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25 Sep

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti

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Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti at Amazon

I started listening to the radio in the early “70′s. At that time, there were a lot of comedy television shows produced to showcase a band’s music. There was, for instance, the “Sonny and Cher Comedy hour” with their great music and outlandish costumes interspersed with good-natured bickering. Several of these comedies, such as “The Partridge Family” with David Cassidy, “Getting Together” (with Bobby Sherman) and ” the Monkees” served to make their stars a teen heartthrob.

There were also assortment shows like the “Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour”. Glen commented that “It’s aweinspiring when you think when it comes to the power of TV and movies. If I hadn’t had hit records, I wouldn’t have gotten TV and movies, but the Goodtime Hour made my career explode all over the world.” I loved these shows, in particular their music. Television shows have always been a big influence on our enjoyment of rock music, even now.

I soon produced an interest in the history of rock and roll. The words “Rock and roll” were apparently introductory used in 1951 by a Cleveland disk jockey called Alan Freed, and were taken from the song “My Baby Rocks Me with a Steady Roll”. It was established in blues music, which evolved in the 1950′s from rhythm and blues, to use the terms “rock, roll, rock and roll, etc) to refer to sexual intercourse. Freed used the term to mean music with a raw, heavy, back beat in order to include whites in his audience.

He started a radio program called “Moondog Rock and Roll Party” that played black music for a white audience; his a feeling of excitement for black music became contagious. In 1952, Freed organized the introductory rock and roll concert. The record industry, conscious that a new and frequent music was being invented by blacks, tried to exploit it.

In 1952 “Bill Haley and the Comets” became the original (black) rock and roll band, altho at that time the US was still largely racially divided. When Sam Phillips founded Sun Records, he declared “If I could find a white man who sings with the Negro feel, I’d make a million dollars”.

In 1952 the “Bandstand” television program went on the air. In 1953, Bill Haley’s “Crazy Man Crazy” became the primary rock song to enter the Billboard charts. “Crying in the Chapel” by the Orioles, became the primary black hit to top the white pop charts. In 1954, doo-wop, a new kind of black vocal harmoniousness emerged, with the Penguins’ Earth Angel (1954) and by the Platters’ Only You (1955).

Juke box machines were disseminating in the early ’50′s and the introductory solid body electric guitars were brought onto the market. In 1954, record companies swopped to “45′s, and the transistor radio was introduced. Record players became cheaper. Now teenagers could listen to their music anyplace they wanted.

“American Graffiti” was a great movie to spotlight early rock and roll. Bill Haley’s “Rock around the Clock” was the primary rock song used in a movie, and it became the national anthem of rock and roll; turning rock and roll into a nationwide success in 1954.

In 1955, Chuck Berry became the firstborn major composer of rock and roll (instead of just an interpreter). He was the initial one to have the guitar as the lead instrument and to have descending pentatonic double-stops (the essence of rock guitar). Unfortunately, being black, he didn’t get the same airplay as a white musician so he remained a cult figure. I do not forget him most for “Johnny Be Goode”

Elvis Presley’s recorded his initial record was in 1954 and, since his initial hits (such as Good Rocking Tonight) were all black ones, enabled white kids to play black music. With his huge success, white “rockers” were not only endured but even promoted by the major record producers. The music of black’s (such as “Shake, Rattle, and Roll”) was still more powerful and original however.

Slowly and regularly “white rockers” played more guitar than piano and singers begun to sing their own songs (instead those of professional songwriters). “Black rockers” had always written their own songs and composed on the guitar. This is how rock and roll became guitar-based, applied a little combo rather of an orchestra, and so emphasized the rhythm rather of the harmony. Rock musicians were expected to have a guitar in front of them even altho most of the white ones didn’t know how to play the guitar.

The record industry boomed and independent labels flourished. By 1959, the market part of rock and roll was 42.7%. This, in spite of a bill proposed in Congress in 1955 to ban rock and roll in the U.S. Thank god, that didn’t happen!

The 1960′s saw a “British invasion” of rock bands. The Beatles were the most remarkable of these; they made rock the most usual music in America. Bob Dylan employed rock and roll to protest war, poverty, and racism. Rock and roll continued to manufacture and change.

Although rock and roll is still around, it doesn’t mean the same thing as it did these primary two decades. After the advent of disco in the “70′s, a heap of persons thought rock was losing it is originality. It rebounded with hard rock and heavy metal in the 80′s. Rap, a black movement, became very popular. By the late 90′s people were complaining rock was too depressing. Then the very young group Hanson appeared with “MMM Bop” and took the world by storm. Other “boy bands” followed, along with shows on finding them and making them into stars. Even now we have shows like “American Idol” which are very popular.

