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We turn our attention to Rhythm and Blues. In the late forties, white record companies labeled commercial black music 'race music'. Eventually, Jerry Wexler, then working at Millboard magazine as a reporter, thought of the phrase, 'rhythm and blues' and it caught on. Before long, numerous other descriptions appeared, Motown, the Philadelphia sound, Soul, but all had in common that the music expressed the rising aspirations of the ghetto.
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"From Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson of the...hip-hop group the Roots, comes this vibrant book commemorating the legacy of Soul Train—the cultural phenomenon that launched the careers of artists such as Tina Turner, Stevie Wonder, the Jackson 5, Whitney Houston, Lenny Kravitz, LL Cool J, and Aretha Franklin. Questlove reveals the remarkable story of the captivating program, and his text is paired with more than 350 photographs of the show's most memorable...
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"I Ain't Studdin' Ya is the behind-the scenes story of beloved blues entertainer Bobby Rush's extraordinary rise to fame. Born Emmett Ellis Jr. in Homer, Louisiana, he acquired his first real guitar, adopted the stage name 'Bobby Rush,' and started playing juke joints in Little Rock, Arkansas, as a teenager barely old enough to sneak through the door. After leading his own band in Arkansas, he relocated to Chicago in the 1960s, where he started working...
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