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Overview

In the 1950s, disc jockey Alan Freed was an important figure in the promotion of African American popular music, and he began calling it “rock and roll.” Soon, white artists such as Bill Haley and His Comets and Pat Boone began recording cover versions of black artists’ songs, most of which were more commercially successful than their black counterparts. The most successful of all the early rock and rollers, of course, was Elvis Presley. Presley’s ascent to stardom in the 1950s secured the popularity and commercial viability of the genre of rock and roll.

Objectives

  • Recall the technological changes and its impact in the music industry
  • Examine the influence of disc jockey Alan Freed
  • Identify various rhythm and blues artists
  • Examine some of the ways that white artists modified the music of black artists in their cover versions
  • Recall the music that Elvis Presley recorded during the 1950s

Introduction


Charlotte Forten

Charlotte Forten

In the early 1950s, many different musical threads came together to create the earliest rock and roll. Artists such as Ray Charles, Chuck Berry, and Fats Domino wrote and recorded some of the earliest crossover hits. Soon, white artists such as Bill Haley and the Comets and Pat Boone began recording cover versions of black artists’ songs, most of which were more commercially successful than their black counterparts. Changes in technology, new and hybrid musical forms, and shifts in music consumption patterns all contributed to a reworking of the American popular music landscape that would forever alter the history of popular music consumption in the United States.

"I had written a tune called 'Shake, Rattle and Roll,' but the white stations refused to play it - they thought it was low-class black music. We thought what we needed was a new name. But a white disc jockey named Alan Freed laid on it, and he thought up the name 'rock n' roll.' "
-Jesse Stone
"I would imagine after the first recording session with Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller and Atlantic Records I began to realize that this is going to be like this for the rest of my life and I knew that what, what they were doing was going to be successful because with each session that we would do, it would get better and better and better, the songs would become better, the, ah, the feeling of success was there and we were all in the middle of that as well."
-Ben E. King
Alan Freed was one of the organizers of the Moondog Coronation Ball, the first rock and roll concert . The concert was held in Cleveland on March 21, 1952.