Cowboys and Indies
The Epic History Of The
Record Industry
By
Gareth Murphy
This book is
a definitive expose of the evolution of recorded music. It clocks in at a
luxurious 357 pages with an additional 21 pages that include knockout
bibliography and Index sections. Murphy has done his research well, never
skimping or missing a beat with an incredible knack of narrative prose that
keeps the reader on the edge of his seat. It takes a few days to assimilate all
the interwoven plots and subplots that give this history a feel of a scripted
storyline that fiction writers utilize to keep the reader on the edge of his
seat. Murphy takes the reader back in time to the earliest moments of Gardner
Hubbard’s development of the telegraph which led to Thomas Edison’s phonograph
and the recording of the spoken word. Edison’s discovery was pure genius at
work, without a road map, just an indelible intellect and a strong work ethic.
But it was Alexander Graham Bell and his team that vastly improved Edison’s
“talking machine.” They named it the
Graphophone, complete with waxy cylinders, a floating stylus and stethoscope
tubes for listening. This marked the birth of the record Industry. The year was
1880.
Murphy
brings the reader front and center into World War II and the birth of
Sinatramania. It began in earnest in 1943 when Sinatra’s first solo recording
sold a million copies. With the help of a wealthy benefactor (Columbia
Records), Sinatra bought his way out of his contract with bandleader Harry
James for $25,000. As the war raged on, Sinatra was classified as 4-F,
registrant was not acceptable for military service (due to a perforated ear
drum). At the time, a well-known journalist observed that Sinatra was the most
hated man of WWII much more than Hitler!
According to
the author institutional racism was particularly demeaning, even cruel. Many black
musicians avoided conscription, claiming psychosis, drug addiction and other
assorted maladies. It evolved from the mindset that a more militant branch of
jazz emerged called Be-Bop. Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker and Sonny Stitt all
embraced this musical militancy. Gillespie stated, “The enemy by that period
was not the Germans, it was above all the white Americans who kicked us in the
butt every day, physically and morally.”
By 1947
record sales went from 275 million to 400 million. In April 1948 Ted
Wallerstein created the 33 1/3 rpm 12 inch long record, the LP!
From that
point forward, the author leads the reader through a roller coaster ride
through several seminal events that led to the creation of rock & roll.
Memphis was the connection to Beale Street and the birth of Sun Records and the
enduring myth of the King of Rock & Roll, Elvis Presley and a triad of
equally talented pioneers including Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Roy
Orbison.
An entire
chapter was devoted to the Beatles and Brian Epstein. They changed
everything…forever. Rock music ascended to the top of the heap causing the
careers of most of the Brill Building songwriters, producers and performers to
disappear, so long to Doc Pomus; hello to John Lennon. The Beatles were the
Tsunami and no one could stop their advance. The British Invasion was brutal
but the music was incredible. Everything else in the rock & roll pantheon
was a response to that initial wave of talented Brits including the Stones,
Manfred Mann, the Hollies and the Dave Clark 5.
In the
mid-sixties musicians found their muse both lyrically and musically. Bob Dylan
led the way and helped expand the voice of folk music to include thoughtful
protest about human liberties and the Vietnam war. This was a long chapter.
The author
includes a treatise on Rap music and its ascendance in 1979 with the Sugar Hill
Gang. They hit the bigtime with “Rappers Delight” and it help forever change
the face of popular music. It was profane, sometimes violent but it was real.
Rap spoke of truth and justice in a way that brought people together regardless
of race, color or creed. Behind it all was gobs of money.
Gareth
Murphy is credible in his assertion about the power of music, “In the big city,
cut off from the elements, records have become our folklore, our spiritual
medicine, our last sacred connection to the godhead.
Amen
Bo White
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