Monday, December 5, 2022

Jamaica Music : Reggae

          Reggae music was a big part of Jamaican culture. Many artists practiced the style of reggae and some of the artists like Bob Marley influenced and showed people internationally all about this music. It originated around the time that Jamaica was being attacked by European countries like Spain and native people being taken into slavery. Bob Marley was born after the time of slave trading but whites still effected the native people and this is how he got his inspiration for his music. 


        The music of Jamaica began five centuries ago, when Columbus colonized the land of the Arawak Indians. This dates the start of oppression by first the Spanish and then the English in this area of the Caribbean. Blacks were brought in as slaves by the English, and although Jamaica has had it's independence since 1963, the tension of authority and control still reigns. Jamaica is a story of injustice, international influence, ineffective governing, and unequal distribution of wealth; all of these elements provide a solid base for the theme of oppression and the need for a revolution and redemption in Jamaican music. Reggae in particular reflects these injustices, and the feelings, needs and desires to change the lifestyle that Jamaicans have historically lived. Reggae music has two meanings. It’s generic name for all Jamaican popular music since 1960, West Indian style of music with a strongly accented subsidiary beat. Reggae can also refer to the particular beat that was extremely popular in Jamaica from around 1969 to 1983. Jamaican music can be divided into four areas that carry their own distinctive beat. (ska, rocksteady, reggae and dancehall) Each of these types of music had their own. The names and styles of reggae have changed over the years but the traditions and intentions of the music has not. Reggae music has grown and developed from the people and the experience of Jamaican like. The amazing thing about this style of music is that it stretches the globe with it’s popularity and is the only music not of European and American origin that is listened to in every country on earth. In modern time it is the first third world nation that is sharing its culture to such a diverse culture. I am fascinated at the fact that such a small, impoverished country could have created a music style that is so popular around the globe, without the aid of corporate hype or planning committees. The names and styles of reggae have changed over the years but the traditions and intentions of the music has not. Reggae music has grown and developed from the people and the experience of Jamaican like. The amazing thing about this style of music is that it stretches the globe with its popularity and is the only music not of European and American origin that is listened to in every country on earth. In modern time it is the first third world nation that is sharing its culture to such a diverse culture. I am fascinated at the fact that such a small, impoverished country could have created a music style that is so popular around the globe, without the aid of corporate hype or planning committees. Many music historians agree that the word reggae first appeared in 1968 by Toots and the Maytals. At the time, "reggae" was simply the latest in a series of dance crazes to hit Jamaica, a slower, more beat heavy, bass dominated rhythm than ska and rock-steady. The styles that had swept the nation before reggae had come into its own. More than three decades have passed, and reggae music is becoming increasingly more popular. Toots once explained to writers Stephen Davis and Peter Simon in their book Reggae Bloodlines what the meaning of Reggae is. He said that, "just mean coming’ from the people…. coming’ from the majority. When you say reggae, you mean regular, majority."




     Bob Marley died of cancer on May 11, 1981, at the premature age of thirty-six. By then he was well known to college kids worldwide, but few could have foreseen the celebrity he has attained since. Born in Jamaica, he is the only third-world performer to be elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 1999, the BBC named his “One Love” the “Song of the Millennium”; the same year Time declared his 1977 Exodus the “Best Album of the Twentieth Century.” Voted the third-greatest songwriter of all time in a 2001 BBC poll (behind Bob Dylan and John Lennon), Marley has sold an estimated 50 million records worldwide. On the 2007 Forbes list of “Top-Earning Dead Celebrities,” he ranked twelfth, with his estate earning an estimated $4 million. His posthumous greatest-hits collection, Legend (1984), is among the top-selling compilations of all time. Twenty-seven years after his death, there is perhaps no country where his songs—wry ballads and martial anthems, with soothing or stirring melodies—aren’t familiar. The songs tell a familiar story of black slaves, mainly West Africans brought to work Jamaica’s fields of indigo and sugar cane, combining their own diverse cultures with those they found and making something new. Like many of his contemporaries—young country people who migrated to the city seeking work, only to end up in its swelling slums—Marley absorbed the political and musical currents that flowed through Jamaica and its capital, Kingston, in the years before and after its independence in 1962. Among the sounds were spirituals sung in clapboard churches and folk songs toiled and danced to in fields and shacks; newer rhythms from neighbouring islands—mambo from Cuba, calypso from Trinidad; and increasingly, with the advent of the transistor radio and the spread of “sound systems” (turntables and enormous loudspeakers that made musical block parties possible), American doo-wop and rhythm-and-blues. In a city full of artists and entrepreneurs seeking to forge a new national culture, Marley and his peers—like many others in the third world at the time—adapted these sounds to their lives on the margins. From the early 1960s, Marley became part of the rapid evolution of Jamaican popular music: mento, the calypso-inflected dance style dominant in the 1950s, gave way by the decade’s end to the kinetic hop called ska, and then, in the mid-1960s, to the languid shuffle called rocksteady; finally, a few years later, came the driving, spacious sound of reggae—the style Marley brought to a worldwide audience. 


