rather to bring the sophistication of the classical tradition into the popular music he loved. Gershwin s ability as a pianist served him well as he negotiated through New York s music industry for the next few years and by 1918 he graduated from serving as a song plugger for one publisher to serving as a bona-fide staff composer for the publisher T. B. Harms, Inc., a position from which he was able to launch his songwriting career. Jerome Kern s situation parallels Gershwin s in some respects but shows a number of distinctive features as well. His parents were Jewish-German emigrants who, after modest beginnings, managed to establish a comfortable middle class existence. Jerome s mother was an avid and skilled pianist who encouraged him in his musical interests (particularly his piano study) and took him to a Broadway show for his tenth birthday. The musical theatre proved to be a great delight for Kern, especially the operettas of the American Victor Herbert, and he soon came to the decision that a life in the theatre would be his goal. Jerome s skill at the keyboard provided him with an entrée into various musical opportunities and, as a high school junior, he was given the unusual

6 6 honor of assisting the seniors in creating a class show. But, now firmly committed to his new career, he quit high school to study music briefly in Heidelberg, Germany (although he was apparently not formally enrolled at the University there). After an abortive career in business (encouraged by his father), Jerome secured an entry-level position with a publisher with whom he placed some modest piano pieces. Seeing the need for continued formal instruction, Kern enrolled at the New York College of Music to study counterpoint, harmony, and composition. But Kern s strongest interest remained in music theatre and he soon moved to a different publishing house, T. B. Harms, where he was to eventually buy a partnership. From that base, Kern quickly broke into the musical theatre world, working with various lyricists to compose individual songs for American producers who interpolated them into imported British musicals. Meanwhile, Kern waited impatiently for the opportunity to write an entire score of his own. A descendant of Jewish Russian Jewish émigrés, Richard Rodgers life parallels Kern s to a great extent. His family was wealthy, his physician father an enthusiastic musical amateur and his mother a talented amateur pianist who encouraged her son s musical endeavors. Like Kern, Rodgers showed his musical abilities early. He started playing piano at the age of six and was writing his own tunes, harmonizing them by ear, at the age of nine. He resisted formal piano lessons but was an avid composer from any early age, copyrighting his first song at the age of fifteen. His parents were fond of musicals and often purchased sheet music of the hit songs of the day. Rodgers poured over it eagerly with Victor Herbert s music quickly becoming became a favorite. But his parents had

7 7 more elite tastes as well and Richard was also taken to the ballet, Metropolitan Opera and various classical performances. But Rodgers, like Kern and Gershwin before him, was most drawn to Broadway. Rodgers later recalled being particularly taken with an early musical by Kern and being aware that music theatre was on the verge of a revolution, one in which he very much wanted to participate. 1 In 1917, Rodgers was also impressed by the Columbia College varsity show and he himself began shortly thereafter to become involved in major amateur productions. Rodgers enrolled himself at Columbia and, shortly thereafter, met lyricist Larry Hart, who shared an enthusiasm for Kern s music. The two agreed to collaborate and things developed quickly for the duo, one of their songs being interpolated into a Broadway musical. Then, on the strength of their contribution to the 1920 Columbia University varsity show, the duo was presented with the opportunity of writing their first Broadway show (although many of the Rodgers and Hart originals were eventually dropped from the show before it opened in New York). While no further professional opportunities presented themselves for four years, the two continued to write amateur shows for the college and other organizations. Meanwhile, Rodgers enrolled at the Institute for Musical Art (which later became Julliard) to study harmony with Percy Goetschius, one of the most famous music theorists of his day. Finally, in 1925, he and Hart were asked to write a score for a new musical sponsored by the Theatre Guild and the career of Rodgers and Hart was up and running. College musicals were also to eventually play an important role in the success of Cole Porter, who was born to wealthy parents in Peru, Indiana, and grew up in very different circumstances than the New York composers with whom he was to compete for decades.

8 8 While the young Porter may have the lacked the cosmopolitan experiences of those composers, Cole s parents were preoccupied with supplying the young man with all the requisite social graces, including music. Young Porter was given private instruction in French, violin and piano, attended the opera in Chicago, and traveled to Paris after his senior year in prep school. He eventually went to Yale, where he majored in French and minored in music, becoming well known for his contributions to college musicals. After graduation, Cole enrolled in Harvard Law School, shortly thereafter moving to the liberal arts program where he took two courses music appreciation and basic harmony. These experiences provided him with a solid grounding, but by no means a thorough technical training in music. Porter was given the opportunity to write his first Broadway show, See America First in 1916, but the show failed miserably and, almost a year later, Porter sailed to Paris. Porter tried his hand at Broadway again in the somewhat more successful Hitchy-Koo of 1919 and, while living in Paris, enrolled at the Schola Cantorum, one of France s most prestigious music schools, to study harmony and orchestration. While Porter did not study long, he like Gershwin did produce a composition in the classical style of the day a ballet entitled Within the Quota, in 1923, one year before Gershwin s famous concert work Rhapsody in Blue. But while Porter could boast of classical training and, at one point after the initial success of his ballet, may have considered focusing on the classical style, Porter nevertheless required technical assistance in later years, and employed a musical secretary. While Porter notated the lyrics, melody and a sketch of the harmonic structure to support the melody, his musical secretary, Albert Sirmay, devised the original piano arrangements in which the songs were published and is likely to have made embellishments in the harmonic structure from time to time.

9 9 Porter s break came in 1927 when he was contacted to write the score for Paris, a musical that was to be a vehicle for a well-known French actress of the day. Porter rose to the occasion, producing some memorable work and his career quickly began to take off. Whereas the independent songwriters associated with Tin Pan Alley and musical theatre were the key figures in the creation of popular music in the first half of the century, the situation began to change in the second half as performers who wrote their own material increasingly dominated popular music. But the change was neither immediate nor complete. Even as the first echoes of rock & roll reverberated through the popular music industry in the mid- and late 1950s, canny publishers began to strategize about how to manufacture songs tailored to the teen market. Aldon music, owned by Donald Kirschner and Al Nevins and associated with the so-called Brill Building style (so designated because so many of the publishers of the period were housed in or around New York s Brill Building), proved to be among the best at the game. Employing a stable of composers much as the major Tin Pan Alley publishing houses of 1920s had, Aldon Music saw itself as carrying on that older tradition, insisting on high standards of professionalism and craftsmanship in its approach, while turning out songs that would appeal to the average teenager. Aldon s staff composers were assigned to write songs in specific styles that often had to be tailored to the needs of specific performers. The publishing house was successful at supplying songs to a number of individuals and groups ranging from the increasingly archaic balladeers such as Steve and Edie Gormet to the popular teen idols such as Bobby Vee and the girl groups such as the Shirelles, and the Cookies. Perhaps the most

10 10 successful songwriting team to labor for Aldon music paired up lyricist Gerry Goffin with composer Carole King, then husband and wife. Although King showed an early interest in music, playing piano by the age of four and leading her own band while still in high school, she attended Queens College to major in education. There she met Goffin, who was pursuing a degree in chemistry. Inspired by the popular songwriting team of Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller and songwriting friends such as Neil Sedaka and Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil (also a highly successful songwriting spousal team), the two quickly agreed on a personal and professional collaboration and Sedaka helped them to get a position with Aldon. The first Goffin- King song, Kid Brother was surprisingly successful, being recorded as a B side by one of the singers associated with the publishing house. But the duo s next fifty songs failed to make an impression on Aldon producer Don Kirshner and went unrecorded. It was not until Goffin and King produced the poignant Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? for the Shirelles that their career began to gain momentum. Like Carole King, Londoner Elton John (born Reginald Kenneth Dwight) embraced the piano at an early age, managing to win a scholarship to the prestigious Royal Academy of Music junior program at the age of eleven. But while this program urged the western classical music tradition on its young charges, Elton s interests remained fixed on popular music and he secured a position as a hotel pub pianist at the age of sixteen. His repertoire at that point consisted mostly of the ballads of the day, but Elton also composed witty songs about the pub s regular patrons. John performed in other contexts as well, playing with the band Bluesology as early as 1961 and later linking with then- British pop star Long John Bauldry.

