genre american
Rock 'n' Roll
View in the web ↗mid-1950s–early 1960s · Memphis / Chicago / New Orleans
Blues rhythm and form aimed at teenagers: Chuck Berry's guitar stories and Elvis Presley's Sun sessions turned Black rhythm and blues into a national youth music.
Rock ‘n’ roll was less a new music than a new audience. Musically, its first records are rhythm and blues: twelve-bar forms, backbeat drumming, boogie bass lines. What changed in 1954–56 was who was buying — white teenagers with postwar pocket money, reached through new channels: independent labels, disc jockeys like Alan Freed (who popularized the term “rock and roll,” itself long-standing Black slang), and 45-rpm singles (Britannica, “Rock and roll”).
The style’s two founding figures map its two parents. Chuck Berry, at Chess in Chicago, wrote precision-tooled story-songs about cars, school and girls over a country-tinged boogie guitar — “Maybellene” (1955) began as a reworking of the fiddle tune “Ida Red.” Elvis Presley, at Sun in Memphis, was a white Southerner steeped in Black blues and gospel as well as hillbilly music; his first single (1954) paired a blues (Arthur Crudup’s “That’s All Right”) with a bluegrass waltz (Bill Monroe’s “Blue Moon of Kentucky”) played with blues feel — the fusion in a single seven-inch artifact (Guralnick 1994).
The genealogy was never a secret — Presley himself told reporters that “the colored folks been singing it and playing it just like I’m doin’ now, man, for more years than I know” — but the rewards were unequally distributed: white performers and white-owned labels captured most of the money and credit for a music whose grammar was Black. That tension, documented throughout this tree’s sources, is part of rock ‘n’ roll’s story, not a footnote to it. From here the lineage runs onward through rockabilly and the British blues revival — both now on this map — toward the whole rock family.
Connections
Roots, siblings & influences
Chuck Berry was a Chess Records artist; the first rock 'n' roll records were structurally blues records played faster for a younger audience.
Rock and roll · Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta
The hillbilly side of the equation: Berry's 'Maybellene' reworked a country fiddle tune, and Presley came up through country radio and hillbilly bookings.
Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley · Country Music, U.S.A.
The vocal fervor of early rock — Presley included — was learned in church and from gospel radio.
Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley · The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times
What grew from it
Rock's amplification, studio techniques and audience — Davis was listening hard to Jimi Hendrix.
The blues/R&B half of the equation, filtered through Sun Records' echo.
Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley · Rock and roll
Key artists
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Chuck Berry
artistRock 'n' roll's chief architect: a Chess Records bluesman who aimed blues guitar and country storytelling at teenagers and wrote the genre's foundational songbook.
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Elvis Presley
artistThe Sun Records sessions of 1954–55 fused blues, gospel and hillbilly in one voice — and showed the industry that the fusion, sung by a white Southerner, could sell to everyone.
Sources
- Rock and roll ↗ . Encyclopædia Britannica · Encyclopedia
- Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley — Peter Guralnick (1994). Little, Brown and Company · Book
- Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta — Robert Palmer (1981). Viking Press · Book
- Country Music, U.S.A. — Bill C. Malone and Jocelyn R. Neal (2010). University of Texas Press (3rd rev. ed.; first published 1968) · Book
- The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times — Anthony Heilbut (1971). Simon & Schuster · Book