- Lecture and class discussion, with focus on active listening to music;
- Viewing of video programs on music;
- Attendance at live concert performance(s);
- Collaborative learning through student presentation(s).
Selected case studies for each decade, drawn from the following styles, artists and events:
1. Roots of Rock ’n’ Roll to 1950
Delta Blues; Gospel; Country; Ragtime & Dixie; The Musical Legacies of Slavery; The Depression; Great Migration & the Spread of the Blues; Electric Blues
The Legacy of Tin Pan Alley and the Music Industry Business Model
2. 1950s
Rock ’n’ Roll; Rockabilly; Skiffle; Country; Rhythm & Blues
Post WW2 Affluence and the Emergence of the Teen Market
3. 1960s
Folk Revival and Protest Songs; The Rise of the Canadian Singer-Songwriter; The British Invasion
The Civil Rights Movement; From Race Records to Motown; Counterculture and Psychedelia; Drug Culture; Pop Art and the New York Scene; Hippies & Beatniks
4. 1970s
The Art of the Mixing Board (Dub); Funk; Jazz Fusion; Disco; Rock Music (Glam, Prog, Metal); Punk; New Wave
Challenging Gender Stereotypes; Punk and the Birth of the Indie Scene; Disaffected Youth; Independent Record Labels; Rock Against Racism
5. 1980s
Hip Hop; Rap; Electro; Jamaican Dancehall; Indie; Mainstream Pop; Synth Pop
Digital Technology; Cell Phones; MTV
6. 1990s
Grunge; Britpop; Tribute Bands; Urban; Trance; Acid House; Jungle; Drum & Bass; Trip Hop; Pop Punk; Nu Metal; Trance; Techno; Canadian Singer-Songwriters
Napster; Globalization; Digital Recording; The Industry Fights Back
7. 2000s
Nu-Metal; Post Grunge; Singer-Songwriter; Alt Country; Unplugged
Digital Distribution; Bedroom Producers; The DIY Industry; The Impact of Declining Album Sales
8. 2010s
Dubstep; EDM in North America; Indie; Pop
Streaming; YouTube Hits; Synchronization and New Business Models
At the end of the course the successful student will have developed:
- Awareness of the social factors affecting the development of popular music (e.g. technology, migration, economics and demographics) and of the role of popular music in driving social change;
- Vocabulary to describe musical and sonic characteristics of popular music and evolving production techniques;
- Critical listening skills, enabling detailed discussion of production values, aesthetics and song structure.
Annotated Timeline with Playlist 10%
Reviews of Live Concerts/Videos 30%
Presentation 25%
Weekly Listening and/or Reading Quizzes 20%
Final Examination 15%
A recent edition of a text such as:
Szatmay, David P. & Ripley, Lynsay. Rocking in Time: A Social History of Rock’n’Roll. Canadian Edition. Pearson.
PEFA 1136 or by permission of instructor
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