11 11 John s career as a songwriter began much like Goffin and King s. Elton and lyricist Bernie Taupin began working together in 1967 after having both responded to an ad in the New Musical Express. They auditioned successfully for publisher Dick James and the two of them were hired to turn out as many as ten songs a day in the designated style of various major performers of the period. However, this was no elbow to elbow collaboration of the sort that had characterized the relationship of Goffin and King and the other Brill Building songwriting teams of the period or the best-known songwriting teams from the first half of the century. Although Taupin and John were to become fast friends, they always worked separately, the lyrics completed in advance with the composer making few if any adjustments. After a few false starts, fame came to Elton John as a performer with the album Elton John and the songwriting team of John and Taupin soon became one of the most successful and respected of the 1970s. Stevie Wonder (born Steveland Judkins or Morris) matured with almost miraculous speed as a performer, being described as a vocal and piano prodigy at the age of seven and acquiring significant skill on harmonica and drums shortly thereafter. He was introduced to Barry Gordy, the founder of Motown Records and, by age twelve, had a recording contract, a major album, Twelve-Year Old Genius and a hit single. By the age of twenty, he was writing or co-authoring most of his songs and occasionally contributing to the repertoire of other Motown artists. The exact nature of these early collaborations remains murky. His songs are often co-credited to some of the regular Motown songwriters in the mid-1960s and Stevie s precise contribution is unclear (not unusual in Motown s collaborative system).

12 12 When he turned twenty-one, Wonder s contract with Motown records expired and he decided to take some time off, enrolling briefly at the University of Southern California where he studied music theory. Upon his return to the Motown fold, Stevie negotiated terms that gave him almost complete artistic control over his recordings and he continued to compose widely in a variety of styles. Neither John Lennon nor Paul McCartney received formal instruction in music in their early years growing up in Liverpool, although McCartney s father, who played occasionally in dance bands, may have given Paul a few tips now and then on piano. Lennon s father, Alfred, was an amateur banjo player who taught John s mother, Julia, how to play a few simple songs on the instrument, and Julia well may have instructed her John in turn, since he is reported to have use banjo chord fingering when he first picked up the guitar. Lennon was to have no formal training in music beyond those early halfhearted attempts although, by the late 1960s, he would receive an education of sorts in the philosophy and techniques of avant-garde music from New York artist Yoko Ono. Nevertheless, despite his relationship with Yoko Ono (including his later involvement with some of her avant-garde work) and his participation in some of the Beatles experimental endeavors in the late 1960, Lennon held doggedly to his image of himself as a natural musician, unspoiled by too much musical learning or sophistication. With the spirit of experimentation in the air in the late 1960s, McCartney would also make his own personal attempt to familiarize himself with the music of some avant-garde composers. But McCartney never became fluent in the use of musical notation, even in the 1980s and 1990s when his interest in writing concert music came to a peak with his Liverpool Oratorio.

13 13 Influences The great American songwriters working early in the century were exposed to a reasonably consistent list of influences, although their reaction to those influences remained diverse. Composers like Berlin, Kern and to a slightly lesser extent Porter, came of age musically shortly after the turn of the century when the most famous American role models were Victor Herbert and George M. Cohan, and the frothy British theatre music descended from Gilbert and Sullivan dominated the stage along with Viennese and German operetta and more subtle influences from the minstrel show, vaudeville, and ragtime. Ragtime was to have the largest influence on Berlin, although Kern relied on its rhythmic formulas from time to time in the early years. Gershwin became a solid ragtime performer in his early years, but the distinctive rhythmic vitality of his music reflected the emerging hot dance styles of the 1920s more than the increasingly out-of-date mannerisms of classic ragtime. Kern, who wrote frequently for the British stage and was often called upon to interpolate songs into operettas in the Viennese and German style (such as the popular works of Rudolf Friml) was perhaps most touched by the old-world lyrical style represented by that tradition. But Richard Rodgers too was taken by the elegant waltzes of Herbert and the middle European operetta style, both of which echoed through his style intermittently for years to come. The catchy vaudeville-based simplicity of Cohan s rousing tunes and straightforward, often jaunty lyrics made the most direct impact on Berlin s music, although it seemed to resound through the occasional early (and usually inconsequential) Kern song as well. Even some of Gershwin s early songs occasionally smacked of the minstrel show or

14 14 vaudeville circuit with their snappy rejoinders and patter-like repeated lines as in the composer s Swanee. Dialect songs of various sorts, including the frequently racist Coon or Mammy songs were prevalent at the beginning of the century and the early musicals would still occasionally contain scenes designed to exploit that style. Dialect songs, particularly Yiddish ones, were an important part of Berlin s repertoire as late as 1910, with one of his songs playing a big role in the elevation of Fanny Brice to early century superstardom. Perhaps surprisingly given the background of several of the composers referred to above, the use of melodic or harmonic materials that could be thought of stylistically Jewish was rare. Ironically, it was in Cole Porter s music, particularly his moody, minor key laments, that some critics and commentators have found the most obvious references to Jewish music. Porter had, at one point, made an apparently half-joking remark to Richard Rodgers about his plan to write Jewish music in order to secure hits, but Rodgers came to take the remark seriously and later noted that Porter was the one who had written the most enduring Jewish music for the music theatre, despite the fact that he was an Episcopalian millionaire among so many Jewish composers. 2 The 1920s Jazz Age was to have an impact on each of the five composers, although in many cases that influence played itself out more in the emulation of the new hot dance crazes (about which Kern was far from enthusiastic) and a more raucous orchestration of the songs (done by professional arrangers rather than by the composers themselves in most cases). One would not expect the improvisatory element of jazz to play a major role in the composition of popular song, but the melodic/harmonic essence of the blues that underlies much of the authentic jazz of the period seems to be relegated