    

To conclude the reggae music was a big part of Jamaica and Bob Marley was a key influence of this music. The reggae music was founded at the time of Spain trading native Jamaicans around Europe and was the music of the people. Reggae music was about the wrongs that have been done to Jamaican people. Bob Marley was effected by these wrongs and used his musical talent to influenced people on an international scale about these wrongs and the style of reggae itself before he passed away.

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Music & Family

 So I had a chance to ask my mom about how music was and how it affect her generation here is the interview below. 


https://youtu.be/aRNVj7_INaw

Saturday, October 29, 2022

American Roots Hip Hop

 American Roots Big Blog No. 1



    As we know today Hip Hop is one of the most of many genres that are played in the United States Today. Hip-Hop has spread in many different countries and is now being played in many different parts of the world. Hip Hop has not also been this popular as in many things, great things always have small beginnings and by the end of this blog, you will have a deeper meaning and connection in which Hip Hop has come from.


    Hip Hop started bringing itself to the scene in the 1970s. Hip Hop started breaking into The Bronx which is a city in New York. In New York City The Bronx is known for its high crime rate and rising poverty with young people in the Bronx started creating cultural expressions about their experiences and the way they were living during that time through not just music but dances also. While Hip Hop was starting to grow in that area artists had now gained attention from fans and started performing at venues that were public parks and recreational areas in the Bronx. Hip Hop started to emerge and now DJs will start to assemble beats and will have MCs rap on their beats for entertainment at shows.



    At the beginning of Hip Hop, the music originated from DJs and MCs while most of the most popular DJs and MCs came from New York.  During this time there was a popular DJ named DJ Kool Herc who was great at mixing beats with popular dance songs at that time. With the influence that other DJs received from DJ Kool Herc other DJs started to develop more skills being a DJ which also helped make rapping more popular. As DJ Kool Herc's era was coming to an end Hip Hop started to earn more popularity and national recognition with a song named Rapper Delights which was made by the SugarHill Gang gained a lot of popularity and started many people around the world to this Hip Hop style of music. 



    As Hip Hop started to gain more their were many Artists that have started to involved as the artists Run-D.M.C, LL Cool J, and the Beastie Boys which has helped form Hip Hop as we know it today.  D.M.C started bringing Hip Hop to the television scene where he started making live Hip Hop performances on National Television. LL Cool J and Public Enemy were artists that brought different themes to Hip Hop music as they expressed their feelings through music. As Hip Hop continues to grow it expanded past its region in California a rap group Straight Outta Compton became one of the biggest rap or Hip Hop groups to emerge to the Hip Hop scene which wasn’t from New York. You will think this will be great to see Hip Hop expand but this started to cause conflict between the East and The West in the United States which led to the unsolved murders of Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. Hip Hop has now become a world influence as it started to receive audiences from China, Tokyo, Paris, and London. Hip Hop became one of the best-selling music genres in the United States.




    Today, Hip Hop music comes from many different cities in the United States like Atlanta, Detroit, New Orleans, and Jacksonville to name a few. Hip Hop has spread all over the world and is one of the most selling genres of music in the world today. 




Saturday, October 8, 2022

Music & Gender

                                                                              


                                                             Music And Gender

 



Music is art that is spreading across the entire whole and an art that every gender uses in their daily lives. As we view music from across the world you can see that even in bands, congregation, or orchestra different genders will play a different instrument. Also gender can also classify the type of music you listen to and also how you connect to the music in an emotional way.  




     There are also different instruments you will see being played with the differences in gender.  Most of the time in a band you find most females play the flute, violin, clarinet, and also the cello. You will also find males playing the drum, saxophone , trumpet and trombone. I’m not saying that a certain gender has to play a certain instrument but most of the time this is the case we see the most as genders playing instruments. Here is an example of a band and the different instruments that are being played by the different genders in the band.


