LITERACY : Proofreading
Circle the missing commas. Write corrections on the lines below. One
example is done for you. Find and correct 5 more errors.
Blues is a music genre and musical form originated in the Deep
South of the United States around the 1870s. The genre developed
from roots and spirituals.Blues incorporated spirituals work songs
field hollers shouts chants and rhymed simple narrative
ballads.The blues form ubiquitous in jazz rhythm and blues and rock
and roll is characterized by the call-and-response pattern, the blues
scale and specific chord progressions, of which the twelve-bar blues
is the most common.
Example : spirituals, work
1. ……………………………………………………………
2. …………………………………………………………..
3. …………………………………………………………..
4. …………………………………………………………..
5. …………………………………………………………...
LITERACY : Proofreading
Circle the missing commas. Write corrections on the lines below. One
example is done for you. Find and correct 5 more errors.
LITERACY:
8.WG7c
Blue notes usually thirds or fifths flattened in pitch are also an essential part of the sound. Blues shuffles or walking bass reinforce the trance-like rhythm and form a repetitive effect known as the groove. Blues as a genre is also characterized by its lyrics bass lines and instrumentation. Early traditional blues verses consisted of a single line repeated four times. It was only in the first decades of the 20th century that the most common current structure became standard: the AAB pattern, consisting of a line sung over the four first bars its repetition over the next four, and then a longer concluding line over the last bars. Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative often relating the racial discrimination and other challenges experienced by African-Americans.
Example : Blue notes, usually
1. ……………………………………………………………
2. …………………………………………………………..
3. …………………………………………………………..
4. …………………………………………………………..
5. …………………………………………………………...
Define the following musical terms :
1. CHORD : ……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
2. MELODIC RIFF : …………………………………………………………………………………………..
3. SYNCOPATION : ………………………………………………………………………………………….
Write down the names of the notes which make up the following chords :
1. C CHORD : …………………………………………….
2. F CHORD : ……………………………………………
3. G CHORD : …………………………………………….
4. C7 CHORD : ……………………………………………
Complete the chart below with the chords of the 12 bar blues :
Blues and Jazz
In the 17th and 18th centuries slaves were captured from many African counties and forced to work in the
southern states of America. They mainly worked on the land producing cotton, tobacco and sugar.
New Orleans was controlled by the French. Some black people were free and well-educated. They were
called Creoles. When the Spanish took over in 1764, the Creoles lost all of their rights to freedom and
many left the area becoming travelling musicians.
By the 1900s, slavery was a thing of the past but very severe racism and poverty forced black families to
move away from the south and into industrial cities such as New York and Chicago.
1900 Ragtime and New Orleans Jazz (Dixieland) were becoming popular. Scott Joplin played and com-
posed a new style of ‘ragtime’ and became the first celebrity musician in America. Other very
successful jazz musicians of the time were Louis Armstrong (trumpet) and Bix Beiderbeck (cornet/
trombone).
1920s African-American music became popular throughout America with both black and white people.
Bessie Smith was a very celebrated singer of the ‘blues’. Blues songs are very emotional songs, usually
describing a person’s feelings during tragic or sad events.
During the 1920s there was a complete ban on alcohol (Prohibition). Secret clubs called Speakeasy’s were
opened where jazz was played and alcohol served.
1930s This is often called the Swing era and more white artists began to perform jazz and blues. Benny
Goodman was a white clarinettist who insisted that his band was mixed.
1940s Swing and dances such as the Lind hop spread across to Britain and Europe as American soldiers
became involved in the Second World War.
1950s Band leaders such as Count Basie and Duke Ellington toured and jazz became even more popular
and more complex (Bebop).
1960s Different styles of jazz emerged such as Cool Jazz. Harmonies became even more complicated
and improvisations were longer. Important figures were Charlie Parker (saxophone) and Dizzie Gillespie
(trumpet).
1970/80s Miles Davies (trumpet) and John Coltrane (saxophone) continued to develop jazz in new ways
and it became linked to many different styles including rock, Latin American, Indian and African music
(Hugh Masekela – trumpet).
