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British Invasion - Ballet Wiki Information
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right in the U.S., and subsequent appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, marked the start of the British Invasion.
The British Invasion
is used to describe rock and roll, beat and pop performers from the United Kingdom who became popular in the United States from 1964 to 1966. The Second British Invasion refers to MTV and New Wave acts of the 1980s. In the latter half of the 2000s the term would be used to describe the critical and popular success of mostly female acts at first and then British acts in general.
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BRITISH INVASION - BALLET TICKETS
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Original British Invasion
The rebellious tone and image of American rock and roll and blues musicians became popular with British youth in the late 1950s. Early attempts to replicate American Rock and Roll failed. The skiffle craze with its " Do-it-yourself" attitude was imitated by several British acts that would later be part of the "invasion". Young British groups started to combine various British and American styles. This coalesced in Liverpool during 1962 in what became known as the “beat boom” for its Merseybeat sound. [ [1] [2] [3]
]
On December 10, 1963 the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite ran a story about the Beatlemania phenomenon in the United Kingdom. [4] After seeing the report, 15 year old Marsha Albert of Silver Spring, Maryland wrote a letter the following day to disc jockey Carroll James at radio station WWDC asking "why can't we have music like that here in America?".[ On December 17 James had Albert introduce I Want to Hold Your Hand live on the air, the first airing of a Beatles song in the United States.][ WWDC's phones lit up and Washington, D.C. area record stores were flooded with requests for a record they did not have in stock.][ On December 26 Capitol Records released the record three weeks ahead of schedule.][ The release of the record during a time when teenagers were on vacation helped spread Beatlemania in America.][ On January 18, 1964 I Want To Hold Your Hand reached number one on the Cash Box chart, the following week it did the same on Billboard.][ On February 7 The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite ran a story about The Beatles' United States arrival that afternoon in which the correspondent said "The British Invasion this time goes by the code name Beatlemania". [5] Two days later (Sunday, February 9) they appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show. Seventy five percent of Americans watching television that night viewed their appearance.][ On April 4 the Beatles held the top 5 positions on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, the only time to date that any act has accomplished this.][ [6] The group's massive chart success continued until they broke up in 1970.][
During the next two years, Chad & Jeremy, Peter and Gordon, The Animals, Manfred Mann, Petula Clark, Freddie and the Dreamers, Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, Herman’s Hermits, The Rolling Stones, The Troggs, and Donovan would have one or more number one singles. [7] Other acts that were part of the invasion included The Kinks and The Dave Clark Five.][ British Invasion acts also dominated the music charts at home in the United Kingdom. [8]
]
British Invasion artists played either blues based rock music, or a guitar driven hybrid of rock and pop music.[ A second wave of the invasion occurred, featuring acts such as The Who and The Zombies, that were influenced by the invasion's pop side and American Rock music.][
]
The Beatles movie A Hard Day's Night
and fashions from Carnaby Street led American media to proclaim England as the center of the music and fashion world.[
The emergence of relatively homogenous worldwide rock music styles about 1967 marked the end of the "invasion".][ A majority of the acts associated with the invasion did not survive its end, but many would become icons of rock music.][
]
Influence
A number of young and amateur American bands inspired by the invasion created a raw version of the British Invasion sound that has since become known as Garage Rock. A handful of grange acts had chart success. [9]
The British Invasion influence continued on subsequent groups such as Todd Rundgren [10] amongst others.
British Invasion acts influenced fashion, haircuts and manners of the 1960s of what was to be known as The Counterculture.[
]
Second British Invasion
In the early 1980s music from the United Kingdom was informed by the after effects of the "Punk/New Wave" revolution. Music videos, having been a staple of British music television programs for half a decade, had evolved into image conscious short films. [11] [12] At the same time, pop and rock music in the United States was undergoing a creative slump due to several factors, including audience fragmentation and the effects of the anti-disco backlash.[ [13] Videos did not exist for most hits by American acts, and those that did were usually taped concert performances.][ When the cable music channel MTV launched on August 1, 1981, it had little choice but to play a large number of music videos from British New Wave acts.][ Also in 1981, Los Angeles radio station KROQ began the Rock of the '80's
format which would make it the most popular station in that city.][
]
At first MTV was only available in small towns and suburbs. To the surprise of the music industry when MTV became available in a local market, record sales by acts played solely on the channel increased immediately and listeners phoned radio stations requesting to hear them.[ The September 1982 arrival of MTV in the media capitals of New York City and Los Angeles, led to widespread positive publicity for the new "video era".][ By the fall, "I Ran" by A Flock of Seagulls, the first successful song that owed almost everything to video, had entered the Billboard Top Ten.][ Duran Duran's glossy videos would come to symbolize the power of MTV.][
]
Early in 1983 radio consultant Lee Abrams advised his clients at 70 album-oriented rock stations to double the amount of new music they played.[ During that year 30% of the record sales were from British acts. On July 18, 18 of the top 40, and 6 of the top 10 singles, were by British artists.
