Top 15 Why barbershop music still strikes a chord

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African American roots: Barbershop quartet singing is associated with the United States.

A Cappella: Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, the Black community harmonized.

The rise of the quartet: From these African American ensembles the quartet evolved and with it.

Blackface parody: In time this unique musical style was being imitated by white minstrel performers.

The barbershop as a social club: Barbershop music can also be traced back to an era when American.

Barber's music: Also around this time—the late 19th century—the British expression.

A blend of musical style: After white professional quartets began popularizing the sound.

With the music came a fashion: Soon, barbershop quartets began performing in theaters to enthusiastic.

First recordings: The early 1920s saw the first recordings made of barbershop music.

For the record: Barbershop quartets by now where almost exclusively white, particularly.

Play that barbershop chord: One man who did manage to buck the trend was Bert Williams. 

Old and new: By the mid-1920s white close harmony barbershop quartets were all the rage. 

The four voices of barbershop music: The barbershop style is characterized by four-part harmony.

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Second voice: The second voice is a bass, the part which provides the bass line to the melody.

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