15 15 to a fairly minor role in the music of all of the composers except Gershwin. Although a number of composers in the first half of the century wrote songs incorporating the term blues into their title, relatively few other than Gershwin and Harold Arlen employed on a regular basis blues-related melodic gestures (in particular the harmonic clashes caused by flatted thirds and sevenths of the so-called blues scale ) or blues-derived harmonies in contexts that resembled the typical usage of those same devices in authentic African-American blues style of the period. The eclectic Irving Berlin would sample blues-like elements from time to time in his stylistic meanderings and Cole Porter would draw upon the insistent repetition of some blues-like motives in some of his songs. But it was primarily Gershwin, in both his classical works and songs, who would make the language of the blues an important part of his regular vocabulary. Not surprisingly, the theatrical context in which individual songs were to be presented also had a significant influence on both their musical style and their lyrics, increasingly so as the newer and more sophisticated musicals demanded that the songs be more completely integrated into the plot. While Irving Berlin achieved a reputation for producing high quality individual songs based on universal themes that could exist as stand-alone Tin Pan Alley products or be incorporated willy-nilly into just about any early musical, Kern, Gershwin, Rodgers and Porter came to put more focus on tailoring songs to particular dramatic or stylistic contexts. Kern s many interpolated songs were generally designed to be at home in their surroundings, whether a witty English comedy that emphasized rapid, patter-like melodic lines or a Viennese-style operetta that demanded a more languidly lyrical approach. And, when a distinctive dramatic or narrative theme was involved, both the composers and lyricists had to adjust accordingly.

16 16 Kern s Showboat, while making little if any attempt to evoke authentic black music, nevertheless prompted Kern to adopt a new musical vocabulary, one that was able to lend great dignity to simple melodic and harmonic structures. And when Rodgers and Hammerstein tackled Oklahoma! and Irving Berlin took on Annie Get Your Gun, there is no question that the folksy dramatic context for both productions brought about some significant stylistic readjustments in music and lyrics. Songwriters working in the second part of the century had a selection of music influences to draw upon that was almost as broad as those available to earlier songwriters but very different in nature. The direct influence of the English and Viennese operettas was now absent. The vogue for ragtime had long since passed into history as had the jazz age dances of the 1920s and 1930s. Even the formulaic swing band repertoire of the late 1930s and 1940s was considered somewhat archaic by the early 1950s, and the songs of the Golden Age Tin Pan Alley composers such as Berlin, Gershwin and Porter no longer dominated the tastes of popular music consumers as they had in the past. Those songs had been replaced in the public s attention by an eclectic assortment of less imaginative, less sophisticated ballads and novelty tunes which had in common with the earlier Tin Pan Alley style only the typical 32-bar form and, at times, a mawkish sentimentality also found from time to time in the Golden Age (although seldom in the work of the major songwriters). By the mid-1950s, however, a dramatic change was in the air as American teenagers, feeling the need to express their individuality, began to embrace African-American music as never before. By 1954, occasional songs by black rhythm & blues artists began to sneak into the pop charts. Soon thereafter, a handful of white performers with country &

17 17 western backgrounds began to forge a synthesis between R&B and C&W, giving birth to rockabilly, manifest in such diverse performers as Bill Haley and the Comets and Elvis Presley and the other pioneers working for Sam Philips and Sun Records in Memphis beginning in But as rock and roll emerged whether in the guise of rockabilly or the R&B-tinged style performed by artists such as Chuck Berry and Little Richard the songwriters who had considered themselves to be in some way the inheritors of the old Tin Pan Alley tradition sometimes found themselves in an uncomfortable position. For one thing, the new mode of popular music put the emphasis much more on the distinctive and highly individualistic style of the performer rather than on the song itself, a trend that had begun to show itself in the late 1940s as more emphasis began to be put on the big band vocalist than either the big band itself or the band s specialized repertoire. While most listeners in earlier decades would have enjoyed differentiating between the styles of Cole Porter and George Gershwin, the emphasis now was on differentiating between the distinctive styles of the performers. Furthermore, it was unclear just how much the emerging rock and roll artists needed new material or what the nature of that new material might be. Many of Elvis Presley s early songs were just jumped-up versions of well-known country & western songs or reinterpretations of established R&B songs. The R&B-styled soloists like Chuck Berry and Little Richard relied primarily on their own originals based closely on the urban blues of the late 1940s and early 1950s, although Berry proved to be a master of retooling the typical blues lyrics to appeal to white adolescents. Of course the Tin Pan Alley style did not disappear immediately or completely; songs from the 1930s and 1940s

18 18 sometimes found their way into the repertoire even of R&B specialists like Ray Charles (e.g., Georgia on My Mind ) and Fats Domino (e.g., My Blue Heaven ) or the smoother R&B vocal groups such as the Platters (e.g., Twilight Time ). But the appetite for new songs in the old Tin Pan Alley style lessened dramatically in the mid-1950s and some professional songwriters whose expressive range was linked to that older tradition found themselves adrift and unwanted. But while this dramatic sea change proved to be a harbinger of doom for some songwriters of the old school, it was a call to opportunity for a new breed of songwriters who were conversant with both the Tin Pan Alley tradition (or at least the vestiges of that tradition) and the new R&B-based traditions. When, as the late 1950s yielded to the early 1960s, it became increasingly clear that not every rock & roll performer competing for the public s attention was capable of composing his or her own songs, professional songwriters like Leiber and Stoller and the Brill Building composers moved quickly to plug the gaps with material that frequently combined the rhythmic intensity of the new R&B-influenced rock & roll with the tunefulness and lyrical charm of traditional Tin Pan Alley material. The best of these songwriters, such as Goffin and King, were able to draw from different musical influences in different proportions depending on the type of artist for whom their work was intended. While writing for the black girl groups popular in the early 1960s, the emphasis tended to be on rhythmic energy and a gospel-like interaction of lead and background vocals. When writing for one of the Teen Idols in the same period, the emphasis was on a plaintive lyricism based on a simplification of the old Tin Pan Alley ballad in combination with lyrics that celebrated teenage love without appearing to condescend. There were exceptions to this pattern, of course: Goffin &

19 19 King s Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?, written for the girl group, the Shirelles, is an extraordinarily sensitive ballad with unusually insightful lyrics for the period, showing that the new breed of professional songwriters in the late 1950s and early 1960s could at times cross genres with the same mastery as the composers and lyricist of the Golden Age. Also coming of age in the late 1950s and early 1960s both as performers and songwriters were John Lennon and Paul McCartney of the Beatles. Both were susceptible to a range of influences at least as extensive as those available to the Brill Building composers and both showed the same ability to merge and synthesize these stylistic elements into new genres. The older Tin Pan Alley style was to have the greatest influence on Paul McCartney, perhaps sensitized to its virtue through his acquaintance with his father s dance band repertoire. McCartney s affection for the adult ballads of the 1940s was authentic and continued to be expressed periodically throughout the 1960s (and beyond) in such songs as Yesterday and Michelle. Even the English music hall style found a place in McCartney s heart, although it was expressed primarily in novelty numbers over the years (e.g., When I m Sixty-Four and Your Mother Should Know ). Perhaps the earliest style to make an impact on both Lennon and McCartney as performers was skiffle, the homemade folk music style fashionable in England in the mid- and late 1950s. Skiffle songs, many of them adaptations of well known folk songs, were melodically simple and guileless and based on rudimentary and repetitive rhythmic patterns. While Lennon and McCartney probably engaged in free variations on some of the familiar tunes that made up most of the skiffle repertoire, both looked more to early

