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This well-organized, visually interesting book offers an in-depth examination of the social history of rock-and-roll. "Rockin' in Time" emphasizes several main themes, including the importance of African-American culture in the origins and development of rock music.
Tracing rock from its inception-from American blues to the present-this book shows how rock-and-roll has reflected and sometimes changed American and British culture for the last fifty years.
Topics covered in this comprehensive history are: the blues and racism; Elvis Presley and rockabilly; Dick Clark and Don Kirshner; the California sound; Bob Dylan; the British invasion; Motown; acid rock; campus unrest and militant blues; the 1970s; punk rock; MTV; Generation X; the rave revolution; hip hop; and nu-metal.
An excellent reference work for rock fans, music industry employees, those employed by radio stations, and those in music and performer-related marketing.
New To This Edition
- MyMusicKit online website which includes documentaries, video, robust assessment questions, and additional features
- Full four color design to update the text’s look
- Chapters on genres such as folk rock, heavy metal, and the most recent development in the music industry, Music and the Internet
Acknowledgments | |
The Blues, Rock-and-Roll, and Racism | |
The Birth of the Blues | |
From the Rural South to the Urban North | |
Muddy Waters and Chicago R&B | |
The Wolf | |
Other Chess Discoveries | |
The Independent Sweepstakes | |
The R&B Market | |
From R&B to Rock-and-Roll: Little Richard and Chuck Berry | |
Social Change and Rock-and-Roll | |
Racist Backlash | |
The Music Industry versus Rock-and-Roll | |
The Blanching of Rock | |
The Story of Arthur Big Bo | |
Crudup | |
Elvis and Rockabilly | |
Rockabilly Roots | |
The Rockabilly Sound | |
Sun Records and Elvis | |
The Kille | |
Blue Suede Shoe | |
Johnny Cash | |
The Sun Rockabilly Stable | |
The Decca Challenge | |
Rockabilly Sweeps the Nation | |
The Selling of Elvis Presley | |
Reactions Against the Presley Mania | |
Elvis Goes to Hollywood | |
The Teen Market: From Bandstan | |
to Girl Groups | |
Lost Idols | |
The Booming Teen Market | |
Dick Clark andAmerican Bandstand | |
Clark's Creations | |
The Payola Investigation | |
Don Kirshner Takes Charge | |
The Sounds on the Streets | |
The Girl Groups | |
The Dream | |
Surfboards and Hot Rods: California, Here We Come | |
The New American Empire | |
Surfing U.S.A. | |
The Sound of the Surf | |
The Beach Boys | |
Jan and Dean | |
Drag City | |
Bob Dylan and the New Frontier | |
Songs of Protest | |
The Folk Revival | |
Civil Rights in a New Frontier | |
Bob Dylan: The Music of Protest | |
Joan Baez | |
The Singer-Activists | |
Motown: The Sound of Integration | |
Motown: The Early Years | |
Civil Rights in the Great Society | |
The Sound of Integration | |
The Supremes on the Assembly Line | |
The Motown Stable | |
The British Invasion of America: The Beatles | |
The Mods, the Rockers, and the Skiffle Craze | |
The Early Beatles | |
Manager Brian Epstein | |
The Toppermost of the Poppermost | |
The Beatles Invade America | |
The Mersey Beat | |
The Monkees | |
The British Blues Invasion and Garage Rock | |
British Blues and the Rolling Stones | |
The Stones Turn Raunchy | |
Success | |
The Who | |
The British Blues Onslaught | |
American Garage Rock | |
Folk Rock | |
Dylan's Disenchantment | |
Folk Rock | |
Acid Rock | |
The Beats | |
The Reemergence of the Beats: The New York Connection | |
The Haight-Ashbury Scene | |
The Hippie Culture | |
Acid Rock: The Trip Begins | |
Rock-and-Roll Revolution | |
Psychedelic London | |
The Decline and Fall of Hippiedom | |
Fire from the Streets | |
Soul Music | |
Black Soul in White America | |
Militant Blues on Campus | |
Campus Unrest | |
The Psychedelic Blues | |
Heavy Metal Thunder | |
The Rebirth of the Blues | |
Woodstock and the End of an Era | |
Escaping into the Seventies | |
Miles Ahead | |
Sweet Seventies Soul | |
Classical Rock | |
Back to the Country | |
Seventies Folk | |
The Era of Excess | |
The M | |
Decade | |
Elton John | |
Heavy-metal Theater | |
Art Pop in the Arena | |
Funk from Outer Space | |
Disco | |
Corporate Rock | |
Punk Rock and the New Generation | |
New York Punk | |
The Sex Pistols and British Punk | |
The British Punk Legion | |
Rock Against Racism | |
The Jamaican Connection: Reggae and Ska | |
The Independent Labels | |
Right-Wing Reaction | |
The Decline of Punk | |
Post-Punk Depression | |
The New Wave | |
I Want My MTV | |
MTV and the Video Age | |
The New Romantics | |
MTV Goes Electro-Pop | |
MTV and Michaelmania | |
The Jackson Legacy | |
Pop Goes the Metal | |
The Promise of Rock-and-Roll | |
Trickling Down with Ronald Reagan | |
The Boss | |
The Benefits | |
Children of the Sixties | |
Classic Rock and the Compact Disc | |
Country Boomers | |
The Generation X Blues | |
The Hardcore Generation | |
Thrash Metal | |
Death Metal | |
The Industrial Revolution | |
Grunge | |
The Rave Revolution and Britpop | |
House and Techno | |
A Rave New World | |
The Dark Side of the Jungle | |
Chillin' | |
Out | |
BritPop | |
The Hip-Hop Nation | |
The Old School | |
The Second Wave | |
Gangsta | |
Young, Gifted, and Black | |
The Return ofShaft | |
Hip-Hop Pop | |
New Jack Swing | |
Spice World | |
Hip Hop Grows Up | |
Metal Gumbo: Rockin' | |
in the Twenty-first Century | |
Nu-Metal Pioneers | |
The Rap-Rock Explosion | |
Progressive Metal | |
Nu-Metal Anthems | |
The Internet, Jam Bands and Three Shades of the Blues | |
The Age of the Internet | |
The Download Mania | |
The Reinvention of the Music Industry | |
Jam Bands | |
Life in Wartime | |
The Singers-Songwriters | |
Blues from the Garage | |
Black Metal | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
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