Jewish influence in rhythm and blues

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Studio of Chess Records in Chicago, founded in 1950 by Leonard and Phil Chess

Though the music itself developed in African-American communities, the Jewish influence in rhythm and blues, particularly in terms of the music's presentation to a wider audience, was important. According to the Jewish writer, music publishing executive, and songwriter

WASP-controlled realm of mass communications, but the music business was "wide open for Jews as it was for blacks".[1] Jews played a key role in developing and popularizing African American music, including rhythm and blues, and the independent record business was dominated by young Jewish men, and some women, who promoted the sounds of black music.[2]

Jewish-owned record companies and the promotion of African American music

Jewish composers, musicians, and promoters had a prominent role in the transition from jazz and

rock 'n' roll in American popular music of the 1950s,[3] while Jewish businessmen founded many of the labels that recorded rhythm and blues during the height of the vocal group era. According to Israeli Jewish historian Ari Katorza, although only two percent of the total US population was Jewish, their representation in the music industry was much higher,[4] and by this time they owned or managed about "forty percent of the independent record companies recording and distributing rock 'n' roll and rhythm and blues music in the United States."[5]

In the decade from 1944 to 1955, many of the most influential record companies specializing in "race" music (or rhythm and blues, as it later came to be known) were owned or co-owned by Jews. These included Chess and National Records in Chicago; King in Cincinnati; Savoy in Newark; Apollo, Old Time (Old Town?), and Atlantic in New York; and Specialty, Aladdin, and Modern in Los Angeles, as well as many others; [6] they were the small independent record companies that recorded, marketed, and distributed doo-wop music.[7] Jack and Devora Brown, a Jewish couple in Detroit, founded Fortune Records in 1946, and recorded a variety of eccentric artists and sounds; in the mid-1950s they became champions of Detroit rhythm and blues, including the music of local doo-wop groups.[8]

Jewish entrepreneurs started scores of independent record companies between 1940 and 1960; many of them focused on black popular music and promoting black talent with their new vocal group sound. Although black-owned independent labels competed with the Jewish-owned indie labels in the rhythm and blues era, Jewish entrepreneurs had access to a wide

A&R, and record distribution. This network wielded considerable influence in American culture and business.[9]

Running an independent record label in the rhythm and blues and early rock 'n' roll era was practically a Jewish business niche. Prominent Jewish entrepreneurs included

Jewish women in the business end of rhythm and blues

The Shirelles (1962)

Deborah Chessler, a young Jewish sales clerk interested in black music, attended shows at black and white performance venues in segregated Baltimore, where she absorbed the music that influenced her own songwriting. After the shows, she tried to sell her songs, which she described as in the "black vein", to the groups backstage. Chessler, who could not read or write music, would repeat melodies she composed in her mind until she could find a pianist to transcribe them. She wrote the lyrics to her song "It's Too Soon To Know" on toilet paper when she could find no other paper in her hotel room.[10] With Chessler as their manager and songwriter, the Baltimore doo-wop group the Orioles recorded the song and it reached no. 1 on Billboard's race records charts in November 1948.[11]

A few Jewish women were in the recording business, such as Florence Greenberg, who started the Scepter label in 1959, and signed the African American girl group, the Shirelles. The songwriting team of Gerry Goffin and Carole King, who worked for Don Kirshner's Aldon Music at 1650 Broadway (near the famed Brill Building at 1619);[12] offered Greenberg a song, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow", which was recorded by the Shirelles and rose to number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1961. During the early 1960s, Scepter was the most successful independent record label.[13]

Business practice and relations with black artists

The prevailing narrative of the historical record has described the unfair treatment of black performers by the men who ran the postwar music industry; the most controversial among them were the Jewish owners of independent record companies that sprang up in the United States in the 1940s. Record company owners such as Herman Lubinsky had a reputation for exploiting black artists, and only a few Jewish owners were never accused of dealing unfairly with the black artists they recorded.[14] The sometimes morally dubious business practices of men like Lubinsky and Syd Nathan caused Jewish label heads to be regarded as parasites on black culture by some groups and commentators.[15]

Lubinsky, who founded Savoy Records in 1942, produced and recorded the Carnations, the Debutantes, The Falcons, the Jive Bombers, the Robins, and many others. Although his entrepreneurial approach to the music business and his role as a middleman between black artists and white audiences created opportunities for unrecorded groups to pursue wider exposure,[14] his business partner Ozzie Cadena, a producer and A&R scout for Savoy Records, told an interviewer that Lubinsky hated blacks;[16] Lubinsky in turn was reviled by many black musicians.[17]

