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The Angry Decade: The Sixties By Paul Sann

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Page 1: The Angry Decade:

The Angry Decade:

The SixtiesBy Paul Sann

Page 2: The Angry Decade:

During the 1960s, the connections between music and society are particularly evident as rock and roll “came of age” with entertainers beginning to take active roles in political, social and cultural movements. By listening to and analyzing the lyrics of selected examples of popular music from the era, you will develop a greater understanding of the historical and political forces as well as the emotional climate of the decade.

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The songs are studied from two perspectives. First, approaching them as primary sources, you will consider from an historical perspective what the songs reveal about the attitudes of this decade. Secondly, the lyrics will provide an opportunity for literary and poetic analysis.

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Part 1: The Early Sixties

1958-1964

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Day One

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The song “American Pie” by Don McLean will be used as a starting point as it contains allusions to some of the events and figures to be studied. At least 30 specific references to musicians, songs, and events from the late 1950s through 1972 may be found in the song. Many of these will be mentioned during the unit and it is the your job to locate them during the ensuing class discussions.

Page 7: The Angry Decade:

Political History: 1960

Dwight D. Eisenhower is President of the United States.John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon were vying for presidency in the next year.‘Tricky Dick’ was no more…he was going to change his ways.

Page 8: The Angry Decade:

More Politics

Frank Sinatra wrote and sang the song “High Hopes” for JFK’s run for Presidency.

John and Robert Kennedy helped bail Martin Luther King, Jr. out of jail. This may have cost him some white votes, but definitely gained the black vote.

Russia sends Cuba missiles, advisors, and other supplies. Both countries are very communist and this led to a scary time—the Cold War.

Page 9: The Angry Decade:

Civil Rights MovementIt had been brewing for years already.Lunch counter sit-ins. Black people couldn’t sit at the

counters in the south and had to leave if a white person wanted a seat. Some cafes wouldn’t even allow black people to eat.

Black, white, and religious people sat at counters for hours at a time. Eventually, police were called in and many were arrested.

Martin Luther King, Jr. was involved and was arrested as well.

Page 10: The Angry Decade:

Society

Elvis came home from the army in Germany.Frank Sinatra still had number 1 songs.The Everly Brothers sang “You Lost that Lovin’

Feeling”The Kingston TrioJohnny Preston had a number one hit

“Running Bear”

Page 11: The Angry Decade:

1961Camelot begins: JFK

was elected president.Robert Frost speaks at

his inaugural address.The first year for JFK was

very difficult.

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Robert Kennedy, who was in charge of an active investigation against the mob, told his brother John that he couldn’t be friends with Frank Sinatra anymore.

Page 13: The Angry Decade:

The Bay of PigsJFK thought the Cold

War was coming to a head, and maybe he could fend it off for a while. He sent “advisors” to Cuba with trained nationals to take back their land.

The mission was a terrible disaster, and was supposed to be a surprise victory. Fidel Castro had the upper hand for negotiations. Eventually, all those who were captured were released to the U.S.

Page 14: The Angry Decade:

The Berlin WallRussia held Eastern

Germany, West Germany was free. Berlin, the capitol, was then split in two by a wall. Families were torn apart, tensions were high, the cold war got worse.

This wall remained for almost 30 years without hardly anyone freely traveling back and forth.

Page 15: The Angry Decade:

Society

Fabian had hit musicFrankie Avalon,

singer/actor/heart throb, was very popular at this time.

Page 16: The Angry Decade:

1962Albert DeSalvo began

his terror in Massachusetts. He would murder women in the same way every time. He was known as the “Boston Strangler”. (Although they didn’t catch him for years.)

Page 17: The Angry Decade:

Marilyn MonroeThe sex goddess

Marilyn Monroe had been in movies and in Playboy. Her marriage to neither Joe DiMaggio nor Arthur Miller didn’t last. She was torn by Hollywood who wanted a piece of her financial potential.

Page 18: The Angry Decade:

She was found at her home, next to a night stand full of sleeping pills and other prescriptions. There was a conspiracy that she was murdered because of her affairs with JFK.

However, nothing came of the gossip. It was announced as a suicide. Joe DiMaggio took care of her estate. He still loved her after all those years.

Page 19: The Angry Decade:

Cuban Missile CrisesRussia had sent Cuba

(less than 100 miles from Florida) missiles and launching equipment. Of course, for defensive purposes only.

JFK sent an ultimatum. Nothing can be sent in, what’s in there must be dismantled, and there is now an embargo on Cuba. (This is why Cuban cigars are illegal now!)

Page 20: The Angry Decade:

Ole Miss IntegrationOne black student,

James Meredith, tried to enroll in Ole Miss. He was greeted by the governor of Mississippi, Ross Barnett and an army despite a court order allowing his enrollment.

