История рок музыки в Великобритании
Федеральное агентство по образованию Российской Федерации
Новгородский государственный университет им. Ярослава Мудрого
Реферат на тему:
Rock music in
Выполнил:
Студент группы 1262
Иванов Я. О.
Проверила:
Александрова Г. П.
В. Новгород
2006 г.
History of British music
Little
survives of the early music of
Some of the earliest music to remain is either church music, or else is in the form of carols or ballads dating from the 16th century or earlier. Troubadors carried an international courtly style across western Europe. It was common in times before copyright for melodies to be interchangeable, and the same melodies will often have been used (with differing words) for secular and religious purposes. Melodies like that of the Sussex Carol or Greensleeves will have had a long history of eclectic use over the centuries.
During the
15th century, a vigorous tradition of polyphony developed in
16th to 17th Centuries
With the growth in wealth and leisure-time for the noble classes, tastes in music began to diverge sharply. While in the early part of the period it is possible for tavern songs like Pastime with Good Companie to be attributed (apocryphally) to King Henry VIII, by the middle 16th Century there were distinct styles of music enjoyed by the differing social classes. Renaissance influences made the acquisition of musical knowledge an almost essential attribute for the nobleman and woman, and ability to play an instrument became an almost mandatory social grace.
The Rennaisance influence also internationalized courtly music in terms of both instruments and content, the lute dulcimer and early forms of the harpsichord were played, ballads and madrigals were sung. The pavane and galliard were danced. Henry Purcell became court composer to King Charles II and wrote incidental music to plays and events.
For other
classes instruments like pipe, tabor, bagpipe shawm, hurdygurdy and crumhorn accompanied folk music and
community dance. The fiddle gradually grew in popularity. Differing regional
styles of folk music developed, in geographically separated areas such as
From about
1588 to 1627, a group of composers known as the
18th Century
As courtly music grew more elaborate and internationalised, with composers such as Handel and Mozart, writing operas, oratorios and symphonic works, an British musician called John Gay produced The Beggar's Opera, a revolutionary popular opera which used British folk forms.
19th Century
With the Industrial Revolution came a parallel revolution in British popular music as people moved from stable agrarian communities into the growing industrial centres with the rise of the brass band in the North of Britain. Folk Music went through a rapid series of transformations as different regional idioms came together and reformed themselves into the first universally acceptable and commercial popular music. This change began first in the alehouses and later in what became known as the Music Hall. Music Hall became the dominant form of British popular music for over a century from its birth in the 1850s. While folk music continued to enjoy popularity in the countryside, it was replaced for the majority by the new forms.
Early 20th Century
Edward Elgar was the dominant classical composer of the early part of the century. British tastes also tended towards light classical composers such as Edward German, Ketelbey and Eric Coates, whose music was spread by the new medium of Radio.
Radio also played a part in the increasing popularity of big band dance music, popularised by the orchestras of Geraldo, Ambrose, Henry Hall and Billy Cotton, and singers like Al Bowlly, and Jack Buchanan.
Operetta and Musical Comedy were very popular forms in this period, and leading British composers included Ivor Novello, Noel Coward, and Noel Gay.
Popular singers in the Music Hall idiom included, Marie Lloyd, Vesta Tilley, George Formby, Flanagan and Allen and Gracie Fields. With the advent of World War II the taste for a more reflective and romantic style of music was led by singers like Anne Shelton and Vera Lynn.
The Fifties
A significant
factor in the early growth of folk clubs was Topic Records. A.L. Lloyd wrote
many of the sleeve notes for the records for the next 20 years and sang on
several of their albums. Ewan MacColl
toured widely in
The modern period
In the 60s and
70s,
The seventies
were probably the heydays for Folk Music Publications. The popularity of British
folk declined in the later 1970s, however, losing ground to glam rock, disco,
punk rock, heavy metal and lovers rock. In the mid-1980s a new rebirth began,
this time fusing folk forms with energy and political aggression derived from
punk rock. Leaders included The Men They Couldn't Hang, Oyster Band, Billy
Bragg and The Pogues. Folk-dance music also became
popular in the 80s, with the British Country Blues Band and Tiger Moth. Later
in the decade, reggae influenced British country music due to the work of
Edward II & the Red Hot Polkas, especially on their seminal Let's Polkasteady from 1987. In the 21st century,
Northumbrian folk
Pipes
Northumbrian
folk is most characterized by the use of Northumbrian smallpipes
as well as a strong Scottish and Celtic influence. Northumbrian pipes are small
and elbow-driven and the music is traditionally very swift and rhythmic.
Another distinct form of Northumbrian pipe is called the "half-long"
or "border" pipe. Perhaps the most important of the old masters of
the pipes is Billy Pigg. Drawing on these pioneers, popularizers like Louis Killen, The High Level Ranters and Bob Davenport brought Northumbrian folk to
international audiences, while Jack the Lad, Hedgehog Pie and
Northumbrian pipe music has seen a recent revival due to the touring of artists like Kathryn Tickell.
West Country
The West Country is most noted for its Scrumpy and Western music, much of it fusing comical folk-style songs with affectionate parodies of more mainstream musical genres, delivered in the local West Country dialects.
Sea shanties
Sea shanties are a form of work song traditionally sung by sailors working on the rigging of ships. There are several types, divided based on the type of work they set the rhythmic base for. For example:
* short haul shanties: for quicks pulls over a short time
* capstan shanties: for repetitive, longer tasks that require a sustained rhythm
* halyard shanties: for heavier work that require more time between pulls to set up
History of British Rock Music
Chuck Berry
invented rock and roll in 1955.
