unitron said:Like the man said, you know it when you hear it.
Then we agree..................Doo Wop is in the ear of the beholder. Your definition could be different than my definition.
unitron said:Like the man said, you know it when you hear it.
LARadioRewind said:Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I submit that "folk" and "doo-wop" and "rock'n'roll" are terms that describe and define a sound and not necessarily an artist or group.
LARadioRewind said:This is the first time anyone has ever agreed with me! Golly gee, what did I do wrong?
unitron said:...............if it had been Doo-Wop there would have been a deep voiced guy coming in in the middle with a spoken part
TheFonz said:unitron said:...............if it had been Doo-Wop there would have been a deep voiced guy coming in in the middle with a spoken part
Really? And all of this time I thought The 5 Satins' "In The Still Of The Night" was a Doo Wop song.
LARadioRewind said:I like the comment about "I know a doo-wop song when I hear one." That says it best.
Now that we have that settled, do I dare ask why country stations in 1974 played I Can Help and Back Home Again? I know a country song when I hear one, and those songs were not country...and yet they both topped the country chart! Go figure!
Maybe we shouldn't get started on this...![]()
That seems like an anomoly in today's radio trade, which lives and dies by research. You might expect that playing "all of them" would not do well in "testing". But it's welcomed news.Silkie said:WMID plays all of them.
jfrancispastirchak said:That seems like an anomoly in today's radio trade, which lives and dies by research. You might expect that playing "all of them" would not do well in "testing". But it's welcomed news.Silkie said:WMID plays all of them.
RADIO TRUTH said:A real group record is usually either four or five part harmony.
And, much like one of its most formidable, though stylistically different successors, MOTOWN, DooWop sounds "urban".landtuna said:We all know it is a very distinctive sound, as are most genuine Doo-Wop songs.RADIO TRUTH said:A real group record is usually either four or five part harmony.
jfrancispastirchak said:And, much like one of its most formidable, though stylistically different successors, MOTOWN, DooWop sounds "urban".
By your definition then wouldn't a barbershop quartet be considered "group harmony" and thus, Doo-Wop?
We all know it is a very distinctive sound, as are most genuine Doo-Wop songs.
Nope - there is more than the harmony attribute to describe Doo....er, I mean "group harmony".
RADIO TRUTH said:This music has been around since the early 50s and was always known as group or group harmony records to fans of the music. When the term doo wop came along, it trivialized the music.
My music listening began in the early 50's and by the mid to late 50's the term Doo Wop was a well known identifier of the genre among my peers. A lot of it was the original dance music of my generation - especially the slow dances. I doubt you could find anyone in my youth that called this music "group harmony" as a name nor would anyone call it trivializing. We loved it.