1
100
32
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/3c7c571a4f07f62a3fec0bc98b4f208d.jpg
f81f93386d9b55a5aa04cd7dcb5085e0
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Blues Collection
Alternative Title
Blues Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of blues music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.<br /><br />During the middle to late 19th century, African-American ex-slaves and their descendants in the Deep South began playing a style of music that evolved from Black Spirituals and chants, work songs, field hollers, rural fife and drum music, revivalist hymns, and European folk and country dance music. It was characterized by its call-and-response narrative pattern, blue notes, and specific chord progressions, of which the 12-bar blues was the most common. By the turn of the century, blues music was being performed in regions such as Louisiana, the Mississippi Delta, the Piedmont region, and Texas, typically by a solo musician on acoustic guitar, harmonica, or piano. Initially, a traditional blues verse was made up of a single line repeated four times, until the common AAB pattern was established in the early 20th century.<br /><br />In 1912, W. C. Handy, an African-American minstrel show band leader, published "Memphis Blues," which helped popularize the genre by transcribing and orchestrating it in a symphonic-like style. Handy is also credited with giving the blues its contemporary form, and was crowned the "Father of the Blues." The unexpected success of Mamie Smith’s "Crazy Blues," eight years later, caused record labels to begin producing “race records," featuring blues singers such as Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith. Most of the blues pioneers from the 1920s performed solo with an acoustic guitar. Among the most recognized are Robert Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Leadbelly and Charlie Patton.<br /><br />As blues spread from the Deep South, it took on regional characteristics and styles. The Mississippi Delta blues featured slide guitar and a rootsy, sparse style. The Piedmont blues used an elaborate ragtime-based rhythm and fingerpicking technique. The Memphis blues, popular in vaudeville and medicine shows, was influenced by jug bands, incorporating unusual instruments such as washboard, kazoo, jug, mandolin, and fiddle. Urban blues forced performers to become more elaborate, as they had to adapt to a larger, more varied audience. Boogie-woogie consisted of piano-based blues derived from barrelhouse and ragtime in Chicago. Big band blues emerged out of Kansas City and incorporated elements of jazz and swing. West Coast blues was heavily influenced by a swing beat, and popularized by Texas musicians who moved to California. Electric blues came out of Chicago, Memphis, Detroit, and St. Louis in the 1950s, using electric guitars, double bass, drums. and harmonica performed through a microphone, amplifier and PA (public address) system. By the beginning of the 1960s, the most popular genres for young Americans were rock and roll and soul music, both rooted in African-American blues.<br /><br />Buried in the Deep South, Central Florida has had a long blues tradition, and a number of notable blues musicians had roots in Florida, including Tampa Red, Bo Diddley, Ray Charles, "Diamond Teeth Mary" McClain, Gabriel Brown, Noble "Thin Man" Watts, Willie Green, Blind Blake, Little Mike and the Tornadoes, Barrelhouse Chuck, and the Allman Brothers Band. Muddy Waters wrote a song for his 1977 album, <em>Hard Again</em>, entitled "Deep Down in Florida," in which he mentions Newberry and traveling to Gainesville to see an old friend. Waters met his third wife while performing at the popular blues dance hall, the Cotton Club, in Gainesville. The club opened in 1948 and had regular performances by such future famous blues musicians as James Brown, B.B. King and Ray Charles. The Wells’ Built Hotel and Casino, which is now an African-American history museum, is located in the historic African-American community of Parramore in Downtown Orlando. The hotel hosted many notable African-American musicians and celebrities during the Segregation era. Guitar Slim, Ray Charles, Ivory Joe Hunter, B. B. King and Bo Diddley were among the bluesmen traveling along the Chitlin' Circuit who were guests at the hotel and performers at the casino.
Contributor
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Language
eng
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bradenton, Florida
The Alley, Sanford, Florida
West Tampa, Tampa, Florida
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
DeVane, Dwight, Blaine Waide, Peggy A. Bulger, Doris J. Dyen, and David Evans. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/856993560" target="_blank"><em>Drop on Down in Florida: Field Recordings of African American Traditional Music 1977-1980</em></a>. Atlanta, Ga: Dust-to-Digital, 2012.
Oakley, Giles. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3082016" target="_blank"><em>The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues</em></a>. New York: Taplinger Pub. Co, 1977.
Palmer, Robert. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6864668" target="_blank"><em>Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta</em></a>. New York: Viking Press, 1981.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Charles "Charlie" Brantley
Alternative Title
Charlie Brantley
Subject
Honey Drippers (Musical group)
Brantley, Charlie
Tampa (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Blues (Music)--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rhythm and blues music--United States
R&B (Music)
Description
Charles "Charlie" Brantley, a musician born in West Tampa, one of the oldest neighborhoods in Tampa, Florida, around the turn of the 20th century. Brantley began his music career in 1935, when he joined the Florida Collegians, a group of Tampa musicians. Influenced by bandleader Louis Jordan, he started his own group, Charlie Brantley and His Original Honey Dippers, in 1944. Brantley gave young musicians the opportunity to break into the music scene by performing with his band and would often allow them to stay at his home on 1901 Cherry Street in Tampa. When a young Ray Charles came to Tampa in the fall of 1946, Brantley hired him as a piano player and allowed him to stay at his house. Brantley founded the Negro Musical Association in the late 1940s and continued to perform with his band until June 1949, when a severe heart and nerve condition forced him to quit playing and take on a management role. Brantley passed away on Christmas Day in 1964.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/144" target="_blank">Blues Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/charlie-brantley-and-his-original-honey-dippers.php" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/charlie-brantley-and-his-original-honey-dippers.php</a>.
Coverage
Home of Charlie Brantley, West Tampa, Tampa, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1935-1964
Format
image/jpg
Extent
12.6 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by the <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by the <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Ripani, Richard J. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/630115374" target="_blank"><em>The New Blue Music Changes in Rhythm & Blues, 1950-1999</em></a>. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2006.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/charlie-brantley-and-his-original-honey-dippers.php" target="_blank">Charlie Brantley and His Original Honey Dippers</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/charlie-brantley-and-his-original-honey-dippers.php.
African American
band
band leader
blues
blues music
blues singer
blues vocalist
Brantley, Charles
Brantley, Charlie
Charlie Brantley and His Original Honey Dippers
Honey Dippers
music
Negro Musical Association
Original Honey Dippers
R&B
rhythm and blues
saxophonist
singer
Tampa
vocalist
West Tampa
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/f90906ab9c11b9cb7337a1de66542f41.JPG
fe1eeb98f811fcc4bb6fa68b480524ff
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 color photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Tempests at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, 2010
Alternative Title
Tempests at Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg
Subject
St. Petersburg (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
The Tempests performing live at the Firestone Grand Prix on March 29, 2010. The Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg is a Verizon IndyCar Series race and is located at 1 Beach Drive Southeast, 42, in St. Petersburg, Florida. The photograph, from left to right, features Tommy Angarano, Darren Shaw, and Chris Winter.<br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photograph, March 29, 2010: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Tempests.JPG" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Tempests.JPG</a>.
Coverage
Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
2010-03-29
Format
image/jpg
Extent
334 KB
Medium
1 color photograph
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
Angarano, Tommy
bass guitar
bass guitarist
Beach Drive
blues
drum
drummer
Firestone Grand Prix
garage band
garage rock
Grand Prix
GTE Federal Credit Union
guitar
guitarist
keyboard
pop
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
Shaw, Darren
soul
soul music
St. Petersburg
The Tempest
The Tempests
Verizon IndyCar Series
Winter, Chris
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/305c22e86465e788ec96ed689b3fa860.jpg
4aaf51f01f891889a0431e790ff714ef
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Original Format
1 flyer
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Hey Gang! Big Dance at The Village
Alternative Title
Hey Gang! Big Dance at The Village
Subject
Tampa (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
Flyer for a concert for the band, The Tempests on March 12, 1966. The dance was held at The Village, located at 3003 Cypress Street in Tampa, Florida. <br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original flyer, ca. March 12, 1966: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original flyer. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/tempests%20ad%20-%201966.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/tempests%20ad%20-%201966.jpg</a>.
Coverage
The Village, Tampa, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1966-03-12
Format
image/jpg
Extent
81 KB
Medium
1 flyer
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
blues
Cypress Street
dance
flyer
garage band
garage rock
pop
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
soul
soul music
St. Petersburg
Surfers' Club
Tampa
The Tempest
The Tempests
The Village
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/a448604043ee033f13657f2372983444.jpg
eac9801d941d1e06a84abe8f6f95f758
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Original Format
1 flyer
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Shangri-Las and The Tempests at Mason's Hall, March 26, 1966
Alternative Title
Shangri-Las and Tempests at Mason's Hall
Subject
Shangri-Las (Musical group)
Tampa (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
Flyer for a concert for The Shangri-Las and The Tempests at Mason's Hall. The "Teen Seen," which was located on the West End Buffalo Avenue Bridge in Tampa, Florida, on March 26, 1966. The flyer features a photograph of The Shangri-Las, a New York-based girl group who were scheduled to headline the event. Admission was $1.50.<br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original flyer, ca. March 26, 1966: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original flyer. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/promo%20ad%20-%201960%27s.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/promo%20ad%20-%201960%27s.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Mason's Hall, Tampa, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1966-03-26
Format
image/jpg
Extent
72.4 KB
Medium
1 flyer
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
O'Dair, Barbara. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34951566" target="_blank"><em>Trouble Girls: The Rolling Stone Book of Women in Rock</em></a>. New York: Random House, 1997.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
"Teen Seen"
blues
flyer
Ganser, Marguerite "Marge"
Ganser, Mary Ann
garage band
garage rock
girl group
Mason's Hall
pop
pop group
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
Shangri-Las, The
soul
soul music
Tampa
The Shangri-Las
The Tempest
The Tempests
Weiss, Elizabeth "Betty"
Weiss, Mary
West End Buffalo Avenue Bridge
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/8eef5b58e10fe9afb844925ad260467e.jpg
4c9308f1fd9353137df638b8a9e85117
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 color photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Tempests at Surfer's Club, 1966
Alternative Title
Tempests at Surfer's Club
Subject
Madeira Beach (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
Color photograph of the band, The Tempests, performing live at Surfer's Club in 1966. Surfer's Club was a teenage nightclub in the 1960s, located at 14966 Gulf Boulevard, in Madeira Beach, Florida. The club, which opened in July 1964 and closed in October 1966, only allowed kids ages 15-20. Nightly chaperones ensured there was no "front to back" dancing. The photograph, from left to right, features Doug Palmer, Charlie Bailey, and Tommy Angarano, as well as nine teenagers dancing in front of the stage.<br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photograph, 1966: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Surfers%20Club%20-%201966.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Surfers%20Club%20-%201966.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Surfer's Club, Madeira Beach, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1966
Format
image/jpg
Extent
185 KB
Medium
1 color photograph
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
Angarano, Tommy
Bailey, Charlie
blues
garage band
garage rock
Madeira Beach
Palmer, Doug
pop
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
soul
soul music
St. Petersburg
Surfer's Club
The Tempests
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/f56581ee642d1f04f1e3fa90db3266a8.jpg
65722dddcd3dff167b51199084981858
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Tempests at The Joker's Club, 1964
Alternative Title
Tempests at Joker's Club
Subject
St. Petersburg (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
The Tempests, featuring the band's original lineup performing live at The Joker's Club, located at 3615 37th Street North in St. Petersburg, Florida, in 1964. The photograph, from left to right, features Tommy Angarano, Bobby Allen, Bill Hickman, Charlie Bailey, and Doug Palmer.<br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph, 1964: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Tempests%20-%201964.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/Tempests%20-%201964.jpg</a>.
