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real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
Sat Sep 7, 2019, 11:18 PM Sep 2019

On edit: Lounge music with radio and Rock and Roll history

Last edited Mon Oct 28, 2019, 04:00 PM - Edit history (3)

On Edit: Please feel free to post whatever song or music trivia that suits your mood, in this thread, which will become increasingly informative and interesting. Also the first song, by the Rolling Stones was intended to be a warning about some of the problems excessive alcohol use causes. Heavy drinkers already know about other social and legal problems it causes.

First, "Please allow me to introduce myself" with a song, which was NOT funny at the free Atamont Rock Festival, where Mick Jagger paid the Hell's Angels to conduct security with beer!


Four people died at the Rolling Stones' Altamont Concert, on Dec. 6, 1969, including concertgoer Meredith Hunter, who was stabbed to death by a Hell's Angel biker as he approached the stage with a gun. Three others at the Altamont Free Concert were killed.

As for me, I'm retired. But I worked extensively in media, especially radio.
14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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On edit: Lounge music with radio and Rock and Roll history (Original Post) real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 OP
Well start this thread off on a cheery note why don't you unblock Sep 2019 #1
While the OP was meant to be interesting, it's not cheerful. real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 #3
I think a lounge should have music like this DBoon Sep 2019 #2
How about this powerful "dream" song by Celine Dion. real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 #4
perfect choice nt yellowdogintexas Sep 2019 #7
With the release on DVD of "Rocketman," I think an Elton John song is needed... Archae Sep 2019 #5
Elton John's first hit and a recreation from Rocketman: real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 #6
That's a great Elton John song w/ good musical history Jeffersons Ghost Sep 2019 #8
How about the history of Rock and Roll, first? real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 #9
And now, early radio, featuring a rising star real Cannabis calm Sep 2019 #10
The invention of broadcast radio real Cannabis calm Oct 2019 #11
radio history, not yet edited... real Cannabis calm Oct 2019 #13
Thank you. Very much. abqtommy Oct 2019 #12
Thanks for your reply... real Cannabis calm Nov 2019 #14

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
3. While the OP was meant to be interesting, it's not cheerful.
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 06:32 PM
Sep 2019

Here's another unusual (but slightly sad) song, written by Jagger and Richards, for friend Marianne Faithfull, who did not get as big of a hit from the song as the Rolling Stones did, when it was re-released and sung by Jagger. This song is uncharacteristic of the Rolling Stones. The Rolling Stones collaborated with the London Philharmonic Orchestra on their version:




Marianne Evelyn Gabriel Faithfull (born 29 December 1946) is an English singer, songwriter, and actress. She achieved popularity in the 1960s with the release of her hit single "As Tears Go By" and became one of the lead female artists during the British Invasion in the United States.

Born in Hampstead, London, Faithfull began her career in 1964 after attending a Rolling Stones party, where she was discovered by Andrew Loog Oldham.

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
4. How about this powerful "dream" song by Celine Dion.
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 06:46 PM
Sep 2019
Celine Dion The Power of The Dream Official Live Music Video Atlanta 1996 Olympics

Archae

(46,340 posts)
5. With the release on DVD of "Rocketman," I think an Elton John song is needed...
Sun Sep 8, 2019, 06:51 PM
Sep 2019

And I really like this one by him, "Club At The End Of The Street."

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
6. Elton John's first hit and a recreation from Rocketman:
Mon Sep 9, 2019, 11:52 PM
Sep 2019

The music of Elton John and Bernie Taupin's became Elton John's first hit single, “Your Song.” It is the subject of a new clip from the movie... "I wanted his interpretation of me, through Bernie's lyrics and my music – not just acting."



You can also watch this recreation from the movie Rocketman and read a short clip about the movie.

https://ultimateclassicrock.com/watch-elton-john-create-your-song/

Jeffersons Ghost

(15,235 posts)
8. That's a great Elton John song w/ good musical history
Fri Sep 13, 2019, 06:20 PM
Sep 2019

This is for Freepers, masquerading as Democrats in the Lounge:

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
9. How about the history of Rock and Roll, first?
Sat Sep 14, 2019, 04:27 PM
Sep 2019

Some readers might realize that the roots of Rock, date back much further than Blues hits of the 50's.

