Rock and roll (often written as
rock &
roll or
rock ’n’ roll) is a genre of
popular music that originated and evolved in the United States
during the late 1940s and early 1950s, primarily from a combination
of the
blues,
country
music and
gospel music. Though
elements of rock and roll can be heard in country records of the
1930s, and in blues records from the 1920s, rock and roll did not
acquire its name until the 1950s. An early form of rock and roll
was
rockabilly, which combined country
and
jazz with influences from traditional
Appalachian folk music and
gospel.
The term "rock and roll" now has at least two different meanings,
both in common usage. The American Heritage Dictionary and the
Merriam-Webster Dictionary both define rock and roll as synonymous
with
rock music. Conversely, Allwords.com
defines the term to refer specifically to the music of the 1950s.
For the purpose of differentiation, this article uses the latter
definition, while the broader musical genre is discussed in the
rock music article.
In the earliest rock and roll styles of the late 1940s and early
1950s, either the piano or saxophone was often the lead instrument,
but these were generally replaced or supplemented by guitar in the
middle to late 1950s. The beat is essentially a
boogie woogie blues rhythm with an accentuated
backbeat, the latter almost
always provided by a
snare drum. Classic
rock and roll is usually played with one or two electric guitars
(one lead, one rhythm), a string bass or (after the mid-1950s) an
electric
bass guitar, and a
drum kit.
The massive popularity and eventual worldwide view of rock and roll
gave it a widespread social impact. Far beyond simply a musical
style, rock and roll, as seen in movies and on television,
influenced lifestyles, fashion, attitudes, and language. It went on
to spawn various sub-genres, often without the initially
characteristic backbeat, that are now more commonly called simply
"rock music" or "rock".
Origins of the style
The origins of rock and roll have been fiercely debated by
commentators and historians of music. There is general agreement
that it arose in the southern United States of America - the region
which would produce most of the major early rock and roll acts -
through the meeting of the different musical traditions which had
developed from transatlantic African slavery and largely European
immigration in that region. The migration of many freed slaves and
their descendants to major urban centers like Memphis and north to
New York City, Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland and Buffalo meant that
black and white residents were living in close proximity in larger
numbers than ever before, and as a result heard each other's music
and even began to emulate each others fashions. Radio stations that
made white and black forms of music available to other groups, the
development and spread of the
gramophone record, and musical styles such
as
jazz and
swing
which were taken up by both black and white musicians, aided this
process of "cultural collision".
The immediate roots of rock and roll lay in the so-called "
race music" and hillbilly music (later called
rhythm and blues and
country and western) of the 1940s and 1950s.
Particularly significant influences were jazz,
blues, boogie woogie, country,
folk and
gospel
music. Commentators differ in their views of which of these
forms were most important and the degree to which the new music was
a re-branding of
African American
rhythm and blues for a white market, or a new hybrid of black and
white forms.K. Keightley, "Reconsidering rock" S. Frith, W. Straw
and J. Street, eds,
The Cambridge companion to pop and
rock (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), p.
116.
In the 1930s
jazz, and particularly
swing, both in urban based
dance bands and blues-influenced country swing,
was among the first music to present African American sounds for a
predominately white audience. The 1940s saw the increased use of
blaring horns (including saxophones), shouted lyrics and boogie
woogie beats in jazz based music. During and immediately after
World War II, with shortages of fuel and limitations on audiences
and available personnel, large
jazz bands
were less economical and tended to be replaced by smaller combos,
using guitars, bass and drums. In the same period, particularly on
the
West Coast and
in the
Midwest, the
development of
jump blues, with its
guitar riffs, prominent beats and shouted lyrics, prefigured many
later developments. Similarly,
country
boogie and Chicago
electric blues
supplied many of the elements that would be seen as characteristic
of rock and roll.V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine,
All Music Guide to Rock: The Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and
Soul (Backbeat Books, 2002, 3rd edn., 2002), p. 1303.
Rock and roll arrived at time of considerable technological change,
soon after the development of the
electric guitar,
amplifier and
microphone, and the
45
rpm record. There were also changes in the record industry,
with the rise of independent labels like
Atlantic,
Sun
and
Chess servicing niche audiences
and a similar rise of radio stations that played their music. It
was the realization that relatively affluent white teenagers were
listening to this music that led to the development of what was to
be defined as rock and roll as a distinct genre.
