Music in the 1950s in the United States was dominated by mostly Rock and Roll, Classic Pop, Blues, Country Music, and Jazz. Rock and Roll became extremely popular throughout this time period among the youths because they had a lot of money to be spent on records and phonographs according to the “http://www.ushistory.org/us/53d.asp”. Elvis Presley was a famous icon of Rock and Roll during that time due to his huge popularity and chart-topping records. He is the best-selling artist in the history of recorded music and he was successful in other genres too such as blues, gospel, and pop music. He was extremely popular and controversial due to his energized interpretation of songs and sexually provocative performance style. According to the “https://blogs.longwood.edu”, blues had great influence on the development of rock and roll music such as how rock and roll was influenced by elements of blues instrumentation, rythm, and purpose. …show more content…
We find that both of them are composed of instruments such as drums, guitars, and vocals. We also find that both of the music are emotionally driven and artists in both groups manipulated with notes and amplified their instruments to get that addictive beat. We see some sort of connection such as how Blues music got more and more popular, so did the popularity of rock and roll rose along with it. Since Rock and Roll originated from the lower classes and African American music, many white middle-classes people thought it was tasteless compared to the classic music they liked to listen. We also see young teenagers rebelling against the music that their parents and the older generations loved which gave the teenagers a feeling of self-determination. Parents disliked this new type of music and so did some adults took action by banning them in some schools and some radio stations and churches even called it Satan’s