Rock music seems to have it is ebbs and flows, most of all evolving and altering with American culture. It has been the soundtrack of our lives.


For those of us who grew up in the ’70s, this drive-in compilation of ’50s and ’60s rock and doo-wop, finish with Wolfman Jack introductions, was our introduction to this music. There are 41 jukebox hits here, and each one of them is a classic of it is time (although two tracks–”At the Hop” and “She’s so Fine” are covers by the revival band Flash Cadillac & the Continental Kids). In his 1973 movie, conductor George Lucas used the music (and the presence of mysterious deejay Wolfman) as the AM-radio soundtrack to one night in suburban California, 1962. The idea was to capture and sustain an end-of-summer, end-of-innocence mood that’s in the air allround the picture– not as a shortcut to establishing a amount of time (as in Robert Zemeckis’Forrest Gump). There’s an amazing lot of spontaneous energy in these tunes–from Chuck Berry and Buddy Holly, to the Platters and the Clovers and the Del-Vikings, to the Crests and the Beach Boys–and likewise just a hint of melancholy that goes down very nicely with a burger, shake, and fries. –Jim Emerson

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti Photo

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti Picture

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti Image

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti

Original Hits Soundtrack American Graffiti Photo


Most helpful client reviews

54 of 57 people found the following review helpful.
5Magnificent
By Candace Scott
What more may you say? This is rather perchance the best collection (and most eclectic sampling) of 50′s and 60′s music available. I was a kid when American Graffiti came out in 1973 and went week after week to the theatre to see it. It’s held up beautifully all these years later. I owned the vinyl version of this double album, likewise the casette and even the eight track. The quality of the CD is leagues in front of the firstborn vinyl album, all the scratches and bumps have been got rid of and it results in a joyous listening experience. Each and each one of these songs is riveting, fun to listen to and just plain great!

If you’re too young to do not forget these years, this album will give you a taste of what it must have been like to have grown up in the 50′s and early 60′s. An further and added note: if you’re never seen the movie, rent it or buy it immediately. It’s a deserved classic!

57 of 62 humans found the following review helpful.
5Classic rock of ’50s, early ’60s shine in this album!
By Alex Diaz-Granados
Of all the categories of music available on compact discs (or cassettes), one of my favorites has always been the movie soundtrack. Not only does a good soundtrack album helps listeners do not forget bestloved scenes from the movies, but it likewise may inspire them to explore musical styles they would have other than as supposed or expected never listened to.

Just as John Williams Romantic-era stylings of his Star Wars scores opened my ears and mind to classical music at the age of 14, the songs of respective artists featured in the soundtrack for 1973′s George Lucas nostalgia-laced American Graffiti opened my heart and soul to the early rock ‘n’ roll and doo-wop of the late 1950s and early ’60s. Having been born in 1963 into a household where only my older sister listened to such artists as The Beatles, Tom Jones and Englebert Humperdinck, it was only in the days of “Happy Days” (a TV sitcom that was inspired by the success of Lucas’ basi real successful movie) that I got a taste of early rock ‘n’ roll songs in the vein of “(We’re Gonna) Rock Around The Clock,” the song that kicks off this 2-CD, 41-song album.

The songs staged here were not only chosen by conductor George Lucas because they fit the time amount of time (no song here was freed after 1962), but also because the songs themselves were like a Greek chorus commenting on the on-screen doings of Steve, Laurie, Curt, John, Carol, Debbie and Toad. If the mood is upbeat, then songs like “Rock Around The Clock” are featured. For more with regard to emotions charged sequences (Steve and Laurie’s heart-rending argument at the school dance, for instance), The Platters’ widely known and esteemed cover of Kerns’ “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” and “Only You” are perfective accompaniment.

From that initial track by Bill Haley and the Comets (such a whimsical and punny band name) to the surfin’ crowd-pleasing Beach Boys’ “All Summer Long,” the basi soundtrack album of American Graffiti will not only have listeners who saw the movie remembering the film’s respective characters and situations, it will also invoke the seemingly more innocent era of that pre-Cuban Missile Crisis summer of ’62, with it is cruising teenagers, drive-in diners with roller skating waitresses and the the optimisti feeling that all is going to turn out well of the Kennedy years.

This is a fun soundtrack album to listen to. If you’re old sufficient to do not forget the era, it will be a personal musical portal to the past. If you’re like me, born after 1962 and more intimate with Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Usher, and Britney Spears, give it a listen. It may open your heart and soul to older, yet still terrifi styles of early rock ‘n’ roll.

48 of 52 humans found the following review helpful.
5Classic
By thedude_888
This is a fantastic soundtrack. The oldies are fading away from each day radio. Now is the time to buy CD’s like this to keep that era alive.

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