Origins of the phrase
In 1951,
Cleveland,
Ohio
disc jockey Alan Freed began broadcasting rhythm and blues
and country music for a multi-racial audience. Freed is
often credited with first using the phrase "rock and roll" to
describe the music he aired; its use is also credited to Freed's
sponsor, record store owner
Leo Mintz, who
encouraged Freed to play the music on the radio. However, the term
had already been introduced to US audiences, particularly in the
lyrics of many rhythm and blues records, like Bob Robinson's "Rock
and Rolling" (1939),
Buddy Jones's "Rock
and Rolling Mamma" (1939) and Joe Turner's "Cherry Red" (1939).
Three different songs with the title "Rock and Roll" were recorded
in the late 1940s; by Paul Bascomb in 1947,
Wild Bill Moore in 1948, and by Doles
Dickens in 1949, and the phrase was in constant use in the lyrics
of R&B songs of the time. One such record where the phrase was
repeated throughout the song was "Rock and Roll Blues", recorded in
1949 by
Erline "Rock and Roll" Harris.
The phrase was also included in advertisements for the film
Wabash Avenue, starring
Betty
Grable and
Victor Mature. An ad
for the movie that ran April 12, 1950 billed Ms. Grable as "the
first lady of rock and roll" and Wabash Avenue as "the roaring
street she rocked to fame".
Before then, the word "rock" had a long history in the English
language as a metaphor for "to shake up, to disturb or to incite".
"Rocking" was a term used by black gospel singers in the American
South to mean something akin to spiritual
rapture. In 1916, the term "rocking and rolling" was
used with a religious connotation, on the phonograph record "The
Camp Meeting Jubilee" by an unnamed male "quartette". In 1937,
Chick Webb and Ella Fitzgerald recorded "Rock It for Me", which
included the lyric, "So won't you satisfy my soul with the rock and
roll". The verb "roll" was a medieval metaphor which meant "having
sex". Writers for hundreds of years have used the phrases "They had
a roll in the hay" or "I rolled her in the clover". The phrase
"rocking and rolling" was secular black slang for dancing or sex by
the early twentieth century, appearing on record for the first time
in 1922 on
Trixie Smith's "My Man Rocks
Me With One Steady Roll", and as a
double entendre, ostensibly referring to
dancing, but with the subtextual meaning of sex, as in
Roy Brown's "
Good Rocking Tonight" (1948).
The terms were often used together ("rocking and rolling") to
describe the motion of a ship at sea, for example as used in 1934
by the
Boswell Sisters in their song
"Rock and Roll", which was featured in the 1934 film
Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round, and in
Buddy Jones' "Rockin' Rollin' Mama" (1939).
Country singer Tommy Scott was referring to the motion of a
railroad train in the 1951 "Rockin and Rollin'". An alternative
claim is that the origins of "rocking and rolling" can be traced
back to steel driving men working on the railroads in the
Reconstruction South. These men would sing hammer songs to keep the
pace of their hammer swings. At the end of each line in a song, the
men would swing their hammers down to drill a hole into the rock.
The shakers — the men who held the steel spikes that the hammer men
drilled — would "rock" the spike back and forth to clear rock or
"roll", twisting the spike to improve the "bite" of the
drill.
Early rock and roll records
There is much debate as to what should be considered the
first rock & roll record.
Big Joe Turner was one of many
forerunners and his 1939 recording, "
Roll
'Em Pete", is close to '50s rock and roll.
Sister Rosetta Tharpe was also
recording shouting, stomping music in the 1930s and 1940s that in
some ways contained major elements of mid-1950s rock and roll. She
scored hits on the pop charts as far back as 1938 with her gospel
songs, such as "This Train" and "Rock Me", and in the 1940s with
"Strange Things Happenin' Every Day", "Up Above My Head", and "Down
by the Riverside". Other significant records of the 1940s and early
1950s included
Roy Brown's "Good Rocking
Tonight" (1947),
Hank Williams'
"
Move It On Over" (1947),
Amos Milburn's "Chicken Shack Boogie"
(1947),
Jimmy Preston's "
Rock the Joint" (1947),
Fats Domino's "
The
Fat Man" (1949), and
Les Paul
and Mary Ford's "
How High the
Moon" (1951).