20 20 rockabilly and rhythm and blues songs as models for their earliest songwriting attempts. Elvis Presley proved to be the first enduring performance model for the Beatles with both Lennon and McCartney imitating aspects of Presley s vocal delivery and the Beatles incorporating some Presley songs into their early repertoire as the group began its transformation from a skiffle band to a rock & roll band. But Presley was not primarily a composer and his direct influence on Lennon and McCartney s earliest original songs remained minimal. Rhythm and blues-styled rock & roller Little Richard also provided a performance model for Paul McCartney in particular. Paul s vocal impersonation of Little Richard s raucous, gospel-influenced style played a large part in the Beatles performing repertoire as early as the late 1950s and continuing for some years after that. There are relatively few of Lennon or McCartney s original songs that are directly modeled after Little Richard s (the l965 song I m Down being an exception), but his falsetto squeals did play a distinctive (if occasional) role in some Lennon and McCartney songs from 1963 and 1964 such as She Loves You. Chuck Berry s influence, particularly on John Lennon, was probably more pervasive and enduring. Berry s hits from the mid- and late 1950s often featured repetitive, chantlike melodies focusing on a central pitch that may well have served as a source for a number of Lennon melodies in the 1960s and even the 1970s when Lennon was recording as a solo artist. The so-called uptown rhythm and blues style, to which the Brill Building songwriters were major contributors, also had a major impact on the compositional style of Lennon and McCartney. The Beatles compared themselves to girl groups such as the

21 21 Shirelles on more than one occasion and Lennon and McCartney both expressed their admiration for the songs of Goffin and King, and recorded their own version of Chains (not necessarily one of Goffin-King s finest). Both Paul and John tried their hand at writing songs in the uptown style, focusing on a gospel-inflected style that eschewed the standard blues progression for a more varied, often more pop-sounding harmonic framework as in Lennon s All I ve Got to Do. Still, the influence was a passing one and the uptown style never became a primary source of inspiration for either songwriter in the long run. Rockabilly artists from the mid- and late 1950s such as Carl Perkins (of whom lead guitarist George Harrison was particularly fond) had a considerable effect on the Beatles performance style and repertoire, but it is difficult to pinpoint any pervasive influence of the rockabilly style on the majority of original songs by Lennon or McCartney, although the former appears to have drawn elements from that style occasionally as late as the mid-1960s and rockabilly was often a pervasive influence on Ringo s occasional compositional efforts. The popular folk style, as presented in the late 1950s and early 1960s by groups such as the Kingston Trio and Peter, Paul and Mary, made relatively little impact on the Beatles original songs in the early 1960s, although there are glimmers of that style in the mid- 1960s (as in McCartney s I ll Follow the Sun ) and Bob Dylan s style can clearly be heard on both the music and lyrics of Lennon s You ve Got to Hide Your Love Away in A year later, both folk music and country & western music became major sources for the Beatles revolutionary album Rubber Soul.

22 22 Psychedelic music, expressed most clearly in the use of harmonic drones, non-western sounding scale patterns and stream of conscious lyrics with colorful, fantastic imagery became a significant influence for the Beatles in the mid- and late 1960s, although its impact on the songs of Lennon and McCartney was somewhat short-lived. Coming to age musically in the 1960s, Elton s John s songwriting influences match those of the Beatles to some extent, but focus more on the light, tuneful gospel style that also influenced the uptown rhythm and blues and Motown styles in the early and mid-1960s. The light gospel style can be heard most clearly in the piano accompaniments and chord progressions of several early Elton John songs and even Bernie Taupin s lyrics sometimes suggest the influence of gospel music in such songs as Take Me to the Pilot. The sensitive, nuanced and somewhat sentimental melodies of the then-emerging singer/songwriter movement also had an impact on John s evolving style in the 1970s, just as Taupin s lyrics sometimes echoed the themes of romantic disappointment that are equally typical of that style. While the songs of John and Taupin came under fire by critics in the 1970s for demonstrating a limited expressive range, both the composer and the lyricist also showed an ear for parody and satire that links them to McCartney and, to a lesser extent, Lennon in the late 1960s. The most obvious source for the style of the young Stevie Wonder is the frenetic rhythm and blues style represented by the hard-driving riff songs of Ray Charles (e.g., What I Say? ). But Wonder s taste was eclectic almost from the beginning, not only in his choice of performed material (a decision that is influenced sometimes significantly by his producers at Motown Records) but in the range of styles he exploited as he turned more and more to his original songs as primary recording material.

23 23 Gospel music was a strong influence on Stevie through the 1970s as were other distinctly black music styles like the strongly rhythmic funk tunes that emerged in that period (heard so clearly in Superstition ). But the light, lyrical melodies descended from the older Tin Pan Alley tradition continued to play a major role in Wonder s songwriting (e.g., My Cherie Amour, Isn t She Lovely? and others), through to the mid-1980s. Styles and influences, training and background all make a contribution to the artistic identity of a songwriter. But the same influences and background can be shared by any number of composers and lyricists who never manage to produce work of extraordinary merit. In the end, the only absolutely essential ingredient of a successful career as a songwriter or a songwriting team is in the possession of unique talent the quality of their inspiration and their craftsmanship over the course of a career. Terence J. O Grady The University of Wisconsin-Green Bay

and styles of performance dominated popular song. commercially successful songs of the period. a) Irving Berlin ( )

and styles of performance dominated popular song. commercially successful songs of the period. a) Irving Berlin ( ) Chapter Outline I. The Golden Age of Tin Pan Alley Song A. Introduction 1. During the 1920s and 1930s, certain characteristic musical structures and styles of performance dominated popular song. 2. Professional

More information

AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S

AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S AMERICAN POP MUSIC THE EARLY 50 S OVERVIEW EARLY 1950 S In general, the 50 s were prosperous times in America Stable economy No active war Emphasis on going to college, getting married, and raising a family

More information

Content. Learning Outcomes

Content. Learning Outcomes The Beatles WRITING Content The Beatles are one of the most famous bands of all time. The Beatles have influenced the music world greatly since their first album in 1963. In this lesson, look for new adjectives

More information

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core Core introduces students to the history, theory, and genres of music, from the most primitive surviving examples through the classical to the most contemporary in the world at large. The course is offered

More information

Bellwork. Who are the Beatles??

Bellwork. Who are the Beatles?? Bellwork Who are the Beatles?? The Beatles and the British Invasion Chapter 4 British Pop between 1964 and 1966 1. British Pop between 1964 and 1966 1. American business taken by storm in early 1964 by

More information

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core Core is a streamlined course that introduces students to the history, theory, and genres of music, from the most primitive surviving examples, through the classical to the most contemporary in the world

More information

LESSON 1: COURSE OVERVIEW Study: Why Study Music? Learn about the various components of music study, including history, theory, and performance.

