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Thread started 02/20/10 9:12pm

Identity

Spinner Presents: 20 Important Black Rockers Past and Present

February 2010

Jimi Hendrix plugging in his electric guitar -- that's black power. Rock music was born from rhythm and blues; more than half of the original inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame were African-American. And despite detours from soul to hip-hop, black musicians have never left rock 'n' roll. February is Black History Month in North America, but these rockers deserve celebration every day of the year.






Sister Rosetta Tharpe

Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis all loved Sister Rosetta, a gospel singer who grew up performing in tent revivals and played guitar like she was possessed by the Holy Spirit. Her version of 'Rock Me' (1938) is often nominated as the first rock 'n' roll song.






Fats Domino

If the Fat Man looked like the young Elvis, he might have had another nickname -- the King of Rock 'n' Roll. "Rock 'n' roll was here a long time before I came along," Elvis himself once said. "Let's face it -- I can't sing like Fats Domino can."





Chuck Berry

If you were looking for another name for rock 'n' roll, as John Lennon once said, "you might call it Chuck Berry." Other guitar slingers, notably Berry's Chess Records labelmate Bo Diddley, had styles of their own, but Berry's combination of masterly riffs and teenage storytelling made rock an art form. Roll over, Beethoven!







Little Richard

Two decades before Elton John and a half century before Lady Gaga, Richard Penniman was the flying saucer of rock 'n' roll -- a dazzling alien who came to pitch camp. When he sang "Awopbopaloobop, a lopbamboom," the kids knew exactly what he meant.





Arthur Lee

Supposedly the first musician to hire a young James Marshall Hendrix on a recording session, the founder and mastermind of the wildly creative Southern California flower-power band Love proved that the psychedelic '60s weren't just for white kids on San Francisco's Haight Street.





Jimi Hendrix

The ultimate guitar god set the tone for an entire era when he asked the loaded question "Are you experienced?" At the height of Black Power, he dropped his British bandmates in favor of African-Americans Billy Cox on bass and drummer Buddy Miles -- the Band of Gypsys.




Funkadelic

Before George Clinton revived the Parliament name in 1974, the other half of the P-Funk universe released some of the most anarchic rock music this side of Frank Zappa. Eddie Hazel's insane soloing on the 10-minute title track of Funkadelic's 'Maggot Brain' album still stands as one of the most mind-blowing performances in rock history.






Black Merda

Billing themselves as "the first all-black rock band," members of this Detroit's band backed Motown star Edwin Starr on his own tough hits (including 'War') before signing as a self-contained act with Chess Records. Surviving members reunited a few years ago, just in time to see their old records sampled by Ja Rule and Kanye West.






Phil Lynott

Born to an Irishwoman and an Afro-Brazilian father, this hard-drinking Dublin guitarist was the anchor of the classic hard rock band Thin Lizzy ('The Boys Are Back in Town'). He also backed Johnny Thunders, alongside ex-Sex Pistols Steve Jones and Paul Cook, on the former New York Dolls guitarist's album 'So Alone.'
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Reply #1 posted 02/20/10 9:12pm

Identity





Betty Davis

Married to Miles Davis, the former Betty Mabry turned the jazz master on to the music of Hendrix and Sly Stone. She named Miles's rock-fusion album 'Bitches Brew,' then cut several sides of her own with a young Neal Schon, later of Journey, on guitar. With songs such as 'Anti Love Song' and 'If I'm in Luck I Might Get Picked Up,' Ms. Davis rocked as hard as any three Stooges.







Bad Brains

The Beastie Boys chose their name -- BBs -- as an homage to Bad Brains, who took their own name from a Ramones song. Washington, DC's one-of-a-kind hardcore-reggae fusion band has blown away more than one generation of musicians with its startling loud-soft dynamic.







Prince


When Prince Rogers Nelson, already a dance-music phenom, squeezed lightning from his guitar on the classic power ballad 'Purple Rain,' it was like Jimi never went away -- he only got a little shorter.







