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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alan_FreedAlan Freed - Wikipedia

    Albert James "Alan" Freed (December 15, 1921 – January 20, 1965) was an American disc jockey. He also produced and promoted large traveling concerts with various acts, helping to spread the importance of rock and roll music throughout North America. In 1986, Freed was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His "role in breaking down ...

  2. Mar 27, 2018 · Published March 27, 2018. Alan Freed, the "father of rock 'n' roll," didn't just come onto the scene during a new era. He helped define it. Hulton Archive/Getty Images American disc jockey and radio performer Alan Freed (1921 – 1965) who coined the term rock ‘n’ roll sits in a 1010 WINS sound studio during a radio broadcast.

  3. Jeff Wallenfeldt. Alan Freed did not coin the phrase rock and roll; however, by way of his radio show, he popularized it and redefined it. Once slang for sex, it came to mean a new form of music. This music had been around for several years, but Freeds primary accomplishment was the delivery of it to new—primarily.

  4. Photo courtesy Library of Congress. One of the most important popularizes of rock and roll during the '50s, Alan Freed was the first disc jockey and concert producer of rock and roll. Often credited with coining the term rock and roll in 1951, ostensibly to avoid the stigma attached to R&B and so called race music, Freed opened the door to ...

  5. Biography - The Official Licensing Website of Alan Freed. Freed was born to a Russian-Jewish immigrant father, Charles S. Freed, and Welsh-American mother, Maude Palmer, in Windber, Pennsylvania. In 1933, Freed’s family moved to Salem, Ohio where Freed attended Salem High School, graduating in 1940.

  6. Alan Freed, originally an announcer of classical music, became a pop music deejay in Cleveland in the early 1950s and was known to his listeners as “Moon Dog.” His audiences at first were largely black until white teenagers began to hear and like what he…

  7. His career effectively ended in 1959 when he was caught up in the “payola” scandal, accused of accepting bribes to play certain records. Despite his personal tragedies, Freed’s innovations helped make rock and roll and the Top-40 format permanent fixtures of radio. Alan Freed died on January 20, 1965.

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