THE ’50s: TEENAGERS DEMAND MUSIC WITH A BEAT, SPUR RHYTHM-BLUES . . . APRIL 24, 1954

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (2015)From the MCRFB news archive: 1954

Field Reaps $15,000,000; Radio, Jukeboxes Answers Big Demand 

 

 

 

 

 

NEW YORK (April 17) — Rhythm and blues records, once limited in sales appeal to the relatively small Negro market, has blossomed into one of the fastest growing areas of the entire record business.

The Spaniels. A Vee-Jay Records Cashbox ad, 1953. (Click on image for largest view).
The Spaniels. A Vee-Jay Records, Cashbox ad, early-1950s. (Click on image for largest view).

Rhythm and blues record sales last year reached an all-time high of $15,000,000. Indications are that 1954 sales will surpass that mark. The growing popularity of this music is reflected in its wide use by disk jockeys and juke box operators.

More than 700 disk jockeys across the country devote their air time exclusively to rhythm and blues recordings. Many disk jockeys who once restricted their programming only to popular records, are following the change in listener taste by including rhythm and blues selections with their regular popular offerings.

To satisfy the growing demand for this material more than 75 record companies regularly release rhythm and blues recordings. Their combined production effort results in more than 1,000 rhythm and blues records per year.

Teenage Demand

Teenagers have spearheaded the current swing to R&B, and are largely responsible for keeping its sales mounting. The teenage tide has swept down the old barriers which kept this music restricted to a segment of the population.

The present generation has not known the rhythmically exciting dance bands of the swing era. It therefore satisfy its hunger for “music with a beat” in the Earl Bostic, Buddy Johnson, Tiny Bradshaw bands or uses the rhythmically pronounced recordings of the Clovers, Ruth Brown and others, as its dance music.

Earl Bostic, 1952
Earl Bostic, 1952

The expansion of this field had resulted in a number of companies who find it highly profitable, devoting their exclusive production to R&B, and spiritual recordings.

Such companies as Atlantic-Cat, Apollo, Savoy, Peacock Duke, Specialty, Modern-RPM, Federal, Aladdin, Chess-Checker, United-States, Chance, Herald, Imperial and others emerge among the strongest independent labels of the entire record industry. In addition to the highly successful firms which specialize in the R&B field are such companies as RCA-Victor, Columbia, Decca, Dot, King and others, which either themselves or through their subsidiary labels issue many R&B records along with their regular record releases in other fields.

Juke Boxes Lead

Juke box operators are credited being among the first to sense the teenage swing to R&B. In noting the youngster preference for this music, they continued to increase its supply on those juke boxes which were exposed to teenage traffic.

This in turn fostered R&B popularity as reflected in requests to disk jockeys and  in record stores. Dealers who heretofore didn’t stock R&B records were quick to pick up the ball and are now offering a healthy selection of R&B recordings.

Some California juke box operators say that machines located where young people congregate will show popular records taking a secondary position to R&B recordings. California distributors who specialize in R&B estimate that 35 per cent of their sales volume come directly from the juke box field.

In New York it is no longer uncommon for a box in an average teenage hangout to have at least a few R&B records featuring Dinah Washington, Ruth Brown, The Clovers, Earl Bostic, Tiny Bradshaw, among others. In Miami, boxes in taverns and milk bars in virtually every neighborhood sport R&B records in addition to pop releases.

  Country – Wide

Operators in widely-scattered sections of the country have found that many R&B records have a wide enough appeal to go into boxes in any area. Indicative of the expansion of the rhythm and blues market is the large number of retail outlets which previously did not stock these platters, but has since found it necessary and especially profitable to do so.

Dance hall days. Teens swingin' to the R&B band sound, circa 1953.
Dance hall days. By 1953, teens were swinging more to “music with a beat,” spurring further rhythm and blues acceptance and popularity throughout the 1950s decade. 

On the West Coast, such class retail outlets as Crawford’s, Martindale’s, and the Gramophone in Beverly Hills, California, now stock rhythm and blues and point to a successful sales volume with the line.

In the main, these stores and others of their type, are thus far only carrying the “hit” or chart listed items, although they’re continually adding to their inventory.

Where it was previously necessary for a teenager to go out of his immediate shopping neighborhood and buy a rhythm and blues recording, it is now the neighborhoods that are adding to their coffers through stocking R&B records. Significantly, some established R&B outlets have noticed a decline in their volume, apparently taken up by the “Johnny come lately’s” who now stock rhythm and blues.

