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The official state symbols represent the cultural heritage
and natural treasures of each state or the entire United States
South Carolina Symbols
South Carolina SymbolsAmerican Folk Dance, Amphibian, Animal, Beverage, Bird, Botanical Garden, Butterfly, Dance, Dog, Fish, Flag, Flower, Folk Art and Crafts Center, Fruit, Gemstone, Grass, Hall of Fame, Hospitality Beverage, Insect, Language, Military Academy, Motto, Music, Nicknames, Opera, Pledge to State Flag, Poet Laureate, Popular Music, Railroad Museum, Reptile, Rural Drama Center, Seal, Shell, Song, Song, Spider, Stone, Tapestry, Tartan, Tobacco Museum, Tree, Waltz, Wildflower, Wild Game Bird |
South Carolina State Popular MusicBeach MusicAdopted on March 27, 2001.The General Assembly by Act No. 15, 2001 designated beach music as the official popular music of South Carolina. It was adopted on March 27, 2001. Beach music has contributed tremendously to the enjoyment of our citizens and has become synonymous with the Shag. Beach music, as it's known in the South, originated in the coastal Carolinas in the years following World War II. Hip young black and white dancers that defied segregation after World War II and gave birth to "beach music" and the Shag, South Carolina's official state music and dance. The term referred to Afro-American "race" music (later called "rhythm & blues") that could be found in South Carolina only on jukeboxes. With the decline of big band swing prompted young white dancers to seek out alternative music. George Lineberry, one of the young white dancers who worked for a local amusements company in Myrtle Beach until 1948, took it upon himself to install "race" records on jukeboxes in white establishments, including the popular oceanfront pavilion in the heart of the tourist district. Lineberry chose records that he and his friends had discovered on visits to black nightclubs. Because it was mostly heard at the beach, this exciting, hard-to-find new music genre became known to white visitors as "beach music." "This was the devil's music-you just didn't listen to it in the average white Southern home," said Marion Carter, founder of Ripete Records, a "beach music" specialty label in Elliott, South Carolina. (A15, R25, H3634) |
State Symbols State symbols represent things that are special to a particular state. symbol \ˈsim-bəl\ noun Etymology: in sense 1, from Late Latin symbolum, from Late Greek symbolon, from Greek, token, sign; in other senses from Latin symbolum token, sign, symbol, from Greek symbolon, literally, token of identity verified by comparing its other half, from symballein to throw together, compare, from syn- + ballein to throw — more at devil Date: 15th century 1: Something that represents something else by association, resemblance, or convention, especially a material object used to represent something invisible. |