Music Pop History

Diposting oleh Unknown on Senin, 04 Februari 2013

Music Pop 

Musical entertainment for the masses

Musical entertainment was born as a reflection of the relationship between humans and nature. The first disconnects between these two entities occurred with courtly music and religious music, that reflected not humans in their natural environment but humans in artificial environments such as the court and the monastery. This branch of music eventually evolved into what we call "classical music".
It is likely that, instead, musical entertainment for the poor masses remained roughly the same over many centuries, because their lifestyle did not change all that much.
But the second major disconnect affected precisely these classes of people. It took place after the industrial revolution, when reckless urbanization and factory life dramatically altered the soundscape of the lower classes. Musical entertainment for the masses became a completely different phenomenon, although still derived from the market fair and the itinerant circus. It also merged with the renewed vogue for the theater and with the booming capitalist attitude. In the USA it was further affected by the melting pot of immigrants (including slaves), by the vast linguistically-uniform territory and by the process of colonization of new lands. Musical entertainment for the masses in the industrial society was to be quite different from anything that had come before.
First of all, it became a commodity, just like many other things (from long-distance transportation to newspapers) were becoming commodities. An entire industry was born to profit from it and to fuel its growth. The tension between its social roots and the industry that turned it into a mass product was going to remain the fundamental theme of its history.
Secondly, it introduced a new way to experience musical entertainment by separating the stage and the audience in a way that did not exist in folk music (although it already existed in courtly music). Indirectly this led to the birth of the "auteur" also in popular music, not only in classical music.
Thirdly, it became the soundtrack of the middle class. As the middle class was being created in the big cities of Europe and the USA, musical entertainment reflected its hedonistic, social, political, economic urges.
Finally, it created a whole new spectrum of professions (the owner of the theater, the performer, the publisher, etc).

Napoli: the Aria

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Pop music was born in Napoli, Italy, in 1679, when Alessandro Scarlatti composed his first opera, or even earlier, when Francesco Provenzale coined the musical language that Scarlatti popularized: light, lively and catchy. They placed the emphasis on arias, clearly separated from the "recitativo", and grounded the arias on a strong sense of rhythm and melody. The Neapolitan passion for melodic singing, as defined by Alessandro Scarlatti's Griselda (1721), Giovanni Pergolesi's La Serva Padrona (1733), Giovannni Paisiello's Nina pazza per amore (1789), Domenico Cimarosa's Il Matrimonio Segreto (1792), dominated Western Europe for at least a century. Thanks to them, the opera became a simpler, funny, popular form of entertainment, and the style of singing evolved into a refined art of its own, the "bel canto". The Italian audience loved to sing the arias of Gioacchino Rossini's Il Barbiere di Siviglia (1816), Vincenzo Bellini's Norma (1831), Gaetano Doninzetti'sLucia di Lammermoor (1835). Few people could afford to go to the opera, but many people would hum and whistle and mimick the great opera singers. Even Giuseppe Verdi, not exactly the lightest of composers, was sung at barber shops and wedding parties. More arias were added to the repertory by Pietro Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana (1890), Ruggero Leoncavallo's "I Pagliacci" (1892), Giacomo Puccini's Madame Butterfly (1904). The opera was a complex work of art, but their catchy arias served the less "sophisticated" taste of the masses as well as any folk dance.
An early example of how the aria of the opera transferred to popular music is Eduardo Di Capua's O Sole Mio (1898), one of the most recorded songs of all times.

Vienna: the Waltz

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Following the social upheavals caused by the industrial revolution and by the American and French revolutions, the 19th century witnessed two major revolutions that were both social and cultural in nature: the rise of the bourgeoisie and romanticism. They both emphasized the "popular" element, a fact that did not take long to affect instrumental music.
The social dance of the Western aristocracy (since 1650) had been the minuet. The new social order required a new social dance, a "popular" one. The waltz, derived around 1800 from an Austrian folk dance (the laendler), as well as the mazurka from Poland and the polka from Bohemia, served proved to be a good match for the new social mood. The first dance hall for waltzing opened in Germany in 1754, but the waltz came into its own when it took Vienna by storm at the turn of the century thanks to dance halls such as "Zum Sperl" (1807) and "Apollo" (1808). These dances were much more vibrant than the old minuet. They allowed for more creativity. And they were more "erotic" because they were "couple-oriented" dances and the dancers were facing each other and embracing each other. Where the minuet emphasized the collective pattern, the waltz emphasized the man-woman interaction, and left the couple free to interact or not interact with the other couples on the dance floor. From the Middle Ages on, the Church had discouraged this kind of "pagan" folk dance, considering it too suggestive and too disorderly. The age of romanticism rediscovered the jovial spirit of the folk dance, although it recast it into the cold, disciplined realm of uniformed officials and long lady dresses. Replacing the peasant combo with an orchestra helped make the folk dance palatable to the aristocracy. The An der Schoenen Blauen Donau (1867), composed by Austrian composer Johann Strauss Junior, marked the apogee of the phenomenon.

Paris, Vienna, London: the Operetta

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"Opera-Comique", the theater founded in Paris in 1715 to stage popular forms of entertainment such as comedy, dance and music shows, descendants of the light entertainment provided by itinerant troupes at medieval fairs, eventually gave the name to a musical genre, the "opera-comique". They were related to the opera only insomuch as they borrowed the new styles made popular in Napoli, but their fragmented structure betrayed their origin as, basically, a "variety show".
Jacques Offenbach created the "opera bouffe", such as Orphee Aux Enfers (1858), as an extension of the same concept. The songs were meant to be simple and catchy, the rhythm engaging, the tone light and humurous, the theme farcical.
The Viennese operetta, pioneered by Franz von Suppe in the 1860s and popularized, once again, by Johann Strauss Junior's Die Fledermaus (1874) and Franz Lehar's Die Lustige Witwe/ The Merry Widow (1905), did something similar with the "singspiel".
The English operetta was significantly different from the operetta of Paris and Vienna. It descended from the "ballad opera" a` la John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728), a cycle of songs to accompany a an operatic parody. It was, generally speaking, far less provocative. The prototype was Henry Bishop's Clari or the Maid of Milan (1823), which contained one of the most popular songs of the century, Home Sweet Home. The genre peaked with the works of composer Arthur Sullivan and librettist William Gilbert: The Sorcerer (1877), H.M.S. Pinafore (1878), one of the most popular (Farewell My Own), The Pirates of Penzance (1880), premiered simultaneously in London and New York, Iolanthe (1882), the first operetta staged at D'Oyly Carte's super-modern "Savoy" theatre (the first "electrical" theater in the world), Princess Ida (1884), and The Mikado(1885), influenced by the Japanese craze of the time and probably their masterpiece (Tit Willow,Three Little Maids), one of the first to be recorded (with a cast that included the most famous pop stars of Britain, such as Peter Dawson and Stanley Kirkby). Sullivan proved to be one of the most versatile composers of his age, running the gamut from waltzes to quotations from Wagner's operas, from military marches to medieval madrigals. His style was, de facto, an exuberant parody of the entire body of western music. Gilbert, meanwhile, painted a social universe of declining aristocracy, revered royalty and proud imperial ambitions that "satirized" but did not "criticize". In fact, it was largely devoid of the social and political anxieties of those decades.
So popular were Gilbert and Sullivan's operettas that impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte built two theaters for them, the "Savoy" (1881) and the "Royal English Opera House" (1891).
His rival impresario George Edwardes, headquartered at the "Gaiety" theater, responded with Alfred Cellier's Dorothy (1886), including the hit Queen of My Heart, and Sidney Jones' The Gaiety Girl(1893), featuring the "Gaiety Girls", by far the greatest attraction of the decade.
While mostly ignored (or despised) in the Continent, the English operetta with its brisk pace, delirious wit and popular melodies was highly successful in the USA.
Leslie Stuart's Floradora (1899), instead, belonged to the genre of the musical comedy.