A leading contender as the first fully formed rock 'n' roll
recording is "
Rocket 88" by
Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats (which
was, in fact,
Ike Turner and his band The
Kings of Rhythm recording under a different name), recorded by
Sam Phillips for
Sun Records in 1951. Three years later the first
rock and roll song to enter
Billboard
magazine's main sales and airplay charts was Bill Haley's
"
Crazy Man, Crazy" and the first to
top the charts, in July 1955, was his "
Rock Around the Clock" (recorded in
1954), opening the door worldwide for this new wave of popular
culture.
Rolling Stone magazine argued
in 2004 that "
That's All
Right " (1954), Elvis Presley's first single for Sun Records in
Memphis, was the first rock and roll record, but, at the same time,
Big Joe Turner's "
Shake, Rattle
& Roll", later covered by Haley, was already at the top of
the
Billboard R&B
charts.
Early rock and roll used the
twelve-bar
blues chord progression and shared with boogie woogie the four
beats (usually broken down into eight eighth-notes/quavers) to a
bar. Rock and roll however has a greater emphasis on the
backbeat than boogie woogie.
Bo Diddley's 1955 hit "
Bo Diddley", with its b-side "
I'm A Man", introduced a new
beat and unique guitar style that inspired many artists.
Also formative in the sound of rock and roll were
Little Richard and
Chuck Berry.
From the early 1950s, Little Richard combined
gospel with New
Orleans
R&B, heavy backbeat, pounding piano and wailing
vocals. His music, exemplified by songs such as "
Tutti Frutti" (1955), "
Long Tall Sally" (1956) and "
Good Golly, Miss Molly" (1958),
influenced generations of rhythm and blues, rock and
soul music artists. Chuck Berry, with "
Maybellene" (1955), "
Roll over Beethoven" (1956), "
Rock and Roll Music" (1957) and
"
Johnny B. Goode" (1958), refined and developed the
major elements that made rock and roll distinctive, focusing on
teen life and introducing guitar intros and lead breaks that would
be a major influence on subsequent rock music.
Soon rock and roll was the major force in American record sales and
crooners such as
Eddie Fisher,
Perry Como, and
Patti Page, who had dominated the previous decade
of popular music, found their access to the pop charts
significantly curtailed.

The cover of Elvis Presley's debut RCA
Victor album.
Photo taken on January 31, 1955
Rockabilly
"Rockabilly" usually (but not exclusively) refers to the type of
rock and roll music which was played and recorded in the mid 1950s
by white singers such as
Elvis
Presley,
Carl Perkins and
Jerry Lee Lewis, who drew mainly on the
country roots of the music. Many other popular rock and roll
singers of the time, such as Fats Domino and Little Richard, came
out of the black rhythm and blues tradition, making the music
attractive to white audiences, and are not usually classed as
"rockabilly".
In July
1954, Elvis Presley recorded the regional hit "That's All Right
(Mama)" at Sam Phillips' Sun studios
in Memphis. Two months earlier in May 1954,
Bill Haley & His
Comets recorded "Rock Around the Clock". Although only a minor
hit when first released, when used in the opening sequence of the
movie
Blackboard Jungle,
a year later, it really set the rock and roll boom in motion. The
song became one of the biggest hits in history, and frenzied teens
flocked to see Haley and the Comets perform it, causing riots in
some cities. "Rock Around the Clock" was a breakthrough for both
the group and for all of rock and roll music. If everything that
came before laid the groundwork, "Clock" introduced the music to a
global audience.
In 1956 the arrival of rockabilly was underlined by the success of
songs like "
Folsom Prison Blues"
by
Johnny Cash, "
Blue Suede Shoes" by Perkins and "
Heartbreak Hotel" by Presley. For a few
years it became the most commercially successful form of rock and
roll. Later rockabilly acts, particularly performing songwriters
like
Buddy Holly, would be a major
influence on British Invasion acts and particularly on the song
writing of the Beatles and through them on the nature of later rock
music.
