Rock 'n' roll: Difference between revisions
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'''Rock and roll''' is the earliest form of [[rock music]], originating in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and deriving from [[rhythm and blues]]. The name "rock and roll" comes from an African-American vernacular reference to sexual activity. Segregation existing in the Southern [[United States]] at the time meant that 'rhythm and blues' was used to describe the 'black' or 'race' version of the music, with its [[jazz]]-derived instrumentation including [[piano]]s and [[saxophone]]s, while the 'white' (European American) form of the music, with its emphasis on [[guitars]], is what is often nowadays often called [[rockabilly]]. | '''Rock and roll''' is the earliest form of [[rock music]], originating in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and deriving from [[rhythm and blues]]. The name "rock and roll" comes from an African-American vernacular reference to sexual activity. Segregation existing in the Southern [[United States]] at the time meant that 'rhythm and blues' was used to describe the 'black' or 'race' version of the music, with its [[jazz]]-derived instrumentation including [[piano]]s and [[saxophone]]s, while the 'white' (European American) form of the music, with its emphasis on [[guitars]], is what is often nowadays often called [[rockabilly]]. | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[Rock music]] | *[[Rock music]] | ||
Revision as of 12:11, 27 January 2008
Rock and roll is the earliest form of rock music, originating in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and deriving from rhythm and blues. The name "rock and roll" comes from an African-American vernacular reference to sexual activity. Segregation existing in the Southern United States at the time meant that 'rhythm and blues' was used to describe the 'black' or 'race' version of the music, with its jazz-derived instrumentation including pianos and saxophones, while the 'white' (European American) form of the music, with its emphasis on guitars, is what is often nowadays often called rockabilly.
Black rock 'n' roll (as it is often abbreviated) musicians include Fats Domino, Little Richard and Lloyd Price; Elvis Presley, Johnny Burnette and Carl Perkins are among the white ones.