Paris: the Cabaret

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After the Terror and the Napoleonic wars, the cafes that sprouted all over Paris became a symbol of a more relaxed (public as well as private) life. After the last major crisis, the German invasion of 1870, was over, an event immortalized by Pierre Degeyter's "L'Internationale" (1888), Paris began craving for entertainment after decades of intolerance and wars. The cafes served alcohol, food and fun. One particular kind was the cafe-concert.
The theater was where the operas were performed with solemn pomp, but the "cafe-concert" was the place that offered a more casual environment for the bourgeoisie to listen to the same arias while drinking a liqueur and chatting with a friend at a table. Its performers were often amateurs, but devoted ones, who could approximate the styles of the opera. Most cafe-concert would also offer other forms of entertainment, such as comedians. Eventually, the singers of the cafe-concert began to write their own material, and sing it in more regular tones (not the tenors and the baritones of the operas). Since their audience was the bourgeoisie, they addressed issues that their audience could identify with, such as satirical accounts of celebrated events. The success of the operettas influenced a parallel evolution in the music, that became more lively, hummable and rhythmic, with an emphasis on a refrain that people could easily memorize. The "chanson" was born. The genre and the locale helped each other: people went to the cafe-concert to listen to the chansonniers, but they also listened to the chansonniers because they were meeting friends at the cafe-concert. The cafe-concert was also one of the few places where the politically-motivated intellectuals could hear political talk. It was the ideal place for the artists to meet and exchanged ideas. The cafe-concert soon became a reference point for the entire cultural life of Paris. The cafe-concert was the place where the social classes mingled: for the first time in French history, the aristocracy and the lower classes shared the same venue.
During those years, the star of theater was Sarah Bernhardt, an actress who became a myth, an "immoral" woman who was one of the first feminists, jealous of her independence and indifferent to traditional family roles. Public opinion was against her when she ended her tenure at the "Odeon" in 1872, but her cult was just starting.
Around the same time, the circus was becoming more than just trained animals and pretty riders. Following the British example, each French circus was adding acrobats, clowns and singers to its parade of sensations. The result was a more exhilarating experience that drew bigger and bigger crowds.
The cabaret (originally the term for liquor stores) was born in 1881 in Paris when Rudolphe Salis opened "Le Chat Noir" in the Monmartre district, catering to that colorful crowd of writers, artists and musicians. It was the natural evolution of the cafe-concert, away from the opera and towards the young decadents. The cabaret was born for the artists to exhibit themselves: poets, comedians, musicians shared the stage. The satirical element (both of the politics and the customs of the day, and sometimes of the intellectuals themselves) was much stronger. It soon began to copy the format of the circus, adding acrobats and clowns to its program.
The renaissance of the French song began in the mid 1880s with composers and singers such as Jules Jouy and Xavier Privas. Jouy was influential in establishing "Le Chat Noir" as the main venue for the new chansonniers. He even pioneered the concept of the "video clip" because he used "shadow shows" to accompany his songs (silhouettes projected onto a transparent screen). This "shadow show" became one of Paris' main attractions until the end of 1895, when Auguste and Louis Lumiere debuted their "Cinematographe" at the "Salon du Grand Cafe". In 1897 Jouy wrote La Soularde for Yvette Guilbert, one of the most famous songs of the "Belle Epoque".
Two of the early chansonniers created the two archetypical styles. Aristide Bruant borrowed from folk music a plain tone that fit his stories of the lower classes and his contempt for the bourgeoisie. He was the founding father of the realist song (Saint LazareSaint OuenA La Villette). Yvette Guilbert, instead, the prototype of the "chanteuse", adopted a melodramatic, half-spoken style that was more influenced by Sarah Bernhardt than by folk singing (Ma Tete, 1904). The former and his disciples were much more successful among the general audience.
The first music hall of Paris had been opened by Joseph Oller in 1875 (the "Fantasies Oller"), who also opened the most famous, the "Olympia", in 1888, on Boulevard des Capucines. In the following decade many more opened, mostly in Montmartre, including the "Folies-Bergere", mostly in the area around Boulevard de Strasbourg and the Porte St Denis.
Jeanne Bourgeois, better known as "Mistinguette", ruled the stage of the Parisian music halls when recordings made its stars famous world-wide: "Mon Homme," "La Rumba d'Amour", "Ca C'est Paris" and especially "Mon Homme" (1920) were her "hits". She is credited with pioneering the entrance from the top of a spectacular staircase and the fanciful exotic costumes that would become novelties around the world.
During her legendary tenure at the "Folies Bergere" in 1909, Mistinguette discovered Maurice Chevalier, a young singer (13 years younger than her) who went on to become the most popular French entertainer between the two wars, and the quintessence of the French seducer for the rest of the world, with songs such as MimiLouiseDans la Vie Faut Pas s'en Faire (1921), Valentine(1924), Prosper (1935), Ma Pomme (1936), Ca Fait d'Excellents Francais (1939). After the "Great War" (in which he served and was wounded), he became the star of the "Casino de Paris", where he entertained a crowd of American soldiers. Thanks to that connection, Chevalier became instrumental in bridging the world of the French cabaret and the world of African-American music (jazz, ragtime). He staged his first Broadway musical in 1922 and became the first foreign singer to star in a Hollywood musical in 1929.
The first dance halls, such as the "Moulin de la Galette", were simply venues for people to enjoy the music and also dance to it. But dancing soon took on a life of its own, and a lifestyle of its own. The "Moulin Rouge", opened in 1889 by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, was a dance hall that offered a wild and sumptuous environment for the wealthy male audience to forget their families and their work. There prevailed an explicit erotic element, both in the attire of the singers/dancers and in the themes of their songs. Fundamentally, it was a bigger and more ambitious (and more dissolute) form of cabaret, mixing music (played by a full orchestra) and dance (choreographed like a ballet) in elaborate shows. The rhythm was frantic, as epitomized by the "can can" that became the soundtrack of this era.
The prostitutes that used to hang out at the "brasseries" (sort of restaurant-brothels) became the stars of the cabarets. In fact, one could claim that the cabaret turned prostitution into a form of art. Their fans ranged from aristocrats to working-class students. The cabaret provided the first public arena for social and sexual promiscuity.
All in all, la "belle epoque" (Paris between 1890 and World War I) created the modern idea of entertainment. Those were also the years of the first films, of the Art Noveau, of the Impressionism, of Debussy, of the "Tour Eiffel" (1889). The cabaret was where people celebrated the "belle epoque". But the celebration ended in a massacre: World War I.
Nonetheless, the "Olympia" continued to dominate the night life till 1928 (when it turned into a movie theater). The main show was now starring the sexy and exotic African-American entertainer Josephine Baker, who had arrived in Paris with the "Revue Negre" in 1925 and became famous wearing only a costume of bananas.