The Blues were born when African American slaves began singing, as they picked cotton and corn in the deep south.

Here are a few examples of Blues Songs, by African American artists that were re-released as Rock and Roll hits.

A wildly energetic and gyrating Elvis Presley (the King of Rock and Roll) took to the stage on The Milton Berle Show in 1956 to sing the now legendary rock hit, “Hound Dog.” The controversial televised performance — set to the swoons and giggles of excited female audience members — won the singer his nickname “Elvis the Pelvis.” The song topped the Billboard charts and remains one of the most-loved tunes in rock ‘n’ roll history — but it actually made its first appearance today in August, back in 1952. Rhythm and blues singer Ellie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton recorded her chart-topping original version in Los Angeles.





The term “rock and roll” was early African American slang for sex, and Cleveland record store owner Leo Mintz employed the phrase to get white teens to buy rhythm and blues music without racial prejudice. Early blues recordings have influenced musicians throughout history...

Jazz trombonist Kai Winding and his orchestra first recorded the Jerry Ragovoy - born September 4, 1930 - penned “Time is on My Side” in 1963, but the only refrain he included was the song’s title and “You’ll come runnin’ back.” It featured backup vocals from powerhouse singers Cissy Houston, Dionne Warwick, and Dee Dee Warwick. Soulful Irma Thomas recorded her version of the song in 1964, with the help of songwriter Jimmy Norman, who elaborated on the lyrics. It became their first top ten hit in the US and an enduring classic.His best-known composition "Time Is on My Side" (written under the pseudonym of Norman Meade) was made famous by The Rolling Stones. Ragovoy also wrote "Stay With Me", which was originally recorded by Lorraine Ellison and made famous by Bette Midler in her film The Rose.


Kansas Joe McCoy/Memphis Minnie and “When the Levee Breaks,” Otis Rush and “I Can’t Quit You Baby,” and Muddy Waters “You Shook Me”

Husband and wife blues music duo Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie wrote a song in response to the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927, which devastated the region and forced many African Americans to relocate to the Midwest. Led Zeppelin covered the track in 1970. Jimmy Page called it “the most subtle thing” on the English rock band’s fourth album, elaborating on the lyrics and musical arrangements.

Led Zeppelin also borrowed from blues musicians Otis Rush and Muddy Waters for “I Can’t Quit You Baby” and “You Shook Me” — both songs written by Willie Dixon — which appeared on their debut album.


Blind Willie McTell and “Statesboro Blues”

Most people are familiar with The Allman Brothers’ slide riffs when it comes to the song “Statesboro Blues,” but Piedmont and ragtime blues singer and guitarist Blind Willie McTell demonstrated his own “astonishingly rich” and “dazzling” guitar work on the song in 1928.



real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
10. And now, early radio, featuring a rising star
Sun Sep 22, 2019, 02:26 AM
Sep 2019

Hank Williams never learned to read music and based his compositions on storytelling and personal experience. After school and on weekends, Williams sang and played his guitar on the sidewalk in front of the WSFA radio studio, in Montgomery, Alabama. His recent win at the Empire Theater and the street performances caught the attention of WSFA producers who occasionally invited him to perform on air. So many listeners contacted the radio station asking for more of "the singing kid", possibly influenced by his mother, that the producers hired him to host his own 15-minute show twice a week for a weekly salary of $15.00.

Move It On Over is a song written and recorded, in 1957, by Hank Williams. The song was his first major hit, reaching #4 on the Billboard Singles chart. The song is considered one of the earliest examples of rock and roll music.

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
11. The invention of broadcast radio
Sat Oct 19, 2019, 09:26 AM
Oct 2019

Guglielmo Marconi, the First Marquis of Marconi, lived from 25 April 1874 until 20 July 1937. He was an Italian inventor, and electrical engineer, known for his pioneering work on long-distance radio transmission, development of Marconi's law, and a radio telegraph system. He invented radio and shared the 1909 Nobel Prize in Physics with Karl Ferdinand Braun in recognition of their contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy. Marconi made the first transatlantic transmission in 1901.

