Music Video History

Words: 1512
Pages: 7

The birth of music videos
Mankind is always looking for new things, for ways to improve. Consequently technology is also always developing. Eventually, scientists found a way to record sounds and movements in the late 19th century, that led to the oldest known music video, created in 1895. (The Music Video, Before Music Television, 2011, para.#2) It was made for the Kinetophone and showed moving pictures with its soundtrack recorded individually. In 1925 the brothers Max and David Fleischer created an animation with a bouncing ball, which hopped over lyrics to let people contribute to in-theatre sing-alongs. Subsequently, in the 1940s jukeboxes that could show music videos were created for public areas. There were different types of jukeboxes.
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After the Great Depression and the Second World War, which ended in 1945, trust and hope increased for many. Among the population, there was a feeling of security, both in the government and the social outlook . (Baby-boomers van de jaren 50 en 60 verplichten de maatschappij om te veranderen, n.d., para#4) This led to the baby-boomer generation; a heavily increased amount of births from 1946 to 1964. (Baby Boom Generation, n.d., para#1) From 1948 until 1973 there was an economic growth in the Western World, goods became cheaper and especially the middle class started to become wealthier. They started to purchase more luxury goods such as televisions and music equipment, as they were more affordable. Because of this increased wealth, their children, the baby boomer generation, had more free time as they did not have to work as much to earn money. These baby boomers started to consume more luxury goods themselves, such as music and clothes. They could form their own style and started to join groups with the same hobbies. The amount of free time and the desire to distinguish themselves expressed itself in a reaction against the traditional ways of their parents; they formed a counterculture. (Het ontstaan van de teenager, n.d., para#3) Multiple subcultures arose. The biggest ones were rock, in the 1950s, the hippies from the late 1960s and punk in the late 1970s. (Slang, youth subcultures and rock music, n.d., para#4, 5) (De opkomst van Jongerensubculturen, n.d., para#9, 10, 11,