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Where does the term "Rock & Roll" come from?

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  1. In 1951, Cleveland, Ohio disc jockey Alan Freed began playing rhythm and blues music for a multi-racial audience. Freed is credited with first using the phrase "rock and roll" to describe the music. However, the term had already been introduced to US audiences, particularly in the lyrics of many rhythm and blues records. Three different songs with the title "Rock And Roll" were recorded in the late 1940s; one by Paul Bascomb in 1947, another by Wild Bill Moore in 1948, and yet another by Doles Dickens in 1949, and the phrase was in constant use in the lyrics of R&B songs of the time. One such record where the phrase was repeated throughout the song was "Rock And Roll Blues," recorded in 1949 by Erline "Rock And Roll" Harris. The phrase was also included in advertisements for the film Wabash Avenue, starring Betty Grable and Victor Mature. An ad for the movie that ran April 12, 1950 billed Ms. Grable as "...the first lady of rock and roll" and Wabash Avenue as "...the roaring street she rocked to fame".

    Before then, the phrase "rocking and rolling", as secular black slang for dancing or s*x, appeared on record for the first time in 1922 on Trixie Smith's "My Man Rocks Me With One Steady Roll". Even earlier, in 1916, the term "rocking and rolling" was used with a religious connotation, on the phonograph record "The Camp Meeting Jubilee" by an unnamed male "quartette".[3] The word "rock" had a long history in the English language as a metaphor for "to shake up, to disturb or to incite". In 1937, Chick Webb and Ella Fitzgerald recorded "Rock It for Me," which included the lyric, "So won't you satisfy my soul with the rock and roll." "Rocking" was a term used by black gospel singers in the American South to mean something akin to spiritual rapture. By the 1940s, however, the term was used as a double entendre, ostensibly referring to dancing, but with the subtextual meaning of s*x, as in Roy Brown's "Good Rocking Tonight." The verb "roll" was a medieval metaphor which meant "having s*x". Writers for hundreds of years have used the phrases "They had a roll in the hay" or "I rolled her in the clover"[4]. The terms were often used together ("rocking and rolling") to describe the motion of a ship at sea, for example as used in 1934 by the Boswell Sisters in their song "Rock and Roll"[5], which was featured in the 1934 film "Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round",[6][7] and in Buddy Jones' "Rockin' Rollin' Mama" (1939). Country singer Tommy Scott was referring to the motion of a railroad train in the 1951 "Rockin and Rollin'". [8].


  2. It began in the late 50's with Elvis Presley / Elvis Costello / Beatles etc,  

  3. Pelvis Elvis?

  4. from 1916 by a couple

  5. let me guess hhmm.......is it kevin federline-lose control am I right or I'm just blew it oh well I'm just jakin it anyway

  6. I'm not exactly sure, but I agree with Minny on this one.

    Elvis Presley, Elvis Costello and The Beatles. In my opinion The Beatles invented Rock and Roll.

  7. Goes Wayyy back to the southern blues era & it was a euphemism for s*x.

    By the 1950s, radio dj Alan Freed picked up on it, & used on his radio show & popularized it to what we know today.

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