Many people went to jail in protest. Many people were hurt. Meredith eventually enrolled the following fall. He said it was the first time he had been called “nigger”.

Page 21: The Angry Decade:

SocietyCountry-western music

was popular with Ray Charles leading them with “I Can’t Stop Loving You”.

Peter, Paul, and Mary had a number one song.

Joan Baez was a famous folk singer.

Bob Dylan was a new face in folk singing.

Page 22: The Angry Decade:

1963NASA was given $4.2

billion. There were many reasons why; exploration, science, advancement, adventure, and most importantly, to beat Russia in the Space Race.

Martin Luther King, Jr. led the march on Washington, D.C. This is where he said the “I have a dream” speech.

Page 23: The Angry Decade:

John F. Kennedy is shot.November 22, 1963Kennedy was on a trip

to Texas. One stop in Dallas was fatal. Kennedy and his wife were on a trip to start gathering popularity for the next presidential race.

Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested, then shot by Jack Ruby before any trial could begin.

Lyndon B. Johnson took the oath of office in the airplane before they left Dallas.

Page 24: The Angry Decade:

Other events in 1963…Women’s Liberation

began in this year.Andy Warhol and his

pop art is very popular.New York hosted the

Mona Lisa.

Miles Davis was popular in music.

So was Nat King Cole with “Ramblin’ Man”.

Page 25: The Angry Decade:

1964Cigarettes came with a

warning from the surgeon general for the first time this year.

College students experimented with drugs.

18-year-old males had to register for the draft and some burned their draft cards.

Mini skirts were very popular, even with Jackie Kennedy.

Cassius Clay was a winner, but by this time he had changed his name to Muhammad Ali and was against the war; he even went as far as refusing to report to the army after being drafted.

Page 26: The Angry Decade:

Riots in New YorkAfter Pat Lynch

‘accidentally’ sprayed down some black students in front of a school, a police officer killed a summer-school student. This tipped off a riot that spread to Chicago and other cities.

341 people were injured.

197 people were jailed.

Page 27: The Angry Decade:

University of Berkeley

Students would:Picket nuclear labs on

campusesDemonstrate the civil

rights causesProtest the arms raceSpecifically, they

protested the GOP convention across the river.

The university president didn’t like it and tried to remove them.

Students surrounded the police car for a sit-in.

Joan Baez performed; students were locked in a university hall.

The students won a ‘free speech’ vote by faculty members. This set the tone for protestors on campuses for the rest of the decade.

Page 28: The Angry Decade:

Robert F. KennedyWith his eyes set on

Presidency, Bob ran for and won a senate seat for the state of New York.

He had previously been involved in politics from the Justice Department.

Lyndon B. Johnson, who was used by JFK to win the Texas vote, did NOT get along with Robert Kennedy.

Kennedy did not run as Vice-President for Johnson.

Page 29: The Angry Decade:

Invasion of The BeatlesEd Sullivan hosted his

own show that featured current shows across the United States.

It was his idea to invite the Beatles to America.

“A Hard Day’s Night” drew $1.6 million in the movie houses.

Beatles by-products brought in another $50 million.

Lennon credited Elvis Presley and his mother (who brought Elvis’s record home) for his musical inspiration.

Page 30: The Angry Decade:

Some early hits…

“She Loves You” “Twist and Shout“I Want to Hold Your Hand”“Can’t Buy Me Love” “A Hard Day’s Night”

Page 31: The Angry Decade:

Day 3: 1965-1967

The New Generation

Page 32: The Angry Decade:

1965February 27; The

Vietnam Conflict escalated to actual fighting and deaths.

1365 dead5300 wounded148 missing or

captured that year

We were there initially to help the South Vietnamese country stay ‘free’ from North Vietnam, who are communist under Ho Chi Minh

Of course, we started there for ‘support’.

Page 33: The Angry Decade:

Malcom XMalcom X, a leader in

the movement of Black Separatist, was shot and killed.

The Black Separatists believed that segregation was a bad idea. Whites and blacks should be apart.

But the separated population should also be treated equal.

There still is active participation in black separatism. The group the Black Panthers had a face-off in Paris, TX, not too long ago.

Page 34: The Angry Decade:

Racial Tensions MLK, Jr. led a march in

Selma, Alabama, one of the most racists places in the south.

Many people were arrested, elected officials were obviously corrupt, sheriffs ignored crimes against black people, etc.

A Protestant minister was beaten so badly, he died of his injuries two days later.

75 other men were put in the hospital because their march was met with “horses, whips, clubs and tear gas” (159).

Lyndon Johnson plead to congress to guarantee the unobstructed right to vote for the black people.

Page 35: The Angry Decade:

More racial tensionsA black man home

from the Air Force was pulled over for DUI. He was speeding near L.A.

A crowd began to gather after the field sobriety tests, and nine minutes later, had to arrest his mother who was berating the cops.

