DAN PENN ESSENTIAL QUESTION

Similar documents
DAN PENN ESSENTIAL QUESTION

INTRODUCING GLAM ROCK

THE INFLUENCE OF RHYTHM AND BLUES

SAY IT LOUD: THE RISE OF BLACK PRIDE

THE AMERICAN BLUES IN BRITAIN

THE NEW YORK CITY UNDERGROUND

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

SEVENTIES SOUL: THE SOUNDTRACK OF TURBULENT TIMES

GOSPEL MUSIC AND THE BIRTH OF SOUL

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF THE SURF SOUND

THE MEMPHIS SOUND: A CASE STUDY OF MUSIC AND INTEGRATION IN MID-CENTURY AMERICA

THE ROOTS OF PROGRESSIVE ROCK

ALL OVER THIS LAND: THE EMERGENCE OF FOLK ROCK

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

THE EARLY YEARS: BRINGING A ROCK AND ROLL ATTITUDE TO FOLK

THEMATIC LESSON: LOVE SONGS

GIVING AMERICA BACK THE BLUES

SEVENTIES SOUL: THE SOUNDTRACK OF TURBULENT TIMES

THE RISE OF DISCO ESSENTIAL QUESTION. How did Disco relate to the sentiments and social movements of the 1970s? OVERVIEW

CHUCK BERRY ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Why is Chuck Berry often considered the most important of the early Rock and Rollers? OVERVIEW

DYLAN AS POET ESSENTIAL QUESTION. How did Bob Dylan merge poetry with popular music? OVERVIEW

THE GROUNDBREAKERS ITALIAN-AMERICAN VOCALISTS BEFORE ROCK AND ROLL

CONSIDERING THE FUTURE OF ROCK AND ROLL

THE HISTORICAL ROOTS OF HIP HOP

THE ROOTS OF HEAVY METAL

YOUTH, MASS CULTURE, AND PROTEST: THE RISE AND IMPACT OF 1960S ANTIWAR MUSIC

RITCHIE VALENS AND THE BIRTH OF LATINO ROCK

Regional Centers for R&B/Soul

THE BEATLES: MULTITRACKING AND THE 1960S COUNTERCULTURE

BEATLEMANIA ESSENTIAL QUESTION. What were the factors that contributed to the rise of Beatlemania? OVERVIEW

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF DOO WOP

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

SOUL MUSIC. Fromm Institute. Week Three: Southern Soul. Recommended Listening:

FROM ILLUSTRATED SONGS TO THE MUSIC VIDEO: A HISTORY OF SOUND AND IMAGE

The Latin Rhythms of Despacito

SAMPLING: THE FOUNDATION OF HIP HOP

LITTLE KIDS ROCK LESSON MEMORY, HOPE, AND CHARLIE PUTH S SEE YOU AGAIN

THE BLUES AND THE GREAT MIGRATION

W6 - Motown Pop and Southern Soul ( )

THE SOCIOLOGY OF AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC (SOAP) UNIT 5 NOTES. Soul, Motown, & Funk

INTERDISCIPLINARY LESSON: BLOWIN IN THE WIND

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

THE FINE LINE BETWEEN CREATION AND THEFT: AN EXPLORATION OF ORIGINALITY IN DIGITALLY MANIPULATED MUSIC

THE INFLUENCE OF LATIN MUSIC IN POSTWAR NEW YORK CITY

The Impact of Motown (Middle School)

LITTLE KIDS ROCK LESSON ALESSIA CARA S HERE : PERSPECTIVES ON FUN, PEER PRESSURE, AND ANXIETY

FUNK ASSERTS ITSELF: BLACK ART FOR BLACK AUDIENCES

THE SAN FRANCISCO SCENE, 1967

Penn Wood Middle School 7 th Grade English/Language Arts Curriculum Overview

How to use this handout:

Syllabus for Sweet Soul Music: The Golden Age of Soul in the 1960s and 1970s

MOVING FASTER THAN THE IMAGINATION: THE EVOLUTION OF SOUND RECORDING

WORLD WAR II AND THE SHRINKING OF THE ENSEMBLE

Sam Cooke. Group 5: Michael Muradian, Vinh Dang, Yazan Alkhatib.