Historians Robert Cherry and Jennifer Griffith maintain that regardless of Lubinsky's personal shortcomings, the evidence that he treated African American artists worse in his business dealings than other independent label owners did is unconvincing. They contend that in the extremely competitive independent record company business during the postwar era, the practices of Jewish record owners generally were more a reflection of changing economic realities in the industry than of their personal attitudes.[14]

Some Jewish company owners genuinely appreciated the music they recorded and were committed to the struggle for racial equality.

Jim Crow segregation, while Chess's part ownership of local black oriented radio station WVON helped foster good relations between the black and white communities in Chicago.[14]

Jews in the business with black identity

There were also Jews in the music business who considered themselves black culturally, but Jewish in their roles as entrepreneurs who managed black singing groups. Jewish creative people in the industry—artists, arrangers, producers, and songwriters—also sometimes preferred to mask their ethnic background and assume an African American cultural identity.

Jerry Leiber, who grew up in lower-class West Baltimore where his mother opened a grocery store in a black neighborhood,[19] once commented, “I felt black. I was, as far as I was concerned.”[20][21]

Brill Building songwriting

Brill Building at 1619 Broadway, Manhattan, New York

The American girl groups of the late 1950s and early 1960s had a sound directly influenced by the vocal harmonizing of the earlier black groups who sang doo-wop. Many of the doo-wop songs informing early rock 'n' roll music were written by the so-called "Brill Building" writers, most notably the songwriting team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who wrote songs for the Robins, the Clovers, and then did the same for the Coasters.[22] The "Brill Building" hit-maker businesses in New York that created the Brill Building sound were known for the strong Jewish and female presence in their stables of young songwriters.[23] These songwriters contributed to a revitalization of doo-wop and pioneered the girl group stylings of the Shirelles, the Crystals, the Ronettes, and the Shangri-Las,[12] all of whom had great Billboard chart success in the late 1950s and early 1960s.[24]

The music conceived at the Brill Building was more sophisticated than other pop styles of the time, combining contemporary sounds with classic Tin Pan Alley songwriting.[25] Ellie Greenwich, Carole King, and Cynthia Weil were among the most accomplished of the Brill Building songwriters who wrote R&B and doo-wop hits,[26] and used doo-wop conventions to express the drama of teenage love and give voice to the romantic concerns of young female music fans.[27]

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Muchin, Andrew (August 1994). "How a Bunch of Upstart Jewish Independent Record Producers Helped Turn African American Music into a National Treasure" (PDF). Moment Magazine. pp. 53–54. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
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  4. . Jewish impresarios contributed disproportionately to bringing Negro 'rhythm and blues' into the mainstream of American culture.
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  10. ^ Pamela Horner (2009). "An Evening with Deborah Chessler, Songwriter and former manager of the Orioles at The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame" (PDF). classic harmony.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2010. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
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  14. ^
    S2CID 161459134. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on 2021-01-29.
  15. ^ CommonQuest. American Jewish Committee and Howard University. 1996. p. 25.
  16. ^ CommonQuest. American Jewish Committee and Howard University. 1996. p. 24.
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  19. ^ Apperson, Jay (4 December 1997). "A Baltimore Jewish kid who rocked Music: Jerry Leiber's childhood around Sandtown-Winchester led to "Hound Dog," "Stand By Me" and other legendary tunes of rock 'n' roll". baltimoresun.com. Archived from the original on 27 November 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
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  21. ^ "Jerry Leiber: Remembering One Of Rock's Great Songwriters". NPR.org. 26 August 2011. Archived from the original (Interview by Terry Gross) on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2021. We really felt that we were very black, and we acted black, and we spoke black because, you see, when I was a kid growing up, it was–where I came from, it was hip to be black, you know. I mean, to be white was kind of square, you know.
  22. . We also wrote songs for black groups like the Coasters and the Clovers who, once doo-woppers, were now considered rock and rollers… Maybe a critic could see rock and roll as R&B or deconstructed/reconstructed doo-wop. At the time, no one knew exactly what to call anything.
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  27. ^ Barton, Laura (3 September 2009). "Simply Brill: the women who shaped rock'n'roll". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2021-05-06.

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