Berlin: the Cabaret

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The French cabaret spread to Berlin. While it already produced influential songs, such as Ernst von Wolzogen's Madame Adele (1901), the prototype of the prostitute song, cabaret music became a musical genre in its own only during the 1920s, at the times of the Weimar Republic, closely related to the decadent atmosphere of night clubs as well as to expressionist culture (Frank Wedekind's "Lulu" or Josef von Sternberg's Der Blaue Engel). Unlike Paris, where Bruant's mellow, melodious style was always more popular, Berlin's cabaret music tended to follow the melodramatic style of Yvette Guilbert.
Cabaret music helped a repressed generation vent their frustration into erotic themes and political satire. The stars were almost always women, such as Marlene Dietrich, Margo Lion, Zarah Leander, Fritzi Massary, Kate Kuhl, Lotte Lenya, Lore Lorentz, Gisela May, Tatjana Sais, Helen Vita, Voli Geiler, Ursula Herking, Trude Hesterberg, Greta Keller, Hildegard Knef, Grete Weiser, Hanne Wieder, etc. The figure of the fatalist "chanteuse" came into its own in Berlin, not Paris.
In 1927 the classical composer Kurt Weill began a collaboration with the playwright Bertold Brecht, incorporating jazz, folk and pop elements (probably the first time that the three genres had been merged) in the satirical-didactic musical dramas Die Dreigroschenoper/ The Three-Penny Opera(1928), based on John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728), containing the swinging theme of Mack The Knife, and Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny/ Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (1929).
German cabaret died in 1933 with the advent of Hitler: the nazi party did not like its display of German decadence.
Ironically, the most typical song of the German cabaret will be Norbert Schultze's Lili Marlene(1939), sung in German by Danish cabaret chanteuse Lale Andersen, a tune that many interpreted as an anti-war song.

Britain: the Music Hall

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The equestrian circus (which had nothing in common with the original "circus" of the Romans) was invented in London in 1768 by Philip Astley. It later came to included other trained animals besides horses. In 1859 it added the flying trapeze. Soon, it also listed jugglers, acrobats, magicians and clowns among its acts. Popular music was for taverns. Comic plays were for the theaters. During the second half of the 19th century these three worlds started catering to the same audience. It was inevitable that they merged.
British "music hall" was a genre, not a place. Charles Morton is credited with being the first enterpreneur who, in 1840, added a saloon for entertainment next to his restaurant, "St George's Tavern", in Pimlico. The idea quickly spread to other parts of London, as the lower classes liked the combination of food, beer and performers. Unlike the French music hall, that catered to all social classes and whose main patrons were from the aristocracy, the British music hall was very much a rowdy, lewd, unsophisticated low-class form of mass entertainment. A respectable gentleman would not set foot in a music hall, and a respectable performer would not perform on the stage of a music hall. So a new kind of performer was born, that harked back to the medieval fairs and to the circus, and a new kind of audience was born, one that appreciated a quick laugh and detested the pomp of literature and classical music. Morton admitted women to his new "Canterbury Hall" (1852), and soon other music halls sprouted all over London. By the end of the century, there were literally hundreds of them. The demand for songs grew exponentially and fueled a boom in songwriters. These songwriters were in charge of producing songs that were catchy, rhythmic, worked in loud environments and invited audience participation. The main inspiration came from the popular dances, whether jigs or polkas, but the melodies often mimicked folk ballads. The song had to be easy to learn, because the audience was expecting to sing along. The most famous song of the beginnings was probably Champagne Charlie (1854), but the first notable songwriter of the music hall was George LeBrunn, who wrote Oh Mr Porter (1893), It's a Great Big Shame (1894) The Houses in Between (1894). Stars of the music hall included Marie Lloyd (1890s), Gus Elen (1890s), Larry Lauder (1900s), and Harry Champion (1900s), the author of I'm Henry the Eighth I Am (1911), each of them identified with a routine of sketches and songs.
A law meant to protect theaters forbade music halls from presenting theatrical plays, so they had to limit themselves to musical sketches (mainly sing-along routines). In 1907 the law was relaxed and the music halls began to stage comic sketches as well. It still kept its identity, though: the audience sat at tables, eating and drinking, while the shows were performed on stage. The popularity of these venues was such that in 1912 a revue took place in front of the king himself at the "Palace" theater. The music hall became more respectable (especially after the prohibition of alcohol in 1909 and of food in 1914) and found a new market: the middle class. It also expanded its horizons, becoming more similar to French-style variety shows that mixed acrobats, comedians, singers and clowns.
The music hall had survived the competition of the cinema, but did not survive the competition of the "British Broadcasting Company" (BBC) that began broadcasting in 1922.
Just a few months earlier, the French cabaret had taken London by storm.