The words spread: The Whiteys were beating up black people.

For an entire week, rioting continued, costing 34 lives, 898 injuries, and 4,000 arrests.

Looting was abundant.

Page 36: The Angry Decade:

Black -Out and spaceNew York suffered

from a 13-hour black out. It began in Canada and rolled down to the northeastern United States.

Imagine being stuck in an elevator for 13 hours!!!

The first American took a space walk in 1965. Ed White was aboard Gemini 4 .

This was practice for docking in space in later missions. It was deemed a total success.

Page 37: The Angry Decade:

Communism in AmericaCongress ruled that all

communists had to register with the government if they lived in the United States.

Cesar Chavez organized a strike for grape workers in California. He was the largest leader for the Mexican-American work force.

Page 38: The Angry Decade:

SocietyFashion dictated that

people wore their hair LARGE.

Sonny and Cher sang and performed on a variety show.

Frank Sinatra still held a large audience.

Songs:“Downtown”The Beatles made

$200 million in 1965Nat King Cole died at

age 44 of cancer

Page 39: The Angry Decade:

1966The Vietnam War was

exploding. Over 100 soldiers were dead and 600 wounded…in a week.

McNamara (defense secretary) said we had progressed more than he expected that year.

This ‘progress’ led to 4,800 deaths, 335 planes shot down, and 75,000 more men in Southeast Asia than during the Korean war.

Page 40: The Angry Decade:

Black PowerJames Meredith, the

Ole Miss grad, decided that to encourage the 450,000 unregistered black voters in Memphis, Tennessee.

He was shot with a shotgun, but wasn’t killed.

However, this led to a retaliation movement, called black power. They were a militant group that was ready to hit back.

Their new anthem was “kill whitey” and they struck the Midwest for weeks.

Page 41: The Angry Decade:

The Texas Tower Charley Whitman was a

good student at the University of Texas. He seemed like an up-and-coming 25-year old.

However, he had secret angers, and decided to take care of his mother and wife.

He shot his mother in the back of her head and stabbed her in the chest.

Then he went home and stabbed his wife three times in the chest.

He climbed the Texas Tower with a small arsenal and food. In 94 minutes, he shot 45 people, killing 14 of them. In all, he killed 16 people.

After it was over, and he was shot dead, they discovered a tumor in his brain that caused a mental disorder.

Page 42: The Angry Decade:

Society in 1966Dr. Timothy Leary’s

league fore Spiritual discovery (LSD) was thriving in New York.

John Lennon says: “Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. We’re more popular than Jesus, now. I don’t know which will go first—rock ‘n’ roll or Christianity Jesus was right, …

…but his disciples were thick and ordinary.”

Muhammad Ali divorced his wife for wearing her pants too tight and too much make up. Not a very Muslim way of life.

The Mammas and the Pappas, The Byrds, The Lovin’ Spoonful, Simon & Garfunkel were popular.

Page 43: The Angry Decade:

Songs for the day:Outside of a Small

Circle of Friends by Phil OchsWritten because Kitty

Genovese was stabbed three times on a ‘good street’ and no one called the police

It took three different attempts and 35 minutes to get the job done.

The song states the complacency that Ochs detests. He states that you should stand up for what is right.

Compare and contrast the style with the message.

Page 44: The Angry Decade:

Other songs…

“My Generation” by The Who.

“Down on Me” by Big Brother and the Holding Company (Janis Joplin)

Let’s look at the lyrics and the divisions created between “straight” society and the “counter-culture,” fueled in large part by the Vietnam War.

Page 45: The Angry Decade:

Day 4

The counter-culture:Love, Peace, and Drugs

Page 46: The Angry Decade:

1967-1968Vietnam

The government kept downplaying the death and destruction.

“the military picture is favorable” --General Westmorland

9,378 killed62,024 wounded

Muhammad Ali: “Why should they ask me and other so-called Negroes to put on a uniform and go 10,000 miles from home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people in Vietnam while so-called Negro people in Louisville are treated like dogs and denied simple human rights?”

Page 47: The Angry Decade:

The Longest SummerFueled by “Black

Power”, demonstrations quickly led to violence across the country.

DetroitTampaDaytonBuffalo

AtlantaCincinnatiNewarkNew YorkCambridge, MarylandMany people were

hurt, killed, robbed, and arrested.

Page 48: The Angry Decade:

LSD

“Turn on to the scene; tune in to what’s happening. Drop out—of high school, college, grade school…and follow me, the hard way.”--Dr. Timothy Leary

Flower PowerLove –in timeHippies were there to

sit it out. (It as in war, bombs, violence, etc.)

All with bell bottoms, bells on their waist, grass to smoke, and nothing ‘normal’ to hold them back.

Page 49: The Angry Decade:

Hippie dangers In theory, hippies didn’t

like to work or follow ‘normal’ lives.

