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Chapter 8 - Elvis Presley to rap: moments of change since the forties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

John Potter
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

A similar stylistic fragmentation to that which occurred in classical singing can also be found in pop singing in the second half of the century. In chapter 6 I proposed that jazz singing, the dominant popular style from the late twenties onwards, reached a stylistic plateau with the singing of Frank Sinatra. In fact, by the end of the forties popular singing style as represented by the successors of Armstrong and Crosby was showing the typical signs of decadence that precede a significant change in popular taste. Crosby himself was at the peak of his powers and had many imitators, whose often well-crafted Tin Pan Alley ballads monopolised the record industry's sales charts. The introduction of weekly published charts of bestselling singles began in the USA in 1940, and although the charts were not immune to interference they do provide a better guide to popular musical taste than any indicator previously available. Under segregation the separate markets for ‘black’ and ‘white’ audiences could be easily identified and targeted by the record industry. The first Billboard Best Selling Singles chart was, in effect, a measurement of sales to white buyers. Sales to the black audience were soon sufficiently large for the addition of a separate chart. In 1949 this became the Rhythm and Blues chart, and a Country and Western chart was added at the same time.

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Chapter
Information
Vocal Authority
Singing Style and Ideology
, pp. 133 - 157
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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