Roma: the Canzonetta

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The cafe-concert arrived in Italy already in 1890, when the "Salone Margherita" opened in Napoli, the capital of Italian pop music. It displayed the two elements that would remain typical of Italian variety shows: foreign singers marketed as "world stars" (although often totally unknown in their country of origin) and Neapolitan melody. The cafe-concert attracted classical composers and poets, but never truly represented the spirit of the Italian people.
Both in the north and in the south, Italian pop music of the beginning of the century was a music of poverty, not a music of entertainment. Bandiera Rossa (189#), the communist anthem of the workers, Mamma Mia Dammi Cento Lire, the lament of the emigrant, Leggenda del Piave(1918), a song of soldiers, Stamattina mi Sono Alzata (1918), which became famous during the following world war as the partisan anthem Bella Ciao, were the real soundtrack of ordinary lives. Mussolini erased the collective unconscious of these poor emigrants and replaced it with triumphal songs like Giovinezza (1926), the fascist anthem, and Mario Ruccione's Faccetta Nera (1935), composed to celebrate Italy's invasion of Ethiopia. Italian songwriters were only free to sing romantic love. Thus it is not surprising that the 1930s were the years of romantic songs such as Andrea Bixio'sParlami d'Amore Mariu` (1932), sung by one of Italy's most famous entertainers, Vittorio DeSica. No matter what the purpose was, the Italian song remained fundamentally anchored to the format of Napoli's "canzone", in turn derived from the arias of the opera.
Even Mussolini could not fend the American influence. In the age of Swing Jazz, the rhythm of many Italian hits betrayed the African-American roots: Pippo Barzizza's Quel Motivetto che mi Piace Tanto, Carlo Innocenzi and Alessandro Sopranzi's Mille Lire al Mese (1939), sung by Gilberto Mazzi, Luigi Astore and Riccardo Morbelli's Ba-ba-baciami Piccina (1940), sung by Alberto Rabagliati, Gorni Kramer's Ho un Sassolino nella Scarpa (1943), sung by Natalino Otto. The Trio Lescano (three ordinary-looking young Dutch women in long skirts) were the main hit makers of the fascist era: Signorine Grandi FirmeMa le Gambe (1938), Tulipan (1938), Gorni Kramer'sPippo Non lo Sa (1939), Mario Panzeri's Maramao Perche' Sei Morto (1939). Eugenio De Curtis'Non Ti Scordar di Me (1935) and Odoardo Spadaro's Porta Un Bacione a Firenze (1938) were in the traditional melodic style. The fascist era was symbolically closed by Eros Sciorilli's melancholyIn Cerca di Te (1945), sung by Nella Colombo.

Roma: the Canzonetta After the War

After the war, liberated Italy lived its own "belle epoque". Not only was the nation free to sing about their poverty, but Italian television, inaugurated in 1954, created a whole new landscape for entertainment, one that was viewed as a second liberation by a people long gagged by fascist censorship. The fervor of the reconstruction and the international victories of epic bicycle riders Fausto Coppi and Gino Bartali signaled a new national mood. There was still a powerful force restricting free expression in Italy, though: the Catholic Church, that retained its grip on Italian politics and dominated moral issues, and made it virtually impossible for Italians to adopt the "amoral" stance of the French chansonniers. The new vehicle for the romantic song was Sanremo's "Festival Della Canzone Italiana", that debuted in 1951. Nilla Pizzi was its first star, thanks to Panzeri's Grazie dei Fior (1951), Bixio Cherubini's Vola Colomba Vola (1952) Panzeri's Papaveri e Papere (1952) and Panzeri's Casetta in Canada (1957). Domenico Modugno's and Franco Migliacci's Nel Blu Dipinto di Blu (1958) was, by far, the greatest success of Italian pop music, but Fred Buscaglione'sEri Piccola Cosi` (1959) and Panzeri's Come Prima (1958) also scored abroad.
The Sixties were the age of the economic boom. The "canzonetta" absorbed the influence of American pop music (whether the twist or the ballad) while retaining the emphasis on simple melodies: Franco Migliacci's and Bruno Defilippi's Tintarella di Luna (1960), sung by Mina, Nico Fidenco's Legata a un Granello di Sabbia (1961), Adriano Celentano's 24 Mila Baci (1961) andIl Ragazzo della Via Gluck (1966) Alberto Testa's Quando Quando Quando (1962), sung by Tony Renis, Bobby Solo (Satti)'s Una Lacrima sul Viso (1964), Mario Panzeri's Non Ho l'Eta`(1964), sung by Gigliola Cinquetti, Bruno Zambrini's In Ginocchio da Te (1964) and Non Son Degno di Te (1964), both sung by Gianni Morandi, Pino Donaggio's Io Che non Vivo (1965), Renato 'Calibi' Angiolini's Le Colline Sono in Fiore (1965), sung by Wilma Goich, Don Backy'sCasa Bianca, sung by Marisa Sannia, Giancarlo Bigazzi's Lisa dagli Occhi Blu (1969), sung by Mario Tessuto Franco Migliacci's and Claudio Mattone's Ma Che Freddo Fa (1969), sung by Nada.
The "underground" of the Italian canzone was represented by the "cantautori", Italy's version of the French "chansonniers", often headquartered in the northern city of Genova. Luigi Tenco's Mi Sono Innamorato di Te (1962), Ho Capito Che ti Amo (1965), Vedrai Vedrai (1965) and Un Giorno dopo l'Altro (1966); Gino Paoli's Il Cielo in una Stanza (1960), Senza Fine (1961), Sapore di Sale (1963); and especially Fabrizio DeAndre`'s La Guerra di Piero (1963) and La Canzone di Marinella (1964), and Paolo Conte's Insieme a Te Non Ci Sto Piu` (1968) and Azzurro (1968), the most memorable melody of the era.
Rock music landed in Italy as the "beat", which most Italians believed was an American/British genre when in fact it was a native Italian version of the canzone adapted to whatever dance craze was around. It was a movement of renovation and rejuvenation, in which young people took control of their music (or so they thought). The songs of the Italian beat were mildly irreverent and sexually provocative. The first club for the beat was the "Piper" in Rome, which opened in 1965, the same year in which Gianni Boncompagni and Renzo Arbore debuted "Bandiera Gialla" on national radio, whose eponymous theme was an Italian version of Crispian St Peters' The Pied Piper. Basically, the musica of the "beat" singers amounted to the traditional melodic canzone performed with the instruments of rock music (electric guitar, drums) instead of the orchestra, and with a free spirit inspired by the hippie revolution. The best of them all, Patty Pravo, debuted with Ragazzo Triste(1966), a cover of Sonny Bono's But You Are Mine, and Paul Korda's Se Perdo Te (1967), and sang Franco Migliacci's and Bruno Zambrini's La Bambola (1968) and Lucio Battisti's Il Paradiso(1968). The beat also boasted the first Italian rock bands, but Rokes, Equipe 84, Camaleonti, Corvi, Nomadi, Giganti, Dik Dik were still very much in the melodic tradition.
Throughout the beat era, the Italian charts were still ruled by traditional singers. The apogee of Italian romantic pop will be Claudio Baglioni's and Antonio Coggio's Questo Piccolo Grande Amore(1972), but Italian music in the 1970s was to be dominated by a new generation of "cantautori".
More aboutMusic Pop History

