A Vision of Love: An Etiquette of Vocal Ornamentation in African-American Popular
Ballads of the Early 1990s
By Richard Rischar
Around 1990, buoyed by the success of Bill
Cosby's situation comedy and Oprah Winfrey's daytime talk show, there
was a renewed visibility of African-American pop culture in the mainstream.
Movies such as Do the Right Thing (1989; directed by Spike Lee) and Boyz
'N the Hood (1991; directed by John Singleton) represented a point of
arrival for black directors. The new Fox network (and, to a lesser extent,
NBC) featured the situation comedies Living Single, Martin, and A Different
World, which starred and were, to varying degrees, written, directed,
and produced by African-Americans. These shows treated their subject matter
in a more unapologetically black way and were less dependent on the stereotypes
of past shows like The Jeffersons or Good Times, both from the 1970s.
Another Fox show, In Living Color, represented a similar increase in the
presence of mainstream black comedians (a way paved in the 1980s by Eddie
Murphy). Murphy's protégé, Arsenio Hall, was able to sustain
a mainstream talk-show format from 1989 to 1994 that nevertheless maintained
a black point of view. And of course in music, which had never lacked
a strong African-American presence, hip-hop had made a signicant mark
on the charts; as a wide range of musicians became familiar with this
music, some began to appropriate aspects of it for their own music, though
not always with great success.
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