Fishbone


Currently on tour with fellow ska survivors the English Beat, the long-running L.A. mashup beat the Red Hot Chili Peppers to the intersection of Funk, Metal and Anything Goes. First of its mosh-pit kind, this band long ago earned the right to 'Party at Ground Zero.'






Living Colour

A key founder of the Black Rock Coalition, jaw-dropping guitarist Vernon Reid found the enduring lineup for his band when he met singer Corey Glover at a birthday party. When the group sang 'Elvis Is Dead,' they meant it on more than one level.




Lenny Kravitz

Son of the Bahamian actress who played Helen Willis on 'The Jeffersons,' Kravitz cut his debut album on his own terms, after several labels told him his music wasn't "black enough." The classic psychedelic-Beatles sound of 'Let Love Rule' launched the latter-day hippie to instant stardom.





Ben Harper

Raised on folk and blues in his grandparents' California music store, the Grammy-winning roots rocker gave it up for classic rock when he joined the all-star band backing Will Ferrell on 'Free Bird' for Conan O'Brien's final 'Tonight Show' episode.







Saul Williams

Titling his Rick Rubin-produced debut 'Amethyst Rock Star,' the slam poet went on to a fruitful collaboration with Nine Inch Nails's Trent Reznor, whose industrial sound heavily influenced the aggressive concept album 'The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of NiggyTardust!'







The BellRays

Tina Turner has "retired" from performing almost as often as she changes nylons. For almost 20 years now, BellRays frontwoman Lisa Kekaula has made rapt club audiences forget all about her mentor. When she testifies on 'Revolution Get Down,' it's Detroit 1968 all over again.




TV on the Radio

This Brooklyn product's 2008 album, 'Dear Science,' effectively swept the critics' polls as best album of the year. Singer Tunde Adebimpe covered Neil Young for his role in the film 'Rachel Getting Married'; big-bearded guitarist Kyp Malone recently released a solo album as Rain Machine.





BLK JKS

"Real life is like clay," says Lindani Buthelezi, a founding member of this fantastically adventurous South African rock band. The critically acclaimed group treats its music -- a challenging collision of prog rock, New Wave, dub reggae and any other sound that strikes its fancy -- much the same way.
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Reply #2 posted 02/20/10 9:56pm

Timmy84

And again no Isley Brothers/Ernie Isley? What gives? LOL
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Reply #3 posted 02/20/10 10:19pm

DakutiusMaximu
s



The Family Stand- I liked 'em best funky style on Chain but they started rockin' with Moon in Scorpio.
[Edited 2/20/10 22:19pm]
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Reply #4 posted 02/20/10 10:29pm

midiscover

LOL!
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Reply #5 posted 02/20/10 10:30pm

sosgemini

avatar

Despite Acid Queen, I don't get the credit Tina Turner gets for being a rocker. All her stuff circa Whats Love sounds adult contemporary to me. I guess these kats agreed.
Space for sale...
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Reply #6 posted 02/20/10 10:41pm

Identity

Timmy84 said:

And again no Isley Brothers/Ernie Isley? What gives? LOL


You had me worried: I thought you were gonna say Lil' Wayne.
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Reply #7 posted 02/20/10 10:49pm

Timmy84

Identity said:

Timmy84 said:

And again no Isley Brothers/Ernie Isley? What gives? LOL


You had me worried: I thought you were gonna say Lil' Wayne.

neutral You don't know me that well do ya? Why the hell would I say him? brick

lol
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Reply #8 posted 02/20/10 10:50pm

Timmy84

sosgemini said:

Despite Acid Queen, I don't get the credit Tina Turner gets for being a rocker. All her stuff circa Whats Love sounds adult contemporary to me. I guess these kats agreed.


