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Lee Morgan - The Lion and the Wolf

Rock and roll was everything the suburban 1950s were not. While parents of the decade were listening to... big bands, their children were moving to a new beat.

Rock and roll sent shockwaves across America. A generation of young teenagers collectively rebelled against the music their parents loved. In general, the older generation loathed rock and roll. Appalled by the new styles of dance the movement evoked, churches proclaimed it Satan's music.

Because rock and roll originated among the lower classes and a segregated ethnic group, many middlenclass whites thought it was tasteless. Rock and roll records were banned from many radio stations and hundreds of schools.

The commercial possibilities were limitless. As a generation of young adults finished military service, bought houses in suburbia, and longed for stability and conformity, their children seemed to take comfort for granted. They wanted to release the tensions that bubbled beneath the smooth surface of postwar America. Above all, they wanted to shake, rattle, and roll.


Lee Morgan - The Lion and the Wolf
  • Released: 1966
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Written by: Lee Morgan

"Still only 19, Lee Morgan's playing was imbued with youthful enthusiasm, but he was also synthesizing his influences into an original sound of his own. Morgan was extraordinarily prolific between 1966 and 1968, releasing around eight albums' worth of material." 

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