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  2. Music history of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_the...

    The earliest popular Latin music in the United States came with rumba in the early 1930s, and was followed by calypso in the mid-40s, mambo in the late 1940s and early 1950s, chachachá and charanga in the mid-50s, bolero in the late 1950s and finally boogaloo in the mid-60s, while Latin music mixed with jazz during the same period, resulting ...

  3. Jazz Age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz_Age

    Those critical of jazz saw it as music from people with no training or skill. [78] White performers were used as a vehicle for the popularization of jazz music in America. Although jazz was taken over by the white middle-class population, it facilitated the mesh of African American traditions and ideals with white middle-class society. [79]

  4. Swing era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swing_era

    During the 1920s the older two-beat style of jazz was superseded by four-beat jazz, facilitated by replacement of the sousaphone with the string bass. Four beat rhythm was the foundation of the Chicago style jazz developed by Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines, and of the swing era rhythmic styles.

  5. Music history of the United States in the 1950s - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_the...

    It was a way of thinking perfectly suited to the new market in which vocalists were creating unique identities and hit songs were performed as television skits. [2] Whereas Big Band/Swing music placed the primary emphasis on the orchestration, post-war/early 1950s era Pop focused on the song's story and/or the emotion being expressed.

  6. Great American Songbook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_American_Songbook

    Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. According to the Great American Songbook Foundation: . The "Great American Songbook" is the canon of the most important and influential American popular songs and jazz standards from the early 20th century that have stood the test of time in their life and legacy.

  7. Music history of the United States to the Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_the...

    In Louisiana, drums remained legal well into the 19th century. There, African slaves, many from the Caribbean islands, danced in large groups, often in circle dances.As of 1817, dancing in New Orleans had been restricted to the area called Congo Square, which was a hotbed of musical fusionism, as African styles from across America and the Caribbean met.

  8. Music history of the United States (1900–1940) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_the_United...

    Modern Native American pow wows arose around the turn of the 20th century. While some claim that pow wow had been an integral part of indigenous cultures for over 10 centuries, some modern analysts believe that pow wows were invented to appeal to tourists and had only a tangential relationship to genuine Native American traditions, which generally revolved around ceremonial dance music like ...

  9. Timeline of music in the United States (1920–1949) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_music_in_the...

    George Gershwin premiers Rhapsody in Blue, an historically significant piece [83] that fused three strands of American music: modernist classical music, instrumental jazz and popular blues; the piece "played a role in defining American musical modernism" in the 1920s, [84] though it was "probably the most successful work in the movement to ...