The Supremes
As we are going to be writing a song one in the style of the 60's and one in the style of the 70's I have started by looking at The Supremes and analysing one of there songs to give me an idea of how their music from the 60's was created. This will allow me to have a deeper understanding of Mowtown and the purpose of the genre, as well as giving me inspiration for a starting point when writing my own song.
Stop! In the Name of Love
This song was written in 1965 by The Supremes who were a popular girl group in the 60's. When listening to the song, Stop! In the Name of Love, I found they fit into the genre of mowtown. I knew because they used intrustuments such as tamborines, cow bells, drums, xylophone and trumpets, all of which are commenly used in mowtown songs. The song had a moderate tempo and had a verse, chorus structure, also used in most mowtown songs.
The lyrical meaning of the song is not wanting a person you love to leave you, the music supports the message by contrasting to the lyrics, the backing music was quite upbeat while the lyrics were sang with saddness, this is because mowtown music is always upbeat.
By doing this analysis I have learnt how to pick a song apart a recognise each part and how to contributes to the final song, this will aid me when it comes to analysing other songs as well as creating my own, as I will be able to reflect on my own work and ensure I have thought about each aspect such as the intrustments, tempo, genre, struture and lyrical meaning.
The Supremes were a big deal in the 60's as civil rights were just coming into place. Having an african-american girl group would have been outrageous before 50's but was now socially acceptable due to more rights happening around the world.
Monday, 16 February 2015
Thursday, 5 February 2015
Bibliography
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Boundless.
“The New Wave of Feminism.” Boundless U.S. History. 14 Nov. 2014.
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ISMIR.
Feminism in the 60’s and 70’s
This semester we are looking into the 60's and 70's and will create pieces of music around this theme. For my first historical research I have looked at feminism during this time period and these are the things that I have learnt.
Feminism in the 60’s
Bra Burning
The
Miss America Pageant protest in 1968 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where women
gathered to burn symbolic items. There is no statue on the Atlantic City
Boardwalk to commemorate an important protest about standards of beauty for
women and a contest tied into capitalism, war, and race. Instead, our cultural
touchstone from that day is the negative and trite association of feminists as
“bra-burners.”
Bras
were just one of the items protestors were encouraged to bring that day that
signified how the male-dominated culture was keeping women locked into rigid
ideas of beauty, but they weren’t burned. Starting a fire on the boardwalk was
illegal, so protestors opted to Playboy
magazines and other items in a Freedom Trash Can. Still, the bra-burning image
remained—a symbol that was easy to belittle as women focusing on something
trivial. (Jennifer Lee, 2014)
The Pill
In 1960,
the Food and Drug Administration approved the combined oral contraceptive pill.
It was made available in 1961. The advent of oral contraceptives had a profound
impact on women economically and socially. The pill allowed
for greater female participation in higher education and careers, as unwanted
pregnancies could easily be prevented. (Boundless, 2014)
Betty
Friedan
Betty
Friedan broke new ground by exploring the idea of women finding personal
fulfilment outside of their traditional roles. She also helped advance the
women's rights movement as one of the founders of the National Organization for
Women.
After
becoming pregnant with her second child, Friedan stayed home to care for her
family, but she was restless as a homemaker and began to wonder if other women
felt the same way she did—that she was both willing and able to be more than a
stay-at-home mom. To answer this question, Friedan surveyed other graduates of
Smith College. The results of her research formed the basis of her book The
Feminine Mystique, published in 1963,
throughout which Friedan encourages women to seek new opportunities for
themselves. It began Friedan's incredibly significant role in the women's
rights movement.
Feminism in the 70’s
In 1974,
First Lady Betty Ford moved to the front of the feminist movement as she talked
candidly about her pro-choice views and feminist stances. Over 1,000 colleges
began offering women's studies courses and 230 women's centers on college
campuses provided support services for female students.
By 1975, the court case Taylor v. Louisiana made it illegal to exclude women from juries. For the first time, federal employees' salaries could be garnished for child support and alimony, and United States armed forces opened its military academies to women. (Boundless, 2014)
By 1975, the court case Taylor v. Louisiana made it illegal to exclude women from juries. For the first time, federal employees' salaries could be garnished for child support and alimony, and United States armed forces opened its military academies to women. (Boundless, 2014)
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