In honor of 666 days in Beta!

Historically, what evidence has been cited in support of the claim that Rock 'n' Roll is the music of Devil?
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In honor of 666 days in Beta! Historically, what evidence has been cited in support of the claim that Rock 'n' Roll is the music of Devil? |
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Replying to Michael Thibodeau: I would love to see any reference to non-church music being called the devil's music during the medieval period that cites medieval sources. I've been working on medieval music history for quite some time and never seen any reference to any of this history. The reference to the tritone being the devil's interval can't be traced any further back than the 1700s. See F.J.Smith, "Some aspects of the tritone [...]: the non-emergence of the Diabolus in musica" Journal of Musicological Research, 1979 for a complete debunking of this false tradition. The avoidance of the melodic tritone in medieval music was for melodic, not theological grounds. The practice of using tritones in melodic writing was actually freer in the late Middle Ages than later periods, with sonorities such as G-E-Bb with G in the bass considered as consonant as G-Eb-Bb or G-E-B. |
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It actually goes back to the Medieval period when music that was not church music nor followed the church's rules was the devil's music. Madrigals were considered the devil's music because they were mostly about sex. Ending a piece on a minor chord was also forbidden which gave us the Piccardi third (raising the third of the final chord of a piece in a minor so it cold end on a major). The tritone was also banned. In modern and American terms, the blues was considered the devil's music by the African American religious community at the turn of the 20th century because of song content and that it was tied to drinking and dancing. This was true of jazz and carried over to rock and roll. The associations with drinking, dancing and sex were the original reasons. Voodoo New Orleans musicians didn't help the cause nor did the fears of middle American about their white kids listening to "black" music. Then there was Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath.... |
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The first thing that comes to mind is «backmasked» messages (i. e. hidden by the means of recording it backwards) with sinister and supposedly satanic contents: The best example of such message is the classic passage from reversed «Stairway to Heaven»:
Listen to it: http://www.nauglefest.net/downloads/stairway_reverse.mp3 |
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Overly-broad question that's dangerously close to off-topic, but I have to quote this famous song from a pioneer in Christian rock, Larry Norman (1947-2008). With lyrics. The title quote, "Why should the Devil have all the good music"? has been attributed to none other than Martin Luther(1483-1546)
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A key factor is that rock and roll made people move in ways that were not conducive to celibacy, ie they had fun concentrating on worldly things rather than spiritual. Obviously this is the work of the devil. :-) Nice screen grab, by the way. |
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