Doo wop
Doo wop was one of the most popular forms of 1950s rock and roll,
with an emphasis on multi-part vocal harmonies and meaningless
backing lyrics (from which the genre later gained its name), which
were usually supported with light instrumentation. Its origins were
in African American vocal groups of the 1930s and 40s, like the
Inkspots and the
Mills Brothers, who had enjoyed considerable
commercial success with arrangements based around close harmonies.
They were followed by 1940s R&B vocal acts like
The Orioles,
The
Ravens and
The Clovers, who injected
a strong element of traditional gospel and, increasingly, the
energy of
Jump blues. By 1954, as rock
and roll was beginning to emerge, a number of similar acts began to
cross over from the R&B charts to mainstream success, often
with added honking brass and saxophone, with
The Crows,
The
Penguins,
The El Dorados and
The Turbans all scoring major hits.
Despite the subsequent explosion in records from doo wop acts in
the later 50s, many failed to chart or were one-hit wonders.
Exceptions included
The Platters, with
songs including "
The Great
Pretender" (1955) and
The Coasters
with humorous songs like "
Yakety Yak"
(1958), both of which ranked among the most successful rock and
roll acts of the era. Towards the end of the decade there were
increasing numbers of white, particularly Italian American, singers
taking up Doo Wop, creating all-white groups like
The Mystics and
Dion and the Belmonts and racially
integrated groups like
The Dell
Vikings and
The Impalas. Doo wop
would be a major influence on vocal surf music, soul and early
Merseybeat, including the Beatles.
Cover versions
Many of the earliest white rock and roll hits were covers or
partial re-writes of earlier rhythm and blues or blues songs.
Through the late 1940s and early 1950s,
R&B music had been gaining a stronger beat and a
wilder style, with artists such as Fats Domino and
Johnny Otis speeding up the
tempos and increasing the
backbeat to great popularity on the
juke joint circuit. Before the efforts of Freed
and others, black music was taboo on many white-owned radio
outlets, but artists and producers quickly recognized the potential
of rock and roll. Most of Presley's early hits were covers, like
"
That's All Right" (a countrified
arrangement of a blues number), its flip side "
Blue Moon of Kentucky", "
Baby, Let's Play House", "
Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and "
Hound Dog".
Covers were customary in the music industry at the time; it was
made particularly easy by the
compulsory license provision of
United States copyright law
(still in effect). One of the first successful rock and roll covers
was
Wynonie Harris's transformation
of Roy Brown's "Good Rocking Tonight" from a jump blues to a showy
rocker and the Louis Prima rocker "Oh Babe" in 1950, as well as
Amos Milburn's cover of what may have been the first white rock and
roll record,
Hardrock Gunter's
"Birmingham Bounce" in 1949. The most notable trend, however, was
white pop covers of black R&B numbers. The more familiar sound
of these covers may have been more palatable to white audiences,
there may have been an element of prejudice, but labels aimed at
the white market also had much better distribution networks and
were generally much more profitable. Most famously,
Pat Boone recorded sanitized versions of Little
Richard songs, though Boone found "
Long
Tall Sally" so intense that he couldn't cover it. Later, as
those songs became popular, the original artists' recordings
received radio play as well.
The cover versions were not necessarily straightforward imitations.
For example, Bill Haley's incompletely bowdlerized cover of "Shake,
Rattle and Roll" transformed Big Joe Turner's humorous and racy
tale of adult love into an energetic teen dance number, while
Georgia Gibbs replaced
Etta James's
tough, sarcastic vocal in "Roll With Me, Henry" (covered as "Dance
With Me, Henry") with a perkier vocal more appropriate for an
audience unfamiliar with the song to which James's song was an
answer,
Hank
Ballard's "Work With Me, Annie". Elvis' rock and roll version
of "Hound Dog" was very different from the blues shouter that
Big Mama Thornton had
recorded.