Although Australia's first officially recognized broadcast was made in 1906, some sources claim that there were transmissions in Australia in 1897, either conducted solely by Professor William Henry Bragg of the University of Adelaide or by Bragg in conjunction with G.W. Selby of Melbourne.

Reginald Aubrey Fessenden was born October 6, 1866 and died July 22, 1932. He was a Canadian-born inventor, who did most of his work in the United States. He claimed U.S. citizenship through his American-born father. During his life he received hundreds of patents in various fields, most notably ones related to radio and sonar.

Fessenden is best known for his pioneering work developing radio technology, including the foundations of amplitude modulation (AM) radio, at approximately 50 kHz. His achievements included the first transmission of speech by radio, in 1900 and the first two-way radiotelegraphic communication across the Atlantic Ocean in 1906. In 1932 he reported that, in late 1906, he made the first radio broadcast of entertainment and music, although a lack of verifiable details has led to some doubts about this claim.

Radio experiments began at Beloit College with the arrival of Physics Instructor Charles Aaron Culver in 1907. During his time at the college he initiated pioneering work in radio and wireless, leaving in 1920 to join the faculty of Carleton College, where he was also instrumental in college radio. Beloit College held one of the earliest licensed stations at a small college, with WEBW, having its initial broadcast in October, 1924. Beloit’s current station, WBCR-FM, is still broadcasting today.

Charles David "Doc" Herrold, lived from November 16, 1875 until July 1, 1948. He was an American inventor and pioneer radio broadcaster, who began experimenting with audio radio transmissions in 1909. Beginning in 1912 he became the first person to make entertainment broadcasts on a regular schedule, from his station in San Jose, California.

Eventually, the government adopted a regulation, which took effect on December 1, 1921, requiring that anyone planning to transmit entertainment to the general public had to obtain a Limited Commercial license. So, on December 9, 1921, a license with the randomly assigned call sign of KQW was issued to Herrold, in San Jose. Operation of the broadcasting station was financed by sales of radio equipment by the Herrold Radio Laboratory.


real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
13. radio history, not yet edited...
Mon Oct 28, 2019, 10:44 PM
Oct 2019

Last edited Tue Oct 29, 2019, 06:58 PM - Edit history (2)

EARLY COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT

Unlike the telephone, which was quickly adopted for business and home use, it took many years before radio's financial returns would match its great potential. In the United States, this resulted in a series of companies which sold stock at vastly inflated prices, backed mostly by vastly inflated visions of the companies' profits. Industry Comments appearing in 1901 issues of Western Electrician warned that the radio "field is still so uncertain that investors, remembering the liquid-air fiasco, should relinquish their money only after assuring themselves that display advertisements and glowing prospectuses are based on sound common sense". Wireless Telegraphy Stock, in the November 30, 1901 Electrical Review, noted the high prices already being paid for stock in companies with minimal assets and limited prospects, and opined that "The American public is to-day very much the same as it was when the late illustrious P. T. Barnum made his discovery that it liked to be fooled." In the November, 1904 issue of The Electrical Age, Wireless Telegraph Earnings warned that, even though "alluring" advertisements promoting stock sales continued to appear in the daily newspapers, there still was no reason to believe that the operations of any of the U.S. radio companies were even remotely profitable.
https://earlyradiohistory.us/sec006.htm

Live musicians were so terrified of recording their music FDR had to step in
They even went on strike against radio stations

For the music industry, the advent of recorded sound was an abstract, shocking technological development that looked like an existential threat. Live musicians were suddenly not necessary for the experience of music. Once the same thing, the music industry and recording industry were now competitors. Musicians were not happy about it.

In 1906, the famous conductor John Philip Sousa wrote a scathing critique of recorded music in Appleton's Magazine titled “The Menace of Mechanical Music,” in which he painted a bleak future for the art. The illustrations that accompanied the piece underscored his techno-dystopian vision.