LESSON 1: COURSE OVERVIEW Study: Why Study Music? Learn about the various components of music study, including history, theory, and performance. Core is a streamlined course that introduces student to the history, theory, and genres of music, from the most primitive surviving examples, through the classical to the most contemporary in the world

More information

Music (MUS) Courses. Music (MUS) 1

Music (MUS) Courses. Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) Courses MUS-011. Basic Musicianship I. 0 Credits. Requirement for Music Majors who do not pass the Music Theory I, MUS-117, placement exam. A pre-music theory course designed

More information

The Impact of Motown (Middle School)

The Impact of Motown (Middle School) The Impact of Motown (Middle School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to help students identify the impact that Motown music and its artists had on the 20 th century as well as today s popular

More information

Music. Music Instrumental. Program Description. Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division

Music. Music Instrumental. Program Description. Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division (For Meteorology - See Science, General ) Program Description Students may select from three music programs Instrumental, Theory-Composition, or Vocal.

More information

The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same record?

The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same record? The Twist The Twist was originally on the B side of which artist s record? A: Hank Ballard What musical form did The Twist follow? A: 12 bar blues Instead of The Twist, which song was promoted on the same

More information

George Gershwin: An American Composer Published on Metropolitan Library System (http://www.metrolibrary.org)

George Gershwin: An American Composer Published on Metropolitan Library System (http://www.metrolibrary.org) George Gershwin: An American Composer [1] Posted by: Breck McGough on Friday, September 11th, 2015 [2] On September 26, we celebrate the 117th birthday of one of the greatest figures in American music,

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 001S Applied Voice Studio 0 Credits MUS 105 Survey of Music History I 3 Credits A chronological survey of Western music from the Medieval through the Baroque periods stressing

More information

asdfghjklqwertyuiopsdf

asdfghjklqwertyuiopsdf Praise For THE YOUNG MUSICIAN S GUIDE TO SONGWRITING asdfghklqwertyuiopsdf Lisa makes all aspects of songwriting (form, harmony, rhythm, lyrics, titles, etc.) amazingly easy in this book! Next time I do

More information

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY OF POPULAR MUSIC A/B /656600

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY OF POPULAR MUSIC A/B /656600 MUSIC DEPARTMENT All courses fulfill the Fine Arts Credit. All music classes must be taken for the entire academic year. Many Music Classes may be taken for repeated credit. MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY

More information

Music. Music-Instrumental

Music. Music-Instrumental Music-Instrumental Program Description Students may select from three music programs Instrumental, Theory-Composition, or Vocal. Music majors are urged to take class lessons or private instruction in their

More information

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only. MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course MUSC 101 Class Piano II (1) Group instruction for students at an early intermediate level of study. Prerequisite:

More information

THE INFLUENCE OF RHYTHM AND BLUES

THE INFLUENCE OF RHYTHM AND BLUES OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION What did R&B bring to early Rock and Roll, and how was early Rock and Roll different? OVERVIEW All popular music comes from somewhere. But when innovative music gets on the

More information

PERFORMING ARTS. Head of Music: Cinzia Cursaro. Year 7 MUSIC Core Component 1 Term

PERFORMING ARTS. Head of Music: Cinzia Cursaro. Year 7 MUSIC Core Component 1 Term PERFORMING ARTS Head of Music: Cinzia Cursaro Year 7 MUSIC Core Component 1 Term At Year 7, Music is taught to all students for one term as part of their core program. The main objective of Music at this

More information

Music. Associate in Arts in Music for Transfer (ADT: A.A.-T)

Music. Associate in Arts in Music for Transfer (ADT: A.A.-T) Associate in Arts in Music for Transfer (ADT: A.A.-T) Program Description The Associate in Arts in Music for Transfer degree provides students with the foundations for a broad range of musical specializations

More information

Curriculum Development Project

Curriculum Development Project 1 Kamen Nikolov EDCT 585 Dr. Perry Marker Fall 2003 Curriculum Development Project For my Curriculum Development Project, I am going to devise a curriculum which will be based on change and globalization

More information

Theater. The Preparatory Center for the Performing Arts Spring 2017 Schedule of Classes The Spring Semester begins on Tuesday, January 31st.

Theater. The Preparatory Center for the Performing Arts Spring 2017 Schedule of Classes The Spring Semester begins on Tuesday, January 31st. The Preparatory Center for the Performing Arts Spring 2017 Schedule of Classes The Spring Semester begins on Tuesday, January 31st. The Spring semester is a 16-week program that runs from January 31 until

More information

Component 1: Performing

Component 1: Performing Component 1: Performing Internal and External Assessed Performances Over the next two years at King Edward VI, you will follow a programme of assessed s that will help you to prepare your final A Level

More information

The music of the United States reflects the country s multi-ethnic population through a diverse array of styles.

The music of the United States reflects the country s multi-ethnic population through a diverse array of styles. INTRODUCTION The music of the United States reflects the country s multi-ethnic population through a diverse array of styles. It is a mixture of music influenced by West African, Irish, Scottish, Mexican

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 2 Music Theory 3 Units (Degree Applicable, CSU, UC, C-ID #: MUS 120) Corequisite: MUS 5A Preparation for the study of harmony and form as it is practiced in Western tonal

More information

Date: My Favorite Instrument

Date: My Favorite Instrument Name: Date: T My Favorite Instrument 7rr iso! What is your favorite musical instrument? Why is it your favorite? Do you have a favorite musician who play this instrument? If yes, who is it. Would you play

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses. Music (MUS) 1. MUS 110 Music Appreciation (3 Units) Skills Advisories: Eligibility for ENG 103.

MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses. Music (MUS) 1. MUS 110 Music Appreciation (3 Units) Skills Advisories: Eligibility for ENG 103. Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses MUS 100 Fundamentals Of Music Techniques (3 Units) Learning to read music, developing aural perception, fundamentals of music theory and keyboard skills. (Primarily

More information

Instrumental Music Curriculum

Instrumental Music Curriculum Instrumental Music Curriculum Instrumental Music Course Overview Course Description Topics at a Glance The Instrumental Music Program is designed to extend the boundaries of the gifted student beyond the

More information

MUSIC. An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era

MUSIC. An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era MUSIC An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era I. BASIC ELEMENTS OF MUSIC THEORY 20% A. Sound and Music 1. Definitions a. Music is sound organized in time b. Music of the Western world 2. Physics

More information

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music Music Study, Mobility, and Accountability Project General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music Excerpts from the National Association of Schools of Music Handbook 2005-2006 PLEASE

More information

REVOLUTION WITHIN A REVOLUTION

REVOLUTION WITHIN A REVOLUTION THE BEATLES REVOLUTION WITHIN A REVOLUTION THE FRAGMENTATION CONTINUES. THE INDEPENDENT LABLES PROVIDED MORE AND MORE ONE HIT WONDERS. WHAT WAS ROCK & ROLL IN THE EARLY 60 S? - ONE COULD GIVE MANY DIFFERENT

More information

1. Content Standard: Singing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music Achievement Standard:

1. Content Standard: Singing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music Achievement Standard: The School Music Program: A New Vision K-12 Standards, and What They Mean to Music Educators GRADES K-4 Performing, creating, and responding to music are the fundamental music processes in which humans

More information

Prerequisites: Audition and teacher approval. Basic musicianship and sight-reading ability.

