A New and Concise History of Rock and R&B through the Early 1990s. Eric Charry

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A New and Concise History of Rock and R&B through the Early 1990s - Eric Charry

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deeply imbued with synthesized and sampled sounds. While British synthpop bands were overtly exploiting the potentials of the new technology, even guitar, bass, and drums-oriented bands were being enhanced. The massive snare drum, electronically enhanced by engineer and producer Bob Clearmountain, on dance-oriented music like David Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” (1983) and Hall and Oates’s album Big Bam Boom (1984) was pervasive in the decade. In 1984 Clearmountain produced Bruce Springsteen’s highest-ever charting single, “Dancing in the Dark” (pop #2), which, along with “Born in the USA” (pop #9), left Springsteen’s trademark electric guitar by the wayside in favor of that 1980s ubiquitous snare drum sound (Milner 2009: 326–27).

      Personal computers came on the market in the late 1970s, using a keyboard interface. In 1984 the Apple Macintosh debuted as the first to use a mouse that could manipulate a graphic cursor in the monitor, a major development that opened up the possibilities for new music-related software, such as Soundtools, which came out in 1989. Pro Tools software (still an industry standard), allowing four tracks of digital recording, came on the market in 1991 (at $4,000); by 1997 digital audio workstations (DAW) with forty-eight tracks came on the market. The instant easy editing capabilities of DAWs may have had some unintended consequences for musicianship: “The most common charge is that DAWs have dealt a fatal blow to the idea of musical spontaneity. Why get it right the first time when you can always fix it through plug-ins or judicious editing?” (Milner 2009: 299). That jury is still out, although it may be related to plummeting electric guitar sales in the past decade, from 1.5 million sold annually (the same amount sold in the mid-1960s) to just over 1 million in 2017 (Edgers 2017).

      See figure 1. Copyright in the United States

      See figure 2. Copyright timeline

      See figure 3. Growth of the recording industry in the United States to the 1930s

      See figure 4. Growth of radio in the United States

      See figure 5. Music on television, 1940s–1980s

      See figure 6. African Americans in starring roles in television

      See figure 42. Blaxploitation films and the next generation

      See figure 7. Magazines

      See figure 8. Industry popularity charts (Billboard)

      See figure 9. Grammy categories

      See figure 10. Innovations in sound and musical instrument technology, 1948–2001

      1 Both ASCAP (2019) and BMI (2019) have online searchable databases.

      2 For more on copyright, see U.S. Copyright Office (2015, 2019a, 2019b, 2019c); for an in-depth history of U.S. copyright law and its implications see Vaidhyanathan (2001).

      3 The standard text on the history of the music industry is Sanjek (1988, 1996), from which I draw extensively here.

      4 Player pianos (or pianolas), dating to the 1870s, were automatically played when air pumped through perforations in a scrolling roll of paper caused piano keys to strike the strings. Coin-operated player pianos were introduced by the Wurlitzer Company in 1898. Figures cited are from Sanjek (1988, 2: 77, 296, 321–22).

      5 Recently, computer analysis has allowed those traces to be heard (First Sounds 2008).

      6 For more on the inventions of Edison and Berliner, see Library of Congress (2019a, 2019b) and UCSB Cylinder Archive (2019).

      7 Zak (2001) and Horning (2013) offer rich explorations into the world of recording studios.

      8 Digital enhancement of the acoustic recordings may downplay the contrast.

      9 Figures for 1947 and 1955–60 are from Gillett (1996: 492) and those from 1999 to 2008 are from Hutchinson, Macy, and Allen (2010: 43). Sanjek (1996: 285, 333) gives both $214.4 and $204 million for 1947.

      10 See the recent nine-part BBC radio series (Mason 2019) for an expansive history of the music industry and technology. For online histories of recording technology, see Beardsley and Leech-Wilkinson (2009) and Schoenherr (2005). For an online narrative of the record industry, see Medium (2014). For diverse studies of the music and recording industry, see Chapple and Garofalo (1977), Denisoff (1986), Goodman (1997), and Katz (2010).

      11 The standard text on the history of broadcast radio is Barnouw (1966–70), from which I draw extensively here. More recent interpretive work includes Douglas (1987, 1999) and Smulyan (1994). Barnouw (1975) covers the history of television broadcasting.

      12 For information on Dick Clark and American Bandstand, see Jackson (1997); for MTV, see Tannenbaum and Marks (2012).

      13 RIAA (2019a) has a searchable database for gold and platinum records.

      14 The references are to Wald’s House on Henry Street and Hurston’s Dust Tracks on the Road.

      15 See Recording Academy (2019) for listings of Grammy Award winners and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (2019) for inductees.

      16 Mayfair Recording, the second New York studio (after Atlantic) to go eight-track (in 1965), was used by the Velvet Underground and Frank Zappa in 1966–67. Motown went eight-track in 1964.

      17 Plasketes (1992: 117–18); Christman (1999, 2007); Caulfield (2018); RIAA (2019b). See also Osborne (2012).

      18 Berry’s ES-350T from 1959 is on display at the National Museum of African American History and Culture. This section on electric guitars and amplifiers draws from Hunter (2005) and Tolinski and di Perna (2016).

      19 The Telecaster was briefly called the Broadcaster, but they had to change the name, as Gretsch had their own Broadkaster.

      20 Jeff Beck played an Esquire in the Yardbirds, and later a Les Paul on his solo debut LP Truth (1968).

      21 A 1993 New York Apollo Theater all-star blues concert (B. B. King and others 1993-v) showcases three guitar models: Gibson ES-335 (B. B. King); Fender Stratocaster (Buddy Guy, Eric Clapton, and Jeff Beck); and Fender Telecaster (Albert Collins).

      22 The following paragraphs on synthesizers and samplers draw from Pinch and Trocco (2002), Jenkins (2007), Russ (2008), Milner (2009: 308–46), Fintoni (2016), Twells (2016), S. Wilson (2016), and Linn (2019).

      23 The iconic bass line to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” was played on two Minimoogs (Keyboard 2009: 25).

      24 For a detailed history of Roland and its products, see Reid (2004–5).

      25 See Twells (2016). Synth Britannia (Whalley 2009-v) covers the synthesizer in the 1970s–80s in the United Kingdom.

      26 For an explanation of the science of digital sampling, see Audacity (2019). At the May 1980 Audio Engineering Society meeting the Synclavier II, Linn LM-1, and Fairlight CMI all had official debuts (Milner 2009: 317).

      27 See Milner (2009: 330–34), J Dilla (2014-d), Fintoni (2016), and E-MU Systems (2019).

      28 The original print version (Noakes 2006: 215) edits one of RZA’s terms for a general audience.

      2

      1920S–1950S

      Rock

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