Rock and Roll 1950'

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It is hard to believe, but there was once a time when there was no rock music. Most historians trace the beginning rock back to the year 1954, when a new type of music, then called Rock and Roll, appeared and revolutionized musical tastes, at least among young people, and pretty much changed the world.
This new music, of course did not develop in a vacuum, but resulted from the convergence of two musical styles, Rhythm and Blues and Country, as well as a series of technological developments that created a new market for music.
Like Jazz, Rhythm and Blues developed from the music called the Blues. The Blues, to review what you have already learned in the Jazz unit, "grew out of African spirituals and work songs sung by African-Americans in the South. Many of these people had been brought to the United States as slaves, and before the Civil war they labored in difficult situations on the Southern plantations. 'Call and response' was often used as a means of communication by the workers in the fields, who fooled the plantation owners into thinking that their music was the 'happy' music of hard working slaves."
Rhythm and Blues developed from the Blues, and Rock and Roll developed from Rhythm and Blues (R&B). Little Richard, one of the great innovators in 1950's rock music, has often said that "Rhythm and Blues had a baby and somebody named it rock and roll." He, of course is absolutely right, and a number of important R&B artists were part of the beginning of Rock and Roll. Among them were Muddy Waters, Willie Mae Thornton, Joe Turner and Ray Charles.

While music was developing, technology was also changing. In the late 1940's and early 1950's, phonograph records were large and heavy and easily damaged. These records played at 78 rpm's (78 revolutions per minute) and were played on rather awkward record players that were usually part of a large piece of furniture (console), which often was located in the living room. Stereo had not yet been invented. In many homes, the entire family would sit around the living room listening to bands like Glen Miller, Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman, and soloists like Frank Sinatra, Patti Paige, Doris Day, and Eddie Fisher. Record companies marketed music to adults and radio stations played music that would appeal to the entire family.


In the 1950's, records began to change with the development of new technology that led to both the 33 rpm record and the 45 rpm record. The advantage of the new technology was that more musical information could be put on a record, and it was of higher technical quality. Thus, the 33 became popular because more music could be put on a 33 than several 78's and it sounded much better. The 45's were much smaller in size and contained one song on each side. These, as you might guess, were called singles. Not only were 45's much cheaper to buy than the old 78's and the larger 33's, but they could be played on a small record player that could be purchased inexpensively by a teenager and kept in his or her room.
Teddy boys,
Manchester 1955
This meant that there were now two markets for music, one for adults who bought mostly 33 rpm records and continued to play them on console phonographs and the other for young people, who bought mostly 45's and played them on small phonos in their rooms.
Also during this period, the "transistor radio" was invented and became popular. This meant that radios became much smaller and much less expensive, and like the small phonographs soon found their way to young people's rooms. Car radios were also becoming more popular, and more people were listening to the radio while driving. For a long time, the radio was an expensive option in a car. It is hard to imagine a car without a radio today, just as sometime in the not to distant future, it will be hard to imagine a car without a telephone. But in the 1950's radios were just beginning to become standard equipment in cars.

Radio stations began to program their music to fit the demographics of a new audience. The audience, which until the early 1950's was a pretty homogeneous audience, now was divided into segments with different interests and people listened to music in a number of places, including their cars. This all meant that some radio stations played music for adults and some stations played music for the teens.
Not surprisingly, young people were tired of the music their parents listened to and they started to look for something new. The white teens of the major metropolitan areas such as New York, Chicago, Detroit and Los Angeles began to turn to the stations that played music they had never heard before. It turned out that the music being played on the "black" radio stations in those cities was Rhythm and Blues (R&B). This music, was of course, familiar to the black population in America, but was brand new for many whites. Since the white audience was so much larger than the black audience, radio stations and record companies released that a major shift in listening patterns was about to occur, and in order to keep the white audience, as well as to appeal to the black audience, they needed to broadcast and promote R&B, or something like R&B.
Big Joe Turner's song "Shake, Rattle and Roll" began to be played on the white stations. The white record companies started looking for white acts (in the foolish belief, soon to be proved wrong, that white kids wouldn't buy records by black performers) that played something resembling R&B. Groups like Bill Haley and His Comets (originally a country band called the Saddlemen) and soloists like Elvis Presley brought a strong country background to the music, and this combination of R&B and Country became Rock and Roll.



45 rpm vinils could be purchased inexpensively
by a teenagers . Music became a consuption
good for tue hew generation available
 for listening at their rooms or take to parties



These influences combined in a simple, blues-based song structure that was fast, sexy, catchy and could be danced to easily and with excitement. These qualities, along with the fact that it horrified adults in general and parents in particular, caused Rock and Roll to become immensely popular with teenagers, who then, for the first time had their own music.
Among the important bands and soloists in 1950's Rock and Roll were Willie Mae Thornton, Big Joe Turner, Bill Haley and His Comets, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Fats Domino, Bo Diddley, Gene Vincent, the Everly Brothers, and Carl Perkins. Unfortunately, we can't cover all of them in this course, but we try to give you a representative group.
These influences combined in a simple, blues-based song structure that was fast, sexy, catchy and could be danced to easily and with excitement. These qualities, along with the fact that it horrified adults in general and parents in particular, caused Rock and Roll to become immensely popular with teenagers, who then, for the first time had their own music.
Among the important bands and soloists in 1950's Rock and Roll were Willie Mae Thornton, Big Joe Turner, Bill Haley and His Comets, Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Fats Domino, Bo Diddley, Gene Vincent, the Everly Brothers, and Carl Perkins. Unfortunately, we can't cover all of them in this course, but we try to give you a representative group.




