How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll: An Alternative History of American Popular Music

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Oxford University Press, 2009 M06 1 - 336 pages
"There are no definitive histories," writes Elijah Wald, in this provocative reassessment of American popular music, "because the past keeps looking different as the present changes." Earlier musical styles sound different to us today because we hear them through the musical filter of other styles that came after them, all the way through funk and hip hop. As its blasphemous title suggests, How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll rejects the conventional pieties of mainstream jazz and rock history. Rather than concentrating on those traditionally favored styles, the book traces the evolution of popular music through developing tastes, trends and technologies--including the role of records, radio, jukeboxes and television --to give a fuller, more balanced account of the broad variety of music that captivated listeners over the course of the twentieth century. Wald revisits original sources--recordings, period articles, memoirs, and interviews--to highlight how music was actually heard and experienced over the years. And in a refreshing departure from more typical histories, he focuses on the world of working musicians and ordinary listeners rather than stars and specialists. He looks for example at the evolution of jazz as dance music, and rock 'n' roll through the eyes of the screaming, twisting teenage girls who made up the bulk of its early audience. Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, and the Beatles are all here, but Wald also discusses less familiar names like Paul Whiteman, Guy Lombardo, Mitch Miller, Jo Stafford, Frankie Avalon, and the Shirelles, who in some cases were far more popular than those bright stars we all know today, and who more accurately represent the mainstream of their times. Written with verve and style, How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll shakes up our staid notions of music history and helps us hear American popular music with new ears.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Amateurs and Executants
13
2 The Ragtime Life
25
3 Everybodys Doin It
36
4 Alexanders Got a Jazz Band Now
49
5 Cake Eaters and Hooch Drinkers
60
6 The King of Jazz
71
7 The Record the Song and the Radio
84
12 Selling the American Ballad
150
13 Rock the Joint
166
14 Big Records for Adults
184
15 Teen Idyll
199
16 Twisting Girls Change the World
213
17 Say You Want a Revolution
230
The Rock Blot and the Disco Diagram
248
Notes
255

8 Sons of Whiteman
97
9 Swing That Music
111
10 Technology and Its Discontents
126
11 Walking Floors and Jumpin Jive
138
Bibliography
281
Index
291
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About the author (2009)

Elijah Wald is a musician, writer and historian, whose books include Escaping the Delta: Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues; Narcocorrido, about the modern Mexican ballads of drug trafficking; The Mayor of MacDougal Street (with Dave Van Ronk), and Global Minstrels: Voices of World Music. He is currently teaching at UCLA, and contributing regular pieces to the Los Angeles Times. For more information, please visit www.elijahwald.com.

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