MAINSTREAM METAL, PARENTAL ADVISORIES, AND CENSORSHIP

THE MUSIC OF MACHINES: THE SYNTHESIZER, SOUND WAVES, AND FINDING THE FUTURE

Disney Broadway Magic. DISNEY PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOPS WITH CORRESPONDING NATIONAL CORE ARTS STANDARDS (Click below to review the standards)

PMEA Model Curriculum Framework Strand: Music Technology PA Big Ideas and National Standards Artistic Processes

HOW TO STUDY ROCK AND ROLL

Sam & Dave Hold On I m Comin

Auditions Workshop: Musical Theatre

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Band Curriculum Grade 11

Civil War Music Irish Folk Songs

Sample Pages from. Strategies to Integrate the Arts in Language Arts

Grade Level: 4 th Grade. Correlated WA. Standard(s): Pacing:

The Music of Motown (High School)

Using Nonfiction to Motivate Reading and Writing, K- 12. Sample Pages

Museum of Contemporary Photography Curriculum Development Project Funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art

Motown Legend Honored by Links, Inc. in Beverly Hills

Subject Area. Content Area: Visual Art. Course Primary Resource: A variety of Internet and print resources

Visual Art Department Indian Hill Exempted Village School District

CAEA Images of Power Lesson Plan. Grade Level: MS, HS (Adaptable for Elementary, University, Special Needs)

TRUMBULL PUBLIC SCHOOLS Trumbull, Connecticut

Fundamentals of Business Communication 2012 Chapter 17: Writing Reports

Subject Area. Content Area: Visual Art. Course Primary Resource: A variety of Internet and print resources Grade Level: 1

Acting 101. DISNEY PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOPS WITH CORRESPONDING NATIONAL CORE ARTS STANDARDS (Click below to review the standards)

1.4.5.A2 Formalism in dance, music, theatre, and visual art varies according to personal, cultural, and historical contexts.

100 Years of Dance ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Why might people dance, and how have dance trends changed in America since the 1920s?

Delaware Standards for Visual & Performing Arts

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District String Orchestra Grade 9

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Printmaking I Grades 10-12

VISUAL ARTS SL, YEAR 1

Grade 3 General Music

Art Instructional Units

CONTENT MAP. The Rhythm and Rhyme of Literature. Unit EQ How is the rhythm, flow, meter and tone of a work influenced by figurative language?

HUMANITY S BEATS: HOW RHYTHMS REPRESENT PEOPLE AND PLACE

Breaking News English.com Ready-to-Use English Lessons by Sean Banville

Finding Aid to The HistoryMakers Video Oral History with Kenny Gamble

10 Day Lesson Plan. John Harris Unit Lesson Plans EDU 312. Prepared by: John Harris. December 6, 2008

Core Content/Program of Studies Curriculum Map Bourbon County Schools

Marching through War

Second Grade Art Curriculum

Curtis Blues: The Roots of Rock and Rap - Rhythm and Lyrics in Acoustic Delta Blues

5 th GRADE CHOIR. Artistic Processes Perform Respond

Many authors, including Mark Twain, utilize humor as a way to comment on contemporary culture.

MUS-111 History of American Popular Music

America s Musical Heritage

Guide to the W. C. Handy Collection

Composing with Courage

Cla ssic Rock & Soul. Mike Lee. Bart Wigfield. Dave Miller. George Krauss. Brad Rippel. London Stadler. Jan Byer Doug Wagner.

