Tuesday, January 18, 2022

The Short Stories of Four Music Genres and Their Ties to Country Music

Dare I call them 'kissin' cousins'?

Boogie-Woogie:

The roots of this genre lie in the Piney Woods of northeast Texas dating back to the late 19th century. What became boogie-woogie began in African-American communities in the late 1870s and evolved from there. Oral histories that were gathered in the 1930s from some of the oldest living Americans, both African-Americans and white Americans, showed a widespread consensus that revealed that boogie-woogie piano was first played in Texas in the early 1870s. Jelly Roll Morton (1890-1941), African-American ragtime and jazz pianist, bandleader, and composer said he first heard boogie-woogie on a piano early in the 20th century. Influenced by blues and ragtime, the genre evolved and spread out as time went on. In turn, it had an influence on other genres, country and western music one of them. Boogie-woogie, initially played on the piano, eventually found its way to the guitar. African-American folk and blues singer and musician Lead Belly (1888-1949) was known for his proficiency on the 12 string guitar. He was among the first guitar players to adapt the rolling bass of the piano for the guitar. Lead Belly was born in Mooringsport, Louisiana and raised in Harrison county, Texas. He said he first heard a boogie-woogie piano in the area of Caddo Lake in northeast Texas in 1899. Another time he heard boogie-woogie coming from a piano was in Shreveport, Louisiana's Fannin Street district. White country musician Merle Travis (1917-1983) played a role in marrying country music and boogie-woogie. He learned his guitar style from his father's barber Ike Everly (1908-1975; father of Don (1937-2021) and Phil (1939-2014)). His picking style was called “Travis picking” which was born during his boogie-woogie period and changed guitar playing in America. It involved picking bass with one finger while picking the melody at the same time.



Jelly Roll Morton "Boogie Woogie Blues"


Merle Travis and "Cannonball Rag"

Hillbilly Boogie:

Fads come and go and boogie-woogie, considered a fad, had just about gone away in the late 1930's into the early 1940's. After WWII the genre was resurrected in country music where it was called hillbilly boogie. It wasn't much of a stretch since there was already a relationship between country music and boogie-woogie. Rock historian Ed Ward (from an interview transcript from NPR dated Nov. 15, 2011) gives the credit for hillbilly boogie to Arthur Smith who, Ward says, started it all in 1945. Smith's Hot Quintet, having some time remaining in a recording session, recorded “Guitar Boogie” on a lark. The song became a hit and for the rest of his life Smith was billed as Arthur “Guitar Boogie” Smith (1921-2014). However, according to an article at WikiZero, musicians who played country music began recording boogie music in 1939. This came after Johnny Barefield (1909-1974) recorded “Boogie Woogie”, also in 1939. The Delmore Brothers (Alton (1908-1964) & Rabon (1916-1952)) embraced the boogie-woogie style sometime in the 1940s. With their influence hillbilly boogie found itself at home among musicians recording country music. Their “Freight Train Boogie” was said to be part of the joint evolution of country music and the blues that culminated into rockabilly. While hillbilly boogie and country music were becoming great friends, Western swing was evolving even more in Texas and Louisiana. In those places polka and a bit of jazz were tossed into the music mix that included hillbilly boogie.

Arthur Smith and Guitar Boogie

Rockabilly:

Rockabilly draws on two major influences: country music and rock music. At the time rockabilly was born rock music usually referred to the rhythm and blues music made by African-American musicians. Rockabilly's roots lie in the American South. There, for decades before rockabilly was a twinkle in anyone's eye, the music played by African-Americans and that played by white Americans had mixed and mingled. Sun Records recorded some of the best examples of rockabilly music. Their roster included Elvis (do you really need a last name? (1935-1977)), Carl Perkins (1932-1998), Johnny Cash (1932-2003) and Jerry Lee Lewis (1935-). While men dominated rockabilly there were two women who held their own against them: Wanda Jackson (1937-) and Brenda Lee (1944-). Jackson sung a song entitled “Rockabilly Fever”, written by Carl Perkins, which gives this description of rockabilly:

We took a little country music, put some pop in, and dressed it up in soul.”

Rockabilly songs are a vivacious high-energy take on a blues chord progression. In a rockabilly band there would be three or four members. There would be two guitars, one electric and one acoustic. The former would handle lead duties and the latter held rhythm duties. From hillbilly boogie lead guitars adopted a heavy twang. The upright bass was often played by slapping rather than plucking. Some guitarists, like Carl Perkins, also sang. Drumming wasn't often considered because the bass could double as both rhythm and percussion.

Rockabilly singers had different styles of singing. For instance, the deep, overheated sound of R & B and blues singers was favored by Elvis and Gene Vincent (1935-1971). Others, however, could be rather eccentric, like Charlie Feathers (1932-1998). He included vocal tricks and tics in his singing such as hiccups and croons.

  Carl Perkins singing "Honey Don't"

Wanda Jackson singing "Hard Headed Woman"

Western Swing:

This sub-genre of country music began in the late 1920's in the West and the South with regional western string bands. It grew out of jazz but was actually a mix of rural, cowboy, polka, old-time, Dixieland jazz, and blues music which was blended with swing. It was played by a hot string band accompanied by drums, saxophones, pianos and, most notably, the fiddle and the steel guitar. The stringed instruments were electrically amplified and this gave the music a distinctive sound. Don't try and marry Western swing bands with the big swing bands of the same era. The two do differ. In Western swing bands, even if heavily orchestrated, the fiddle would most always take the lead, though the steel guitar could also take the lead, and other instruments, even the vocals, followed it. Unlike the horn laden big swing bands, who arranged and scored their own music, Western swing bands freely improvised. This improvisation occurred either by the band as a whole or by the vocalist. Country singer and musician Merle Travis defined Western swing thus:

"Western swing is nothing more than a group of talented country boys, unschooled in music, but playing the music they feel, beating a solid two-four rhythm to the harmonies that buzz around their brains. When it escapes in all its musical glory, my friend, you have Western swing."

During the 1930's and 1940's Western swing's unique up-beat style drew large crowds to dance halls and night clubs in Texas, Oklahoma, and California. Unfortunately, in 1944 a war-time 30% federal excise tax was levied against dance halls and nightclubs that allowed dancing. Even though it was later dropped to 20% “no dancing” signs remained posted and, in essence, was the death knell for Western swing. The war-time tax is believed to have curtailed public dancing as a recreational activity. Well, not quite. Recordings by Bob Wills, Spade Cooley and others were ever popular after the war. Folks could dance again in public if they wanted to but then again, they could dance at home as well.

Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys, feat. Joe Andrews singing "Deep Water"

I think the key component to all four genres is the instruments. In boogie-woogie it's the rousing way a piano is played. Hillbilly boogie and Western swing have four stringed instruments in common: acoustic, electric and steel guitars and the standup bass. However, Western swing has the fiddle which would be as prominent as the steel guitar. Later, in rockabilly, there would just be heavy bass lines and no percussion.

So while each genre grew out of another, influenced another, or was influenced by another, they developed in such a way to make each music genre their own by deciding which elements to keep and which ones to let go of.

NPR The History of Hillbilly Boogie's Earliest Days by Ed Ward, rock historian

American Roots blog

Boogie-Woogie

Hillbilly Music

Boogie-Woogie and Black History

Origins of Country Music

Country Music

Revised and updated 9/25/22. tkp

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