Coverage
The Joker's Club, St. Petersburg, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1964
Format
image/jpg
Extent
219 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
37th Street
Allen, Bobby
Angarano, Tommy
Bailey, Charlie
bass guitar
bassist
blues
drum
drummer
garage band
garage rock
guitar
guitarist
Hickman, Bill
Joker's Club
Palmer, Doug
pop
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
singer
soul
soul music
St. Petersburg
The Joker's Club
The Tempest
The Tempests
Thirty-Seventh Street
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/bfe3f3ab8439736a09f272d18aca728e.jpg
821b1c6255c68517c5d8a3b4f720e134
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/c3827494c57854105cf3a21c5e7511c7.jpg
b5579d2311be7a9140184c9cad79655a
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/0fc20a2517cee4fe55b6cd6d3c0a14b4.jpg
0466a4df4f7a0b9c040ea9dbb351c143
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/068bab3e722705a4f144e62e0bf3f697.jpg
785141b5e64552083b831b505551a012
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
4 black and white photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Tempests at the National Guard Armory, 1966
Alternative Title
Tempests at National Guard Armory
Subject
St. Petersburg (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Tempests (Musical group)
Rock music--United States
Pop music
Blues (Music)--Florida
Soul music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Description
The Tempests performing live at the National Guard Armory, located at 3601 38th Avenue South in St. Petersburg, Florida, in 1966. The first photograph, from left to right, features Roy Delese, Tommy Angarano, Mike Hammer, Buddy Peterson, Brad Myers and Charlie Bailey. The second, third and fourth feature all but Bailey in the same order.<br /><br />The Tempests were formed in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1963, when the members were just 12 and 13 years old. The original members included Doug Palmer (rhythm guitar), Bobby Allen (drums), Bill Hickman (bass guitar), Tommy Angarano (vocals), and Charlie Bailey (lead guitar). Hickman was later replaced with Buddy Peterson and Palmer was replaced with Mike Hammer, enhancing the group's ability to play songs with harmony. Due to the popularity of The Beatles, harmony-driven bands dominated the radio. The new additions proved a success, as the group won the Battle of the Bands at the Electric Zoo and recorded their first record, "I Want You Only," with "I Want You to Know" as the B-side. Allen was later replaced with Brad Myers on drums, and Bailey with Roy Delese on keyboard. The band opened for many national groups, such as The Dave Clark Five, The Shangri-Las, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Tommy James and the Shondells, Blues Magoos, The Doors, The McCoys, the Mindbenders, The Allman Brothers Band, and Three Dog Night.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photographs, 1966: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of four original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966.jpg</a>.
Digital reproduction of four original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966b.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966b.jpg</a>.
Digital reproduction of four original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966c.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966c.jpg</a>.
Digital reproduction of four original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966d.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/National%20Guard%20Armory%20-%201966d.jpg</a>.
Coverage
National Guard Armory, St. Petersburg, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1966
Format
image/jpg
Extent
199 KB
219 KB
214 KB
249 KB
Medium
4 black and white photographs
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Jones, Martin. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/759863392" target="_blank"><em>Lovers Buggers & Thieves: Garage Rock - Monster Rock - Progressive Rock - Psychedelic Rock - Folk Rock. Vol. 1</em></a>. Manchester: Headpress, 2005.
"<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php" target="_blank">The Tropics</a>." TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/the-tropics.php.
38th Avenue
amplifier
Angarano, Tommy
Bailey, Charlie
bass guitar
bassist
blues
Delese, Roy
drum
drummer
garage band
garage rock
guitar
guitarist
Hammer, Mike
keyboard
keyboardist
Myers, Brad
National Guard Armory
Peterson, Buddy
pop
pop music
rock
rock band
rock music
singer
soul
soul music
St. Petersburg
The Tempest
The Tempests
Thirty-Eighth Avenue
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/9700e764deb204f3d6364b6740040202.jpg
198ca3de50f048ce784eabf688bc3b06
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/45bcbef4102147c83397bcded0501f93.jpg
ce62df5629bb23363b570300abb55038
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/5aa46550063839781ed6d5627e22d5bc.jpeg
b4c103718917f5a9677e6e67ec2fe619
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Blues Collection
Alternative Title
Blues Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of blues music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.<br /><br />During the middle to late 19th century, African-American ex-slaves and their descendants in the Deep South began playing a style of music that evolved from Black Spirituals and chants, work songs, field hollers, rural fife and drum music, revivalist hymns, and European folk and country dance music. It was characterized by its call-and-response narrative pattern, blue notes, and specific chord progressions, of which the 12-bar blues was the most common. By the turn of the century, blues music was being performed in regions such as Louisiana, the Mississippi Delta, the Piedmont region, and Texas, typically by a solo musician on acoustic guitar, harmonica, or piano. Initially, a traditional blues verse was made up of a single line repeated four times, until the common AAB pattern was established in the early 20th century.<br /><br />In 1912, W. C. Handy, an African-American minstrel show band leader, published "Memphis Blues," which helped popularize the genre by transcribing and orchestrating it in a symphonic-like style. Handy is also credited with giving the blues its contemporary form, and was crowned the "Father of the Blues." The unexpected success of Mamie Smith’s "Crazy Blues," eight years later, caused record labels to begin producing “race records," featuring blues singers such as Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith. Most of the blues pioneers from the 1920s performed solo with an acoustic guitar. Among the most recognized are Robert Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Leadbelly and Charlie Patton.<br /><br />As blues spread from the Deep South, it took on regional characteristics and styles. The Mississippi Delta blues featured slide guitar and a rootsy, sparse style. The Piedmont blues used an elaborate ragtime-based rhythm and fingerpicking technique. The Memphis blues, popular in vaudeville and medicine shows, was influenced by jug bands, incorporating unusual instruments such as washboard, kazoo, jug, mandolin, and fiddle. Urban blues forced performers to become more elaborate, as they had to adapt to a larger, more varied audience. Boogie-woogie consisted of piano-based blues derived from barrelhouse and ragtime in Chicago. Big band blues emerged out of Kansas City and incorporated elements of jazz and swing. West Coast blues was heavily influenced by a swing beat, and popularized by Texas musicians who moved to California. Electric blues came out of Chicago, Memphis, Detroit, and St. Louis in the 1950s, using electric guitars, double bass, drums. and harmonica performed through a microphone, amplifier and PA (public address) system. By the beginning of the 1960s, the most popular genres for young Americans were rock and roll and soul music, both rooted in African-American blues.<br /><br />Buried in the Deep South, Central Florida has had a long blues tradition, and a number of notable blues musicians had roots in Florida, including Tampa Red, Bo Diddley, Ray Charles, "Diamond Teeth Mary" McClain, Gabriel Brown, Noble "Thin Man" Watts, Willie Green, Blind Blake, Little Mike and the Tornadoes, Barrelhouse Chuck, and the Allman Brothers Band. Muddy Waters wrote a song for his 1977 album, <em>Hard Again</em>, entitled "Deep Down in Florida," in which he mentions Newberry and traveling to Gainesville to see an old friend. Waters met his third wife while performing at the popular blues dance hall, the Cotton Club, in Gainesville. The club opened in 1948 and had regular performances by such future famous blues musicians as James Brown, B.B. King and Ray Charles. The Wells’ Built Hotel and Casino, which is now an African-American history museum, is located in the historic African-American community of Parramore in Downtown Orlando. The hotel hosted many notable African-American musicians and celebrities during the Segregation era. Guitar Slim, Ray Charles, Ivory Joe Hunter, B. B. King and Bo Diddley were among the bluesmen traveling along the Chitlin' Circuit who were guests at the hotel and performers at the casino.
Contributor
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Language
eng
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bradenton, Florida
The Alley, Sanford, Florida
West Tampa, Tampa, Florida
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
DeVane, Dwight, Blaine Waide, Peggy A. Bulger, Doris J. Dyen, and David Evans. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/856993560" target="_blank"><em>Drop on Down in Florida: Field Recordings of African American Traditional Music 1977-1980</em></a>. Atlanta, Ga: Dust-to-Digital, 2012.
Oakley, Giles. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3082016" target="_blank"><em>The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues</em></a>. New York: Taplinger Pub. Co, 1977.
Palmer, Robert. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6864668" target="_blank"><em>Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta</em></a>. New York: Viking Press, 1981.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 color photograph
2 black and white photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
"Diamond Teeth" Mary
Alternative Title
"Diamond Teeth" Mary
Subject
McClain, Mary Smith
Bradenton (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Blues (Music)--Florida
Gospel music--Florida
Vaudeville--Florida
Description
"Diamond Teeth" Mary McClain (born Mary Smith), an African-American blues, gospel, and vaudeville singer who performed from the 1910s through the 1990s. "Diamond Teeth" Mary was the half-sister of blues legend, Bessie Smith, and was present at her death following an automobile accident. Performing in various minstrel shows through the 1920s and 1930s, she was known as "Walking Mary" until the 1940s. She had diamonds removed from a bracelet and set into her front teeth, giving her famous moniker, but eventually removed them to pay for her mother's medical bills. Often promoted as "Queen of the Blues," she performed with some of the biggest names in African-American music, including Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith, Sarah Vaughan, Ray Charles, Count Basie, Nat 'King' Cole, Charlie Parker, and Duke Ellington.<br /><br />"Diamond Teeth" Mary moved to Bradenton, Florida, in 1960, where she began performing gospel music, rather than secular blues, and remained there until her death in April 2000. She was given national exposure in the late 1970s, when Steven Zeitlin of the Smithsonian Institution tracked her down and convinced her to perform at the American Folklife Festival. She performed for President Ronald Reagan at the White House in 1980, appeared in an off-Broadway production in 1981, became one of the first recipients of the Florida Folk Heritage Award in 1986, recorded her first album, <em>If I Can't Sell It, I'm Gonna Sit On It</em>, in 1993, and continued to perform at blues festivals in the United States and Europe until her death at age 97. A play about her life premiered at the Florida Folk Festival in 2000.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Original black and white photographs: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/144" target="_blank">Blues Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Original black and white photographs: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/bands-artists.php" target="_blank">Profiles: Bands & Artists</a>, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Has Format
Digital reproduction of original color photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/34564.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/34564.jpg</a>.
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/DiamondTeethMary.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/DiamondTeethMary.jpg</a>.
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/35464352.jpeg.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/35464352.jpeg</a>.
Coverage
Bradenton, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1960-2000
Format
image/jpg
Extent
140 KB
77.5 KB
33.5 KB
Medium
1 color photograph
2 black and white photographs
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Cohn, Lawrence (ed.) "Mary 'Diamond Teeth' McClain. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27380574" target="_blank"><em>Nothing but the Blues: The Music and the Musicians</em></a>. New York: Abbeville Press, 1993
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/diamond-teeth-mary.php" target="_blank">""Diamond Teeth" Mary"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/diamond-teeth-mary.php.
"Diamond Teeth" Mary
African American
blues
blues music
blues singer
Bradenton
concert
gospel music
McClain, "Diamond Teeth" Mary Smith
McClain, Mary "Diamond Teeth" Smith
minstrel show
minstrelsy
singer
Smith, "Diamond Teeth"
Smith, Mary
St. Petersburg
Tampa Bay
vaudeville
vocalist
Walking Mary
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/4cdd6b5bc7c13072a8419a0c09767512.jpg
e24b40670a612f1f7c2020c186ffabcf
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 business card
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Buckwheat Business Card
Alternative Title
Buckwheat Business Card
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Business card for the band, Buckwheat. The names of the band members appear at the top of the card, with "Buckwheat for live entertainment" printed in the center. The name Randy Stone and a phone number appear at the bottom. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of their guitarist, Danny Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, Dwight Saunders played bass and Richard Radloff played drums. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Text
Source
Original business card: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original business card. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-bus_card.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-bus_card.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
41 KB
Medium
1 business card
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
electric bass guitar
garage band
garage rock
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
Stone, Randy
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/311558278eaa11e4707568d33477cc41.jpg
b7a151e859185c91bbd45f702f943339
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Dwight Saunders of Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Dwight Saunders of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Bassists
Description
Black and white photographs of Dwight Saunders performing on bass guitar with the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of their guitarist, Danny Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, and Saunders on bass, Richard Radloff played drums. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-dwight_saunders.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-dwight_saunders.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
10.2 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
bass guitar
bass player
bassist
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
electric bass guitar
garage band
garage rock
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/97fe3737f4e743b9f1dc61b915a3ce05.jpg
af98fd1f36039c7d56a290f2310200da
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Dwight Saunders Performing with Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Dwight Saunders of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Bassists
Description
Black and white photographs of Dwight Saunders performing on bass guitar with the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of their guitarist, Danny Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, and Saunders on bass, Richard Radloff played drums. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-dwight1.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-dwight1.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
10.1 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
bass guitar
bass player
bassist
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
electric bass guitar
garage band
garage rock
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/89bce75e2298cc5efe5357da7fea1bac.jpg
987600d5202699aa276fda910d1b75bd
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Danny Richard and Dwight Saunders of Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Danny Richard and Dwight Saunders of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Richard, Danny
Description
Danny Richard and Dwight Saunders of the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, and Saunders on bass, Richard Radloff played drums. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny-dwight.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny-dwight.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
19 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
bass player
bassist
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
garage band
garage rock
guitar player
guitarist
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/bc0e60b65e0adcc6bf204bca95055caf.jpg
a3345e43cd392e3802b836026b11adcb
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Danny Richard of Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Danny Richard of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Richard, Danny
Guitarists--United States
Description
Black and white photographs of Danny Richard performing on electric guitar with the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, Richard Radloff played drums and Dwight Saunders played bass. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny_richard.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny_richard.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
8.32 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
electric guitar
garage band
garage rock
guitar
guitar player
guitarist
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/81005d05472f01fed0c03c503e6fc362.jpg
a4656de9c2066a8aa611101eca1478a7
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Danny Richard Performing with Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Danny Richard of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Richard, Danny
Guitarists--United States
Description
Black and white photographs of Danny Richard performing on electric guitar with the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, Richard Radloff played drums and Dwight Saunders played bass. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny1.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-danny1.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
11.3 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
electric guitar
garage band
garage rock
guitar
guitar player
guitarist
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/2b5dedef8923ca20ec722edb7fa8731a.jpg
8af3ed9647043ae22414c38c24e96bec
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 black and white photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Richard Radloff Performing with Buckwheat
Alternative Title
Richard Radloff of Buckwheat
Subject
Clearwater (Fla.)