Transcription:

OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did black artists and white songwriters and musicians interact in the Soul era, and what contributed to that interaction? OVERVIEW I d been digging black records for years and suddenly I got a chance to be involved in making them, even to go get a hamburger, that was all right with me just to be there. And by being there I started getting lucky with some songs. Dan Penn If any single theme dominates this history of Rock and Roll, it is the theme of popular music culture as a place and an experience that allows a degree of racial mixing beyond what American everyday life offers. Again and again, new moments in Rock and Roll s ongoing history come when the boundaries that too often organize the races as separate are broken down. Most commonly, it has been black music that provides the primary materials, the inspiration and the talent that kicks off these changes, these moments. But oftentimes the contributions are the result of a kind of dialogue across racial lines. Booker T. and the MGs, a four-member Memphis combo comprised of two black and two white musicians, represents well the ideal form this dialogue can take. To be sure, their moment, 1960s Soul, is rich in examples. This lesson looks at that juncture in Soul s history, when popular music and the Civil Rights movement seemed almost to be working in support of one another. Aretha Franklin, Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, the Motown acts; so much was happening, and so much was crossing over, getting to a wide, appreciative white audience. But the focal point here is not what was happening at the front of the stage. Rather, this lesson goes behind the scenes, to see where young white musicians and writers were working with African-American performers to create something that was truly born of a dialogue. The focus here is one particular songwriter-producer-musician: Dan Penn. Only 14 when he had his first hit, Is A Bluebird Blue, recorded by Conway Twitty, Penn was entranced by black music, Ray Charles and Bobby Blue Bland among his very favorites. As the epigraph above suggests, Penn found a way to get close to the world associated with just such artists,

OVERVIEW (CONTINUED) not caring if he was allowed in simply because he d be an errand boy if one was needed. Along the way, he wrote some of Soul music s most enduring songs, including I m Your Puppet, Out of Left Field, Dark End of the Street, and Do Right Woman. The artists recording those songs included Aretha Franklin, Percy Sledge, James Carr, and James and Bobby Purify, all African-American singers. As a white songwriter, Penn was writing for those voices, and he would be the first to tell you: I mean, white singers are okay, but black singers are better. You don t even have to think about it. Our aim here is not to assign greater value to white or black voices but to consider the musical results when a class of young white musicians and writers felt unambiguously that black voices were better, and they started writing songs for those voices. In that moment, a dialogue was underway.

OBJECTIVES Upon completion of this lesson, students will: 1. KNOW (KNOWLEDGE): The conditions that led to the interaction of black and white musicians, songwriters, and producers in the 1960s Soul era The songs of Dan Penn, including Do Right Woman, recorded by Aretha Franklin The unique status of popular music culture as a meeting ground of the races 2. BE ABLE TO (SKILLS): Extrapolate arguments about music by assessing sound, mood, tone, instrumentation Draw connections among various print, audio and visual texts Write creatively for personal and/or small group expression Compare and contrast texts, arguments and ideas Common Core: Students will closely read a text and summarize key supporting details and ideas (CCSS Reading 2) Common Core: Students will view and analyze videos of musical performances to draw connections (CCSS Speaking and Listening 2) Common Core: Students will conduct a short reserach project and demonstrate their understanding of the musical contributions of their research subject (CCSS Writing 7) ACTIVITIES MOTIVATIONAL ACTIVITY: 1. Show the clip of Aretha Franklin performing Do Right Woman on The Merv Griffin Show. Ask students to describe who they think might have written this song. To the instructor: If need be, help students to understand the song s basic premise, which revolves around the theme, If you want a do-right woman, you ve got to be a do right-man, or treat-me-as-you d-like-to-be-treated. Do you think the writer was a man or a woman? Was that man/woman white or black? Why do you think he or she wrote it? Where do you think the writer came from? What else do you think you can tell about the songwriter from this song?

