Radcliffe Wrote:
Skiffle didn't predate much of anything. Basically a polite Brit variant on rockabilly. If we were talking jump blues we'd be getting into the primordial goop.
toots Wrote:
how about The Vipers? i see that name get thrown around
The only Vipers I knew about were part of the first garage/psych revivalist wave (got their
Outta The Nest album on vinyl), but a quick google search netted this: "The Vipers were, after Lonnie Donegan, the most successful skiffle act in England, charting a half-dozen singles between November of 1956 and October of 1958."
Ignore Radcliffe. I'm not sure why his addled, ill formed opinions have become sage around here but perhaps its a case of 'in the kingdom of the blind, the one eyed man is king'.
Skiffle was influenced by past and contemporary music, as all music has since people started hitting rocks together, but it was important because it became nationally popular roughly a year to a year and a half before Elvis Presley popularized rock n' roll. In the sense that it was heard by significant numbers of people and inspired a youth following at a national level it predated most forms of what we might now call popular music. Putting it simply Lonnie Donegan was having hits and inspiring kids to form bands when Elvis still hanging around local recording studios.
Also "polite Brit variant on rockabilly"? Hardly. Skiffle was played harder, faster and with more energy than any other existing type of music at the time, which is why it attracted trouble makers like John Lennon and Pete Townsend who were hardly going to make a drawn to anything "polite". The fact that it was often played on home made instruments, by non professional musicians, in a rough and ready style (relative to the time) seem like valid reasons to drawn parallels with punk rock.
Skiffle waned in importance with the appearance of people like Elvis and Chuck Berry 12 to 18 months later, but it's importance was that it created the first generation of rebellious 'punk rock kids' who eventually took up the baton when rock n' roll died a death in the late fifties. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Jimmy Page, Pete Townsend, Keith Richards etc, all started in skiffle bands. Skiffle was hugely important to the development of music, dismissing it as unimportant betrays an ignorance of staggering proportions.
Lonnie Donegan started his skiffle group in 1954. Contrast with one of the biggest hits of 1954, Perry Como's 'Wanted', and it shouldn't be too hard to imagine why scores teenagers up and down the UK went off and formed bands around a washboard and a soap box bass during 1954 - 1956.