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History of Reggae Music

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Reggae Music

The first Jamaican recording studio opened in 1951 and recorded "mento" music, a fusion of European and African folk dance music. The island was awash in rhythm'n'blues records imported by the so called "sound systems", eccentric traveling dance-halls run by no less eccentric disc-jockeys such as Clement Dodd (the "Downbeat") and Duke Reid (the "Trojan"). The poor people of the Jamaican ghettos, who could not afford to hire a band for their parties, had to content themselves with these "sound systems". The "selectors", the Jamaican disc-jockeys who operated those sound systems, became the real entertainers. The selector would spin the records and would "toast" over them. The art of "toasting", that usually consisted in rhyming vocal patterns and soon evolved in social commentary, became as important as the music that was being played.
In 1954 Ken Khouri started Jamaica's first record label, "Federal Records". He inspired Reid and Dodd, who began to record local artists for their sound system. Towards the end of the 1950s, amateurs began to form bands that played Caribbean music and New Orleans' rhythm'n'blues, besides the local mento. This led to the "bluebeat" groups, which basically were Jamaica's version of the New Orleans sound. They usually featured saxophone, trumpet, trombone, piano, drums and bass.
Soon the bass became the dominant instrument, and the sound evolved into the "ska". The "ska" beat had actually been invented by Roscoe Gordon, a Memphis pianist, with No More Doggin' (1951). Ska songs boasted an upbeat tempo, a horn section, Afro-American vocal harmonies, jazzy riffs and staccato guitar notes.

Ska

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Theophilus Beckford cut the first "ska" record, Easy Snapping, in 1959, but Prince Buster (Cecil Campbell), owner of the sound system "Voice of the People", was the one who, around 1961, defined ska's somatic traits once and forever (he and his guitarist Jah Jerry).


The Wailers, featuring the young Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston, slowed down the beat in Simmer Down (1963). Millie Small's My Boy Lollipop (1964) was the first worldwide ska hit. The charismatic leaders of the ska movement were the Skatalites, a group of veteran ex-jazzmen led by saxophonist Tommy McCook and featuring virtuoso trombonist Don Drummond and tenor saxophonist Rolando Alphonso, that formally existed only between 1964 and 1965 (Ball O' Fire, 1965; Phoenix City, 1966; the instrumental Guns Of Navarone, 1967), but ska's star was Desmond Dekker (Dacres), whose Israelites (1968) launched the even faster "poppa-top", and whose 007 Shanty Town (1967) and Rude Boy Train fueled the mythology of the "rude boy". Ska music was relatively serene and optimist, a natural soundtrack to that age of peace and wealth, somewhat akin to the music of the "swinging London".
Jamaica had become an independent country in 1962, but social problems had multiplied. During the mid Sixties, ska music evolved into "rock steady", a languid style, named after Alton Ellis' hit Rock Steady (1966), that emphasized sociopolitical themes, adopted electric instruments, replaced the horns with the guitars, and promoted the bass to lead instrument (virtually obliterating the drums). In other words, ska mutated under the influence of soul music. Rock steady was identified with the crowd of young delinquents (the "rude boys") who mimicked the British "mods" and the American "punks". Its generational anthems were Judge Dread (1967) by Prince Buster, John Holt's The Tide Is High (1966) by the Paragons, Rivers Of Babylon (1969) by the Melodians. The music took the back seat to the vocal harmonies. This helped bring about the supremacy of vocal groups: Wailers, Paragons, Maytals (the new name of the Vikings of the ska hit Halleluja, 1963), Pioneers, Melodians, Heptones, etc.

Reggae


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The word "reggae" was coined around 1960 in Jamaica to identify a "ragged" style of dance music, that still had its roots in New Orleans rhythm'n'blues. However, reggae soon acquired the lament-like style of chanting and emphasized the syncopated beat. It also made explicit the relationship with the underworld of the "Rastafarians" (adepts of a millenary African faith, revived Marcus Garvey who advocated a mass emigration back to Africa), both in the lyrics and in the appropriation of the African nyah-bingi drumming style (a style that mimicks the heartbeat with its pattern of "thump-thump, pause, thump-thump"). Compared with rock music, reggae music basically inverted the role of bass and guitar: the former was the lead, the latter beat the typical hiccupping pattern. The paradox of reggae, of course, is that this music "unique to Jamaica" is actually not Jamaican at all, having its foundations in the USA and Africa.
An independent label, Island, distributed Jamaican records in the UK throughout the 1960s, but reggae became popular in the UK only when Prince Buster's Al Capone (1967) started a brief "dance craze". Jamaican music was very much a ghetto phenomenon, associated with gang-style violence, but Jimmy Cliff's Wonderful World Beautiful People (1969) wed reggae with the "peace and love" philosophy of the hippies, an association that would not die away. In the USA, Neil Diamond's Red Red Wine (1967) was the first reggae hit by a pop musician. Shortly afterwards, Johnny Nash's Hold Me Tight (1968) propelled reggae onto the charts. Do The Reggay (1968) by Toots (Hibbert) And The Maytals was the record that gave the music its name. Fredrick Toots Hibbert's vocal style was actually closer to gospel, as proved by their other hits (54-46, 1967;Monkey Man, 1969; Pressure Drop, 1970).
A little noticed event would have far-reaching consequences: in 1967, the Jamaican disc-jockey Rudolph "Ruddy" Redwood had begun recording instrumental versions of reggae hits. The success of his dance club was entirely due to that idea. Duke Reid, who was now the owner of the Trojan label, was the first one to capitalize on the idea: he began releasing singles with two sides: the original song and, on the back, the instrumental remix. This phenomenon elevated the status of dozens of recording engineers.
Reggae music was mainly popularized by Bob Marley (1), first as the co-leader of the Wailers, the band that promoted the image of the urban guerrilla with Rude Boy (1966) and that cut the first album of reggae music, Best Of The Wailers (1970); and later as the political and religious (rasta) guru of the movement, a stance that would transform him into a star, particularly after his conversion to pop-soul melody with ballads such as Stir It Up (1972), I Shot The Sheriff (1973) and No Woman No Cry (1974).
Among the reggae vocal groups, the Abyssinians' Satta Massa Gana (1971) is representative of the mood of the era.
In 1972 reggae became a staple of western radio stations thanks to the film The Harder They Come.

Dub

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More and more studio engineers were re-mixing B-sides of reggae 45 RPM singles, dropping out the vocals and emphasizing the instrumental texture of the song. The purpose was to allow disc-jockeys to "toast" over the record. Engineers became more and more skilled at refining the instrumental textures, especially when they began to employ sophisticated studio devices. Eventually, "dub" became an art on its own. 