 Another Sign

Another sign that the popularity of rhythm and blues records is seen by the large number of record buyers of Mexican and Spanish descent who are avid devotees of the field. Music operators in routes in areas predominantly populated by Latin Americans report that this group has long been staunch supporters of R&B music.

Black and Latino teenagers dancing to popular rhythm and blues hits in the early-1950s.
Black and Latino teenagers dancing to popular rhythm and blues hits in the early-1950s.

A tremendous market exist in this Latin-American field in an area that spreads through West Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. Distributors in Dallas, Houston, El Paso and Los Angeles report that Latin Americans are among their largest buyers of rhythm and blues records. American disk jockey shows they frequently play rhythm and blues, along with similarly operated retail outlets which stock the line.

There has been an upsurge in the number of broadcast hours R&B records are played in cities all over the country. In Los Angeles there re more R&B jockeys than there were a year ago, and the pop jockey are spinning more R&B records. About 23 hours of R&B disks are played daily on eight Los Angeles stations. The same is true in Chicago and New York.

Air Time

In Chicago the increase in R&B records on the air is an increase about 20 percent over a year ago, and the increase is greater in New York.

The Crows 1953 R&B hit, "Gee."
The Crows 1953 R&B hit, “Gee.”

It is true that many pop jockeys are playing those R&B records such as “Gee” and “Crying In The Chapel,” but a few years ago even these hits were not played. Where pop jockeys are not spinning R&B records, the need is being fulfilled by more R&B air time.  Audiences today are estimated by many jockeys to be 20 to 30 percent white listeners, in both the large cities and the Southern towns.

The increasing importance of R&B records and the growing appeal of many artists in the field are illustrated by some of the exceptionally successful dances and shows featuring R&B talent and produced by deejays in various sections of the country.

Probably the most remarkable record is held by Alan (Moondog) Freed, of station WJW in Cleveland. Freed’s “Coronation Ball” at the Cleveland Arena in March, 1952, which used all R&B talent, including singers and ork, attracted 25,000 people, with thousands turned away. This is one of the largest crowds to attend a dance since WWII. In July of 1952, a Freed dance at the Summit Beach Ballroom in Akron attracted over 3,000 people at $2 per person with thousands turned away. In July, 1953, at the Freed “Rhythm And Blues Show” at the arena in Cleveland, there were 10,000 paid admissions at a $3 top.

Alan Freed's Coronation Ball,1952.
Alan Freed’s Coronation Ball, 1952.

Freed’s P. A.’s

Cleveland's WJW Alan "Moondog" Freed. Click on image for larger view).
Cleveland’s WJW Alan “Moondog” Freed. (Click on image for larger view).

Freed, with his manager Lou Platt, has staged a number of other shows and dances since then, with each attracting over 3,000 people, and again with many thousands invariably turned away. Here again, according to Lou Platt, up to one-third of the audience was composed of white teenagers, pointing out again the appeal of the R&B among whites as well as Negroes.

A check among R&B record firms and R&B distributors on the East and West Coast shows that they are now servicing pop stations and shows  as well as R&B deejays with certain releases. They had found it to be a worthwhile policy to do so, since a pop jockey’s spinning an R&B disk can help increase the sales tremendously. The Crows’ recording of “Gee” on Rama Records, which is a hit both in the Pop and R&B markets, added thousands of additional sales due to the spins given by pop disk jockeys.

The appeal of R&B disks to more than just a limited market is also shown in the records made by pop artists and repertoire of burgeoning of R&B hits. The latest in a series are the records made of “Such A Night,” which was first released by Clyde McPhatter on Atlantic. 

Johnny Ray, Bunny Paul and Jane Turzey made the record after the McPhatter record started to take off. This is merely the most recent case of covering an R&B record; the tradition goes back a number of years. However, in most cases the original record, the R&B disk, often sells more than the pop versions. This could be the case with “Such A Night” as well.

As R&B artists grow both in experience and popularity, they usually have a chance to break thru as pop artists and increase both their earning power in the business.

This is happening today with many artists as their records break through in the pop field. The Earl Bostic Band, the Dominoes, the Orioles, Dinal Washington, Ruth Brown and others have managed to build up as almost as strong an appeal in the pop market as they have in the R&B field. According to all indications, as the R&B market continues to expand this standard,  this will happen with more and more artists gaining popularity in the rhythm and blues field.

(Information and news source, Billboard; April 24, 1954).

A Ruth Brown appearance poster, February, 1954.
A Wichita, KS, Ruth Brown, appearance poster for February, 1957.

Loading