1990s/2000s Jazz now influences pop, hip-hop and R+B and is played all over the world.
Blues and Jazz
In the 17th and 18th centuries slaves were captured from many ……………… counties and forced to work in
the southern states of America. They mainly worked on the land producing cotton, ……………… and
……………….
New Orleans was controlled by the French. Some black people were free and well-educated. They were
called ………………. When the ……………… took over in 1764, the Creoles lost all of their rights to freedom and
many left the area becoming travelling musicians.
By the 1900s, slavery was a thing of the past but very severe racism and poverty forced black families to
move away from the south and into industrial cities such as ………………and ……………….
1900s Ragtime and New Orleans Jazz (Dixieland) were becoming popular. ……………… played and
composed a new style of ‘ragtime’ and became the first celebrity musician in America. Other very
successful jazz musicians of the time were Louis ……………… (trumpet) and Bix Beiderbeck (cornet/
trombone).
1920s African-American music became popular throughout America with both black and white
people. Bessie ……………… was a very celebrated singer of the ‘blues’. Blues songs are very emotional
songs, usually describing a person’s feelings during tragic or sad events.
During the 1920s there was a complete ban on ……………… (Prohibition). Secret clubs called ………………
were opened where jazz was played and alcohol served.
1930s This is often called the ……………… era and more white artists began to perform jazz and blues.
Benny ……………… was a white clarinettist who insisted that his band was mixed.
1940s Swing and dances such as the Lind hop spread across to Britain and Europe as American soldiers
became involved in the Second World War.
1950s Band leaders such as Count ……………… and Duke ……………… toured and jazz became even more
popular and more complex (Bebop).
1960s Different styles of jazz emerged such as Cool Jazz. Harmonies became even more complicated
and improvisations were longer. Important figures were Charlie Parker (saxophone) and ………………
Gillespie (trumpet).
1970/80s Miles ……………… (trumpet) and John Coltrane (saxophone) continued to develop jazz in new
ways and it became linked to many different styles including rock, Latin American, Indian and African
music (Hugh ……………… – trumpet).
1990s/2000s Jazz now influences pop, hip-hop and R+B and is played all over the world.
Year 8 : Rock and Roll
Rock and roll was formed from a mixture of white gospel, country, Afro-American blues
and rhythm and blues styles of music. It was the American disc jockey Alan Freed who
first used the term rock and roll to describe a particular type of music. Since then the
name has stuck.
One of the first rock and roll singers to take to America by storm was Elvis Presley who
released the hit single ‘That’s Alright Mamma’ in 1954. This was followed by a string of
hits and by 1956 he had sold more than 20 million records. Presley’s spectacular stage
performance with his arrogant sneer and thrusting hips created a sensation.
In 1955 Little Richard exploded onto the music scene with ‘Tutti Frutti’. He screamed the
words, pounded the piano and shook his hair. A series of other singers followed including
Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Buddy Holly. It was Buddy Holly who took
the development of rock and roll further than anyone else by using multi-tracking
recording techniques to produce complex studio arrangements.
The late 1950’s and early 1960’s brought success to a number of rock and roll groups.
These were male vocal groups such as The Drifters and female vocal groups such as The
Shangri Las who released ‘Leader of the Pack’ in 1964. The Beach Boys combined the
rhythms of Chuck Berry with the harmonies of Afro- American vocal groups to produce
their own distinctive sound in numbers such as ‘Surfin’ Safari’.
British teenagers took little part in the rock and roll craze until the American group ‘Bill
Haley and the Comets’ created a sensation with the release of the film ‘Rock Around the
Clock’ in 1955. This had youngsters dancing in the aisles in the cinemas where the film
was showing, much to the horror of their parents!
Both Tommy Steele and Cliff Richard were made to look like Presley imitations and
achieved some success. Cliff Richard’s first recording, ‘Move It’ in 1958, had a certain raw
energy about it. However, they soon toned down their rocking image and concentrated
on films, pantomimes and variety shows. It was not until The Beatles released ‘Love Me
Do’ in 1962 that we had British stars who were able to create their own individual sound.