Concerts
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Rock music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Drummers (Musicians)
Description
Richard Radloff performing on drums with the band, Buckwheat. Known for their spontaneous blues-based jams and the pyrotechnics of their guitarist, Danny Richard, Buckwheat was a three-piece high energy rock band that performed in the Tampa Bay area from the late 1960s through the mid-1970s. In addition to Richard on guitar and vocals, and Radloff on drums, Dwight Saunders played bass. The band performed at Battle of the Bands and teen venues throughout the region, including the "Star Spectacular concert series" at Clearwater Auditorium, Indian Rocks Beach, Rowlett Park, and the old "Quest Inn" Coffee House in Downtown Clearwater.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original black and white photograph: <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">Buckwheat</a>, Profiles: Bands & Artists, Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original black and white photograph. <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-richard.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/resources/buckwheat-richard.jpg</a>.
Coverage
Tampa Bay, Florida
Clearwater, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
Date Created
ca. 1968-1973
Format
image/jpg
Extent
13.4 KB
Medium
1 black and white photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Published digitally by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/" target="_blank">Tampa Bay Music Scene Historical Society</a>
External Reference
Abbey, Eric James. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/68192501" target="_blank"><em>Garage Rock and Its Roots: Musical Rebels and the Drive for Individuality</em></a>. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &amp
Co, 2006.
Webb, Tedd. <a href="http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TeddWebb.com. http://www.teddwebb.com/garage_bands/buckwheat.html.
<a href="http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php" target="_blank">"Buckwheat"</a>. TampaBayMusicHistory.com. http://www.tampabaymusichistory.com/buckwheat.php.
African American
band
blues
blues music
blues-rock
blues-rock music
Buckwheat
Clearwater
concert
drum
drummer
garage band
garage rock
musician
power rock
Radloff, Richard
Richard, Danny
rock
rock band
rock music
Saunders, Dwight
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/d730a398c0574aecd3e3561d48c03289.JPG
fde409118ebe0df63d388646006d8ac8
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/6c5b5497bed5ad60e8b057df2aa96d2f.JPG
05451bbb20cd74550ede9a931c2b7ac5
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/5c12d0b70f74ce534947cdec6372e11b.JPG
45da02308ac72cc4706f71dacd0ea177
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/8d4b37e8f808696a8f0c2bfaa51cca44.JPG
fc99ee6ab811c6023697cc2125a3e1c5
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/b80eb1c2a93390cdae19f30d175e1edf.JPG
e78db8703b0e064ae14e6aa1c2edcd9d
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/b9c88b62ca6bb6ae85c469153889106b.JPG
40e5ec4833f6937de1d40fa6e9ab931d
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/20d7bd1e0e2cf5c0c03c873eb79d26f3.JPG
35c0a402df59d3497aa82d8d124f60ef
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/a20fe58f7e6253a9646d061bb6cb01da.JPG
ae7cca1a4a1a73a7aae1defa48d7b6b8
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/765eb67451c34daaa831bf2cc3eb0549.JPG
d15595b4cb3724aabdbe8c892d679ed4
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
9 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Dickey Betts & Great Southern
Alternative Title
Dickey Betts & Great Southern
Subject
Betts, Dickey
Dickey Betts & Great Southern (Musical group)
Concerts--United States
Rock (Music)--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Country music--Southern States
Music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Sarasota (Fla.)
Bradenton (Fla.)
Description
Dickey Betts & Great Southern performing live at a private party of over 300 friends and family in the swamplands of Fruitville, Florida, on February 24, 2013. The first four photographs feature Betts on electric guitar and the fourth photograph shows James Varnado on drums. The fifth and sixth photographs feature Duane Betts and Dickey Betts on guitar, the fourth features a crowd of friends and family at the show, and the fifth features Pedro Arevalo on bass guitar. <br /><br />Forrest Richard “Dickey” Betts is considered one of the most influential guitar players of the 20th century. He was born in West Palm Beach, raised in Bradenton, and has lived in Sarasota for most of his life. Beginning at age 16, he began performing in a series of rock bands on the Florida circuit. A founding member of the Allman Brothers Band in 1969, Betts matched bandleader Duane Allman lick for lick on electric guitar, writing many of their songs. The guitar duo introduced melodic twin guitar harmony and counterpoint, redefining the traditional rhythm/lead roles of rock guitarists. When Allman died in a motorcycle accident in 1971, Betts and Duane’s brother, Gregg Allman, shared leadership of the band, with Betts becoming the sole guitar player and taking a larger role in writing and singing. Betts wrote and sang on the group’s biggest hit, "Ramblin’ Man" in 1973 <br /><br />Betts recorded his first solo album in 1974, and when the band split up in 1976, he formed Dickey Betts & Great Southern. He rejoined the Allman Brothers Band when they reformed in 1978.The band split up again for several years during the 1980s, reformed again in 1989, and Betts remained with them until he was suspended for substance abuse problems in 2000. He reformed Great Southern that year, adding his son, Duane Betts, on guitar. Along with the Allman Brothers Band, Betts was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000ax_QozXAnSg/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000ax_QozXAnSg/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000vh2M_YSRX1w/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000vh2M_YSRX1w/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000Qdud6VMKEyU/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000Qdud6VMKEyU/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000wRDx4FIsFfw/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000wRDx4FIsFfw/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I00006M.HvA2EXsM/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I00006M.HvA2EXsM/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I00009rpZ5NxQRV8/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I00009rpZ5NxQRV8/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000VSQD9kg0sfA/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000VSQD9kg0sfA/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000FApIE8cOrW0/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000FApIE8cOrW0/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, February 24, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000ZO8CCkujD6s/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-02-24-DICKEY-BETTS-GREAT-SOUTHERN-SPEICAL-GUESTS/G00003hCJm94WJ2k/I0000ZO8CCkujD6s/C0000N3GwcxUcDDU</a>.
Coverage
Fruitville, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2013-02-24
Date Copyrighted
2013-02-24
Format
image/jpg
Extent
22.7 KB
21.4 KB
23.3 KB
27.2 KB
24.5 KB
21.5 KB
24.7 KB
18.5 KB
22.3 KB
Medium
9 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Paul, Alan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/846545832" target="_blank"><em>One Way Out: The Inside History of the Allman Brothers Band</em></a>. 2014.
Tatangelo, Wade. “<a href="http://www.ticketsarasota.com/2014/10/29/dickey-betts-on-his-days-before-with-and-after-allman-brothers-interview/" target="_blank">Dickey Betts on his days before, with and after Allman Brothers: interview</a>.” <em>Ticket Sarasota</em>. October 29, 2014. http://www.ticketsarasota.com/2014/10/29/dickey-betts-on-his-days-before-with-and-after-allman-brothers-interview/.
bass guitar
bassist
blues
blues rock
Bradenton
concert
country
country music
country rock
Dick Betts
Dickey Betts
Dickey Betts & Great Southern
drum
drummer
Duane Betts
electric guitar
Forrest "Dickey" Richard Betts
Fruitville
Gibson guitar
Gibson Guitar Corporation
Great Southern
guitar
guitarist
James Varnado
jazz
jazz fusion
Pedro Arevalo
rock
rock music
Sarasota
Sarasota County
Southern rock
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/943814eeeae99747025cf148ee0d8bcf.JPG
37898ed5b38d6d6bcfdc4ccf4a050a8f
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/f65962824b814409fae904f6e9490037.JPG
816d61553dbce99075a2bdefde24745d
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/de5f6324774806992907fd32e4c4656d.JPG
49e1cf1b6f816f0637ac32a9676a4893
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/9afe9c5878d5212f1c1c320c95bcf82a.JPG
4675568622067aee89eaef151f050bf7
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/a31a785ffa5f4f635250d012a2d9023d.JPG
1bb4ea7fc950f1005938a2aa65234c4e
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
5 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
funkUs at The Plaza Theater, 2013
Alternative Title
funkUs at The Plaza Theater
Subject
Funk (Music)--United States
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Rock (Music)--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Jazz--United States
Rhythm and blues music--United States
R&B (Music)
Description
funkUs, performing live at The Plaza Theater, located at 425 North Bumby Avenue in Orlando, Florida, on January 16, 2013. The band was the opening act for Galactic, a jam band from New Orleans, Louisiana. The first photograph features Adam Freeman on drums, Clay Watson on trombone, Eugene Snowden on vocals, and Dave Mann on electric guitar. The second photograph shows Mann on electric guitar, Alessandro Ceserani on bass guitar, and Bill Bairley on keyboard. The third photograph features Mann and Ceserani, the fourth photograph features Freeman, and the fifth features Clay Watson on trombone. <br /><br />Formed in Orlando in 1998, funkUs earned a reputation as a band with a unique blend of eclectic musical genres, following in the footsteps of jam bands such as the Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers Band, and Phish, by combining elements of rock, blues, jazz, rhythm and blues, and funk. The band’s live performances incorporate an improvisational structure with groove-heavy rhythms. Their albums include <em>flavor</em> (2001); <em>strobe light</em> (2002); <em>free</em> (2005), which features Tom Constanten, a former keyboard player for the Grateful Dead; <em>got problems</em> (2009); <em>funkUs meets the Curious Circus</em> (2009); and <em>coconut monkey</em> (2012). Regularly performing throughout Florida, the band has appeared at premier music festivals, including the Purple Hatter's Ball in 2013, Bear Creek Music Festival in 2009 and 2011, Orange Blossom Jamboree in 2010 and 2011, Jambando in the Park in 2010, 2011 and 2012, and many others. They have shared stages with notable bands such as Galactic, Soulive, Dumpstaphunk, Robby Krieger of The Doors, Victor Wooten, Steve Kimock Band, Zach Deputy, and Consider the Source. The lineup is ever-changing, based around its core members: Adam Freeman on drums and percussion, Alex Ceserani on bass and vocals, Bill Bairley on keyboard and vocals, and Dave Mann on guitar and vocals.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, January 16, 2013: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000sTvtoceq7FM/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000sTvtoceq7FM/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000IN78g_a9elM/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000IN78g_a9elM/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000Z5fghjKIE24/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000Z5fghjKIE24/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000eO7V.BRq_j8/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000eO7V.BRq_j8/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000I.ooMyq1YQ8/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2013-01-16-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-Orlando-FL/G0000F75eYCWhCVY/I0000I.ooMyq1YQ8/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Coverage
The Plaza Theater, Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2013-01-14
Date Copyrighted
2013-01-14
Format
image/jpg
Extent
24 KB
17.6 KB
18.9 KB
25.9 KB
17.2 KB
Medium
5 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Bolden, Tony. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/212328134" target="_blank"><em>The Funk Era and Beyond: New Perspectives on Black Popular Culture</em></a>. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
Vincent, Rickey. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32820668" target="_blank"><em>Funk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of the One</em></a>. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1996.
Abbitt, Jim. “<a href="http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2013-04-25/entertainment/os-jim-abbott-jambando-orlando-20130425_1_hindu-cowboys-music-fans-bonnaroo" target="_blank">Jambando still jams after 10 years</a>.” <em>Orlando Sentinel</em>. April 25, 2013. http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2013-04-25/entertainment/os-jim-abbott-jambando-orlando-20130425_1_hindu-cowboys-music-fans-bonnaroo.
Ruff, Emily. “<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/noodling-towards-nirvana/Content?oid=2258931" target="_blank">Noodling towards Nirvana</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. March 18, 2004. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/noodling-towards-nirvana/Content?oid=2258931.
