Rock and roll has changed tremendously over the years. Usually an electric guitar would guide the melody over the song's length, "The melody was clearly laid down with an electric guitar," Gale in context. As time went on, the songs changed, as did the people who played them. Now rock and roll has evolved to something much different than it was then. This essay will dig up the music of the generations past and see how the songs were then. As time goes on we do too, but what was it like when Rock and Roll was barely made? The instruments are very different from what we traditionally use today. In the beginning of rock and roll, the music was popular because of the song's exciting back-beat, and the lyrics were uncomplicated yet powerful "The lyrics were earthy and simple," Gale in context. Usually these songs would have saxophones and pianos harmoniously playing in the background. The style was inspired by gospel music and blues. These seem to be very different from today's usual guitar-based rock and roll songs. Rock and roll was about young love and was simple. The lyrics would be shouted out loud and they would be pronounced in a way that was called boogie-woogie. It was very appealing to younger audiences because of the lyrics' relation …show more content…
These would tell a story of love, usually making people feel the excitement in the music. The music would make some people have an impulse to dance to every note. Rock and roll was a success with adolescents but not older people because in the 1960's the popular Elvis and other singers would make the words more intense in their stories "Elvis Presley, a truck driver and aspiring singer from Tupelo, Miss., whose plaintive, wailing, dynamic delivery, and uninhibited sexuality appealed directly to young audiences while horrifying older people," Gale in context. These strong lyrics were not exactly appropriate for all ages, but were exciting for the young