They did, however, need to eat. They also had bad experiences with LSD.

LSD makes you believe you can fly. Deaths abound, but cops dismissed these as derelicts…

…unnecessary for investigation.

Others new that hippies had drugs, so they became targets for violence.

Many were murdered for their drugs.

Page 50: The Angry Decade:

Society in 1967Elvis marries Priscilla.

Her ring had 21 diamonds.

Dr. Goddard, head of the FDA: “Whether or not marijuana is a more dangerous drug than alcohol is debatable. I don’t happen to think it is.”

The Grateful DeadJefferson AirplaneThe WhoCanned HeatMoby GrapeThe DoorsThe Rolling StonesJimi HendrixThe Beatles’ Stg. Pepper’s

Lonely Hearts Club Band

Page 51: The Angry Decade:

1968The Tet OffensiveThey kept telling us

we were winning.The North

Vietnamese army attacked the U.S. embassy and other strongholds in Siagon.

Johnson failed to change the course of the war, and this meant the beginning of the end for him politically.

Page 52: The Angry Decade:

ExecutionOne of the war’s classic pictures. South Vietnam’s police chief executes a VC officer with a single shot on a street in Saigon.

Page 53: The Angry Decade:

Johnson’s bombshell

Johnson began to call off the war.

No more bombings in North Vietnam.

He also talked about civil rights strife, economic troubles, and other domestic concerns.

He admitted that the country was divided and the president is responsible for the country.

He announced that he would not seek or accept a nomination for the next race of presidency.

Page 54: The Angry Decade:

Martin Luther King, Jr.

April 4, 1968Memphis, TennesseeHe was shot in the

neck, and died without pain.

Riots, of course, ensued for a week in 125 cities in 25 states.

46 people died. It was the bloodiest riot

since the Civil War riots. The man who abhorred

violence and dared to dream of an America where black and white people would live together was the reason for this violence.

Page 55: The Angry Decade:

Takeover at Columbia

Mark Rudd lead 450 students to the Dean and demanded that an ill-advised construction of an $11 million gym be stopped.

It was to take over part of Harlem, and kick out the residents.

They also didn’t like the military funded Institute for Defense Analysis on campus.

After they were demanded off campus, the demonstrators went limp in a posture of passive resistance.

Page 56: The Angry Decade:

692 people were arrested, mostly for resisting arrest.

105 needed to go to the hospital when the police came in swinging with clubs.

This was a week-long demonstration.

The rest of the academic year was in ruin.

The mayor claimed that there was ‘excessive force’ used to clear out the demonstrators.

Page 57: The Angry Decade:

The Election

Richard Millhouse Nixon

His plan was to get out of the war.

He was the obvious choice for the Republican party.

Robert Francis Kennedy

He won most of the states for the Democratic ticket.

He had to debate in California with Hubert Humphry.

Page 58: The Angry Decade:

RFK

They were celebrating a win in California.

He gave a speech, focusing on Chicago next.

They agreed to a conference meeting in the hotel.

Sirhan B. Sirhan met him in the kitchen pantry en-route to the meeting and shot him three times with a .22 pistol.

He lived another 24 hours with sever head trauma.

Page 59: The Angry Decade:

Politics

No one could fill Robert Kennedy’s shoes for the democrats

Hubert Humphrey accepted the nomination, but half-heartedly.

Richard Nixon was a shoe-in for presidency.

His speeches sounded a lot like Eisenhower, and he had old-fashioned ideas the took hold as President.

Page 60: The Angry Decade:

Women’s Lib

During the Miss America Contest, female demonstrators declared that they “shall not be used” anymore, be considered the weaker sex, or held to a double standard of beauty over self-worth.

This is the famous ‘bra burning’ demonstration. Although there are no reports that any bras were actually burned.

Page 61: The Angry Decade:

Jackie Kennedy Onassis

Jackie married Aristotle Onassis, a tycoon worth $1/2 billion.

He was 62, she was 39.

Her ring was worth $1.2 million.

Their honeymoon was $15 million or more.

None of her sisters-in-law were at the wedding.

When he died in 1975, Aristotle’s daughter inherited most, but Jackie had a $2-300,000 a year allowance.

Page 62: The Angry Decade:

SocietyAndy Warhol was

shot by Valerie Solanis.

She shot him because he had legal claim to her plays. She had written a plan called S.C.U.M. (Society for Cutting Up Men)

It called for a takeover that would “eliminate the male sex and begin to create a swinging, groovy out-of-sight female world.”

He survived.

Page 63: The Angry Decade:

Society“Hair” was a

Broadway hit. It was about hippies not wanting anything conventional-barbers, clothes, government, etc.

Pop Music: Janis Joplin, Bob

Dylan, The Beatles, Miles Davis, Ray Charles, Frank Zappa, and Tiny Tim (with “Tiptoe Through the Tulips.)