Adam Freeman
Alessandro Cesarani
Alex Cesarani
Alicia Lyman
bar
bass guitar
bassist
Bill Bairley
blues
Bumby Avenue
Clay Watson
concert
Dave Mann
drummer
drums
electric guitar
Eugene Snowden
funk
guitar
guitarist
jam band
jazz
keyboard
keyboardist
nightclub
orlando
R&B
rhythm and blues
rock
rock music
singer
The Plaza Live
The Plaza Live Theater
The Plaza Live Theatre
The Plaza Theater
The Plaza Theatre
trombone
trombonist
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/a27dbf52a1c6f921e38ab9216f26231f.jpg
448a6215f084f2d8a25d8ddd88f222fa
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/2e7654538a4c69d1078ef885fd654987.jpg
ba955638d487d96f1aa05373c8bbc53a
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
2 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
funkUs at the 7th Annual Spring Jambando, 2012
Alternative Title
funkUs at the Annual Spring Jambando
Subject
Funk (Music)--United States
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Rock (Music)--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Jazz--United States
Rhythm and blues music--United States
R&B (Music)
Description
funkUs performing live at the 7th Annual Spring Jambando at The Plaza Theater, located at 425 North Bumby Avenue in Orlando, Florida, on April 28, 2012. The first photograph features Brian Burgess on bass guitar, and the second photograph features Burgess on bass guitar with Dave Mann on electric guitar. <br /><br />Formed in Orlando in 1998, funkUs earned a reputation as a band with a unique blend of eclectic musical genres, following in the footsteps of jam bands such as the Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers Band, and Phish, by combining elements of rock, blues, jazz, rhythm and blues, and funk. The band’s live performances incorporate an improvisational structure with groove-heavy rhythms. Their albums include <em>flavor</em> (2001); <em>strobe light</em> (2002); <em>free</em> (2005), which features Tom Constanten, a former keyboard player for the Grateful Dead; <em>got problems</em> (2009); <em>funkUs meets the Curious Circus</em> (2009); and <em>coconut monkey</em> (2012). Regularly performing throughout Florida, the band has appeared at premier music festivals, including the Purple Hatter's Ball in 2013, Bear Creek Music Festival in 2009 and 2011, Orange Blossom Jamboree in 2010 and 2011, Jambando in the Park in 2010, 2011 and 2012, and many others. They have shared stages with notable bands such as Galactic, Soulive, Dumpstaphunk, Robby Krieger of The Doors, Victor Wooten, Steve Kimock Band, Zach Deputy, and Consider the Source. The lineup is ever-changing, based around its core members: Adam Freeman on drums and percussion, Alex Ceserani on bass and vocals, Bill Bairley on keyboard and vocals, and Dave Mann on guitar and vocals. <br /><br />A leading figure in the Orlando music scene, the band is also responsible for organizing Jambando, a musical concert series designed to showcase and stimulate Orlando's burgeoning jam band scene. Beginning in 2003 as an idea for the Orlando Fringe Festival, the concept was further developed through an ongoing concert series at Hard Rock Live, and has since made its current homes at The Plaza Theatre in Downtown Orlando's Milk District and The Spirit of Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak. Each concert is created through a collective of musicians and volunteers in a united and conscious effort to establish a musical brand for multi-genre Central Florida music.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, April 28, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, April 28, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-04-28-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-JAMBANDO-Orlando-FL/G0000xDQReyYIRsg/I0000Ig9Uv5r8z7M/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-04-28-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-JAMBANDO-Orlando-FL/G0000xDQReyYIRsg/I0000Ig9Uv5r8z7M/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-04-28-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-JAMBANDO-Orlando-FL/G0000xDQReyYIRsg/I000012K8zQt_Pcw/C00004bs5i3cZxfk" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-04-28-FUNKUS-THE-PLAZA-LIVE-JAMBANDO-Orlando-FL/G0000xDQReyYIRsg/I000012K8zQt_Pcw/C00004bs5i3cZxfk</a>.
Coverage
The Plaza Theater, Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-04-28
Date Copyrighted
2012-04-28
Format
image/jpg
Extent
33 KB
35.2 KB
Medium
2 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Bolden, Tony. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/212328134" target="_blank"><em>The Funk Era and Beyond: New Perspectives on Black Popular Culture</em></a>. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
Vincent, Rickey. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32820668" target="_blank"><em>Funk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of the One</em></a>. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1996.
Abbitt, Jim. “<a href="http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2013-04-25/entertainment/os-jim-abbott-jambando-orlando-20130425_1_hindu-cowboys-music-fans-bonnaroo" target="_blank">Jambando still jams after 10 years</a>.” <em>Orlando Sentinel</em>. April 25, 2013. http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2013-04-25/entertainment/os-jim-abbott-jambando-orlando-20130425_1_hindu-cowboys-music-fans-bonnaroo.
Ruff, Emily. “<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/noodling-towards-nirvana/Content?oid=2258931" target="_blank">Noodling towards Nirvana</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. March 18, 2004. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/noodling-towards-nirvana/Content?oid=2258931.
Alicia Lyman
bar
bass guitar
bassist
blues
Brian Burgess
Bumby Avenue
concert
Dave Mann
electric guitar
funk
guitar
guitarist
jam bando
jazz
nightclub
orlando
R&B
rhythm and blues
rock
rock music
singer
Spring Jambando
The Plaza Live
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/97fe8f26a677e704c94ffdc54cf15b73.jpg
f62c034cea248031240f766a17b31b24
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/9dc3fbbc7b4d8ef8be9a00258b223f72.JPG
28881aca9edf1ff9c9deb2dd1adddaf7
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
2 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at E.L.L.A. Music Fest, 2012
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000G15kzTBt9Kc/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000Mkv.l5ytQC4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
Alternative Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at E.L.L.A. Music Fest
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Nightclubs--United States
Rock music--United States
Jazz--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters performing live at E.L.L.A. Music Fest at H2O in Orlando, Florida, on November 3, 2012. These photographs feature vocalist Kaleigh Baker of The Downgetters, an all-star band from Orlando, featuring Baker, vocalist/guitarist Joseph Martens, guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, guitarist Jeff Nolan, bassist Mike Kossler, saxophonist/keyboards Nathan Anderson, and drummer Mark Janssen. The E.L.L.A. Music Festival, which stands for Elevate.Listen.Love.Appreciate, was created in 2007 by Orlando musician, promoter, and producer Robert Johnson to celebrate the heart, talent, and contributions that Florida female artists give to their communities. In its fifth year in 2012, the female-centric festival added spoken word artists, visual artists and local vendors to the stacked musical lineup.
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 3, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-11-03
Date Copyrighted
2012-11-03
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Has Format
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 3, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000G15kzTBt9Kc/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000G15kzTBt9Kc/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.; <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000Mkv.l5ytQC4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-03-KALEIGH-BAKER-ELLA-FEST-Orlando-FL/G0000wb3sxLak4A8/I0000Mkv.l5ytQC4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank"><br /></a>
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Format
image/jpg
Extent
23.2 KB
20.1 KB
Medium
2 color photographs
Type
Still Image
Coverage
H2O Live!, Orlando, Florida
Accrual Method
Donation
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
"<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/ella-music-fest/Content?oid=2248107" target="_blank">ELLA Music Fest: Sixth annual festival celebrates local female musicians</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 30, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/ella-music-fest/Content?oid=2248107.
Coffin, Kat. "<a href="http://www.examiner.com/article/downtown-orlando-welcomes-the-sixth-annual-e-l-l-a-fest" target="_blank">Downtown Orlando welcomes the sixth annual e.l.l.a. Fest</a>." <em>Examiner</em>. October 27, 2012. http://www.examiner.com/article/downtown-orlando-welcomes-the-sixth-annual-e-l-l-a-fest.
Manes, Billy. “<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322" target="_blank">Kaleigh Baker is back in town</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 16, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322.
Belanger, Ashley. “<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue" target="_blank">Fringe 2015 review: ‘Janis Joplin, Little Girl Blue</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. May 15, 2015. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue.
Strout, Justin. “<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683" target="_blank">Fire and pain: Blues-soul lady-in-waiting Kaleigh Baker makes a strong claim to the throne</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. August 10, 2011. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683.
blues
concert
E.L.L.A. Music Festival
festival
Gamble Records
H2O Live!
HollowGram Records
jazz
Kaleigh Baker
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters
music
musician
nightclub
orlando
Robert Johnson Festival
rock
rock music
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/fbe9c39474bd3812858223f3f147890e.JPG
5c1e87b0aab5fea238f2d9334a555d93
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 color photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at E.L.L.A. Music Fest, 2012
Alternative Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at E.L.L.A. Music Fest
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Rock music--United States
Jazz--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters performing live at E.L.L.A. Music Fest at H2O Live!, located at 100 West Livingston Street in Downtown Orlando, Florida, on November 3, 2012. This photograph features saxophonist/keyboardist Nathan Anderson and vocalist Kaleigh Baker of The Downgetters, an all-star band from Orlando, featuring Baker, vocalist/guitarist Joseph Martens, guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, guitarist Jeff Nolan, bassist Mike Kossler, Anderson, and drummer Mark Janssen. The E.L.L.A. Music Festival, which stands for Elevate.Listen.Love.Appreciate, was created in 2007 by Orlando musician, promoter, and producer Robert Johnson to celebrate the heart, talent, and contributions that Florida female artists give to their communities. In its fifth year in 2012, the female-centric festival added spoken word artists, visual artists and local vendors to the stacked musical lineup.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, November 3, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, November 3, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/ELLA-FEST-2012/G0000TNuvfzSkfkU/I00006aX8Ds2Ix6A/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/ELLA-FEST-2012/G0000TNuvfzSkfkU/I00006aX8Ds2Ix6A/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs</a>.
Coverage
H2O Live!, Downtown Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-11-03
Date Copyrighted
11/3/2012
Format
image/jpg
Extent
21.5 KB
Medium
1 color photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
"<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/ella-music-fest/Content?oid=2248107" target="_blank">ELLA Music Fest: Sixth annual festival celebrates local female musicians</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 30, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/ella-music-fest/Content?oid=2248107.
Coffin, Kat. "<a href="http://www.examiner.com/article/downtown-orlando-welcomes-the-sixth-annual-e-l-l-a-fest" target="_blank">Downtown Orlando welcomes the sixth annual e.l.l.a. Fest</a>." <em>Examiner</em>. October 27, 2012. http://www.examiner.com/article/downtown-orlando-welcomes-the-sixth-annual-e-l-l-a-fest.
Manes, Billy. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322" target="_blank">Kaleigh Baker is back in town</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 16, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322.
Belanger, Ashley. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue" target="_blank">Fringe 2015 review: ‘Janis Joplin, Little Girl Blue</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. May 15, 2015. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue.
Strout, Justin. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683" target="_blank">Fire and pain: Blues-soul lady-in-waiting Kaleigh Baker makes a strong claim to the throne</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. August 10, 2011. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/ELLA-FEST-2012/G0000TNuvfzSkfkU/I00006aX8Ds2Ix6A/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
blues
concert
Downtown Orlando
E.L.L.A. Music Fest
festival
Gamble Records
guitar
guitarist
H2O Live!
HollowGram Records
jazz
Kaleigh Baker
Livingston Street
music
music festival
musician
Nathan Anderson
orlando
rock
rock music
singer
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/02b4ae72ed63a879ee9cf93c3a12d003.jpg
c9d5a3f23d44b53d1797f731fbcfb773
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/24d9147fd431606fb48d95c62d4fb5b9.jpg
5eccc8c7e1cc544c06dd7d66be538032
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
2 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at The Beacham Theater, 2012
Alternative Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at The Beacham
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Nightclubs--United States
Rock music--United States
Jazz--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters performing live at Ralphfest 2 at The Beacham Theater in Downtown Orlando, Florida, on November 24, 2012. The photograph features, from left to right, guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, drummer Mark Janssen, vocalist Kaleigh Baker, bassist Mike Kossler, and guitarist Jeff Nolan. The Downgetters is an all-star band from Orlando, featuring Baker, vocalist/guitarist Joseph Martens, Chodorcoff, Nolan, Kossler, saxophonist/keyboards Nathan Anderson, and Janssen.<br /><br />Ralphfest is an annual concert festival in Downtown Orlando, Florida, that celebrates the memory and musical influence of Ralph Ameduri, Jr. Ameduri was an Orlando musician who was murdered on September 10, 2011, in a robbery attempt on a patio behind Jessie's Bar, a Winter Haven music club where he was filling in for a member of local band, Thomas Wynn & the Believers. The inaugural concert was arranged to cover his funeral expenses and, since then, proceeds from the events have gone to the Ralph Ameduri, Jr. Music Scholarship Fund, which operates through the Foundation for Seminole County Public Schools, awarding a musical instruments to graduating high school students. Ralphfest 2 took place on November 24, 2012, on three different stages: one at The Beacham Theater, one at The Social, and one at The Outside Elixir Stage on Washington Street. The benefit features 26 bands that Ameduri was part of, worked with, had close ties to, or enjoyed, as well as multiple DJs. Some of the performers included Thomas Wynn & the Believers, The Ludes, Music's Milka Ramos, SUNNY, The Downgetters featuring Kaleigh Baker, Riverbottom Nightmare Band, The Legendary JC's, funkUs, and The Woolly Bushmen. Ralphfest 2 raised $10,000.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 24, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 24, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00001HEMzJ.arPo/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00001HEMzJ.arPo/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00007.Hm9G7_.0c/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00007.Hm9G7_.0c/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.
