VA - Rock & Roll, When the Fire Was New (1938-1963)
(A Butterboy Compilation) (4 x CDs)
ROCK & ROLL TIMELINE
"Before you drop the needle on this first track, let me tell you what you’re about to hear,
because this isn’t just a box set, it’s a journey, and it’s meant to be heard in order.
What you’ve got in front of you is a timeline. Not a greatest-hits package, not a list of
familiar names pulled out of context, but a story that unfolds track by track, year by year,
from 1938 to 1963.
I start in 1938 because that’s where the ingredients are already on the table.
There’s no such thing as rock & roll yet, no name for it, no category, but you can hear the
forces gathering.
Gospel fire, blues phrasing, jump-band swing, rhythm starting to matter more than polish.
The music is getting louder, leaner, more physical. You can feel it wanting to move.
As this set rolls into the late 1940s, you’ll hear something click into place.
By 1947, records start aiming directly at the body.
The beat hardens. “Rocking” stops being a metaphor and becomes instruction.
By 1949, the sound isn’t a fluke anymore, different artists, different studios, all arriving
at the same rhythmic truth. That’s when rock & roll becomes recognizable, even before
it’s officially named.
Around 1951, you’ll hear the moment when the world starts calling this thing rock & roll.
DJs say the words. Labels market it. Cars, speed, youth, rebellion, it’s all suddenly right
there in the grooves.
Then comes the stretch most people think they already know, 1954 to 1958, but here,
you’ll hear it as part of a flow, not a highlight reel. This is rock & roll at full voltage,
short records, big attitude, no filler. Rockabilly, R&B, vocal groups, instrumentals,
all coexisting, all pushing the same beat forward. One thing to listen for here:
no artist repeats. That’s intentional.
This music wasn’t built by a few giants, it was built by many hands,
often just passing through the charts once, but changing everything while they were there.
As we move into 1959 and beyond, listen closely, because this is where things
start to stretch and pull apart.
The sound gets smoother in places, stranger in others.
Dance records, girl groups, surf guitars, soul polish, folk influence,
rock & roll is everywhere
now, but it’s no longer one voice. It’s becoming many.
And that’s why this set ends in 1963. Not because the music stops, far from it,
but because the story changes.
After 1963, rock & roll doesn’t disappear…
it evolves into rock. Bands take over.
Albums matter. Scenes form. The rules are different.
So, this box captures how rock & roll is born, how it finds its voice, how it peaks,
and how it finishes becoming what it was always meant to be.
My advice is don’t shuffle this. Let it play straight through.
Listen to how the beat hardens, how the attitude shifts, how the edges smooth out,
and how, by the end, you can hear the door opening to an entirely new era.
This isn’t nostalgia. This is history, spinning at 45 revolutions per minute.
In The majority of cases, I have used the original label mono versions.
Alright… let’s go back to the beginning." (Butterboy)
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Now we’re talking! The roots of Rock ’n’ Roll tight there and a thesis from our Butterboy
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