Sousa foretold the death of the love song and military bands being replaced with “a huge phonograph, mounted on a 100 H. P. automobile” playing his Stars and Stripe Forever. He even lamented that “when a mother can turn on the phonograph with the same ease that she applies to the electric light, will she croon her baby to slumber with sweet lullabies, or will the infant be put to sleep by machinery?”

e then wondered if children would become human phonographs “without soul or expression.” Sousa also argued recorded music would be the death of the amateur musician, arguing, “When music can be heard in the homes without the labor of study and close application, and without the slow process of acquiring a technic, it will be simply a question of time when the amateur disappears entirely.”

Turns out the opposite was true, as research by musicologist Mark Katz showed, the number of amateur musicians and music teachers actually went up in the early years of recorded music.

He then wondered if children would become human phonographs “without soul or expression.” Sousa also argued recorded music would be the death of the amateur musician, arguing, “When music can be heard in the homes without the labor of study and close application, and without the slow process of acquiring a technic, it will be simply a question of time when the amateur disappears entirely.”

Turns out the opposite was true, as research by musicologist Mark Katz showed, the number of amateur musicians and music teachers actually went up in the early years of recorded music.

Further, the rise of “talking pictures” threatened movie theater bands. And an advertising effort was put together, in which the AFM called the phenomenon an “abject surrender to the cold commercialism of the present age” and “a serious menace to cultural growth.”

After taking on theaters, AFM moved on to radio stations and juke boxes. On August 1st, 1942, the organization got a new president: the same James Petrillo who authored “The Menace of Mechanical Music.” On his first day, he announced a musicians’ strike that prevented its 138,000 members from recording any more of their performances.

The Department of Justice called the union’s orders “unjust both to labor and the public,” and in 1943, the chairman of the FCC said the strike was drying up music on the radio. A year later, President Roosevelt announced he would begin a study of whether there was any legal action that can be taken to compel James C. Petrillo to end the ban. The president also telegrammed Petrillo, telling him, “What you regard as your loss will certainly be your country’s gain.”

The strike lasted two years, with the record labels finally giving in when their stockpiles of recordings ran out. The AFM would strike again a few years later when an anti-union law stopped them imposing some of the terms agreed to with the record companies, but by that time recorded sound was thought of as synonymous with the music industry, rather than a competitor.

Other means of reproducing sound eventually emerged, and they became the new enemy. The magnetic recording age was coming, and home recording on cassette tapes was the next crisis on the horizon.
https://timeline.com/live-musicians-were-so-terrified-of-recording-their-music-fdr-had-to-step-in-c03b6af16944

Payola
The term "payola" was coined by Variety in 1938 to refer to gifts, favors or cash surreptitiously dispensed by record companies to get orchestra leaders and disc jockeys to play their songs.Payola - The paying of cash or gifts in exchange for airplay.

"Payola" is a contraction of the words "pay" and"Victrola" (LP record player), and entered the English language via the record business.

The use of financial and other illegal inducements went all the way back to 1880s. They were used by publishers to entice popular singers to perform their songs. It soon became part of the plugging game. Over the years some controls were instituted, but none were effective, since those expressing outrage were mist often responsible for and dependent on it.

The term payola first used in 1916 by Variety in a front page editorial condemning the practice calling it "direct payment evil."

Billboard stated payola was rampant during vaudeville of the 20s, and the big band era of the 1930s and 1940s. "The cancer of payola cannot be pinned on rock and roll."
Billboard Magazine.

In at least two instances there was record of ASCAP"s direct involvement in payola. During the thirties Harry Richman and Paul Whiteman both received financial tribute from ASCAP to pay certain songs. in 1938, the Federal Trade Commission notified ASCAP that payola was a form of bribery and was unethical. the FCC pressured ASCAP to come out publicly against payola and advise its members to stop. ASCAP told its members to stop, but had no effect.