Coverage
The Beacham Theater, Downtown Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-11-24
Date Copyrighted
2012-11-24
Format
image/jpg
Extent
37.3 KB
36.8 KB
Medium
2 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Abbott, Jim. "<a href="http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/music/os-ralph-fest-2015-jim-abbott-010215-20150101-column.html" target="_blank">Ralphfest 4 moves beyond the grief</a>." <em>Orlando Sentinel</em>. January 1, 2015. http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/music/os-ralph-fest-2015-jim-abbott-010215-20150101-column.html.
Manes, Billy. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/trial-of-local-musician-ralph-ameduris-killer-concludes/Content?oid=2242170" target="_blank">Trial of local musician Ralph Ameduri's killer concludes</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. February 4, 2014. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/trial-of-local-musician-ralph-ameduris-killer-concludes/Content?oid=2242170.
Manes, Billy. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322" target="_blank">Kaleigh Baker is back in town</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 16, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322.
Belanger, Ashley. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue" target="_blank">Fringe 2015 review: ‘Janis Joplin, Little Girl Blue</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. May 15, 2015. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue.
Strout, Justin. <a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683" target="_blank">Fire and pain: Blues-soul lady-in-waiting Kaleigh Baker makes a strong claim to the throne</a>.” <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. August 10, 2011. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00001HEMzJ.arPo/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-11-24-KALEIGH-BAKER-with-THE-DOWNGETTERS-RALPHFEST-The-Beacham-Theater-Orlando-FL/G0000qkgT9LRSImY/I00007.Hm9G7_.0c/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
bass guitar
bassist
blues
Brian Chodorcoff
concert
Downtown Orlando
drum
drummer
electric guitar
festival
Foundation for Seminole County Public Schools
fundraiser
fundraising
guitar
guitarist
jazz
Jeffrey Nolan
Joseph Martens
Kaleigh Baker
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters
Mark Janssen
Michael Kossler
music
musician
Nathan Anderson
nightclub
orlando
Ralph Ameduri Jr. Music Scholarship Fund
Ralph Ameduri, Jr.
Ralphfest 2
Ralphfest II
rock
rock music
singer
The Downgetters
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/0e29fcb559f3a813314cf4af7aebed14.jpg
7551bd3f27e1a33a1ff727fa9d827317
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
1 color photograph
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at House of Blues Orlando, 2012
Alternative Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at House of Blues
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Lake Buena Vista (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Nightclubs--United States
Rock music--United States
Jazz--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters performing live at House of Blues Orlando, located at 1490 East Buena Vista Drive in Lake Buena Vista, Florida on August 25, 2012. This photograph features guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, vocalist Kaleigh Baker, bassist Erin Nolan, and saxophonist/keyboardist Nathan Anderson. The Downgetters is an all-star band from Orlando, featuring Baker, vocalist/guitarist Joseph Martens, guitarist Chodorcoff, guitarist Jeff Nolan, bassist Mike Kossler, Anderson, and drummer Mark Janssen.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, August 25, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman, August 25, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-08-25-KALEIGH-BAKER-House-of-Blues-Orlando-FL/G00007TLEMM6IWvE/I0000jKXSZFZ.5K0/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw/" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-08-25-KALEIGH-BAKER-House-of-Blues-Orlando-FL/G00007TLEMM6IWvE/I0000jKXSZFZ.5K0/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw/</a>.
Coverage
House of Blues Orlando, Lake Buena Vista, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-08-25
Date Copyrighted
2012-08-25
Format
image/jpg
Extent
39 KB
Medium
1 color photograph
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Manes, Billy. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322" target="_blank">Kaleigh Baker is back in town</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 16, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322.
Belanger, Ashley. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue" target="_blank">Fringe 2015 review: ‘Janis Joplin, Little Girl Blue</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. May 15, 2015. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue.
Strout, Justin. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683" target="_blank">Fire and pain: Blues-soul lady-in-waiting Kaleigh Baker makes a strong claim to the throne</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. August 10, 2011. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2012-08-25-KALEIGH-BAKER-House-of-Blues-Orlando-FL/G00007TLEMM6IWvE/I0000jKXSZFZ.5K0/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw/" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
bass guitar
bassist
blues
Brian Chodorcoff
Buena Vista Drive
concert
Erin Nolan
guitar
guitarist
House of Blues Orlando
jazz
Kaleigh Baker
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters
Lake Buena Vista
music
musician
Nathan Anderson
nightclub
orlando
rock
rock music
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/926bfd7a01619b0d1d1ad97734fa2211.jpg
cbbfb4fcd15b877baa814b37b57982c4
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/08f0a740f5ea8e22911099d9ab86a5a9.jpg
7384d4c8a33776733815607c526a4530
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
2 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at Orlando Calling, 2011
Alternative Title
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters at Orlando Calling
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Festivals--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Nightclubs--United States
Rock music--United States
Jazz--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters performing live at the Orlando Calling music festival at Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium, located at 1 Citrus Bowl Plaza in Orlando, Florida, on November 12, 2011. Orlando Calling was a two-day music festival that showcased local as well as popular international artists. The 2011 headliners included Bob Seger, The Killers, The Raconteurs, Kid Rock, The Pixies, Blake Shelton, The Doobie Brothers and The Roots. The festival would not return the next year due to poor ticket sales.<br /><br />The first photograph features guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, saxophonist/keyboardist Nathan Anderson, vocalist Kaleigh Baker, an unidentified drummer, and bassist Erin Nolan. The second photograph shows Anderson and Baker. The Downgetters is an all-star band from Orlando, featuring Baker, vocalist/guitarist Joseph Martens, guitarist Brian Chodorcoff, guitarist Jeff Nolan, bassist Mike Kossler, Anderson, and drummer Mark Janssen.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 22, 2011: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 22, 2011. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000Caunyy48YO4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000Caunyy48YO4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph by Alicia Lyman. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000kFK8FgRBr78/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000kFK8FgRBr78/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw</a>.
Coverage
Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2011-11-22
Date Copyrighted
2011-11-22
Format
image/jpg
Extent
32.9 KB
Medium
2 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Manes, Billy. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322" target="_blank">Kaleigh Baker is back in town</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. October 16, 2012. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/kaleigh-baker-is-back-in-town/Content?oid=2255322.
Belanger, Ashley. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue" target="_blank">Fringe 2015 review: ‘Janis Joplin, Little Girl Blue</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. May 15, 2015. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2015/05/15/fringe-2015-review-janis-joplin-little-girl-blue.
Strout, Justin. "<a href="http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683" target="_blank">Fire and pain: Blues-soul lady-in-waiting Kaleigh Baker makes a strong claim to the throne</a>." <em>Orlando Weekly</em>. August 10, 2011. http://www.orlandoweekly.com/orlando/fire-and-pain/Content?oid=2247683.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000Caunyy48YO4/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2011-11-22-KALEIGH-BAKER-Orlando-Calling-Orlando-FL/G0000gcv5TNwE1GM/I0000kFK8FgRBr78/C0000G5l.eE1uUuw" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
bass guitar
bassist
blues
Brian Chodorcoff
Citrus Bowl Plaza
concert
drum
drummer
Erin Nolan
festival
Florida Citrus Bowl
Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium
guitar
guitarist
jazz
Kaleigh Baker
Kaleigh Baker and the Downgetters
music
musician
Nathan Anderson
nightclub
orlando
Orlando Calling
rock
rock music
saxophone
saxophonist
singer
vocalist
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/8c730a185300cf7ae33c45f5d95aebd1.jpg
598ba583c8f06fe0f08dba5245fc7643
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/f6163b7c585416e0b70fc1eb03ba0420.jpg
651e720e33a98c1823fb71ad3cb0d9f6
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
2 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Legendary JC's at Ralphfest 2
Alternative Title
Legendary JC's at Ralphfest
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Festivals--Southern States
Concerts--United States
Rhythm and blues music--United States
R&B (Music)
Soul music--United States
Funk (Music)--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Nightclubs--United States
Description
The Legendary JC's performing live at Ralphfest 2 at The Beacham Theater, located at 46 North Orange Avenue in Downtown Orlando, Florida, on November 24, 2012. The Legendary JC’s, also known as The Joint Chiefs, are an R&B/soul/funk/blues band that was formed by lead vocalist Eugene Snowden in 2000, consisting of an alternating lineup of all-star Central Florida musicians. This photograph features, from left to right, an unidentified guitar player, Roland Simmons, an unidentified harmonica player, Eugene Snowden, Craig Cobb, Katie Burkess, Michael Lashinsky, and an unidentified keyboardist.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 24, 2012: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, November 24, 2012. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000tYq35m54Fx4/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000tYq35m54Fx4/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8</a>.
Digital reproduction of original color photograph. <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000GjmLESU9Jew/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8" target="_blank">http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000GjmLESU9Jew/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8</a>.
Coverage
The Beacham Theater, Downtown Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2012-11-24
Date Copyrighted
2012-11-24
Format
image/jpg
Extent
40.2 KB
38.2 KB
Medium
2 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Bolden, Tony. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/212328134" target="_blank"><em>The Funk Era and Beyond: New Perspectives on Black Popular Culture</em></a>. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
Vincent, Rickey. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32820668" target="_blank"><em>Funk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of the One</em></a>. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1996.
Guralnick, Peter. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13002980" target="_blank"><em>Sweet Soul Music: Rhythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom</em></a>. New York: Harper &amp
Row, 1986.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000tYq35m54Fx4/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/RALPH-FEST-2012/G0000Hji6yLzM_3w/I0000GjmLESU9Jew/C0000fnM5ntjHkP8" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
blues
Clay Watson
concert
Craig Cobb
Eugene Snowden
festival
Foundation for Seminole County Public Schools
fundraiser
fundraising
funk
Joint Chiefs
Katie Burkess
Michael Lashinsky
music
musician
orlando
R&B
Ralph Ameduri, Jr.
Ralph Ameduri, Jr. Music Scholarship Fund
Ralphfest
Ralphfest 2
Ralphfest II
rhythm and blues
Roland Simmons
soul
soul music
The Joint Chiefs
The Legendary JC's
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/4029220673ffa782e944e40c9e3bf2cd.JPG
4c5c4beaeb0803ecd7249e658dcd9164
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/e293143c208f68e1ef45481f0a7a9f12.JPG
f7978bdf1537ef439b7371f09ef363f5
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/a92342161d6fcb7f219bf6eaebedc9cd.JPG
097d74296bf46eb247ba92e3938b695b
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/6e11112aa4176c64b34eb0a4bad4662d.JPG
8bef3cc1f13f6e75486b7e58465e20d6
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/71c08473eba29953278946be243879b6.JPG
9bf936e45576f343c648bec34365ebed
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/c41502b2d6cfa2a8d1b840f4e3ee38ec.JPG
2a151042574651aea5bed9e229b3bd03
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/733f7513ea9976a7618ccae36280b731.JPG
01be2dc83d3b62f87d566eb6e34c0cf2
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Folk Collection
Alternative Title
Folk Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Folk music--United States
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of folk music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Folk music varies by country and region, but is typically described as acoustic-based music that embraces the life and struggles of the common man and the events of everyday life. “Folk” comes from the term “folklore,” which was derived by William Thomas in 1846, to describe “the traditions, customs, and superstitions of the uncultured classes.” Although the definition of folk music is elusive, the International Folk Music Council defines it as “the product of a musical tradition that has been evolved through the process of oral transmission. The factors that shape the tradition are: (1) continuity which links the present with the past; (2) variation which springs from the creative impulse of the individual or the group; and (3) selection by the community which determines the form or forms in which the music survives."
Before sound recording and reproduction allowed people to listen to recorded music, songs were often passed down through oral traditions, creating variants. Cecil Sharp, considered by many to be the founding father of the folklore revival in early 20th century England, believed that competing variants of a traditional folk song created a process of natural selection, eventually creating a more perfect version, shaped by the community. By the end of the 1930s, American folk music had become a social movement, and by the 1960s, folk genres varied as much as the definition of the term itself.
