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 Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music

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MrEnergizer
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PostSubject: Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music   Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Icon_minitimeSat Jul 25, 2009 5:36 am

Fi those that never catch this heres a 6 pt series ..............Noit my rip and TOO many links to add the hide code to, so leechers gwarn with it !!


EPISODE 1: “The Birth of Soul” - In a never-seen-before BBC interview with Ray Charles, he reveals how his innovations first brought soul to a wider audience. The term “R&B,” which means “rhythm” and “blues,” was coined by Billboard Magazine journalist Jerry Wexler after he was asked by his editor to find an alternative for the label ‘race music.’ After many years touring on the ‘chitlin circuit’ (a network of black clubs and bars) with artists like Ruth Brown, Ray Charles finally created his own style by unifying the sexually-charged music of the dance floor with the spiritually-charged sounds of the church hall. Life was hard and sometimes dangerous for black musicians in a segregated society.


EPISODE 2: “The Gospel Highway” - Gospel singer Sam Cooke changed pop music forever and set the standard for every artist that followed him. This episode looks at the world of black music before and after that revolutionary moment in 1957 when Cooke went pop. Tragically, Cooke was killed in 1964 at the prime of his career. Gone, but not forgotten, Cooke bequeathed an extraordinary legacy, inspiring a myriad of black artists from Motown’s Berry Gordy to Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin.

EPISODE 3: “The Sound Of Young America” - Motown changed the landscape of music, rewrote the rule book and created the sound of young America, which appealed to whites as much as to blacks. Crossover soul was the vision of Motown’s founder - Svengali figure Berry Gordy. Reflecting the optimism of the early 60’s and the promise of integration, Gordy’s artists were coached, groomed and targeted at the lucrative white audience.

EPISODE 4: “Southern Soul” - In the summer of 1967, Otis Redding performed in front of a 200,000-strong, mainly white, crowd at the Monterey Pop Festival. Five years after walking into Stax Records studio in Memphis as an unknown singer, he was now breaking into the mass white market and seducing its counter culture without diluting his sound. This episode follows both Redding’s rise, as he became the embodiment of 60’s soul music, and that of Stax Records as it crossed the racial divide at a time of segregation.

EPISODE 5: “Ain’t It Funky” - The tough, urban syncopated rhythms of funk were the soundtrack to the riots and revolutions of the late 60’s and early 70’s. This episode traces the roots of funk from James Brown’s seminal “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag” to the crazy psychedelia of George Clinton.


EPISODE 6: “From Ghetto To Fabulous” - In a never-seen before interview, Mary J. Blige, the queen of hip-hop soul, speaks candidly about her journey from ghetto to fabulous. Her music represents the fusion of R&B and hip-hop and completes the journey that started 50 years ago with the emergence of the early soul sounds of Ray Charles and ends with black R&B artists’ domination of the charts today. The extraordinary story of the unstoppable rise of urban R&B - with its diamond-dripping darlings of the media and high profile celebrity artists is traced back to the housing projects in Yonkers in the 80’s where Mary J. Blige began. R&B, with its roots in soul music which has been evolving over the last 50 years, has moved from ghetto to ghetto-fabulous to simply fabulous.
MrE

Big up Blogsportsoul fi them piece!
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rizostar



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PostSubject: Re: Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music   Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Icon_minitimeFri Oct 15, 2010 10:45 pm

I-man give thanks
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Mister Soundtapes
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Mister Soundtapes

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Registration date : 2008-10-06

Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Empty
PostSubject: Re: Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music   Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Icon_minitimeMon Jan 10, 2011 2:18 am

Quote :
..TOO many links to add the hide code to, so leechers gwarn with it !!
Laughing I think hide codes can go around each group, rather than each link. I'll try to do it. I'd love to download this but rapidshare doesn't like me
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Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Empty
PostSubject: Re: Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music   Deep Soul : The History of Black Popular Music Icon_minitime

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