Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Radio and Music - Coggle Diagram
Radio and Music
Music popularity
Originated out of the Tin Pan Alley
Emerged at the beginning of the 20th century
Technological developments
Phonograph
Gramophone
Reel-to-reel tape recorder
Vinyl records
Music styles
Opera
Vaudeville
Ragtime
Jazz
Blues
Rock
Surf
Folk
Soul
Glam rock
Disco
Hip-hop
Pop
Rap
Major record labels make up over 85 percent of the music industry
The Big Four
EMI
Sony
Universal
Warner
Indie record label advantages
Smaller and more flexible
Able to respond to trends quicker
Able to tap into niche markets
Music stays closer to the artist original vision
New technology
Peer-to-peer file sharing
Napster service
CDs
iTunes
70 percent of the music digital marker
Caused a massive decline in CD sales
Radio popularity
Golden age
Between 1930 and 1950
Wide range of programing
Music
Drama
Theater programs
FM radio
Popular during the late 1960s and 1970s
Formats
Contemporary hit radio
Spanish-language
Nostalgia genres
Radio and culture
Potential to reach anyone
Emotional impact
Traumatic events
National unity
Fairness Doctrine
Repealed in 1987
Types
Satellite radio
Subscription based
HD radio
Free
Internet radio and podcasting
Low cost
Music and culture
Cultural influences
Migration
Youth culture
Racial integration
Racism
Large companies
Hijacking hits made by black artists
Releasing censored cover versions made by white people
Conventional idea of morality
Physical appearance
Young people in the 1950s
Financial freedom
Personal freedom
influenced record sales
Marketing Rock and roll records to teens