The Library of Congress attempted to capture as much North American field material as possible in the 1930s and 1940s, working through the vast collections of collectors such as Alan Lomax and Robert Winslow Gordon. On behalf of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), teams of writers and scholars across the United States collected materials about the places they saw and the people they met. Fieldworkers from the Florida Folklore Project, in conjunction with the Florida Federal Writers' Project, the Florida Music Project, and the Joint Committee on Folk Arts of the Work Projects Administration, concentrated on enclaves known for preserving ethnic traditions, documenting African-American, Arabic, Bahamian, British-American, Cuban, Greek, Italian, Minorcan, Seminole, and Slavic cultures throughout Florida. Florida is home to two significant folk festivals, including the annual Will McLean Music Festival, which is held at the Sertoma Youth Camp in Brooksville, Florida; and the Florida Folk Festival, an annual festival of music, food, and traditional arts to highlight and celebrate Florida's many folk cultures and traditions.
Contributor
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Language
eng
Type
Collection
Coverage
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Valencia College, Orlando, Florida
The Social, Downtown Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
DeVane, Dwight, Blaine Waide, Peggy A. Bulger, Doris J. Dyen, and David Evans. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/856993560" target="_blank"><em>Drop on Down in Florida: Field Recordings of African American Traditional Music 1977-1980</em></a>. Atlanta, Ga: Dust-to-Digital, 2012.
Karpeles, Maud, and A. H. Fox Strangways. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1292970" target="_blank"><em>Cecil Sharp: His Life and Work</em></a>. [Chicago]: University of Chicago Press, 1967.
Lloyd, A. L. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/429559" target="_blank"><em>Folk Song in England</em></a>. New York: International Publishers, 1967.
Lornell, Kip. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/56942443" target="_blank"><em>The NPR Curious Listener's Guide to American Folk Music</em></a>. New York: Berkley Pub. Group, 2004.
McLean, Will. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1599000" target="_blank"><em>Florida Sand; Original Songs and Stories of Florida</em></a>. 1969.
Morris, Alton Chester, and Leonhard Deutsch. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/20853347" target="_blank"><em>Folksongs of Florida</em></a>. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1990.
Seeger, Ruth Crawford, Larry Polansky, and Judith Tick. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/46909473" target="_blank"><em>"The Music of American Folk Song" and Selected Other Writings on American Folk Music</em></a>. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2001.
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples of still images are: paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type "text" to images of textual materials.
Original Format
7 color photographs
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
The Bloody Jug Band, 2014
Alternative Title
Bloody Jug Band
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Concerts--United States
Music--Florida
Musicians--Southern States
Folk music--Florida
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
The Bloody Jug Band at The Social, located at 54 North Orange Avenue in Downtown Orlando, Florida, during the Florida Music Festival on April 26, 2014. The Florida Music Festival, or FMF, was founded by aXis Magazine & Promotions in 2002 as a three day music festival and conference that showcases unsigned artists while promoting major national acts. The Bloody Jug Band is an eight-piece band that formed in Orlando in 2009, whose music combines elements of folk, blues, country, bluegrass, rock, and Americana. Drawing inspiration from historic jug bands of the 1920s and 1930s, the group employs traditional jug band instruments, such as a washboard, washtub bass, cajón, spoons, mandolin and harmonica, and incorporates acoustic guitar, electric guitar, and drums. The band consists of John Theisen (Cragmire Peace) on vocals and washboard, Stormy Jean Casselman (Stormy Jean) on vocals and cowbell, Brian Blodgett (Brian Shredder) on acoustic guitar and mandolin, Seth Ambler (Seth Funky) on washtub bass, Rick Lane (Bloody Rick) on harmonica, Jermichael Duffy (Big Daddy Jerm, Dracula Mohammad) on jug, percussion and kazoo, Dakota Butts (Baby Dingo) on cajón and spoons, and Steven Marshall (Ste-evil) on electric guitar and banjo. Raymond Krugh (DeathRay) took over on electric guitar briefly while Marshall spent time with his newborn baby. The band has performed across the Southeastern United States, sharing the stage with notable acts such as Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band, Joe Buck, Edwin McCain, 3 Bad Jacks, and Old Man Markley. In 2013, the band appeared in a music video for the song, "Timber," by hip-hop recording artists Pitbull and Kesha. The first photograph features Theisen and Lane. The rest of the photographs show individual band members Butts, Lane, Duffy, Theisen, and Casselman, respectively.
Type
Still Image
Source
Original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, April 26, 2014: <a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/143" target="_blank">Folk Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Archive: Concerts Archive</a>, Alicia Lyman.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original color photographs by Alicia Lyman, April 26, 2014.
Coverage
The Social, Downtown Orlando, Florida
Creator
Lyman, Alicia
Publisher
Lyman, Alicia
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Contributor
Lyman, Alicia
Date Created
2014-04-26
Date Copyrighted
2014-04-26
Format
image/jpg
Medium
7 color photographs
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created and published by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://alicialyman.com/" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-collection/CONCERTS-archive/C0000q_kABE1Z.zs" target="_blank">Alicia Lyman Collection</a>
External Reference
Abbott, Jim. "<a href="http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/music/soundboard/os-florida-music-festival-saturday-20140426-post.html" target="_blank">Florida Music Festival 2014: Saturday</a>." <em>Orlando Sentinel</em>. April 27, 2014. http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/music/soundboard/os-florida-music-festival-saturday-20140426-post.html.
Limnios, Michael. "<a href="http://blues.gr/profiles/blogs/an-interview-with-the-bloody-jug-band-the-darker-side-of-blues" target="_blank">An Interview with the Bloody Jug Band: The darker side of Blues and Rock n’ Roll from swamps of Florida</a>." <em>Blues.gr</em>. http://blues.gr/profiles/blogs/an-interview-with-the-bloody-jug-band-the-darker-side-of-blues.
Jones, Michael L. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/870099163" target="_blank"><em>Louisville Jug Music: From Earl McDonald to the National Jubilee</em></a>. 2014.
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I0000S7Pka7N9GzM/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I0000eLw3SGKJBV4/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I0000IO13bxVb8TU/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I000007hnRLw5r7Y/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I00006rjBTHFRj7g/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I00007jPk4ZzanwA/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
<a href="http://alicialyman.photoshelter.com/gallery-image/2014-04-26-FMF-SATURDAY/G0000ugGBd2YGgCY/I0000BTwpXWb0TVg/C0000Ww7xV_PvdPo" target="_blank">Click for Larger Image</a>
acoustic
Americana
aXis
aXis Magazine & Promotions
Baby Dingo
Bloody Rick
blues
cajón
concert
Cragmire Peace
Dakota Butts
Downtown Orlando
festival
Florida Music Festival
FMF
folk
harmonica
harp
John Theisen
jug band
mouth harp
music
musician
Orange Avenue
orlando
Rick Lane
The Bloody Jug Band
The Social
vocalist
washboard
-
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Jazz Collection
Alternative Title
Jazz Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Jazz--United States
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of jazz in Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
The roots of jazz music began in the fields of the American South, as African-American slaves sang “call-and-response” work songs and “spirituals” to help them get through the brutal hours of forced labor. As Europeans immigrated to American cities in the late 19th century, they brought their musical traditions with them, and soon African-American musicians, such as Ernest Hogan and Scott Joplin, combined these styles with polyrhythmic African music, creating ragtime. New Orleans was an especially diverse cultural melting pot and became a place for musical experimentation by the early 1910s. European music merged with blues, folk, marching band music, and ragtime, creating a new genre called “jazz.”
By the 1920s, the First Great Migration brought millions of African Americans to the urban Northeast and Midwest. Young, white Americans became enamored with jazz and blues music and the genre was soon being played on radio stations, at dancehalls, and in homes across the country. New York City, Kansas City, and Chicago began to establish their own styles of jazz. Big band swing became the most popular style of American music in the 1930s and 1940s.
The most definitive feature of jazz is improvisation. The Great Depression forced many bands to cut down in size, leaving more space for intricate melodies and room for exploration. Bebop, which emerged in New York in the early 1940s, was aimed at a listening audience, rather than a dancing one, and became known as “musician’s music.” Bebop paved the way for Afro-Cuban and Latin jazz in the 1950s, when musicians, such as Dizzy Gillespie and Duke Ellington, incorporated Latin rhythms by playing with Cuban musicians in New York. The popularity of rock music in the 1960s and 1970s led to jazz-rock fusion, which combined improvisation with rock rhythms and amplified instruments. By the 1980s, smooth jazz emerged, creating a commercial form of the genre that drew criticism from many purists, who felt that the musicians were more concerned with making money than creating art with substance.
Although Florida might not be as closely associated with jazz as cities like New Orleans, Chicago, and New York City, it has made significant contributions nonetheless. Afro-Cuban jazz developed simultaneously in New York City and Havana in the early 1940s, and Florida’s Cuban immigrants had a profound cultural impact on areas like Miami and Tampa. Since its foundation in 1979, the annual Jacksonville Jazz Festival has become one of the most popular jazz festivals in the country, featuring some of the top names in the genre, such as Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Count Basie, George Benson, and Herbie Hancock. The Clearwater Jazz Holiday began around the same time and has also evolved into a major international jazz festival. In addition to the legendary Sam Rivers, who moved to Orlando in the early 1990s and continued to perform until his death in 2011, Florida has been the home to a number of prominent jazz musicians, including Cedric Wallace, Ira Sullivan, George Tucker, Nathen Page, Alfred “Pee Wee” Ellis, Jackie Davis, Rich Matteson, Jeff Rupert, and the University of Central Florida’s Jazz Professors.
Contributor
<a href="http://wucf.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">WUCF-FM</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Arturo Sandoval Jazz Club, Deauville Beach Resort, Miami Beach, Florida
DeLand, Florida
Young Musicians Camp, University of Miami, Miami, Florida
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Alkyer, Frank. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/319491298" target="_blank"><em> DownBeat--the Great Jazz Interviews: A 75th Anniversary Anthology</em></a>. New York: Hal Leonard, 2009.
Gioia, Ted. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/36245922" target="_blank"><em>The History of Jazz</em></a>. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Ward, Geoffrey C., and Ken Burns. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/42404676" target="_blank"><em>Jazz: A History of America's Music</em></a>. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000.
Moving Image
A series of visual representations that, when shown in succession, impart an impression of motion.
Original Format
1 audio/video recording
Duration
5 minutes and 2 seconds
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
WUCF Artisodes Short: Jazz Fest
Alternative Title
Jazz Fest Artisode
Subject
DeLand (Fla.)
Music--United States
Jazz--United States
Description
Noble "Thin Man" Watts (1926-2004) was a blues and jazz saxophonist from DeLand, Florida, who worked with some of the biggest names in jazz, blues, and rock, including Buddy Holly (1936-1959), Dinah Washington (1924-1963), Jerry Lee Lewis (b. 1935), Lionel Hampton (1908-2002), Chuck Berry (b. 1926), Johnny Mathis (b. 1935), and the Everly Brothers. Watts moved back to DeLand in the mid-1960s, where he remained until his death in 2004. The "Thin Man" Watts Jazz Festival began earlier that year and has continued to grow in the years since.<br /><br />WUCF-TV is a Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) television station serving the Central Florida television market. The station, operated by the University of Central Florida, is the region's sole PBS member station, reaching an estimated population of 4.6 million people in its aerial viewing area. Arts and culture take center stage in WUCF-TV's weekly local series: "WUCF Artisodes." Each episode airs Thursdays at 8 p.m., featuring a local artist or initiative, as well as stories on the arts from across the country. Developed in partnership with 28 PBS stations nationwide, this series is part of WUCF-TV's mission to give everyone a front-row seat to the arts.
Type
Moving Image
Source
Original 5-minute and 2-second audio/video recording of Jazz Fest, <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>, Orlando, Florida, April 21, 2014: WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.
Requires
<a href="http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/" target="_blank"> Adobe Flash Player</a>
<a href="http://java.com/en/download/index.jsp" target="_blank"> Java</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/141" target="_blank">Jazz Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida
Coverage
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
African American Museum of the Arts, DeLand, Florida
Café Davinci, DeLand, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Contributor
Watts, Noble "Thin Man"
Allen, Mary
Armstrong, Anthony
DaVinci Jazz Experiment
Mark Hodgson & the Cosmic Blues Trio
Pendleton, Jefferson
Sheperd, Jeff
Waits/Jordan Quartet
Wilton, John
Date Created
ca. 2015-01-29
Date Issued
2014-04-21
Date Copyrighted
2014-04-21
Format
application/website
application/pdf
Medium
5-minute and 2-second audio/video recording
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally created by <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a> and published by <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
External Reference
Dahl, Bill. "<a href="http://www.allmusic.com/artist/noble-thin-man-watts-mn0000408965/biography" target="_blank">Noble 'Thin Man' Watts</a>." AllMusic.com. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/noble-thin-man-watts-mn0000408965/biography (Accessed March 31, 2015).
African American Museum of the Arts. "<a href="http://www.wattsjazzfest.com/" target="_blank">Thin Man Watts Jazz Fest</a>." WattsJazzFest.com http://www.wattsjazzfest.com/ (Accessed March 31, 2015)
"<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/local-programs/artisodes/" target="_blank">WUCF Artisodes</a>." WUCFTV.org. http://www.wucftv.org/local-programs/artisodes/ (Accessed April 6, 2015).
