Buffista Music 4: Needs More Cowbell!
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
So during this last group's interminable van rides, we got into a big argument about music. Perhaps unsurprising, you get a bunch of artists together, they're going to argue. But I thought the premise for this one was fascinating, and wondered if Buffistas had an opinion.
My opponent's argument was that the umbrella/root of all modern music was rock. I and my compatriot argued that it is blues.
He says that music critics (Rolling Stone?) say it is rock, and I say that the said critics are often subject to a racial bias (okay, I didn't bring up race until a good half-hour into the conversation, but still, I think it figures) that prevents them from acknowledging blues.
I think blues is much more fundamental to the various genres of music that have emerged since the era in question, influencing both form and harmonic structure. I see rock as springing from blues, along with many others.
What do you guys think? Do you see rock as a better overarching term?
Rock *was* born of the blues, so I don't really see how you can skip over it.
Blues all the way.
Rock *was* born of the blues, so I don't really see how you can skip over it.
Yeah. Without blues, there would be no rock.
All hard rock is based on the blues. Blues is, of course, also the root of Jazz.
Country music actually has a lot of blues in it also.
Of course, Gospel is also a huge influence and that rarely gets noted. But all those early uptempo R&B songs are basically gospel structures.
There's also a surprising latin influence that sort of courses through the music (the Bo Diddley beat is actually a latin beat. Same for "Louie Louie").
But yeah, blues is the big river that American music flows from.
You go back far enough and folk, blues, and gospel are pretty much the same thing.
Incidentally, I reviewed a documentary about music in the Civil Rights Movement that played on PBS's American Experience the other night called Soundtrack For A Revolution: [link]
One of the interesting facts that came out of it was that much of the music we associate with the movement was brought to some of the organizers by a couple of white folksingers. True, some of the songs were spirituals, some were folk songs, and some were blues songs, but in the early part of the 20th century, those kinds of genre distinctions were primarily made by the race of the singer and how often they mentioned Jesus.
those kinds of genre distinctions were primarily made by the race of the singer and how often they mentioned Jesus.
This dynamic was noted in the Greil Marcus edited
Stranded
in the chapter on the gospel songwriter Thomas Dorsey (not the Dorsey Brother), where the white writer was working for Civil Rights and some young black kid asked, "How come you keep changing the word "Jesus" to "Freedom" in all these songs?"
Ha! I've actually had Thomas Dorsey in my mix lately.
You know what you want but didn't realize it until right now?
The Clash board game. (Download it and print it out! You can play at home.)
Where'd you see them, Trudy?
May 22nd and 23rd at Terminal 5 in NYC and then May 6 - House of Blues Boston, May 7 - Tower Theater Philly, May 8&9 - Sayerville NJ, May 10 9:30 Club Washington DC.
Here is Frank's epic dive. [link] He's an insane little monkey. He rolled in the air, landed on his back, and kept his guitar up. His feet were in the fourth row, his head in the sixth.
His chief of security, Mehdi (picture Rock Hudson Persian, muscular, and about six foot five) climbed in while another guard held his legs. The poor man didn't even flinch when Frank launched...
I got him a Thank You card, pink with a butterfly.
"Dear Mehdi, Thank you for not killing Frank. I really would have missed my favorite band. If you had dropped the little Monkey on his head no one would have blamed you. In fact, this is Jersey -- we all know by kindergarten how to say, "I din' see NOTHIN'. It was a tragic accident. Poor kid musta fell".
He laughed. The man is gorgeous.
Low plays Toto's Africa
Actually pretty awesome!