Summary

This document provides an overview of the history of country music, covering its origins, development, and key figures. It explores different styles like old-time music, Western swing, honky-tonk, and bluegrass, illustrating the evolution of the genre over time.

Full Transcript

**History of Country Music** Country music was one of the first genres of modern American popular music, and **old-time music** was its earliest style. It developed in the southeastern states of the USA as a mix of folk music from the British Isles, church music and African American blues. It was p...

**History of Country Music** Country music was one of the first genres of modern American popular music, and **old-time music** was its earliest style. It developed in the southeastern states of the USA as a mix of folk music from the British Isles, church music and African American blues. It was played on instruments like **acoustic** guitar, **mandolin**, **autoharp**, **fiddle** and the **banjo**. Old-time music was first recorded in the 1920s, with recordings of the Carter Family becoming the most popular. A. P. Carter collected folk songs and also wrote new songs, and he sang them in harmony with his guitar-playing sister-in-law Maybelle and his wife Sarah, who also played autoharp. Songs like *Can The Circle Be Unbroken (By and By)* and *Wildwood Flower* became hit records, and the Carter Family became the first stars of country music. Jimmie Rodgers, another of country music\'s earliest stars, was recorded at the same **recording sessions** as the Carters. Jimmie was taught how to play guitar and sing blues and work chants by African Americans in railroad gangs in which he worked. He also heard old-time music and folk songs and combined all these styles in his own songs. He often used a vocal technique called **yodelling**, and his first hit record, *Blue Yodel*, sold nearly half a million copies in 1927. Country Music 1930 - 1960 ------------------------- Before television, American families often sat together and listened to the radio. One of the most popular programs was a live country-music variety show called the \"Grand Ole Opry\". It was broadcast from Nashville, Tennessee, which had become the centre of the country-music business. Listeners heard old-time music as well as another style called **Western music**. This style often had horse-like clip-clop rhythms and songs about lovesick cowboys and gun-fighting outlaws. Western music became popular in the 1930s and 40s when singing cowboys began appearing in Hollywood cowboy movies called \"Westerns\". Singing cowboys like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers became huge country-music stars, and Nashville executives decided the cowboy image was better for country music than the **hillbilly** image of old-time music. They renamed the genre \"Country and Western music\" and began dressing their musicians in cowboy clothes. Meanwhile, a style of Western dance music called **Western swing** became popular in Texas, Oklahoma and California. Western swing bands used **amplified** instruments like **pedal steel guitar** to create music loud enough to be heard in large dance halls. Their music was a lively mix of Western country music and swing jazz, and one of the most popular bands was Bob Wills and The Texas Playboys. Another style called **rockabilly** developed when Western swing bands began playing R&B songs as well as country songs. When singers like Elvis Presley heard this new mix of country music and R&B, they formed rockabilly bands with acoustic guitar, electric guitar, **stand-up bass** and drums. Elvis had several rockabilly hits early in his career, as did Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash. Cash became one of country music\'s biggest artists in the 60s when he combined the sounds of rockabilly with those of **honky tonk**. He soon became known as the \"man in black\" because he wore black clothes instead of cowboy clothes, as did Roy Orbison who wore dark sunglasses as well to complete his look. Honky tonk first developed in the 1940s in working-class honky tonk bars near the oil fields of Texas. Honky tonk bands usually included acoustic and pedal steel guitars, fiddle, stand-up bass and drums, and the songs were often about loneliness, love, heartbreak and pain. Working-class people could relate to these songs, especially those of country music\'s greatest singer-songwriter Hank Williams. Hank drank too much, had a difficult relationship with his wife Audrey, and died young at 29. But in his short, troubled life he wrote hundreds of beautiful and powerful songs, many of which have become country-music **standards** like *Lovesick Blues, Cold Cold Heart* and *I\'m So Lonesome I Could Cry*. Other important honky tonk artists include Ernest Tubb, Lefty Frizzell and Jean Shepard. When mainstream country music has become too sweet and **commercial**, younger musicians have often looked to honky tonk for inspiration when seeking a more honest and **authentic** new style of their own. Another style called **bluegrass** began in the 40s when Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys led a **revival** of old-time country music. It featured stringed instruments like guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle and bass, and vocals were usually sung in two, three or four part harmony. Bluegrass was revived in the 70s by **folk rock** bands like the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and again more recently after the soundtrack album from the movie *O Brother, Where Art Thou?