Prerequisites: Audition and teacher approval. Basic musicianship and sight-reading ability. High School Course Description for Chamber Choir Course Title: Chamber Choir Course Number: VPA107/108 Curricular Area: Visual and Performing Arts Length: One year Grade Level: 9-12 Prerequisites: Audition

More information

FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT. 705 Elements of Art Advanced

FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT. 705 Elements of Art Advanced FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT Fine Arts influence the very spirit of the person. Students need opportunities to receive contact with the concepts that add meaning to life and richness to living, as well as providing

More information

Written by Bill B Wednesday, 27 February :59 - Last Updated Wednesday, 27 February :12

Written by Bill B Wednesday, 27 February :59 - Last Updated Wednesday, 27 February :12 Chris Jasper is the soul fans' soul man. In the 70s and 80s he was an integral part of the Isley Brothers and of course went on to become one third of Isley-Jasper-Isley. Now running his own label Gold

More information

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC COURSES CAN BE USED AS ELECTIVE CREDITS

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC COURSES CAN BE USED AS ELECTIVE CREDITS MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC COURSES CAN BE USED AS ELECTIVE CREDITS CONTENT MISSION STATEMENT: Students will develop musical skills that enable them to be performers, consumers, recognize the value of music

More information

MMM 100 MARCHING BAND

MMM 100 MARCHING BAND MUSIC MMM 100 MARCHING BAND 1 The Siena Heights Marching Band is open to all students including woodwind, brass, percussion, and auxiliary members. In addition to performing at all home football games,

More information

Department of Art, Music, and Theatre

Department of Art, Music, and Theatre Department of Art, Music, and Theatre Professors: Michelle Graveline, Rev. Donat Lamothe, A.A. (emeritus); Associate Professors: Carrie Nixon, Toby Norris (Chair); Assistant Professors: Scott Glushien;

More information

SOUL MUSIC. A merger of gospel-charged singing, secular subject matter, and funk rhythms.

SOUL MUSIC. A merger of gospel-charged singing, secular subject matter, and funk rhythms. SOUL & MOWTOWN SOUL MUSIC A merger of gospel-charged singing, secular subject matter, and funk rhythms. Soul grew out of Fifties rhythm & blues, spurred by Ray Charles' eclectic, decidedly secular late-fifties

More information

Music 1. the aesthetic experience. Students are required to attend live concerts on and off-campus.

Music  1. the aesthetic experience. Students are required to attend live concerts on and off-campus. WWW.SXU.EDU 1 MUS 100 Fundamentals of Music Theory This class introduces rudiments of music theory for those with little or no musical background. The fundamentals of basic music notation of melody, rhythm

More information

The Impact of Motown (High School)

The Impact of Motown (High School) The Impact of Motown (High School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to help students identify the impact that Motown music and its artists had on the 20 th century as well as today s popular

More information

Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music

Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music twentieth century, few musicians or composers affected jazz as much John Coltrane Coltrane's 1960s playing included modal and free jazz approaches

More information

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only. MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only. MUSC 101 Class Piano II (1) Group instruction for students at an early intermediate

More information

The Art of Jazz Singing: Working With The Band

The Art of Jazz Singing: Working With The Band Working With The Band 1. Introduction Listening and responding are the responsibilities of every jazz musician, and some of our brightest musical moments are collective reactions to the unexpected. But

More information

ROCK STYLES OF THE 1970 S TO THE 80 S

ROCK STYLES OF THE 1970 S TO THE 80 S ROCK STYLES OF THE 1970 S TO THE 80 S NEW STYLES OF ROCK Jazz Rock ---- also called Fusion Art Rock ---- Transitioned into Progressive Rock NEW STYLES Heavy Metal - Transitioning from British Rock Disco

More information

By Brian Kane. Ballads have long been. Saxophone Journal Masterclass

By Brian Kane. Ballads have long been. Saxophone Journal Masterclass Masterclass Ballads have long been recognized by musicians as one of the most difficult idioms to perform and teach. Playing a ballad requires a high level of maturity, musicianship and variety of interpretive

More information

MUS 4M Musicianship IV

MUS 4M Musicianship IV MUSIC MUS 1 Comprehensive Music Theory I Introduces and develops the study of common practice harmony and melody through figured bass and analysis as represented by the works of Bach and Handel; knowledge

More information

MUSIC (MU) Music (MU) 1

MUSIC (MU) Music (MU) 1 Music (MU) 1 MUSIC (MU) MU 1130 Beginning Piano I (1 Credit) For students with little or no previous study. Basic knowledge and skills necessary for keyboard performance. Development of physical and mental

More information

The Kruger Brothers are just about as fine a band as I ve ever played with... I love to play music with them. Doc Watson

The Kruger Brothers are just about as fine a band as I ve ever played with... I love to play music with them. Doc Watson These guys are capable of playing the fingers off a roomful of great players, yet they hold back and concentrate on bringing out the best in their own music. Barb Heller host of String Fever, North Country

More information

TEST SUMMARY AND FRAMEWORK TEST SUMMARY

TEST SUMMARY AND FRAMEWORK TEST SUMMARY Washington Educator Skills Tests Endorsements (WEST E) TEST SUMMARY AND FRAMEWORK TEST SUMMARY MUSIC: CHORAL Copyright 2016 by the Washington Professional Educator Standards Board 1 Washington Educator

More information

Montgomery County Community College MUS 111 History of Rock and Roll 3-3-0

Montgomery County Community College MUS 111 History of Rock and Roll 3-3-0 Montgomery County Community College MUS 111 History of Rock and Roll 3-3-0 COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course will explore the origins and development of popular music in America, from ragtime and blues,

More information

VISUAL ARTS. Fine Arts Round

VISUAL ARTS. Fine Arts Round Indiana Academic Super Bowl Fine Arts Round 2018 Senior Division Coaches Practice A Program of the Indiana Association of School Principals Students: Throughout this competition, foreign names and words

More information

The Frost Preparatory Program offers music instruction for children of all ages. Our comprehensive program will provide a clear musical path for your

The Frost Preparatory Program offers music instruction for children of all ages. Our comprehensive program will provide a clear musical path for your The Frost Preparatory Program offers music instruction for children of all ages. Our comprehensive program will provide a clear musical path for your child from birth to high school graduation! Whether

More information

VOCAL CLASSES. YOUTH CLASSES 18 and under

VOCAL CLASSES. YOUTH CLASSES 18 and under VOCAL CLASSES YOUTH CLASSES 18 and under CLASSICAL VOCAL SOLO CLASSES Competitors may transpose selections into a suitable key with the exception of Bach, Opera and Oratorio arias. For repertoire suggestions

More information

Wellesley Middle School Performing Arts. Dr. Sabrina Quintana, K-12 Director of Performing Arts

Wellesley Middle School Performing Arts. Dr. Sabrina Quintana, K-12 Director of Performing Arts Wellesley Middle School Performing Arts Dr. Sabrina Quintana, K-12 Director of Performing Arts Dance Drama Music Performing Arts Programs Dance: The Junior Moving Company Teacher: Kara Sullivan Meets after