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Wqybluz2TI" target="_blank">WUCF Artisodes Short: Jazz Fest</a>
African American Museum of the Arts
Anthony Armstrong
Artisodes
Bank of America
blues
bluesmen
Bright House Networks
Cafe DaVinci
Cannonball Adderley
Charles Edward Anderson Berry
Chuck Berry
City of Deland
DaVinci Jazz Experiment
DeLand
Dr. Noble "Thin Man" Watts Amphitheater
ECHO Program
Federal community Development Block Grant Program
festivals
Irene D. Johnson
jazz
Jazz Fest
Jeff Sheperd
Jefferson Pendleton
John Wilton
Johnson, Irene D.
Johnson, Maxel
Julian Edwin Adderley
Mark Hodgson
Mark Hodgson & the Cosmic Blues Trio
Mary Allen
music
musicians
Nat Adderley
Nathanial Adderley
Noble Watts
orlando
PBS
Public Broadcasting Service
saxophones
saxophonists
State of Florida
tenor saxophones
Thin Man Watts
Thin Man Watts Jazz Fest
UCF
University of Central Florida
Volusia County
Waits/Jordan Quartet
WUCF Artisodes
WUCF-TV
-
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Blues Collection
Alternative Title
Blues Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of blues music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.<br /><br />During the middle to late 19th century, African-American ex-slaves and their descendants in the Deep South began playing a style of music that evolved from Black Spirituals and chants, work songs, field hollers, rural fife and drum music, revivalist hymns, and European folk and country dance music. It was characterized by its call-and-response narrative pattern, blue notes, and specific chord progressions, of which the 12-bar blues was the most common. By the turn of the century, blues music was being performed in regions such as Louisiana, the Mississippi Delta, the Piedmont region, and Texas, typically by a solo musician on acoustic guitar, harmonica, or piano. Initially, a traditional blues verse was made up of a single line repeated four times, until the common AAB pattern was established in the early 20th century.<br /><br />In 1912, W. C. Handy, an African-American minstrel show band leader, published "Memphis Blues," which helped popularize the genre by transcribing and orchestrating it in a symphonic-like style. Handy is also credited with giving the blues its contemporary form, and was crowned the "Father of the Blues." The unexpected success of Mamie Smith’s "Crazy Blues," eight years later, caused record labels to begin producing “race records," featuring blues singers such as Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith. Most of the blues pioneers from the 1920s performed solo with an acoustic guitar. Among the most recognized are Robert Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Son House, Leadbelly and Charlie Patton.<br /><br />As blues spread from the Deep South, it took on regional characteristics and styles. The Mississippi Delta blues featured slide guitar and a rootsy, sparse style. The Piedmont blues used an elaborate ragtime-based rhythm and fingerpicking technique. The Memphis blues, popular in vaudeville and medicine shows, was influenced by jug bands, incorporating unusual instruments such as washboard, kazoo, jug, mandolin, and fiddle. Urban blues forced performers to become more elaborate, as they had to adapt to a larger, more varied audience. Boogie-woogie consisted of piano-based blues derived from barrelhouse and ragtime in Chicago. Big band blues emerged out of Kansas City and incorporated elements of jazz and swing. West Coast blues was heavily influenced by a swing beat, and popularized by Texas musicians who moved to California. Electric blues came out of Chicago, Memphis, Detroit, and St. Louis in the 1950s, using electric guitars, double bass, drums. and harmonica performed through a microphone, amplifier and PA (public address) system. By the beginning of the 1960s, the most popular genres for young Americans were rock and roll and soul music, both rooted in African-American blues.<br /><br />Buried in the Deep South, Central Florida has had a long blues tradition, and a number of notable blues musicians had roots in Florida, including Tampa Red, Bo Diddley, Ray Charles, "Diamond Teeth Mary" McClain, Gabriel Brown, Noble "Thin Man" Watts, Willie Green, Blind Blake, Little Mike and the Tornadoes, Barrelhouse Chuck, and the Allman Brothers Band. Muddy Waters wrote a song for his 1977 album, <em>Hard Again</em>, entitled "Deep Down in Florida," in which he mentions Newberry and traveling to Gainesville to see an old friend. Waters met his third wife while performing at the popular blues dance hall, the Cotton Club, in Gainesville. The club opened in 1948 and had regular performances by such future famous blues musicians as James Brown, B.B. King and Ray Charles. The Wells’ Built Hotel and Casino, which is now an African-American history museum, is located in the historic African-American community of Parramore in Downtown Orlando. The hotel hosted many notable African-American musicians and celebrities during the Segregation era. Guitar Slim, Ray Charles, Ivory Joe Hunter, B. B. King and Bo Diddley were among the bluesmen traveling along the Chitlin' Circuit who were guests at the hotel and performers at the casino.
Contributor
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Language
eng
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bradenton, Florida
The Alley, Sanford, Florida
West Tampa, Tampa, Florida
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
DeVane, Dwight, Blaine Waide, Peggy A. Bulger, Doris J. Dyen, and David Evans. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/856993560" target="_blank"><em>Drop on Down in Florida: Field Recordings of African American Traditional Music 1977-1980</em></a>. Atlanta, Ga: Dust-to-Digital, 2012.
Oakley, Giles. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3082016" target="_blank"><em>The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues</em></a>. New York: Taplinger Pub. Co, 1977.
Palmer, Robert. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6864668" target="_blank"><em>Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta</em></a>. New York: Viking Press, 1981.
Moving Image
A series of visual representations that, when shown in succession, impart an impression of motion.
Original Format
1 audio/video recording
Duration
5 minutes and 25 seconds
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
WUCF Artisodes Short: Daniel Heitz
Alternative Title
Daniel Heitz Artisode
Subject
Sanford (Fla.)
Music--United States
Blues (Music)--Florida
Description
Daniel Heitz first took the stage at the Alley blues club in Sanford, Florida, when he was 11 years old. Over the next six years, he became one of the most impressive classical blues guitarists in Central Florida.<br /><br />WUCF-TV is a Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) television station serving the Central Florida television market. The station, operated by the University of Central Florida, is the region's sole PBS member station, reaching an estimated population of 4.6 million people in its aerial viewing area. Arts and culture take center stage in WUCF-TV's weekly local series: "WUCF Artisodes." Each episode airs Thursdays at 8 p.m., featuring a local artist or initiative, as well as stories on the arts from across the country. Developed in partnership with 28 PBS stations nationwide, this series is part of WUCF-TV's mission to give everyone a front-row seat to the arts. This Artisodes Short originally aired as part of "WUCF Artisodes #145: The Call of Music" on October 2, 2014.
Type
Moving Image
Source
Original 5-minute and 25-second audio/video recording of Daniel Heitz, <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>, Sanford, Florida, October 2, 2014: WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.
Requires
<a href="http://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/" target="_blank"> Adobe Flash Player</a>
<a href="http://java.com/en/download/index.jsp" target="_blank"> Java</a>
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/144" target="_blank">Blues Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
<a href="http://video.wucftv.org/video/2365335036/" target="_blank">WUCF Artisodes 145: The Call of Music</a>, WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.
Is Format Of
<a href="http://video.wucftv.org/video/2365333735/" target="_blank">WUCF Artisodes Short: Daniel Heitz</a>, WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.
Coverage
WUCF-TV, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida
The Alley, Sanford, Florida
Publisher
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
Contributor
Heitz, Daniel
Heitz, Sherri
Johnson, Chris
Williamson, Karl
Date Created
ca. 2015-01-29
Date Issued
2014-10-02
Date Copyrighted
2014-10-02
Format
application/website
application/pdf
Medium
5-minute and 25-second audio/video recording
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Geography Teacher
Humanities Teacher
Music Teacher
Provenance
Originally published by <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>.
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by <a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a> and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/home/" target="_blank">WUCF-TV</a>
External Reference
McPherson, Gary. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/64554616" target="_blank"><em>The Child As Musician: A Handbook of Musical Development</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.
<a href="http://www.wucftv.org/local-programs/artisodes/" target="_blank">”WUCF Artisodes</a>.” WUCFTV.org. http://www.wucftv.org/local-programs/artisodes/ (Accessed March 30, 2015).
Click to View (Movie, Podcast, or Website)
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6yGU66JuBA" target="_blank">WUCF Artisodes Short: Daniel Heitz</a>
Albert King
Artisodes
B. B. King
blues
blues guitarists
blues guitars
bluesman
bluesmen
broadcast television distributor
Chris Johnson
classic blues
Dan Heitz
Daniel Heitz
Doc Williamson
Freddie King
Karl Williamson
musicians
PBS
Public Broadcasting Service
Riley King
Sanford
Sherri Heitz
The Alley
The Call of Music
The Daniel Heitz Band
UCF
University of Central Florida
WUCF Artisodes
WUCF-TV
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/65c38a8aa631116cbb5f4659861f8193.jpg
7656592a7477e5e4691628f4d664d9f3
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rick Derringer Ticket Stub
Alternative Title
Rick Derringer Ticket
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Blues (Music)--United States
Pop music
Description
A ticket stub for a concert featuring Rick Derringer (b. 1947) at the Great Southern Music Hall, located at 46 North Orange Avenue in Orlando, Florida, on August 19, 1978. The show began at 11 p.m.<br /><br />The Great Southern Music Hall, which changed its name to the Beacham Theater after renovations in 1976, was a music venue located at 46 North Orange Avenue in Downtown Orlando. The theater opened on December 9, 1921, as a vaudeville and movie theater.
Type
Text
Source
Original ticket stub: Private Collection of Julie Wahl.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original ticket stub.
Coverage
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Contributor
Wahl, Julie
Date Created
ca. 1978-08-19
Date Issued
ca. 1978-08-19
Format
image/jpg
Extent
85.9 KB
Medium
1 ticket stub
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by Julie Wahl and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
Private Collection of Julie Wahl
External Reference
Muise, Dan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49842572" target="_blank"><em>Gallagher, Marriott, Derringer & Trower: Their Lives and Music</em></a>. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corp, 2002.
Beacham
Beacham Theater
blues
blues rock
Christian rock
concerts
Great Southern Music Hall
guitar players
hard rock
jazz fusion
orlando
Orlando concerts
pop music
Rick Derringer
Ricky Dean Zehringer
rock music
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/d62117da05b0d23f614b22a815fcc9ca.jpg
c6f0b9c4f0c1bb1755d29669ac83d746
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Next Sunday
Alternative Title
Next Sunday
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Description
A newspaper clipping about Rock Super Bowl III, featuring Peter Frampton (b. 1950), Kansas, The J. Geils Band, and Rick Derringer (b. 1947) at the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Florida. The concert took place on September 4, 1977, and was presented by Beach Club. The ticket prices ranged between $8.50 and $12.50, including tax.<br /><br />From 1977 to 1983 the Tangerine Bowl hosted a series of music festivals known as "Rock Super Bowls." The Tangerine Bowl has also been known as Orlando Stadium, the Citrus Bowl, Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium, and is currently known as Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium. The stadium opened in 1936 and has been home to numerous sporting and entertainment events throughout its existence. The Tangerine Bowl was located at 1 Citrus Bowl Place in Orlando.
Type
Text
Source
Original article: "NEXT SUNDAY." 1977: Private Collection of Julie Wahl.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original article: "NEXT SUNDAY." 1977.
Coverage
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Contributor
Wahl, Julie
Date Created
ca. 1977
Date Issued
ca. 1977
Format
image/jpg
Extent
65.8 KB
Medium
1 newspaper article
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by Julie Wahl and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
Private Collection of Julie Wahl
External Reference
"<a href="http://www.rockshowvideos.com/rocksuperbowl3.html" target="_blank">Rock Super Bowl III</a>." Orlando Rock Super Bowls. http://www.rockshowvideos.com/rocksuperbowl3.html (accessed February 23, 2015).
