“White people clap on the wrong beat.”
It probably doesn’t speak well of me that some of Professor O’Malley’s lessons still catch me off guard even though we’re well into a month in the class. Still, when I read earlier this week that the topic for today would be “History of Genre”, I didn’t expect to hear about the clapping to rhythm and beats that white people get wrong.
To Professor O’Malley’s credit, he actually segued quite nicely from topic to topic. After showing us many examples of music with a beat like Sousa-Semper Fidelis and “Green Onions” by Booker T. and the M.G., he proceeded to clarify what exactly he meant when he said that white people clap on the wrong beat. For European music, we tend to clap on the one and three of the one-two-three-four beat, such as the aforementioned Sousa-Semper Fidelis or in a marching tune. But music derived from African tradition focuses on the two and four parts of the beat. The most interesting thing about this is how Professor O’Malley tied it to a previous lesson, and explained how our modern music and the formation of genres such as the Blues comes from the displacement of people, much like how Hawaiian music and instruments such as the banjo comes from the American colonization of Hawaii.
We turned the conversation over to some more historic lessons, mainly with African Americans. Professor O’Malley discussed the “Great Migration”, where African-Americans left the south due to the racism that they suffered, hoping to find a new life. Professor O’Malley also tied back to the Minstrel shows that we learned about before, along with how blatantly racist the society of the time was, showing us quotes from Senators Ben Tillman and Carter Glass, with the latter in particular outright saying that he wanted to disenfranchise black voters.
Which ties into why African Americans wanted to move from Mississippi to Chicago. Chicago was hardly a racial paradise, as Professor O’Malley explained, but you could vote, and voting your own political gives you real political power.
Then the topic turned again in an interesting direction. Professor O’Malley showed an example of how African-Americans that had already lived in Chicago were worried about the rural newcomers, but he also mentioned how this ties into the development of the Blues.
“Race” Records began to appear in the late 1920’s. Professor O’Malley described them as being from white producers (barring the Black Swan), but sung by black artists, mainly for a black audience. What interested me was two of figures that were brought up, mainly Bessie Smith and McKinley Morganfield, the latter also being known as Muddy Waters. Bessie Smith was called the Queen of Jazz, and her lyrics were surprisingly brazen for their time. Morganfield was born in 1913 and lived a Stovall Plantation, where you couldn’t even leave without permission. Which makes it interesting that when he made his first song outside the Plantation, the lyrics were actually made in reference to wanting to go back. Professor O’Malley then explained how many of the Race Records would appeal to the nostalgia that many African-Americans had for Mississippi or other states of the south, even though they had just moved away for a better life.
Professor O’Malley ended the lesson with a call-back to the enclosure and free-distribution of information, applying it to music. Personally, I think that there should be free distribution of music so that we can see how different types of music mix together, as they had in the past, but as I’ve been learning for the past few weeks, many aspects of music have a rather sinister backstory, so I look forward to seeing how my opinion on this matter changes as we learn more.