Decline
Commentators have traditionally perceived a decline of rock and
roll in the late 1950s and early 1960s. By 1959, the death of
Buddy Holly,
The Big Bopper and
Richie Valens in a plane crash, the departure
of Elvis for the army, the retirement of Little Richard to become a
preacher, prosecutions of
Jerry Lee
Lewis and
Chuck Berry and the
breaking of the
payola scandal (which
implicated major figures, including Alan Freed, in bribery and
corruption in promoting individual acts or songs), gave a sense
that the initial rock and roll era had come to an end. There was
also a process that has been described as the "feminisation" of
rock and roll, with the charts beginning to be dominated by love
ballads, often aimed at a female audience, and the rise of girl
groups like
The Shirelles and
The Crystals. Some historians of music have
pointed to important and innovative developments that built on rock
and roll in this period, including
multitrack recording, developed by
Les Paul, the electronic treatment of sound
by such innovators as
Joe Meek, and the
Wall of Sound productions of
Phil Spector, continued desegregation of the
charts, the rise of
surf music,
garage rock and the
Twist dance craze.
British rock and roll
In the 1950s, Britain was well placed to receive American rock and
roll music and culture. It shared a common language, had been
exposed to American culture through the stationing of troops in the
country, and shared many social developments, including the
emergence of distinct youth sub-cultures, which in Britain included
the
Teddy Boys.
Trad
Jazz became popular, and many of its musicians were influenced
by related American styles, including boogie woogie and the blues.
The
skiffle craze, led by
Lonnie Donegan, utilised amateurish versions
of American folk songs and encouraged many of the subsequent
generation of rock and roll, folk, R&B and beat musicians to
start performing. At the same time British audiences were beginning
to encounter American rock and roll, initially through films
including
Blackboard
Jungle (1955) and
Rock Around the Clock
(1955). Both films contained the
Bill Haley & His Comets hit
"
Rock Around the Clock", which
first entered the British charts in early 1955 - four months before
it reached the
US pop charts -
topped the British charts later that year and again in 1956, and
helped identify rock and roll with teenage delinquency. American
rock and roll acts such as
Elvis
Presley,
Little Richard and
Buddy Holly thereafter became major
forces in the British charts.
The initial response of the British music industry was to attempt
to produce copies of American records, recorded with session
musicians and often fronted by teen idols. More grassroots British
rock and rollers soon began to appear, including
Wee Willie Harris and
Tommy Steele. During this period American Rock
and Roll remained dominant, however, in 1958 Britain produced its
first "authentic" rock and roll song and star, when
Cliff Richard reached number 2 in the charts
with "
Move It". At the same time, TV shows
such as
Six-Five Special
and
Oh Boy! promoted
the careers of British rock and rollers like
Marty Wilde and
Adam
Faith. Cliff Richard and his backing band
The Shadows, were the most successful home grown
rock and roll based acts of the era. Other leading acts included
Billy Fury,
Joe Brown, and
Johnny Kidd & The Pirates,
whose 1960 hit song "
Shakin' All
Over" became a rock and roll standard.
As interest in rock and roll was beginning to subside in America in
the late 1950s and early 1960s, it was taken up by groups in major
British urban centres like Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham and
London. About the same time, a
British
blues scene developed, initially led by purist blues followers
such as
Alexis Korner and
Cyril Davies who were directly inspired by
American musicians such as
Robert
Johnson,
Muddy Waters and
Howlin' Wolf. Many groups moved towards the
beat music of rock and roll and rhythm
and blues from skiffle, like the
Quarrymen
who became
The Beatles, producing a form
of rock and roll revivalism that carried them and many other groups
to national success from about 1963 and to international success
from 1964, known in America as the
British Invasion. Groups that followed the
Beatles included the beat influenced
Freddie and the Dreamers,
Wayne Fontana and the
Mindbenders,
Herman's Hermits
and the
Dave Clark Five, and the
more blues influenced
The Animals,
The Rolling Stones and
The Yardbirds. As the blues became an
increasingly significant influence, leading to the creation of the
blues-rock of groups like
The Moody Blues,
Small Faces,
The Move,
Traffic and
Cream, and developing into
rock music, the influence of early rock and roll
began to subside.
Cultural impact
The
social effects of
rock and roll were worldwide and massive. Far beyond simply a
musical style, rock and roll influenced lifestyles, fashion,
attitudes, and language. In addition, rock and roll may have helped
the cause of the civil rights movement because both African
American teens and white American teens enjoyed the music. It also
gave rise to many other styles, including
psychedelic rock,
progressive rock,
glam
rock,
alternative rock,
punk and
heavy metal.