Beach Club
blues
blues rock
Christian rock
Citrus Bowl
concerts
Florida Citrus Bowl
hard rock
Infinite Mushroom
J. Geils Band
jazz fusion
Kansas
Labor Day
Lakeland Civic Center
music festivals
orlando
Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium
Orlando Stadium
Peter Frampton
Peter Kenneth Frampton
pop music
progressive rock
Rick Derringer
Ricky Dean Zehringer
rock band
rock concert
rock festival
rock music
Rock Super Bowl
Rock Super Bowl III
soft rock
Streep's
Tangerine Bowl
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/4418c2a1e46ae209a48898bf1c24a080.jpg
5482634cddca25406edb5d99814f6d09
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Peter Frampton Ticket Stub
Alternative Title
Peter Frampton Ticket
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Description
A ticket stub for Rock Super Bowl III, featuring Peter Frampton (b. 1950), Kansas, The J. Geils Band, and Rick Derringer (b. 1947), at the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Florida. The concert took place on September 4, 1977, and was presented by the Beach Club. The ticket prices were between $8.50 and $12.50, including tax.<br /><br />From 1977 to 1983 the Tangerine Bowl hosted a series of music festivals known as "Rock Super Bowls." The Tangerine Bowl has also been known as Orlando Stadium, the Citrus Bowl, Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium and is currently known as Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium. It opened in 1936 and has been home to numerous sporting and entertainment events throughout its existence. The Tangerine Bowl is located at 1 Citrus Bowl Place in Orlando.
Type
Text
Source
Original ticket stub: Private Collection of Julie Wahl.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original ticket stub.
Coverage
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Contributor
Wahl, Julie
Date Created
ca. 1977-09-04
Date Issued
ca. 1977-09-04
Format
image/jpg
Extent
57.8 KB
Medium
1 ticket stub
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by Julie Wahl and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
Private Collection of Julie Wahl
External Reference
Clarke, Steve. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/3522464" target="_blank"><em>Peter Frampton: The Man Who Came Alive : a Fascinating Biography in Words, Interviews and Photographs</em></a>. H. Bunch Associates, 1977.
"<a href="http://www.rockshowvideos.com/rocksuperbowl3.html" target="_blank">Rock Super Bowl III</a>." Orlando Rock Super Bowls. http://www.rockshowvideos.com/rocksuperbowl3.html (accessed February 23, 2015).
Muise, Dan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49842572" target="_blank"><em>Gallagher, Marriott, Derringer & Trower: Their Lives and Music</em></a>. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corp, 2002.
Beach Club
blues
blues rock
Christian rock
Citrus Bowl
concerts
Derringer, Rick
Florida Citrus Bowl
hard rock
jazz fusion
Kansas
music festivals
orlando
Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium
Orlando Stadium
Peter Frampton
Peter Kenneth Frampton
pop music
progressive rock
Rick Derringer
Ricky Dean Zehringer
Rock Super Bowl
Rock Super Bowl III
soft rock
Tangerine Bowl
The J. Geils Band
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/2da820aaec4bd16d09ebb31f3000902c.jpg
1adbcabc3df43b4de771399cc8ba27e3
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rolling Stones Ticket Stub
Alternative Title
Rolling Stones Ticket
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Blues (Music)--United States
Rock music--United States
Description
A ticket stub for a concert featuring The Rolling Stones at the Tangerine Bowl, located at 1610 West Church Street in Downtown Orlando, Florida, on October 25, 1981. The ticket was $15.60, including tax, and the show began at noon, with the doors opening at 9 a.m. with Van Halen as the opening act. The concert was promoted by Cellar Door Productions and Beach Club Productions. The Tangerine Bowl has been also known as Orlando Stadium, the Citrus Bowl, Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium and is currently known as Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium. It opened in 1936 and has been home to numerous sporting and entertainment events throughout its existence.<br /><br />The Rolling Stones is a British rock and blues band formed in 1962 that has become one of the most successful musical acts of all time. The band enjoyed the height of their commercial and critical success during the 1960s and 1970s. The Rolling Stones 1981 Tour was the first time a band had a corporate sponsorship, allowing Jōvan Musk to pay them "several million dollars" to sponsor the tour without the band having to officially endorse the company. The band explained that "selling out" to corporate sponsors would help keep ticket prices down. The average ticket price was $16 and the tour grossed $50 million in tickets sales, the highest of any tour in 1981. This would be the last time the band toured the United States until 1989.
Type
Text
Source
Original ticket stub: Private Collection of Carl Knickerbocker.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original ticket stub.
Coverage
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Date Created
ca. 1981-10-25
Format
image/jpg
Extent
338 KB
Medium
1 ticket stub
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by Carl Knickerbocker and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
Private Collection of Carl Knickerbocker
External Reference
Booth, Stanley. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/586148170" target="_blank"><em>The True Adventures of the Rolling Stones</em></a>. Chicago, IL: A Capella, 2000.
Kozak, Roman. "<a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=GyQEAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PT16&ots=KARA7FrBII&dq=jovan%20presentation%20rolling%20stones&pg=PT16#v=onepage&q=jovan%20presentation%20rolling%20stones&f=false" target="_blank">Rockbill Ties Music Acts With Advertisers</a>." <em>Billboard Newspaper</em> (October 17, 1981): 6, 17.
Loder, Kurt and Steven Pond. "<a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/stones-tour-pays-off-19820121" target="_blank">Stones Tour Pays Off</a>." Rolling Stone 361 (January 21, 1982). http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/stones-tour-pays-off-19820121 (accessed February 17, 2015).
Galbraith, Gary. "<a href="http://rocksoff.org/1981.htm" target="_blank">1981 American Tour 1981 (Still Life) Part 1: 14th September to 26th October</a>." The "Rocks Off" Rolling Stones Setlists Page. http://rocksoff.org/1981.htm (accessed February 17, 2015).
Alex Van Halen
Alexander Arthur Van Halen
Beach Club
Beach Club Productions
Bill Grahamal
Bill Wyman
blues
blues rock
British rock
Capital One Bowl
Carl Knickerbocker
Cellar Door
Cellar Door Productions
Charles Robert Wood
Charlies Wood
Citrus Bowl
concerts
David Lee Roth
Downtown Orlando
Eddie Van Halen
Edward Lodewijk Van Halen
Florida Citrus Bowl
glam metal
hard rock
heavy metal
Jovan Musk
Jovan, Inc.
Keith Richards
metal
Michael Anthony Sobolewski
Michael Philip Jagger
Mick Jagger
music
orlando
Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium
Orlando Stadium
R&B
rhythm and blues
rock & roll
Rolling Stones
Rolling Stones American Tour
Ronald David Wood
Ronnie Wood
sports stadium
stadium
Tangerine Bowl
The Rolling Stones
The Stones
Van Halen
William George Perkas
Wolfgang William Van Halen
-
https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka/files/original/101531e3f47bca516b9b6ae6a1ed79c7.jpg
37422796275cc7c428e3584223034471
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Rock Collection
Alternative Title
Rock Collection
Subject
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Lakeland (Fla.)
Maitland (Fla.)
Orlando (Fla.)
Description
Collection of digital images, documents, and other records depicting the history of rock music in Central Florida. Series descriptions are based on special topics, the majority of which students focused their metadata entries around.
Rock music is uniquely American, emerging in the late 1940s and 1950s, with the influence of African-American blues, jazz, boogie woogie, and gospel, mixed with predominantly white country and Western swing music. This hybrid genre helped define a generation, breaking down color barriers in the South by merging African musical traditions with European instrumentation. The popularization of rock music coincided with the African-American Civil Rights Movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination in the South. The sudden interest of white teens in black “race music” provoked a backlash among traditionalists and Americans found themselves in the middle of a “culture war.” The counterculture youth of the 1950s and 1960s rejected many of the mainstream cultural standards of their parents’ generation, especially in regards to race.
During the First and Second Great Migration of the 20th century, African Americans and whites began living in closer proximity to one another, more so than ever before, resulting in both races emulating the other’s style in fashion, art, and music. Rock music influenced the language, attitudes, ideas, and trends of a generation. The genre continued to evolve, incorporating new elements with each subsequent decade. During the 1960s, the subgenres of folk rock, jazz rock, country rock, blues rock, psychedelic rock, glam rock, and progressive rock emerged. Musicians in the 1970s and 1980s created punk rock, Southern rock, heavy metal, new wave, and alternative rock. By the 1990s, artist continued to expand the genre by creating rap rock, reggae rock, grunge, and indie rock.
Florida has been at the heart of rock music and the “culture war” since the 1950s. The recording industry was actively making rock records in Tampa during the 1960s and in Miami during the 1970s. Gram Parsons, a native of Winter Haven, is credited as the father of the country rock movement of the late 1960s, and Southern rock emerged from Jacksonville during the 1970s and 1980s, with bands such as the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Outlaws, and Molly Hatchet. These contributions played an integral part in the history of rock music.
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Wahl, Julie
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/140" target="_blank">Central Florida Music History Collection</a>, RICHES of Central Florida.
Type
Collection
Coverage
Bob Carr Theater, Orlando, Florida
Enzian Theater, Maitland, Florida
Great Southern Music Hall, Orlando, Florida
Lakeland Civic Center, Lakeland, Florida
Orange County Civic Center, Orlando, Florida
Orlando-Seminole Jai Alai Fronton, Fern Park, Florida
Orlando Sports Stadium, Orlando, Florida
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Curator
Cepero, Laura
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
External Reference
Altschuler, Glenn C. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51518334" target="_blank"><em>All Shook Up: How Rock 'n' Roll Changed America</em></a>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Fisher, Marc. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69594101" target="_blank"><em>Something in the Air: Radio, Rock, and the Revolution That Shaped a Generation</em></a>. New York: Random House, 2007.
Studwell, William E., and D. F. Lonergan. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41090615" target="_blank"><em>The Classic Rock and Roll Reader: Rock Music from Its Beginnings to the Mid-1970s</em></a>. New York: Haworth Press, 1999.
Language
eng
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
Cactus, Bloodrock, Potliquor, Dr. John, and Heaven Ticket Stub
Alternative Title
Cactus, Bloodrock, Potliquor, Dr. John & Heaven Ticket
Subject
Orlando (Fla.)
Music--United States
Rock music--United States
Blues (Music)--United States
Jazz--United States
Funk (Music)--United States
Description
A ticket stub for a concert featuring Cactus, Bloodrock, Potliquor, Dr. John (b. 1940), and Heaven at the Tangerine Bowl, located at 1610 West Church Street in Downtown Orlando, Florida, on April 1, 1972. The ticket was $4 and the show began at 1 p.m. The Tangerine Bowl has been also known as Orlando Stadium, the Citrus Bowl, Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium and is currently known as Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium. It opened in 1936 and has been home to numerous sporting and entertainment events throughout its existence.<br /><br />Cactus is an American hard rock and blues band formed in 1969 in New York. They were known as "the American Led Zeppelin." Bloodrock was an American hard rock and blues band from Fort Worth, Texas, that enjoyed considerable success from 1969 to 1975. Potliquor was a Southern Rock band from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that formed in 1969 and disbanded in 1979. Dr. John, the stage name of Malcolm John "Mac" Rebennack, is an American multi-instrumentalist wh.ose music blended New Orleans blues, jazz, rock, and R&B <span>Heaven was a British jazz-influenced rock band that formed</span> in 1968 and disbanded shortly after the release of their 1971 album.
Type
Text
Source
Original ticket stub: Private Collection of Carl Knickerbocker.
Is Part Of
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/omeka2/collections/show/142" target="_blank">Rock Collection</a>, Central Florida Music History Collection, RICHES of Central Florida.
Is Format Of
Digital reproduction of original ticket stub.
Coverage
Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Florida
Contributor
Knickerbocker, Carl
Date Created
ca. 1972-04-01
Format
image/jpg
Extent
133 KB
Medium
1 ticket stub
Language
eng
Mediator
History Teacher
Rights Holder
Copyright to this resource is held by Carl Knickerbocker and is provided here by <a href="http://riches.cah.ucf.edu/" target="_blank">RICHES of Central Florida</a> for educational purposes only.
Accrual Method
Donation
Curator
Cravero, Geoffrey
Digital Collection
<a href="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/map/" target="_blank">RICHES MI</a>
Source Repository
Private Collection of Carl Knickerbocker
External Reference
Aswell, Tom. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317927942" target="_blank"><em>Louisiana Rocks!: The True Genesis of Rock & Roll</em></a>. Gretna, La: Pelican Pub. Co, 2010.
John, and Jack Rummel. <a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/29428815" target="_blank"><em>Under a Hoodoo Moon: The Life of Dr. John the Night Tripper</em></a>. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994.
American Led Zeppelin
blues
blues rock
boogie rock
Cactus
Capital One Bowl
Carl Knickerbocker
Carmen Appice
Citrus Bowl
concert
concert tour
concerts
Downtown Orlando
Dr. John
Dr. John Creaux
Dr. John the Night Tripper
Florida Citrus Bowl
funk
hard rock
Heaven
heavy metal
jazz
Mac Rebennack
Malcolm John Rebennack
metal
music
New Orleans blues
New Orleans R&B
orlando
Orlando Citrus Bowl Stadium
Orlando Stadium
Potliquor
progressive rock
psychedelic rock
R&B
Rebennack, Mac
rhythm & blues
rock
rock & roll
rock music
sports stadium
Tangerine Bowl
Tim Bogert
zydeco