More information

ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S

ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did Aretha Franklin represent a new female voice in 1960s popular music? OVERVIEW OVERVIEW When Aretha Franklin belted

More information

GOSPEL MUSIC AND THE BIRTH OF SOUL

GOSPEL MUSIC AND THE BIRTH OF SOUL OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did Gospel influence American popular music? OVERVIEW Gospel music first emerged from the fusion of West African musical traditions, the experiences of slavery, Christian

More information

Quiz name: Music Final Exam 2014 (from version 1)

Quiz name: Music Final Exam 2014 (from version 1) Name: Quiz name: Music Final Exam 2014 (from version 1) Date: 1. tempo A a dance in 3/4 meter B getting gradually louder C the speed of the music D the highest sounding pitches 2. allegro A a tempo that

More information

Teacher s Notes. Understanding Popular Music. Technical language

Teacher s Notes. Understanding Popular Music. Technical language Technical language This book helps music students to understand how pop music is put together and uses a modest amount of technical language to achieve this. Exam boards expect students to be familiar

More information

Young Artist Program

Young Artist Program Young Artist Program Music Theory and Ear Training Students explore the structure of music from the earliest fundamentals to college level studies. Music History Students study music history in both survey

More information

BEATLES STUDIO LP S RANKED

BEATLES STUDIO LP S RANKED ABSTRACT From 1963 to 1970, the Beatles released 13 studio albums, this is my personal list of the Beatle albums ranked from least to favorite record. Carlos E. Valdivia This list was started on June 8th

More information

Curriculum Standard One: The student will listen to and analyze music critically, using vocabulary and language of music.

Curriculum Standard One: The student will listen to and analyze music critically, using vocabulary and language of music. Curriculum Standard One: The student will listen to and analyze music critically, using vocabulary and language of music. 1. The student will analyze the uses of elements of music. A. Can the student analyze

More information

MUSIC Music - History & Theory Faculty Name Office Phone Room Number Music - Performance Music - Instrumental Contact Information Division Dean

MUSIC Music - History & Theory Faculty Name Office Phone  Room Number Music - Performance Music - Instrumental Contact Information Division Dean Music 1 MUSIC The study of music provides training in the instrumental competency, vocal competency, performance, techniques, and application. It also provides a foundational background for music appreciation,

More information

Curriculum Map Template. MUSICAL THEATER CURRICULUM MAP Precursors of American Elements of American Musical Theater

Curriculum Map Template. MUSICAL THEATER CURRICULUM MAP Precursors of American Elements of American Musical Theater MUSICAL THEATER CURRICULUM MAP Precursors of American Elements of American Musical Musical Early Forms of American Musical Enduring Understandings:. Students will understand that Musical has been a part

More information

School of Church Music Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

School of Church Music Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary Audition and Placement Preparation Master of Music in Church Music Master of Divinity with Church Music Concentration Master of Arts in Christian Education with Church Music Minor School of Church Music

More information

Music in America: Jazz and Beyond

Music in America: Jazz and Beyond CHAPTER 24 Music in America: Jazz and Beyond Essay Questions 1. Early American Music: An Overview, p. 377 How did the Puritans views on music affect the beginning of American music? 2. Early American Music:

More information

MUSIC DEPARTMENT. VOCAL MUSIC Concert Choir 1 x x x By Audition Bettendorf Singers 1 x x x x None Women s Chorale 1 x x x x None

MUSIC DEPARTMENT. VOCAL MUSIC Concert Choir 1 x x x By Audition Bettendorf Singers 1 x x x x None Women s Chorale 1 x x x x None MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC COURSES CAN BE USED AS ELECTIVE CREDITS CONTENT MISSION STATEMENT: Students will develop musical skills that enable them to be performers, consumers, recognize the value of music

More information

George Gershwin B Y : D A N I S H A L A R S O N

George Gershwin B Y : D A N I S H A L A R S O N George Gershwin B Y : D A N I S H A L A R S O N Early Life Born September 26, 1898 Morris (Moishe) Gershowitz (Russian-Jew from St. Petersburg, Russia) immigrant to the United States in the early 1890

More information

Music (MUS) Courses. Music (MUS) 1

Music (MUS) Courses. Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) Courses MUS 121 Introduction to Music Listening (3 Hours) This course is designed to enhance student music listening. Students will learn to identify changes in the elements of

More information

An Interview with Pat Metheny

An Interview with Pat Metheny An Interview with Pat Metheny When did you discover you had a passion for composing music? Who would you consider the five most influential composers on your work, especially in your formative years? In

More information

Sounds of June 7: June 14: June 21:

Sounds of June 7: June 14: June 21: Sounds of 2013 Come and experience Colorado s best live music in our Town Square Every Friday, 6:00 8:00pm, June 7 through August 30, 2013 Note the new, added show on September 6 th! June 7: Nacho Men

More information

Standard 1 PERFORMING MUSIC: Singing alone and with others

Standard 1 PERFORMING MUSIC: Singing alone and with others KINDERGARTEN Standard 1 PERFORMING MUSIC: Singing alone and with others Students sing melodic patterns and songs with an appropriate tone quality, matching pitch and maintaining a steady tempo. K.1.1 K.1.2

More information

Louis Armstrong was one of America s great musical geniuses equally

Louis Armstrong was one of America s great musical geniuses equally Louis Armstrong Education Kit Introduction Louis Armstrong was one of America s great musical geniuses equally outstanding and innovative as trumpeter, singer, and entertainer. He was also the leader of

More information

*SOME SOURCES FOR RESEARCH ON MUSIC AND DANCE AVAILABLE AT THE MESA COLLEGE LIBRARY*

*SOME SOURCES FOR RESEARCH ON MUSIC AND DANCE AVAILABLE AT THE MESA COLLEGE LIBRARY* *SOME SOURCES FOR RESEARCH ON MUSIC AND DANCE AVAILABLE AT THE MESA COLLEGE LIBRARY* Use SANDY PAC to find all books, periodicals, and audio-visual materials available at Mesa. PROQUEST and EBSCOHOST list

More information

A Boyhood home. British Council - Language Assistant - Essential UK Task 1 Famous Places. Look at these places.

