Sweet Nothings: Women in Rockabilly Music: LaVern Baker and Janis Martin

File(s)
Date
2012-08-01Author
Lewin-Lane, Stephanie P.
Department
Music
Advisor(s)
Gillian M. Rodger
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Rockabilly music is an exciting and vibrant style of early Rock and Roll that originated in the 1950s. With its aggressive beat and anti-establishment connotations, rockabilly is considered a widely male-dominated genre, a point supported by the majority of scholarship and literature on the subject. However, a review of available contemporary recordings, television shows, advertisements and interviews show that women were an integral part of the history of rockabilly music. In this thesis, I will discuss women in rockabilly music and address how issues relating to gender and race in 1950s culture affected women performers. More specifically, I will examine the experiences of two performers, LaVern Baker and Janis Martin, concentrating on formative and important events in their careers and how they affected rockabilly music overall. I will also include interview transcripts with Janis Martin and her mother, Jewel Martin, that are previously unpublished.
Subject
Janis Martin
LaVern Baker
Rhythm and Blues
Rockabilly Music
Rock and Roll
Women Performers
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90895Type
thesis