Tina's early stuff with Ike could get her a stake...somewhat lol
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Reply #9 posted 02/21/10 12:13am

lastdecember

avatar

Timmy84 said:

sosgemini said:

Despite Acid Queen, I don't get the credit Tina Turner gets for being a rocker. All her stuff circa Whats Love sounds adult contemporary to me. I guess these kats agreed.


Tina's early stuff with Ike could get her a stake...somewhat lol


Yeah Tina but where is SLY??? if he isnt considered Rock than Funkadelic sure as hell shouldnt be considered Rock. And any list that has Lenny Kravitz on it better freaking have Sly, Isleys,Tina and shit im sure im forgetting someone here

"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #10 posted 02/21/10 12:39am

Timmy84

lastdecember said:

Timmy84 said:



Tina's early stuff with Ike could get her a stake...somewhat lol


Yeah Tina but where is SLY??? if he isnt considered Rock than Funkadelic sure as hell shouldnt be considered Rock. And any list that has Lenny Kravitz on it better freaking have Sly, Isleys,Tina and shit im sure im forgetting someone here


YEAH THE FUCK IS SLY AT?! hmm
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Reply #11 posted 02/21/10 12:43am

Timmy84

When Sly Stone and the Isley Brothers are not on a list, I don't take it seriously. Those groups ARE PART of the foundation of rock. Hell it wasn't Arthur Lee that put Jimi on first, it was the Isleys way back in 1962 for chrissakes! The same group that did the original "Shout", popularized "Twist & Shout" and some other early songs were covered by white acts yet they sound more energetic than those that covered them and they're not on the list?! And this is even before Ernie Isley even played guitar and when they did...

And you're telling me that Sly, whose band was more rock-oriented in the beginning (with elements of proto-funk), weren't in it? But they're skipping them for Funkadelic? Props to George Clinton and Eddie Hazel but the Isleys and Sly Stone are missing so I can't approve.

They're so quick to just label Hendrix and the early '50s rock heroes tho... neutral
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Reply #12 posted 02/21/10 2:42am

Harlepolis

Where in the HELL is...


Are you fuckin' kidding me? lol

I'm at least glad the Mr.Hazel got mentioned, he doesn't get the props he rightfully deserves IMO.
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Reply #13 posted 02/21/10 2:46am

novabrkr

Mystifier



Black black metal.
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Reply #14 posted 02/21/10 5:11am

SPYZFAN1

They also forgot Mother's Finest,24-7 Spyz and Sound Barrier. I like that pic of Micheal Hampton.
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Reply #15 posted 02/21/10 7:29am

lastdecember

avatar

Timmy84 said:

When Sly Stone and the Isley Brothers are not on a list, I don't take it seriously. Those groups ARE PART of the foundation of rock. Hell it wasn't Arthur Lee that put Jimi on first, it was the Isleys way back in 1962 for chrissakes! The same group that did the original "Shout", popularized "Twist & Shout" and some other early songs were covered by white acts yet they sound more energetic than those that covered them and they're not on the list?! And this is even before Ernie Isley even played guitar and when they did...

And you're telling me that Sly, whose band was more rock-oriented in the beginning (with elements of proto-funk), weren't in it? But they're skipping them for Funkadelic? Props to George Clinton and Eddie Hazel but the Isleys and Sly Stone are missing so I can't approve.

They're so quick to just label Hendrix and the early '50s rock heroes tho... neutral


The "legend" will also get Hendrix on every list like this regardless, not that im slighting the man, he was amazing, BUT, there were tons of others doing more before and after. I mean lets not forget Hendrix opened for the MONKEES when no one would take him. Yeah without SLy and the Isleys and the inclusion of Lenny Kravitz and Ben Harper, sorry i need to see how they came about this list

"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #16 posted 02/21/10 1:42pm

Timmy84

SPYZFAN1 said:

They also forgot Mother's Finest,24-7 Spyz and Sound Barrier. I like that pic of Micheal Hampton.


Yeah they forgot a WHOLE bunch of folks.
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