Race
Rock and roll appeared at a time when racial tensions in the United
States were entering a new phase, with the beginnings of the
civil rights movement for
desegregation, leading to the
Supreme Court ruling that abolished the policy
of "
separate but equal" in 1954,
but leaving a policy which would be extremely difficult to enforce
in parts of the United States. The combination of elements of white
and
black music in rock and
roll, inevitably provoked strong reactions within the US, with many
condemning its breaking down of barriers based on colour. On the
other side of the argument rock and roll has been seen as both
appropriating African American music for a white audience and white
performers, and conversely, in opening the door for many black
performers to reach a wider audience. Many observers saw rock and
roll as heralding the way for desegregation, in creating a new form
of music that encouraged racial cooperation and shared
experience.
Teen culture
Rock and roll is often identified with the emergence of teen
culture among the first
baby boomer
generation, who had both greater relative affluence, leisure and
who adopted rock and roll as part of a distinct sub-culture. This
involved not just music, absorbed via radio, record buying,
jukeboxes and T.V. programmes like
American Bandstand, but it also
extended to film, clothes, hair, cars and motorbikes, and
distinctive language. The contrast between parental and youth
culture exemplified by rock and roll was a recurring source of
concern for older generations, who worried about juvenile
delinquency and social rebellion, particularly as to a large extent
rock and roll culture was shared by different racial and social
groups. In Britain, where post-war prosperity was more limited,
rock and roll culture became attached pre-existing to the
Teddy Boy movement, largely working class in
origins, and eventually to the longer lasting
rockers. Rock and roll has been seen as
reorientating popular music towards a teen market, often
celebrating teen fashions, as in
Carl
Perkins' "
Blue Suede Shoes"
(1956), or
Dion and the
Belmonts "
Teenager in Love"
(1960).
Dance styles
From its early-1950s inception through the early 1960s, rock and
roll music spawned new
dance
crazes. Teenagers found the irregular rhythm of the backbeat
especially suited to reviving the
jitterbug dancing of the big-band era. "
Sock hops," gym dances, and home basement dance
parties became the rage, and American teens watched
Dick Clark's
American Bandstand to keep up on the
latest dance and fashion styles. From the mid-1960s on, as "rock
and roll" yielded gradually to "rock," later dance genres followed,
starting with the
twist, and leading up to
funk,
disco,
house and
techno.
Notes
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- R. Cantwell Bluegrass Breakdown: The Making of the Old
Southern Sound (Da Capo Press, 1992), ISBN 0252071174.
- P. Hurry, M. Phillips, and M. Richards, Heinemann advanced
music (Heinemann, 2001), pp. 153-4.
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Life (University of Illinois Press, 2000), pp. 21-2.
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era, 1954-1963 (Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2000),
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from R & B to rock 'n' roll Music in American life
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(University of Illinois Press, 2000), p. 99.
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institutions (Routledge, 1993), pp. 236-8.
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economy of Black music (Akashic Books, 2005), p. 134.
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Alternative History of American Popular Music (Oxford: Oxford
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- P. D. Lopes, The rise of a jazz art world (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2002), p. 132
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http://home.earthlink.net/~jaymar41/otherfems.html, retrieved
05/08/09.
- M. Lhde, 333 Book (Mel Bay Publications, 2008).
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Further reading
- The Fifties by David Halberstam (1996), Random House
(ISBN 0-517-15607-5)
- The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll :
The Definitive History of the Most Important Artists and Their
Music by editors James Henke, Holly George-Warren, Anthony
Decurtis, Jim Miller (1992), Random House (ISBN 0-679-73728-6)
- The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll by
Holly George-Warren, Patricia Romanowski, Jon Pareles (2001),
Fireside Press (ISBN 0-7432-0120-5)
- Rock and Roll: A Social History, by Paul Friedlander
(1996), Westview Press (ISBN 0-8133-2725-3)
- The Sound of the City: the Rise of Rock and Roll, by
Charlie Gillett (1970), E.P. Dutton
- "The Rock Window: A Way of Understanding Rock Music" by Paul
Friedlander, in Tracking: Popular Music Studies,
Volume I, number 1, Spring, 1988
See also
External links