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Home > Music of the United Kingdom (1950s and 60s)


 

Indigenous styles of music production and performance dominated the United Kingdom until the late 1950s, when imported American rock and roll, pop-folk and rockabilly gained fans among British youth, while American roots music, especially the blues, found its own devoted fanbase.

Music of the United Kingdom
History Ethnicities
Early British popular music English
1950s and 60s Scottish
1970s Welsh
1980s Irish
1990s to present Jamaican and Indian
Genres Classical and Opera - Folk - Popular - Rock
Timeline and Samples
Awards Mercury
Charts UK Singles Chart, UK classical chart
Festivals Glastonbury festival
Media NME - Melody Maker
National anthem " God Save the Queen" (Wales-" Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau", Scotland-" Scotland the Brave", " Flower of Scotland")
Regions and territories
Anguilla - Bermuda - Cayman Islands - Cornwall - Man - Montserrat - Turks and Caicos - Virgin Islands

The roots of British popular music for the rest of the 20th century and into the next were set during the 1950s. In the aftermath of World War 2, the economy was still performing poorly. Many consumer good s were not available, and there was little high-wage labor. American media was popular, and the British youth grew infatuated with the apparent wealth of their American counterparts. The economy of the United States was booming, and the images on TV made it appear as though American teens were able to purchase much that the British could not. At the same time, a legion of American musical innovators, including Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry, were adapting African American rock and roll for mainstream audiences, and American folk bands like The Weavers were fomenting a roots revival of old time music.



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