The first dub singles appeared in 1971, but the man generally credited with "inventing" the genre is Osbourne Ruddock, better known as King Tubby (2), a recording engineer who in 1970 had accidentally discovered the appeal of stripping a song of its vocal track, and who engineered the first dub record, Carl Patterson's Psalm Of Dub (1971). When he got together with producer Lee "Scratch" Perry, Blackboard Jungle (1973) was born: the first stereo "dub" album. It was a Copernican revolution: the engineer and the producer had become more important than the composer. It also marked the terminal point of the "slowing down" of Jamaican music, a process that had led from ska to reggae to rock steady. Compared with the original, dub was like a slow-motion version. a collaboration with melodica player Augustus Pablo led to another seminal work, King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown (1976).
Rainford Hugh Perry, better known as Lee "Scratch" Perry (3), who had nursed the Wailers, pretty much set the reference standard for generations to come with Double Seven (1974), the first reggae album that overdubbed synthesizers, Revolution Dub (1975) and Super Ape (1976), one of the genre's masterpieces.
Melodica virtuoso Augustus Pablo (2), aka Horace Swaby, penned the instrumental albums This Is Augustus Pablo (1973) and East of the River Nile (1977), two of the most atmospheric works of the genre.

Talk-over

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"Rapping" originated from the complementary tradition of the "talk-over". The disc-jockeys of the sound systems used to accompany the dance tracks with impromptu melodic and spoken-word vocals, often simply to add enthusiasm to the dance. This eventually became an art in itself. U-Roy (Edwart Beckford) was possibly the first great talk-over artist, the man who turned dub into a highly-effective vehicle for agit-prop messages (Dynamic Fashion Way, 1969; Runaway Girl, 1976;Wake the TownWear You to the Ball). Other pioneers of rapping were Dennis "Alcapone" Smith, with Forever Version (1971), Prince Jazzbo and I Roy. Big Youth (Manley Buchanan) upped the ante with his wild sociopolitical raps (S-90 Skank, 1972; The Killer, 1973; House Of Dread Locks, 1975; Every Nigger Is A Star, 1976), most effectively on Dreadlocks Dread (1975). Originally, the technique of these "toaster" consisted in remixing other people's songs, removing the original vocals, emphasizing the rhythmic base, and overdubbing their own rhyming stories on the resulting track.

The golden age of Reggae

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As reggae became a world attraction, styles multiplied and inbred with the American genres.
Burning Spear (1), the project of Rastafarian visionary Winston Rodney, unleashed the superchargedMarcus Garvey (1976), perhaps the highest artistic achievements of reggae music.
Joseph Hill's vocal trio Culture were equally passionate, and the title-track from Two Sevens Clash(1977) became the anthem of the rasta-punks and coined "rockers reggae".
Ijahman Levi (Trevor Sutherland) was perhaps the most spiritual vocalist of his generation. His songs were religious hymns (Jah Heavy Lord, 1975; I'm A Levi, 1978; Are We A Warrior, 1978).
Ex-Wailers Peter Tosh, or Winston Hubert McIntosh, crossed over into rock territory with Legalize It (1976).
Other popular classics include Junior Marvin's Police And Thieves (1976) and Gregory Isaacs'Love Is Overdue (1974).

Jamaican revival in Britain

(See British Graffiti)Reggae and ska enjoyed a major revival in Britain during the punk age. Starting in the mid-1970s, ensembles such as Aswad, Steel Pulse, Matumbi and UB40 offered a westernized version of Jamaican music that was rather uninspired, but were lucky enough that the audience found affinities with the implicit protest themes of the political punks. At the same time, British sensations of the ska revival included Specials and Madness. British dub music was a more serious affair, and took longer to emerge. But, over the long term, it was dub music, and not ska or reggae music, that stuck around, thanks to the quality productions of Adrian Sherwood (the brain behind African HeadchargeDub Syndicate and New Age Steppers), Jah Shaka and prolific Guyana-born Neil Fraser, better known as Mad Professor, who penned Beyond the Realms Of Dub (1982), and even Aswad's own New Chapter of Dub (1982). Artistic peaks were reached by dub pioneer and experimentalist Keith Hudson, with Pick A Dub (1976), and instrumental soundpainter Dennis Bovell (a former member of Matumbi, an engineer who coined the soul-reggae fusion called "Lovers Rock"), with Strictly Dubwise (1978), I Wah Dub (1980), probably his most intense release, andBrain Damage (1981), a cosmopolitan work that also mixed calypso, rock and funk. Linton Kwesi Johnson, a Jamaican poet living in England, transposed reggae's mood into dub-based sermons, arranged by Dennis Bovell, on the contemporary issues of the lumperproletariat. Ditto for the other poet of dub, Mutabaruka. These dub poets were as musical as their producers managed to be. Kwesi owed a lot to Bovell.

Jamaican music in the 1980s

(See The New Age and World-music)
Vocal trio Black Uhuru, supported by the rhythm section of Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, wrapped reggae and Rastafarianism into a slick production of drum-machines and synthesizers, especially on Red (1981).
Third World offered a commercial fusion of reggae, funk and soul.
Innovators of the next generation included toaster and turntablist Yellowman (Winston Foster), a pioneer of "dancehall" (reggae music with rock drums) who established his reputation with Mister Yellowman (1982), crossover artists such as Eddy Grant, with the electronic Afro-rock-reggae-funk fusion of Walking on Sunshine (1979), Eek-a-Mouse (Ripton Joseph Hylton), who invented a unique vocal technique that harked back to the early days of toasting, as displayed on Wa Do Dem (1982), and Mikey Dread (Michael Campbell), who crafted African Anthem/ At The Control Dubwise (1979), with help from Scientist, King Tubby, Augustus Pablo and Sly & Robbie, and World War III (1981), with help from Scientist, after collaborating with the punk-rock band Clash.
As far as dub goes, King Tubby raised an entire generation of recording engineers, who went on to become innovators of Jamaican music, such as Prince Jammy (Lloyd James), who concocted the all-digital reggae Under Me Sleng Teng (1985), credited with inventing "ragga" (a fusion of reggae, rap and electronic dance music), and Scientist (Overton Brown).
Popular reggae musicians of the 1980s included Judy Mowatt, who, as a backup vocalist for Marley, was one of reggae's first female performers, and, as a soloist, crossed over into pop-soul balladry, Ivory Coast's sociopolitical bard Alpha Blondy (Kone Seydou), and David "Ziggy" Marley, son of the prophet, who sold out his father's myth to the international disco-pop crowds. Dancehall toaster Shabba Ranks (Rexton Gordon) and Shinehead (Carl Aiken) were the stars of ragga hip-hop.
The star of the 1990s was Buju Banton (Mark Anthony Myrie), revealed by Til Shiloh (1995).
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Bob Marley - Reggae