This is South Carolina State 101 marching bad in the video you see a variety of different instruments being played by the different gender.






      We also find out that different genders will find a different connection with listening to music. The women's gender will more than likely connect to the music more in an emotional way and also will give a better listener to popular music. Also there are more males artists in the music industry but female artists are listening to the most coming from how many females listen to music on a daily basis. Here is a great songs that most females listen to more than any males.




As you see these are popular female love songs that this gender can relate in a emotional way. 




In conclusion,  Music in an art that is view from many type of people across the world. Also that different gender will also view different music in a more personal way or more emotional. We also noticed how different genders play different instruments in a band. 






Saturday, September 24, 2022

Music & Rituals

     Hello , as a music lover I have heard many different styles of music during my lifetime , but as there are different genres of music they are also different occasions or rituals where there are certain type of music being played. There are many examples of the  different rituals as in funerals, church , cookouts, and parties as the list continue to go on. Weddings also falls in that category as you can see how this song below could be meaningful to the significant other . Here is an example of a song that will be played at a wedding:


      

Bruno Mars is a great artist which his songs can be used for many different rituals, but this song is perfect for a wedding as how it explain how the feelings are towards the significant other. 


There are many songs that people also play at gathering or cookouts which bring everybody together to have some fun. Most of the time these will be dance songs that everybody can get up out their seats to do and also participate. Here is an example of a song that would be played at a cookout:


  The Cha Cha slide is on of most popular dances and songs that are played at get together or cookouts it brings people together as everyone starts to dance. 


Funerals also have different types of music but this makes me the saddest of all the different typed of
occasion as its a celebration of ones life as they have passed away. Funeral music can be uplifting and also sad depends on ones personality.  Here is a example of music that would be played at a funeral. 


This song is very sad but it is made in remembrance of Paul Walker death which was an actor in the fast and the furious       

In conclusion with that being said ,  here are many examples of the  different rituals as in funerals, church , cookouts, and parties that we have experience in our lifetime. Its amazing how music is also used in every aspect in life and how we use it in our daily life.

Saturday, September 3, 2022

    

                              Music &Me

 Hello, I am Jaylun Parker. I am currently a student athlete at Converse University. Ever Since I was three  years old I had some type of sports ball in my hand which made me fall in love with sports causing basketball to be the sport I take the farthest. I spent most of my life in South Carolina but I take knowledge from every place I've been which makes me who I am today. I am also big on GOD and family in my life because without GOD and family my life wouldn't be what it will be today which is my biggest support system and put me to the point where I am at in life today. Music also plays a big factor in my life, music helps me to get in a piece of mind and helps me get through things that this life throws my way.






So as you learned about me I talked about music and how it plays a big factor in my life.  


One of my favorite artists is Youngboy Never Broke Again. YoungBoy started his career in 2015 but did not start catching the attention of an audience or a public eye until 2017. He caught the attention of the music world with his single outside today in 2018 which went triple platinum, but in my personal opinion Outside Today is his best song to me, but that was the song that started getting him the most publicity. Many people view or listen to Youngboy because of his aggressive music before games or as a way to get you going , but in my opinion I became a fan because of his meaningful songs where he talks about the problems that go on in some daily lives and some problems that go on in the world today. 


One thing I can say that I enjoyed about Youngboy over the years is that I watched his growth in the music industry and also in his growth in life as a person. He became more versatile with his music from his switching genres and also his flows in his growth in music. One of My Favorite songs by him is I Know it really shows how his growth in music and as a person has changed.







    A piece of music that I really connect with is this song called Keep Your Head Up by Andy Grammer. This song helped me get through a lot of tough times and low points in my life.  This song really taught  me it doesn’t matter what life throws at you but you also have to keep your head up during those tough times and low points when things get hard. Every time I will go through something in life or if anything doesn’t seem as great I will also run to the song and it will cheer me up and also will feel better about the things going on at the moment. 








    I always had a love for music but a piece of music that I can’t really connect to is a song called Fire Your Guns by AC/DC. I really can’t get a connection to the lyrics in the song but I can get a vibe from the instrument used in the creation of the song.






Jamaica Music : Reggae

           Reggae music was a big part of Jamaican culture. Many artists practiced the style of reggae and some of the artists like Bob Marl...