PROCEDURE: 1. Give students each a copy of the Rock s Backpages article about Dan Penn. Ask them to take five minutes to read the piece, making notes as they read of any details they feel are significant. 2. When the group is done, ask them the following questions: Were you surprised that the songwriter of Do Right Woman is a man? Were you surprised that he is white? Based on what you read, why do you think Dan Penn wrote Do Right Woman? What part of the country was Penn from? Can you speculate on how that might have affected his musical interests? What does Penn say about the importance of white and black artists coming together? 3. Have students compare two versions of another Dan Penn original, I m Your Puppet, the first recorded by James and Bobby Purify, the second recorded by Dan Penn. 4. After they listen, ask them to break into groups of three, each group making two lists describing what they hear in each version. If it helps, have them use the Listening Template to organize their responses. If the differences between the versions are subtle to their ears, push the students to make some distinctions. 5. Lastly, ask them to answer the following question: which version do you think Dan Penn might have preferred and why? In Penn s view, did that collaboration across race lines allow for something special? SUMMARY ACTIVITY: 1. Show the students a clip of Booker T. and the MGs playing Green Onions. Ask students to have a class discussion regarding how they think Booker T. and the MGs embody what Dan Penn likes about Soul music. Ask them to point to aspects of the song, the performance, the group presentation to back up their answers. 2. Explain to students that the kind of interactions between the white and black creative communities that Penn treasured were complicated interactions. Explain that in the late 1960s many walls separated the black and white population. 3. Let them watch an excerpt of an interview with Jim Stewart, the founder of Stax Records, the label that released Booker T. and the MGs recordings. 4. Encourage students to reflect freely on what they heard in the interview. But ask them: 5. Did something happen in music culture, in the worlds of men like Dan Penn and Jim Stewart, that was different from life in the culture at large?

HOMEWORK/ASSESSMENT: Assign one or more of the following: Research: Assign students to research Dan Penn, Steve Cropper, Eddie Hinton, or Rick Hall, all white men who worked on important Soul recordings as either producers, writers, and/or musicians. Ask them to write one-page papers on how these individuals helped to break down the color line in their creative work. EXTENSIONS: Have students watch the ABC special about Aretha Franklin from 1968 and write twopage responses to the following questions: What did you learn from the program about the interactions of the black and white record-making communities? What do you think white musicians loved about the black music they were working on? Do you believe that such interactions changed American life? STANDARDS COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS College and Career Readiness Reading Anchor Standards for Grades 6-12 for Literature and Informational Text Reading 2: Determine central ideas or themes of a text and analyze their development; summarize the key supporting details and ideas. College and Career Readiness Writing Anchor Standards for Grades 6-12 in English Language Arts and Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects Writing 7: Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions, demonstrating understanding of the subject under investigation. College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Speaking and Listening for Grades 6-12 Speaking and Listening 2: Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally. SOCIAL STUDIES NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE SOCIAL STUDIES (NCSS) Theme 1: Culture Theme 4: Individual Development and Identity

Theme 5: Individuals, Groups, and Institutions NATIONAL STANDARDS FOR MUSIC EDUCATION Core Music Standard: Responding Select: Choose music appropriate for a specific purpose or context. Analyze: Analyze how the structure and context of varied musical works inform the response. Interpret: Support interpretations of musical works that reflect creators and/or performers expressive intent. Evaluate: Support evaluations of musical works and performances based on analysis, interpretation, and established criteria. Core Music Standard: Connecting Connecting 11: Relate musical ideas and works to varied contexts and daily life to deepen understanding. RESOURCES VIDEO RESOURCES Aretha Franklin Do Right Woman - Merv Griffin Show (1967) Jim Stewart Racial Integration at Stax (2007) Dan Penn I m Your Puppet (1994) Booker T and the MGs Green Onions (1967) Aretha Franklin ABC News Closeup (1968) James and Bobby Purify I m Your Puppet (1966) FEATURED PEOPLE Booker T. and the MGs Aretha Franklin Dan Penn Jim Stewart