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2 - Music

from Part One - 1945–1960

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Christopher Gair
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow
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Summary

Each true jazz moment … springs from a contest in which each artist challenges all the rest, each solo flight or improvisation, represents … a definition of his identity: as individual, as a member of a collectivity and as link in the chain of tradition. Thus, because jazz finds its very life in an endless improvisation upon traditional materials, the jazzman must lose his identity even as he finds it.

Ralph Ellison, Shadow and Act (1967)

The breakthrough year was 1955, when the airwaves rocked with Fats Domino's ‘Ain't That a Shame,’ Bill Haley and his Comets’ ‘Rock Around the Clock,’ Chuck Berry's ‘Maybelline,’ and Little Richard's ‘Tutti Frutti.’ That same year, The Blackboard Jungle linked the boiled-down ‘Rock Around the Clock’ with the dread juvenile delinquency.

Todd Gitlin, The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage (1987)

Protest is an element of all art, though it does not necessarily take the form of speaking for a political or social program.

Ralph Ellison, ‘The World and the Jug’ (1963–4)

Broadly speaking, it is possible to summarise the Beat aesthetic under a small range of influences and interests. In literature, the poetic tradition of Blake and Whitman, alongside a wider indebtedness to the American Renaissance, and twentieth-century poets such as William Carlos Williams and Hart Crane, contributed to the emphasis on personal, often confessional, texts such as ‘Howl’ and On the Road. Like Whitman, the Beats were happy to collapse the divide between high and popular culture, being as willing to celebrate The Shadow (Kerouac, Amiri Baraka) or Lana Turner (Frank O’Hara) as to cite Melville or Pound. This concern is extended in the practice of incorporating American idioms and vernacular into almost all Beat novels and poems.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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  • Music
  • Christopher Gair, University of Glasgow
  • Book: The American Counterculture
  • Online publication: 05 August 2013
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  • Music
  • Christopher Gair, University of Glasgow
  • Book: The American Counterculture
  • Online publication: 05 August 2013
Available formats
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To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Music
  • Christopher Gair, University of Glasgow
  • Book: The American Counterculture
  • Online publication: 05 August 2013
Available formats
×