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Rockabilly Music The Major Influence |
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What happens when you mix the sultry sound of rhythm and blues with the peppy sound of 1950’s pop, then blend in the twang of country from the same era? You’ve created a recipe for the distinct flavor of rockabilly music. The question is, then, where did rockabilly music originate? Many will argue that Elvis
Presley’s 1954 Memphis sessions, recorded for Sam Phillips’s Sun
Records are the first rockabilly recordings.
According to Scotty Moore, who, along with Bill Black, was involved
in these recording sessions, they were taking a break from recording.
He said that Elvis began singing and jumping around, and Bill
“picked up the bass and he began acting the fool”.
At that point, Moore joined in, Sam Phillips overheard the sound,
and asked them to start over so he could record it.
Out of this, rockabilly music was born. |
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What are the rules of rockabilly, anyway?
That amazing rockabilly slap bass
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During the same era, a little known
musician in Lubbock, Texas, named Buddy Holly was building on the
rockabilly music style by adding a little taste of rhythm from south of
the border. Today, Holly is
one of the most well known rockabilly musicians of all time.
Though the original rockabilly musical era seemed to die with Buddy
Holly in the terrible plane crash in 1959, there were several other
musicians who dipped their toes in the pool of rockabilly music, including
Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, and Carl Perkins, whose Blue Suede Shoes is a
rockabilly anthem. |
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Copyright
2005 RockabillyHairstyle.com (www.rockabillyhairstyle.com) |
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