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Bob Marley - Reggae

With his superb songs and arrangements, his rapt appearance and charismatic stage personality, Bob Marley and his group, the Wailers, won audiences for reggae all over the world, and influenced countless other musicians. Mr. Marley's concerts were hours-long, almost mystical events, with whole arenas standing and swaying to the insinuating rhythms and reiterated chants of his songs. Phrases such as "get up, stand up, stand up for your rights" - expressing the conviction that God would redeem the world despite its present sufferings - became anthems for his many admirers.
Mr. Marley died of cancer at the age of 36 in 1981. His cancer was diagnosed after the Wailers' final concerts at Madison Square Garden a year before. Critics described those concerts as mesmerizing, and Mr. Marley was hailed for his "spellbinding performance" and "intense singing and electric stage presence."
— John Rockwell



Bob Marley, in full Robert Nesta Marley    (born Feb. 6, 1945, Nine Miles, St. Ann, Jam.—died May 11, 1981, Miami, Fla., U.S.), Jamaican singer-songwriter whose thoughtful, ongoing distillation of early ska, rock steady, and reggae forms blossomed in the 1970s into an electrifying rock-influenced hybrid that made him an international superstar.
Marley—whose parents were Norval Sinclair Marley, a white rural overseer, and the former Cedella Malcolm, the black daughter of a local custos (respected backwoods squire)—would forever remain the unique product of parallel worlds. His poetic worldview was shaped by the countryside, hismusic by the tough West Kingston

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Spain football boss denies knowing of doping The head of the Spanish football league, Jose Luis Astiazaran, on Monday flatly denied allegations that top flight side Real Sociedad bought doping products under his presidency from 2001-2005.

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Madrid:  The head of the Spanish football league, Jose Luis Astiazaran, on Monday flatly denied allegations that top flight side Real Sociedad bought doping products under his presidency from 2001-2005.

"During my period as president of Real Sociedad, I never had knowledge or suspicion of illegal practices in relation to the medical services, which always worked with the utmost ethics and professionalism" Astiazaran said.

"If I had, I would have acted forcefully and with due diligence," he said in a statement posted on the home page of the Professional Football League.

Astiazaran said Real Sociedad had always cooperated closely with the doping control authorities.

"There were never any incidents in the innumerable drugs tests carried out," he said, describing the allegations as "absolutely inopportune and false".

Astiazaran was reacting after Inaki Badiola, who was president of Real Sociedad during 2008, claimed in an interview with sports daily AS that the Basque club had illegally purchased doping products for six years before his arrival.

Badiola said he believed the doping products may have come from Eufemaniano Fuentes, a doctor at centre of a major blood doping scandal who is currently on trial in Madrid for giving transfusions to high-profile professional cyclists.

Badiola told the paper he had records of payments made for the products and an email from one of the team doctors asking for permission to buy them. Badiola said he planned to check his files against documents related to the Fuentes case.

Fuentes' trial last Friday heard that one of his alleged clients was given the code name "R-Soc". But the accused doctor gave no clue to what the code stood for, telling the court: "It might refer to a good wine."

The doctor, his sister Yolanda and three other defendants from cycling teams are on trial for endangering public health but not incitement to doping, which was not a crime in Spain at the time of their arrests in 2006.

The 57-year-old Fuentes was detained when police seized 200 bags of blood and plasma, and other evidence of performance-enhancing transfusions, revealing a huge doping network after a months-long investigation dubbed "Operation Puerto".

So far only cyclists have been caught up in the scandal but Fuentes has said he had clients from other sporting disciplines.
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Chelsea's Petr Cech sidelined with broken finger Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech has broken his little finger and will miss the Czech Republic's friendly against hosts Turkey in Manisa on Wednesday, national team head coach Michal Bilek said on Monday

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Prague:  Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech has broken his little finger and will miss the Czech Republic's friendly against hosts Turkey in Manisa on Wednesday, national team head coach Michal Bilek said on Monday.

"Petr is not flying with us," Bilek told reporters as the Czech team met in Prague, adding Cech had broken the finger during Chelsea's 3-2 Premier League defeat at Newcastle on Saturday.

The 30-year-old Cech arrived in Prague but a scan showed a fracture.

Bilek said he would try Dnepropetrovsk keeper Jan Lastuvka against Turkey, with Hamburg stopper Jaroslav Drobny on the bench.

The Czech Republic are third in World Cup 2014 qualifying Group B, trailing leaders Italy by five points and Bulgaria by a point.
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Messi insulted Real Madrid assistant coach, says Callejon

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Barcelona:  Real Madrid forward Jose Callejon confirmed Spanish media reports that Barcelona forward Lionel Messi called Madrid assistant Aitor Karanka "Mourinho's puppet" after the game.

Karanka regularly speaks to the media for coach Jose Mourinho, and is widely known for sticking to Mourinho's often abrasive strategy of launching barbs at opponents and referees. Mourinho went as far as to accuse UEFA referees of favoring Barcelona during the Champions League semifinals in 2011.

"I saw the thing with Karanka because I was behind him," Callejon said. "It is true that Messi called him 'Mourinho's puppet.'"

Callejon also alluded to a post-match run-in between Messi and Madrid defender Alvaro Arbeloa, but said he didn't want to comment on it.

Messi has not spoken since the match.

During the game, Messi remained calm as ever even when openly provoked by Madrid's players.

Arbeloa and midfielder Xabi Alonso both taunted Messi by patting him on the cheek after they had brushed while disputing the ball. Messi responded by shrugging his shoulder to the line judge with a perplexed look on his face.

Callejon courted further controversy by saying that the racist chants Barcelona defender Dani Alves had to endure during Wednesday's game at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium were "uncontrollable."

"It has happened to us and it happens in every country," Callejon, who is white, said Friday. "Real Madrid is one of the clubs that most suffers racist insults."

A day after the 1-1 draw in the Copa del Rey semifinals, Alves decried the segments of Madrid fans who abused him with monkey chants.

In January, AC Milan midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng led his teammates off the field during a friendly match in protest at racial abuse by opposing fans.

United States striker Jozy Altidore was the target of racist slurs at a game in the Netherlands earlier this week.

"It happened with Boateng in Italy. It is a worrisome issue and we hope that it can be stopped once and for all," Callejon said.

The two rivals will play at least twice more this season, once in the Spanish league and also in the return leg of the Copa del Rey semifinals.

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