* topped the US album charts in 2001. In the mid-1950s, record companies in Nashville were losing sales to chart-topping rock & roll artists like Little Richard and Elvis Presley. To compete, Nashville producers like Chet Atkins created a new style aimed at white adults who rarely bought country music. They recorded sweet ballads with orchestral strings and choirs instead of traditional country instruments like fiddle, guitar and banjo, and the plan worked. Before long singers like Jim Reeves, Patsy Cline, George Jones and Tammy Wynette were topping the charts and Nashville was making money again. Country Music from 1960 to Now ------------------------------ Many country artists in the 1960s didn\'t like what Nashville had done to country music, and this led to new styles like the Bakersfield sound and **outlaw country**. In Bakersfield, California, artists like Buck Owens and Merle Haggard led an electric guitar-driven revival of honky tonk, while Nashville artists like Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson and Johnny Cash added the progressive themes of folk music and the rebellious attitude of rockabilly to the mix to create the outlaw country sound. In later years these four artists recorded and toured together as The Highwaymen. In the mid-60s a new style called **country rock** began to develop when musicians like Gram Parsons, Bob Dylan and Neil Young began adding elements of country music to their folk rock sound. After Parsons joined chart-topping rock band the Byrds in 1968, they released *Sweetheart of the Rodeo*, one of country rock\'s greatest albums. Bob Dylan also began mixing elements of country music into his folk rock sound in the mid-60s. Dylan had been writing poetic folk songs since the early 60s, especially **protest songs** like *Blowin\' in the Wind* and *A Hard Rain\'s a-Gonna Fall*. When he switched from acoustic to electric guitar in 1965, his sound moved closer to rock. Then in 1969 he returned to country music and recorded *Nashville Skyline* with some of the city\'s finest musicians. In the 70s and beyond he continued to produce country rock, as did artists like Gene Clark, Neil Young, Emmylou Harris and Linda Ronstadt. Another style that appeared in the 60s and continued into the 70s and beyond is **country pop** in which the story-telling lyrics and lilting sounds of country music are combined with the catchy melodies of pop. While the genre has produced a lot of second-rate music, it has also produced many fine songs by highly-talented artists like Bobbie Gentry, Glen Campbell, Kris Kristofferson, Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton. Throughout this period Nashville was producing a lot of smooth, easy-listening country music that many artists and fans felt was dull and overly-commercial, and a backlash began. It started in the 80s when artists like George Strait, Randy Travis and Dwight Yoakam revived the more authentic sounds and themes of honky tonk and outlaw country to create a style called \"new traditionalist\". At the same time alternative rock bands like Cowboy Junkies and REM began adding mandolin and other country instruments to their sound. Interest in country music soon spread within the alternative rock scene, and before long a new style of country rock called \"alt-country\" developed, with bands like Uncle Tupelo, Wilco and Son Volt leading the way. Since 2000, country music has reflected the politically-divided state of the USA as a whole. Two main camps emerged, one reflecting more conservative values and the other reflecting more progressive liberal values. The conservative side produced \"bro-country\" aimed at white men who tended to oppose gun-control, feminism and minority rights. On the progressive side **americana** emerged as a mixture of traditional country music with working-class folk music, attracting artists like Steve Earle and Rhiannon Giddens. Since 2015, award-winning artists like Miranda Lambert, Chris Stapleton, The Chicks and Brandi Carlile have also been expressing more progressive views within a wide range of contemporary country styles. [[[THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FOLK AND COUNTRY MUSIC]]{.smallcaps}](https://grizzlyrose.com/the-difference-between-folk-and-country-music/) What is Country Music? **[Country music has its roots] in the American southeast and west. Its stories tell tales of lonely cowboys, lost cattle, love gone wrong, and hard-drinking at the local saloon.** Originally, country music was accompanied largely by string-instruments: the acoustic guitar, the banjo, the upright bass, and the mandolin.  