Overall record sales would rise by 10% from 1982.][ [14] Newsweek magazine featured Annie Lennox and Boy George on the cover of one of its issues, while Rolling Stone Magazine
would release an England Swings
issue.][ In April 1984, 40 of the top 100 singles, and in a May 1985 survey 8 of the top 10 singles, were by acts of British origin.][
]
Veteran music journalist Simon Reynolds theorized that, just as in the first British Invasion, the use of black American influences by British acts such as Wham, Eurythmics, Culture Club and Paul Young helped to spur their success.[ All of this activity and the unusual high turnover of artists in the charts caused a sense of upheaval. Commentators in the mainstream media credited MTV and the British acts with bringing color and energy to back to pop music, while rock journalists were generally hostile to the phenomenon because they felt it represented image over content.][
]
Subsequent years
British musical success in the United States was at its nadir in the early 2000s. Less than 2% of the top 100 United States albums in both 2000 and 2001 were from the United Kingdom. In April 2002 for the first time since October 1953 there were no British acts on the singles charts.[ This would be reversed in the latter half of the decade when the percentage of albums sold in the U.S. by British acts increased every year from 2005 through 2008. It would increase from 8.5% to 10% of the market between 2007 and 2008. [15]
]
In July 2005 Natasha Bedingfield made her first of what would be many chart appearances. [16] The following year Joss Stone's third album Introducing Joss Stone debuted at number two on the Billboard
200 becoming the first British solo female artist to have an album début that high on the chart. [17] In 2006 and early 2007 British acts James Blunt, Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, Lady Soverign, KT Tunstall, Snow Patrol and Corinne Bailey Rae also had U.S. chart success. By March 2007 these successes had led to speculation that either another British Invasion was underway or a return to normalcy was occurring. [18] [19] [20]
In 2008 Leona Lewis's debut single "Bleeding Love" would become the first number one single on U.S charts by a British female artist since 1986. Her album also reached number 1. [21] 2008 would also be successful for Duffy, Adele, Estelle, and M.I.A.. The success of these British women led to the reporting of a British female invasion. It was noted that as during the original invasion earthier and African-American styles from previous eras were being mined. [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] Led by Coldplay, British acts received a total of 16 Grammy Awards. [28]
Mick Jagger thinks the current success of British acts is due to the diversity of their styles. A spokesmen for HMV Group, an entertainment retail chain, said that the catalyst for the current success of British acts were Amy Winehouse and possibly American Idol host Simon Cowell.
Original British Invasion artists
- The Animals
- The Beatles
- Chad and Jeremy
- The Creation
- The Dave Clark Five
- Petula Clark
- Donovan
- Dusty Springfield
- Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders
- The Fortunes
- Freddie and the Dreamers
- Gerry & The Pacemakers
- Herman's Hermits
- The Hollies
- The Kinks
- Lulu
- Manfred Mann
- The Moody Blues
- The Nashville Teens
- The New Vaudeville Band
- Peter and Gordon
- The Pretty Things
- The Rolling Stones
- The Searchers
- The Spencer Davis Group
- The Swinging Blue Jeans
- The Troggs
- The Who
- The Yardbirds
- The Zombies
Second British Invasion artists
- ABC
- Adam Ant
- Bananarama
- Big Country
- Culture Club
- The Cure
- Dead or Alive
- Def Leppard
- Depeche Mode
- Thomas Dolby
- Duran Duran
- Erasure
- Eurythmics
- A Flock of Seagulls
- Frankie Goes to Hollywood
- Eddy Grant
- Howard Jones
- The Human League
- Billy Idol
- Madness
- Musical Youth
- New Order
- Pet Shop Boys
- Re-Flex
- The Smiths
- Simple Minds
- Soft Cell
- Tears for Fears
- Thompson Twins
- Wang Chung
- Wham!
- Paul Young
- Yaz
See also
- Beatlemania
- Anglophilia
- Uruguayan Invasion
- Korean wave
References
- Morrison, Craig. American Popular Music. British Invasion (New York: Facts on File, 2006, pp. 32-4.
- J. Gould, ''Can't Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain, and America'' (New York, Harmony Books, 2007), pp. 344-5.
- When the Beatles hit America CNN February 10, 2004.
- Tweet The Beatles! How Walter Cronkite Sent The Beatles Viral... in 1963!" by Martin Lewis based on information from "THE BEATLES ARE COMING! The Birth Of Beatlemania In America" by Bruce Spitzer" July 18, 2009.
- The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit
- UK acts disappear from US charts BBC April 23, 2002
- Encyclopedia Britannica Article
- allmusic Genre British Invasion
- allmusic Genre Garage Rock
- Todd Rundgren Bio, Musicianguide.com, retrieved 2007-11-05
- From Comiskey Park to Thriller: The Effect of “Disco Sucks” on Pop by Steve Greenberg founder and CEO of S-Curve Records July 10, 2009.
- Simon Reynolds, ''Rip It Up and Start Again Postpunk 1978-1984'', pp. 340, 342-3.
- A. Bennett, ''Rock and Popular Music: Politics, Policies, Institutions'' (London: Routledge, 1993), p. 240.
- OUP, retrieved 2007-11-05
- British album sales soar in the US musicradar April 15, 2009
- Artist Chart History - Natasha Bedingfield Billboard
- Joss Beats Winehouse
- The third British invasion? BBC March 30, 2007
- Joss Stone launches a British invasion of America M & C
- Hip-Hop News: Hip Hop's Lady Soverign Steals The Top TRL Spot Rap News Network October 20, 2006
- Leona Lewis Makes Big Splash Atop Billboard 200 Billboard April 16, 2008
- The newest British invader, just Duffy MediaLife Magazine 5 May,2008
- Selling their soul: women leading the way in R&B British invasion canada.com June 9, 2008
- Duffy: The British Invasion Continues National Public Radio June 20, 2008
- Welcome to the next British Invasion ... of women Associated Press May 14, 2008
- The New British Invasion: Soul Divas 2008 The Daily Voice April 30, 2008
- KGRS Artist Bios Adele
- Coldplay and Duffy among British acts dominating top ten global albums of 2008 The Telegraph 16 February, 2008
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