The kids' malaise returned, with a much taller wave, when folksingers started singing about the problems of the system. Kids who had not identified with Woody Guthrie's stories of poor people, identified immediately with folksingers singing about the Vietnam war and civil rights. Bob Dylan was arguably the most influential musician of the era. He led the charge against the Establishment with simple songs and poetic lyrics. A generation believed in him and followed his dreams. Music became the expression of youth's ambitions.
At the same
time, the story of commercial rock music took a bizarre turn when it hit the
coast of
The times were ripe for change, but a catalyst was still needed.
"Mersey-beat"
changed the story of rock music forever. Mersey-beat came out of nowhere, but
it came with the power of history.
In the early
Sixties veterans of that scene, or disciples of that scene, led to the
formation of bands such as the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds
and the Animals. The Rolling Stones became "the" sensation in
The most
influential bands of the second generation were the Kinks and the Who. Both
went on to record concept albums and "rock operas" that paraphrased
the British operetta at the sound of rock music. While Kinks were still
proponents of melodic rock, the Who's manically amplified guitars were already
pointing towards a noisier and less gentle future. The Rolling Stones, the
Kinks and the Who represent the triad of British rock bands of the mid 1960s
that would influence entire generations of rock bands for decades. The Who were
composing autobiographical songs of the angry and frustrated urban youth. The
Rolling Stones were composing autobiographical songs of the decadent punks of
the working class. The Kinks were composing realistic vignettes of ordinary
life in bourgeois
Cream and Led Zeppelin upped the ante when they started playing very loud blues. Cream's lengthy solos and Led Zeppelin's fast riffs created the epitome of "hard rock".
The impact of
British electricity on the American scene was equivalent to an earthquake. Kids
embraced electric guitars in every garage of the
On the East Coast it was Dylan again who led the charge. His first electric performances were met with disappointment by his fans, but soon "folk-rock" boomed with the hits of the Byrds and Simon And Garfunkel.
The
psychedelic movement that had been growing across the country somehow merged
with the wave of electric rockers and the protest movement. They became one
both in
In
Progressive-rock took away rock's energy and replaced it with a brain. Traffic, Jethro Tull, Family and later Roxy Music developed a brand of soul-rock that had little in common with soul or rock and roll: long, convoluted jams, jazz accents, and baroque arrangements derailed the song format. King Crimson, Colosseum, Van Der Graaf Generator, early Genesis, Yes and started playing ever more complex, theatrical and hermetic pieces. Arrangements became more and more complex, insturmentalists become more and more skilled. Electronic instruments were employed frequently. Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band, Third Ear Band and Hawkwind created genres that at the time had no name (decadent cabaret, world-music and psychedelic hard rock).
The paradigm
soon spilled into continental
Even
The 1960s were the "classic" age of rock music. The main sub-genres were defined in the 1960s. The paradigm of rock music as the "alternative" to commercial pop music was established in the 1960s. Wild experimentation alloweds rock musicians to explore a range of musical styles that few musicians had attempted before 1966. Captain Beefheart and the Velvet Underground also created a different kind of rock music within rock music, a different paradigm within the new paradigm, one that will influence alternative musicians for decades. More than musical giants like Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix, humble musicians like Captain Beefheart, the Velvet Underground and the Red Crayola may be the true heroes of the 1960s.
In
Later in Britain first came industrial music, invented by Throbbing Gristle as a hybrid of avantgarde and rock music, and then dark-punk, whose main proponents were Joy Division, Siouxsie Sioux, Public Image Ltd, the Cure, the Killing Joke, the Sisters Of Mercy.
In early 80s
In 90s
By the end of
the decade,
The 1990s were also the decade of heavy metal, that peaked in Los Angeles with Metallica, Jane's Addiction, Guns And Roses, and that soon split into a myriad subgenres (doom metal, grind-core, death metal, etc) and funk-metal (Red Hot Chili Peppers and Rage Against The Machine in Los Angeles, Primus and Faith No More in San Francisco). Marilyn Manson was the late phenomenon that recharged the genre.
The Nineties
were the age of electronic music, whether in dance, ambient or noise format.
Electronic musicians and ensembles spread to
Britain's dance music was far more successful (creatively speaking) than its rock bands: Madchester (Stone Roses), rave (Saint Etienne), transglobal dance (Banco De Gaia, Loop Guru, Transglobal Underground, TUU) ambient house (Orbital, Future Sound Of London, Aphex Twins, Mu-ziq), jungle (Goldie, Squarepusher, Propellerheads), trip-hop (Portishead, Tricky), and plain techno (Meat Beat Manifesto, Prodigy, Chemical Brothers) artists redefined compositional processes and cross-bred countless genres.
Industrial music and grindcore somehow merged and spawned terrifying sounds in the albums of Techno Animal and Godflesh.
The Irish Cranberries and the Scottish Belle And Sebastian are among the revelations of the end of the decade.
Of course, it is impossible to mention all the bands and branches of rock, but we tried to mention the brightest ones. Rock music continues its developing and nowadays almost every band merges rock with some other genres and classification is getting impossible and now based on similarity between band’s style and existing branch of rock. In this work we tried to avoid mentioning such brunches as “hardcore”, “hardcore metal”, “death metal” etc. because links between above mentioned branches and its parent branch is very transparent.
References:
·
Irwin, Colin. "
·
Mathieson, Kenny. "
· www.progarchives.com/Progressive_ rock_discography_LIST.asp?style=18
· music.jdmag.net/dir/Women_in_Music/Magazines/index-2-352-0-1-0-.php