Country vocals are simple ballads, danceable tunes, or melancholy romance. Harmony---if present---is simple often involving only two or three voices. What is Folk Music? **Here's another difference between country and folk music. While [county music is an offshoot of folk], there are disparities in origin, sound, and theme.** Folk music started in the eighteen hundreds. American folk songs have origins in the Revolutionary and Colonization period when settlers from the British Isles came to America. [Traditional ballads] like "Barbara Allen" were passed down by the immigrants to their children. They were also introduced to their new country. Folk music is unique to an area and universal within that community. Folk singers often weren't trained. They often played whatever instruments they had at their disposal. Folk also extends into the twentieth century when a new type evolved. It was called the second wave of folk music or the folk revival. Folk music had its heyday in the 1960s. **Similarities between the Two** Origins Both folk and county music are rooted in stories of the working class. They are the music of blue-collar Americans. Both genres blended styles from Irish Celtic melodies and English tunes. Sounds Folk music and traditional country music sound a lot alike. Both have a repetition of simple melodies. Both have lyrics that tell stories. Both use repetition of a catchy chorus or even a memorable phrase to engage their audiences and tempt them to sing along. Rhythm Just as chords and melodies for folk and country were simple, so, too rhythms were easy to tap, clap, and play spoons too. Easy regular rhythms encourage listeners to participate. Instruments Both folk and country instruments often included strings like a guitar, fiddle, upright bass, and mandolin. In addition, folk groups often used whatever they could find. So, a folk group might have someone playing spoons or a washboard, or a washtub bass. While country music shares the stringed instruments of folk singers, they added steel and electric guitars, and often percussion instruments. Artists **A number of musicians dabbled in both folk and country. Examples include** - - - - Emmylou Harris, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash also recorded both folk and country. Jewel started in country but also sings folk and pop. BJ Thomas, Brandi Carlyle, and Lucinda Williams are pop singers who also sang country. Differences between Country and Folk Music Folk music's breadth is far wider than country. In essence, country is one part of folk. It is a unique style of folk music. Folk music---even in its second wave---didn't stray from its pure form.  Country, on the other hand, has muddied the waters between country and pop and even ventured into rock. **Themes** A country songwriter once quipped country songs were about: mama, trains, trucks, prison or getting' drunk. He wasn't off the mark. If you add religion, patriotism, the south, loving and losing, sexy women, feeling lonesome, red-neck life, and yearning for the past, you about have it. Folk themes include protest songs like those of Bob Dylan, historical events like "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gord Lightfoot, and the war songs of Johnny Horton. Other folk songs captured nostalgia for places or ways of life lost like "Shenandoah", "My Old Kentucky Home". Many folk songs are work songs. These include sea chanties, railroad songs, and cowboy songs. Folks songs address current issues like slavery, war, backbreaking jobs, social unrest, and political issues. A good example is "Ohio" written about the Kent State shootings by Neil Young. **Folk songs often take on a regional flavor. Examples include Cajun music, songs of the South and Texas-southwest songs. Appalachian and Midwest folk songs are also regional folk music**. Sounds Folk songs use acoustic instruments. They often rely on found instruments to establish a beat. These might include sticks, spoons, washboards, food stamps, handclaps, and finger snaps. Additionally, folk songs change from generation to generation largely because they were passed on orally. Other key sounds of note: - - - - Rhythm Folk was light rhythm instrumentation while country can often involve a powerful drum part. What is the difference between folk and country music? Both folk songs and country music have roots in early Appalachian music. The difference between the two have become both less and more. Folk and country crossover artists have dotted the line between the two. Instrument changes have blurred differences too. However, with country moving more and more toward pop, it is often hard to tell country is still country---or is it? Examples include the complicated melodies and big sounds of artists like Tim McGraw, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood, and Shania Twain. Even long-time country singers like Reba McIntire and Kenny Rogers are using full orchestra background music.

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