Exemplification Essay: Angry Music In The 1920's

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As with any other Sunday of the year, it was time to mow the grass yet again. Me, my brother and my father are the men for the job on these nice hot days. We all plug into our headphones into our ears as if to escape from the labor that is mowing. This day however, is very different from all the rest. My father, instead of listening to his calming house music while on our riding lawn mower, decides to listen to heavy metal. Next thing you know, our lawn mower has a bent wheel and blade from him crashing into things. This is just one real life example of how music can take you from calm, cool, and collected to angry and destructive. From seeing how one person can react to angry music how would a whole society react to music as a whole group? …show more content…

The 20s was a very influential decade with large events such as the end of World War One, the release of F. Scott Fitzgerald's “The Great Gatsby” , “The Jazz Singer” which was the first talking motion picture to ever be shown in the US, and the start of the great depression. Blues music made its grand premiere during the 20s and continues to inspire and be prevalent today. The blues grew up in the Mississippi Delta just upriver from New Orleans, the birthplace of jazz. Blues and jazz have always influenced each other, and they still interact in countless ways today. Blues was played primarily by African American slaves, ex slaves, and the different descendants of slaves. They would sing while picking cotton and digging through vegetable fields all about their troubles. Well-known blues pioneers from the 1920s such as Son House, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Leadbelly, Charlie Patton and Robert Johnson usually performed solo with just a guitar. The targeted effect that the blues and jazz music had on people was to relieve the stress and anger and pain of being in a dramatically changing society. For the first time, more Americans lived in cities than on farms. The nation's total economic wealth more than doubled between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but unfamiliar “consumer

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