A Boyhood home. British Council - Language Assistant - Essential UK Task 1 Famous Places. Look at these places. A Boyhood home Task 1 Famous Places Look at these places. Buckingham Palace Windsor castle Chatsworth House Stonehenge Brighton beach The Cornish coast The Lake District What have they got in common? Why

More information

How to Write about Music: Vocabulary, Usages, and Conventions

How to Write about Music: Vocabulary, Usages, and Conventions How to Write about Music: Vocabulary, Usages, and Conventions Some Basic Performance Vocabulary Here are a few terms you will need to use in discussing musical performances; surprisingly, some of these

More information

Grade Level 5-12 Subject Area: Vocal and Instrumental Music

Grade Level 5-12 Subject Area: Vocal and Instrumental Music 1 Grade Level 5-12 Subject Area: Vocal and Instrumental Music Standard 1 - Sings alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music The student will be able to. 1. Sings ostinatos (repetition of a short

More information

Division of Music. Division of Music Mission. Division of Music Goals and Outcomes. Division Objectives. Proficiencies. Minot State University 1

Division of Music. Division of Music Mission. Division of Music Goals and Outcomes. Division Objectives. Proficiencies. Minot State University 1 Minot State University 1 Division of Music Chair Erik Anderson Division of Music Mission The mission of the MSU Division of Music is to provide courses of study and performance opportunities in music that

More information

Music. Music. Associate Degree. Contact Information. Full-Time Faculty. Associate in Arts Degree. Music Performance

Music. Music. Associate Degree. Contact Information. Full-Time Faculty. Associate in Arts Degree. Music Performance Associate Degree The program offers courses in both traditional and commercial music for students who plan on transferring as music majors to four-year institutions, for those who need to satisfy general

More information

HANDEL TO HIP HOP GRADE 6. THE EWING PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2099 Pennington Road Ewing, NJ 08618

HANDEL TO HIP HOP GRADE 6. THE EWING PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2099 Pennington Road Ewing, NJ 08618 HANDEL TO HIP HOP GRADE 6 THE EWING PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2099 Pennington Road Ewing, NJ 08618 BOE Approval Date: August 29, 2016 Michael Nitti Revised: Music Teachers Superintendent In accordance with The Ewing

More information

~r#- Senior Honors Recital. A Creative Project (ID 499) Wright. Melanie M. Project Director. Ball State University. Muncie, Indiana.

~r#- Senior Honors Recital. A Creative Project (ID 499) Wright. Melanie M. Project Director. Ball State University. Muncie, Indiana. Senior Honors Recital A Creative Project (ID 499) by Melanie M. Wright Project Director ~r# Ball State University Muncie, Indiana April 1988 Spring 1988 ~,~ ~,!.,,' ) December 10, 1987 marked the presentation

More information

2017 VCE Music Performance performance examination report

2017 VCE Music Performance performance examination report 2017 VCE Music Performance performance examination report General comments In 2017, a revised study design was introduced. Students whose overall presentation suggested that they had done some research

More information

Contents. Introduction

Contents. Introduction Contents Introduction About the Author Acknoledgements Using This Book Improvisation Suggestions In the Style of Carlos Santana: The Singing Guitar6 In the Style of Jimmie Rodgers: The Blue Country0 In

More information

Wootton High School Family and Consumer Sciences Course Offerings

Wootton High School Family and Consumer Sciences Course Offerings Wootton High School Family and Consumer Sciences Child and Adolescent Development 1, 2 and 3 (9 12) Students observe and teach preschool children in Wootton s own Lab School. Students develop competence

More information

Visual & Performing Arts

Visual & Performing Arts LAUREL SPRINGS SCHOOL Visual & Performing Arts COURSE LIST 1 American Music Appreciation Music in America has a rich history. In American Music Appreciation, students will navigate this unique combination

More information

Name: Class: Date: ID: A

Name: Class: Date: ID: A Name: Class: _ Date: _ Final Exam Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The two principal centers of nineteenth-century ballet were France and:

More information

An Introduction to Composing

An Introduction to Composing 2008 25 minutes Teacher Notes: Amy Wert M.M., B.Ed. (Sec Music), A Mus A Program Synopsis Composing can be an amazing and fun experience whether you are a budding Mozart, techno freak, an emerging guitarist

More information

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF THE SURF SOUND

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF THE SURF SOUND OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION What is the Surf sound and where did it come from? OVERVIEW The Surf sound of the early 1960s was built on the interplay of different musical traditions that came together to

More information

3RFS etalk January 2008 Page 1 of 5

3RFS etalk January 2008 Page 1 of 5 3RFS etalk January 2008 Page 1 of 5 Mike and Val James From As Time Goes By to The Galveston Flood disaster: songs to bring you joy and tweak your memories. By Harry Babad and Val James. From the time

More information

Texas Bandmasters Association 2015 Convention/Clinic

Texas Bandmasters Association 2015 Convention/Clinic How to Teach Improvisation and Integrate Into a Jazz Band Rehearsal CLINICIAN: Jim Snidero SPONSOR: Conn-Selmer, Inc. Texas Bandmasters Association 2015 Convention/Clinic JULY 23-26, 2015 HENRY B. GONZALEZ

More information

Popular Music Vocals Diplomas Repertoire List

Popular Music Vocals Diplomas Repertoire List London College of Music Examinations Popular Music Vocals Diplomas Repertoire List Valid from: 2019 until further notice This repertoire list should be read in conjunction with the: Music Performance and

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 110 ACCOMPANIST COACHING SESSION Corequisites: MUS 171, 173, 271, 273, 371, 373, 471, or 473 applied lessons. Provides students enrolled in the applied music lesson sequence the opportunity

More information

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University Iowa State University 2013-2014 1 Music (MUSIC) Courses primarily for undergraduates: MUSIC 101. Fundamentals of Music. (1-2) Cr. 2. F.S. Prereq: Ability to read elementary musical notation Notation, recognition,

More information

MUSICOLOGY (MCY) Musicology (MCY) 1

MUSICOLOGY (MCY) Musicology (MCY) 1 Musicology (MCY) 1 MUSICOLOGY (MCY) MCY 101. The World of Music. 1-3 Credit Hours. For all new music majors, a novel introduction to music now and then, here and there; its ideas, its relations to other

More information

Music Business Handbook and Career Guide, 10th Ed Sherwood Publishing Partners. Chapter 4

Music Business Handbook and Career Guide, 10th Ed Sherwood Publishing Partners. Chapter 4 Chapter 4 Start Thinking... 1. So you ve just written what you consider to be a song with hit potential. How do you go about getting it published? 2. What makes a successful song? Define the songwriter

More information

Charleston County School of the Arts. Charleston County School of the Arts

Charleston County School of the Arts. Charleston County School of the Arts Charleston County School of the Arts County-Wide Magnet School Accepting Students for Grades 6-12 About Our School Charleston County School of the Arts (SOA) offers students rich and intensive instruction

More information

Q&A with John Howland, author of Ellington Uptown

Q&A with John Howland, author of Ellington Uptown Q&A with, author of Ellington Uptown Ellington Uptown: Duke Ellington, James P. Johnson, and the Birth of Concert Jazz by explores a little-discussed yet truly hybrid American musical tradition lost between

More information

Scat Like That. Museum Connection: Art and Enlightenment

Scat Like That. Museum Connection: Art and Enlightenment Museum Connection: Art and Enlightenment Scat Like That Purpose: In this lesson students will gather information about vocal improvisation by listening to Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, and others who

More information

What (is) The Blues. Akram Najjar

What (is) The Blues. Akram Najjar What (is) The Blues Akram Najjar But first of all... Thanks go to our Friends What (is) the Blues? 2/ 33 Blues and the Evolution of Early Jazz and Pop Rhythm and Blues 30s Boogie Woogie 50s Rock n Roll

More information

Smoke Gets in Your Eyes

Smoke Gets in Your Eyes "" is from Kern's musical Roberta, his last big Broadway venture. Based on the Alice Duer Miller novel Gowns by Roberta, it is a sophisticated comedy about an American football player and a Russian princess.

More information