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Stomp and Shout: R&B and the Origins of Northwest Rock and Roll

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"In this book, Peter Blecha tells the story of the Pacific Northwest music scene from the 1940s to the 1960s, an underappreciated golden era of music that deserves its respectful due. Drawing on extensive primary research, including his own interviews with many of the key players, Blecha weaves his own narrative voice and incisive analysis with the firsthand (and highly entertaining) stories of those who lived through the blossoming of this singular musical scene, and readers to experience the scene's evolution through the eyes and ears of those who lived through it"--

328 pages, Paperback

Published January 15, 2025

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Peter Blecha

12 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
214 reviews1 follower
November 30, 2023
It’s a worthy read. It does a lot of things. Certainly a good reference to have. Useful on a several levels. It is a history of the NW sound. It begins in the late 40’s, early 50’s with the jazz scene in Seattle. That morphed into a healthy R&B and blues scene, with soul influence during the 1950’s. Then along comes the white kids and more mixed-race bands than anyplace else at the time. The NW sound that emerged had a strong stream of soul and R&B. The drumbeats are unique for the time. Some really good music emerged but then the national vultures began to pay attention, bought some shit up and turned the NW sound into crappy pop. He argues if there had been better and stronger NW music managers, things might have been very different.
He has a chapter on Hendrix and his connection to Seattle. Not just the city but specific connections about what music and experiences he grew up with that was fundamental to much of his later work.
And…..it is an avalanche of detail about the bands. Who played in what, where they went to next and who fought with who and where did they wind up? The same for clubs and venues. Mostly bars and some after-hours places where some of the white kids hung out and got to know the black players, and sometimes got to play with them on stage. Plus, there is a lot about multiple youth clubs where bands played, and kids hung out. Even some detail about the roller rinks. Radio stations and DJ’s get a lot of attention as they were very powerful in what got on the radio.
I played in bands in the mid to late 60's. We came along at the point where there was “some really good music” in play. We were lucky in that. And even though we were a cover dance band, the way we played at the time reads true to what he says was unique in the make-up of the NW sound.
Profile Image for Will Carlson.
46 reviews
May 30, 2023
I’m glad that I read this but I think that Blecha could improve on his writing. He’s really good at collecting facts and he clearly knows a lot. He also seems to have a lot of passion for the city which I appreciate. However, I found myself appreciating the chapters about Jimi Hendrix more than others and I think it’s cause I know who Jimi is, whereas I’ve never heard a single song from the Wailers, Dave Lewis, Paul Revere, etc. I think a part of why I liked the Hendrix chapters more is because Blecha could’ve done better. One thing is that he kind of just listed facts over and over again, not providing a great narrative.

One thing that stood out was the history behind Louie Louie. That song used to be played after the 7th inning stretch at Mariners games (until they switched it for fucking Macklemore meh). I had no idea that it was THE song in the pacnw. Every band had to have that song in their repertoire to be successful.

Reading this book made me wonder about the experiences that our generation are missing out on thanks to technology. Obviously YouTube, Spotify, etc. bring tons of music from around the globe to your fingertips which is amazing, but I wonder if we’re going to start losing regional sounds. I think it’d be sad to lose out on cities having their own sounds.

Overall it’s a decent book if you’re a music nerd from seattle.

Profile Image for East Bay J.
621 reviews24 followers
May 6, 2025
Great book. The northwest music scene in 40s and 50s was at least as vibrant and unique as that in the 80s and 90s with a ton of great bands. I'd have liked more on the Sonics but I learned a lot about the stompers and shouters of the R&B/rock 'n' roll scene in the Pacific Northwest.
Profile Image for Erik Hanberg.
Author 14 books83 followers
July 16, 2023
Catnip for me. Tacoma and an oral music history are a great combo.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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