Payola had a long history in music, predating both rock and roll and independent record companies. Legislative Hearings. Perfected by the big publishing companies, payola was widely accepted as a more or less legitimate form of promotion. ASCAP protested BMI's sponsoring disc jockey publishing ventures as a refined form of payola.

1940s Variety and Billboard pop charts were used as a measure of successful music promotion. their seeming objectively was laden with controls that made them tools of large publishers and record companies. They were made up of not just sales, but of subjective reports from sampling stores, radio stations and jukebox operators. Music producers used incentives ranging from discounts to bribes to entice retailers to over-report sales and plays to achieve higher chart position. Using these techniques were called vote gathering. With higher chart positions other broadcasters began playing records, consumers bought the record resulting in hits. When disc jockeys became key record companies wooed them by any means

Increased competition tempted many to resort to bribery to access the market. In 1942 Music Publisher's Contact Employees Association wanted to end this. Offered a $500 War Bond for information on anyone offering or accepting payola. When no charges were made Music Publishers Contact Employees Association president Johnny O'Connor declared payola dead, ignoring the fact that the incentive to perform greater than report. Two years later wrote stricter rules to check growth this too had little effect more charges and useless responses.

National Association of Broadcasters tried to deal with the problem by limiting the number of songs individual publishers could have performed on the air and bandleaders, singers and programmers could play. No more than fifteen per hundred performances with the remaining eighty-five from at least seventy other publishers. It never went into effect. In 1944 Warner Brothers threatened to sue against the sponsor of Your Hit Parade, charging the method of selecting songs was illegitimate, arbitrary and often discriminatory. Since performance increased demand for sheet music and records it was very important in breaking hits. If a was quickly dropped cancellation of orders poured. The producers claim the selections based on popularity, determined from record and sheet music sales and network radio play. Warner's suit ended up going nowhere.

In the early 50s music industry publications warned record companies and radio stations that if they did not clean house they would face a crisis of public confidence and possible government regulation. Variety said payola was a 'Frankenstein" rampant in rhythm and blues and country music. a normal operating expense for independents, payola forced the majors to make deals with disc jockeys "to unload their merchandise." cash boc called for a moratorium and prosecution for anyone that betrayed the public trust.

A few stations took steps to restrict payola. In 1952 WMFS distributed a booklet to its employees calling payola a "monster" and promising any disk jockey who took it would be fired. Also DJs were not to mention names of record companies of the records or expressing their opinions about them: "the audience is not interested whether it is Capitol, Decca, Columbia or Victor release. It is interested in the selection and the artist."

Efforts to eliminate payola were half-hearted and ineffective. Record companies came to accept it as a cost of doing business. many saw it as a victimless crime having having little or no impact on consumer choice.

After the U.S. House Oversight Oversight Committee ended the committee wrote a bill making payola a federal offense, prohibited quiz frauds and set fines of up to $10,000, imprisonment for up to one year, or both for broadcasters who "willfully or repeatedly" violated the Communications Statute or FCC rules. The FTC outlawed payola as unfair competition and the IRS declared that the companies that engaged in payola had committed bribery and the payments weren't deductible as business expenses. The bill was signed into law in September.

“Pay-for-play,” in which airtime is bought but the payments are disclosed, is still around. In January 1998, Flip/Interscope Records paid a Portland, Oregon radio station $5,000 to play one Limp Bizkit song 50 times over a five-week period. The band was able to generate enough interest to play a successful concert there. Other stations showed interest in their music, and Limp Bizkit broke into the music biz in a big way–a great argument for free enterprise if you’re a Limp Bizkit fan. However, the argument against pay-for-play, even if the parties are upfront about it, is that it allows big labels to buy their artists’ way onto the charts. It’s not common now, and with so many radio stations owned by conglomerates, there’s less opportunity for the local market dealmaking that was so prevalent in payola’s heyday.
https://www.history-of-rock.com/payola.htm

real Cannabis calm

(1,124 posts)
14. Thanks for your reply...
Thu Nov 7, 2019, 05:20 PM
Nov 2019

Soon, I plan to put ALL my replies together with the first OP and move it to another forum.

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