The Modern Scholar: Rock 'n' Roll and American Society: Part One Audiobook By William McKeen cover art

The Modern Scholar: Rock 'n' Roll and American Society: Part One

From the Beginning to 1960

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The Modern Scholar: Rock 'n' Roll and American Society: Part One

By: William McKeen
Narrated by: William McKeen
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About this listen

An author and university professor whose books include scholarly works on the Beatles and Bob Dylan, William McKeen here tackles the role of popular music in American culture. Beginning with the emergence of rock in the 1950s, and including the meteoric rise of artists such as Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry, McKeen examines the growth of the recording industry while incorporating the social and intellectual history of the country.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.

©2011 William McKeen (P)2011 Recorded Books, LLC
Americas Social Sciences
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What listeners say about The Modern Scholar: Rock 'n' Roll and American Society: Part One

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Informative But Factually Flawed In Some Respects

Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

The author describes the roots of Rock 'n Roll from the time of Charlie Patton forward to 1960s. There is the obligatory nod to Robert Johnson. Various genres of music from blues to country to gospel have an influence on an emerging musical format. In addition to artists like Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Bo Diddly, Buddy Holly, there is coverage of DJ's, record producers, songwriters, and managers who are described in this account. The lecturer often indicates the influence particular musicians had on those who followed.

What other book might you compare The Modern Scholar: Rock 'n' Roll and American Society: Part One to and why?

Any collection of articles by Lester Bangs. Audible has many biographies and autobiographies of musicians.

What about the narrator’s performance did you like?

The author and narrator are the same and the presentation is in lecture format. The lecturer is polished and easy to follow.

If this book were a movie would you go see it?

A movie could probably not be made of this subject.

Any additional comments?

Audible usually provides an accompanying booklet in PDF for with a Modern Scholar title but fails to do so here.The lecturer makes some grating errors and omissions. Johnny Cash did not put tissue paper under the strings of his guitar to achieve his sound. Country music of that era did not feature drums so Cash would put regular paper under his guitar strings to mimic the snap of a snare drum. Les Paul is mentioned as a pioneer who made electric guitars and experimented with multi-track recording. However, completely unmentioned was Leo Fender who had a far greater influence. Leo Fender made the first electric bass guitars that truly give rock music its drive and its rhythm. His Stratocasters and Telecasters are used by more musicians than Les Paul guitars. Finally, Leo Fender made wonderful amplifiers to suit the needs of musicians, including the need for distortion and reverb.

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8 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Educational

I've been listening to rock since I was 12, back then I had a Guns n' Roses poster pinned to my bedroom door. My listening zone usually includes bands from the 70s, 80s and 90s. So I really missed out on the Rock 'n' Roll artists of the 50s and 60s. Personally, the lecture proved to be informative in terms of Rock 'n' Roll pioneers and racial barriers that Rock helped to break down.
Being Part 1 of the three-lecture series, it serves as a springboard for further studies into the history of Rock. The narration was good and personal at times, but too laid back for me.
P. S. Since there is no PDF accompanying the lecture, I had to search the Internet to download one.

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Well researched and accurate

I am extremely impressed with this audio book and will be recommending it to my students. The author takes the time to pay homage to many lesser known artists and musicians who laid the foundation of what we now know as rock and roll. Musicians like Charlie Patton, Jelly Roll Morton, and Son House, as well as promoters Alan Lomax, and John Hammond to name a few.
He also examines the role that segregation and racial predgudice in the evolution of this music; which seems to be conveniently left out most histories of rock.

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    1 out of 5 stars

What's the point?

While I suppose most of what the author presents is factual, or at least accepted fact, without samples of the music he's pontificating on this is pretty much pointless. How hard it expensive would it have been to add the samples? As an audio book this falls far from the mark. Don't bother.

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Audible In General - One Star

1. The books so far (from credits) are hard to follow. The one I returned, I couldn't grasp what the author was talking about. 2. The book I kept was very repetitive by the lecturer and besides I knew most of the material (that's on me, though). I listened to the entire lecture but wondering if I could swap it anyway. 3. Audiobooks are new for me and I find they require undivided attention. I am having trouble with that. 4. The programs are expensive by comparison to the Kindle versions. One of them is $8.00 difference! 5. The Windows 10-64 app crashes at times, when synchronizing between devices. 6. My review caused the app to crash as well. 7. When my trial is over I will probably cancel the membership.

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