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Jazz
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Jazz
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Jazz is an original American
musical art form
originating around the early
1920s in New Orleans, rooted in Western music technique and theory, and is
marked by the profound cultural contributions of African Americans. It is
characterized by blue notes, syncopation,
swing,
call and response, polyrhythms, and
improvisation. Jazz has been described as "America's Classical Music", and
started in saloons throughout the nation. Jazz is not dead.
History
Jazz master
Louis Armstrong remains one of the most loved and best known of all jazz
musicians.
Jazz has roots in the combination of Western and
African music
traditions, including
spirituals,
blues and
ragtime,
stemming ultimately from
West Africa, western Sahel, and New England's religious
hymns and
hillbilly music, as well as in European military band music. After originating
in African American communities near the beginning of the 20th century, jazz
gained international popularity by the 1920s. Since
then, jazz has had a pervasive influence on other musical styles worldwide. Even
today, various jazz styles continue to evolve.
The word jazz itself is rooted in American
slang, probably of sexual origin, although various alternative derivations have
been suggested. According to University of Southern California film professor
Todd Boyd, the term was originally slang for sexual intercourse as its earliest
musicians found employment in New Orleans brothel parlors, with the word
deriving from the term 'jass'. The term "jass" was rude sexual slang, related
either to the term "jism" or to the jasmine perfume popular among urban prostitutes. Lacking an attentive
audience, the musicians began to play for each other and their performances
achieved esthetic complexity not evident in
ragtime. At the root of jazz is the
blues, the folk music of former enslaved Africans in the U.S. South and their
descendants, heavily influenced by West African cultural and musical traditions,
that evolved as black musicians migrated to the cities. According to Pulitzer
Prize-winning African American composer and
classical and jazz trumpet virtuoso
Wynton Marsalis:
Jazz is something
Negroes
invented, and it said the most profound things -- not only about us and the
way we look at things, but about what modern
democratic life is really about. It is the nobility of the race put into
sound ... jazz has all the elements, from the spare and penetrating to the
complex and enveloping. It is the hardest music to play that I know of, and
it is the highest rendition of individual emotion in the history of Western
music.[citation needed]
Needless to say, the view of jazz as simply and solely "black music" is
controversial. Numerous non-black musicians (Bix Beiderbecke, Benny Goodman,
Harry James, Zoot Sims, Gerry Mulligan, Bill Evans, Stan Getz, Dave Brubeck, and
Charlie Haden among others) have made important contributions to jazz. In
addition, it could be argued that jazz would not exist without both instruments
invented or developed by Europeans (the trumpet, saxophone, trombone, double
bass, etc.) and the previous work of Europeans in
music
theory, which was explored in different ways by jazz musicians, such as
increased use of the
seventh chord and extended chords. The origins of jazz are multicultural, not entirely "pure,"
and perhaps reflect the hybrid nature of American culture more than any other
art form.
Early jazz influences found their first mainstream expression in the marching
band and dance band music of the day, which was the standard form of popular
concert music at the turn of century. The instruments of these groups became the
basic instruments of jazz: brass, reeds, and drums, and are voiced in the
Western 12-tone scale.
Black musicians frequently used the melody, structure, and beat of marches as
points of departure; but says "North by South, from
Charleston to Harlem," a project of the National Endowment for the Humanities:
"...a black musical spirit (involving rhythm and melody) was bursting out of the
confines of European musical tradition, even though the performers were using
European styled instruments. This African-American feel for rephrasing melodies
and reshaping rhythm created the embryo from which many great black jazz
musicians were to emerge." Many black musicians also made a living playing in
small bands hired to lead funeral processions in the New Orleans African-American tradition. These Africanized bands played a seminal
role in the articulation and dissemination of early jazz. Traveling throughout
black communities in the Deep South and to northern big cities, these
musician-pioneers were the Hand helping to fashion the music's howling, raucous,
then free-wheeling, "raggedy," ragtime spirit, quickening it to a more eloquent,
sophisticated, swing incarnation.
For all its genius, early jazz, with its humble, folk roots, was the product
of primarily self-taught musicians. But an impressive
postbellum network of black-established and -operated institutions, schools, and
civic societies in both the North and the South, plus widening mainstream
opportunities for education, produced ever-increasing numbers of young, formally
trained African-American musicians, some of them schooled in classical European
musical forms. Lorenzo Tio and Scott Joplin were among this new wave of
musically literate jazz artists. Joplin, the son of a former slave and a
free-born woman of color, was largely self-taught until age 11, when he received
lessons in the fundamentals of music theory from a classically trained German
immigrant in Texarkana, Texas.
Also contributing to this trend was a tightening of Jim Crow laws in
Louisiana in the 1890s, which caused the expulsion from integrated bands of numbers of talented, formally trained African-American
musicians. The ability of these musically literate, black jazzmen to transpose
and then read what was in great part an improvisational art form became an
invaluable element in the preservation and dissemination of musical innovations
that took on added importance in the approaching
big-band
era.
The United States music scene at the start of the 20th century
By the turn of the century, American society had begun to shed the
heavy-handed, straitlaced formality that had characterized the Victorian era.
Strong influence of African American music traditions had already been a part
of mainstream popular music in the United States for generations, going back to
the 19th century
minstrel show tunes and the melodies of Stephen Foster.
Public dance halls, clubs, and tea rooms opened in the cities. Curiously
named black dances inspired by African dance moves, like the
shimmy, turkey trot, buzzard lope, chicken scratch, monkey glide, and the bunny
hug eventually were adopted by a white public. The cake walk, developed by
slaves as a send-up of their masters' formal dress balls, became the rage. White
audiences saw these dances first in vaudeville
shows, then performed by exhibition dancers in the clubs.
The popular dance music of the time was not jazz, but there were precursor
forms along the blues-ragtime continuum of musical experimentation and
innovation that soon would blossom into jazz. Popular
Tin Pan Alley composers like Irving Berlin incorporated ragtime influence into
their compositions, though they seldom used the specific musical devices that
were second nature to jazz players—the rhythms, the blue notes. Few things did
more to popularize the idea of hot music than Berlin's hit song of
1911,"Alexander's Ragtime Band," which became a craze as far from home as
Vienna. Although the song wasn't written in rag time, the lyrics describe a jazz band,
right up to jazzing up popular songs, as in the line, "If you want to hear the Swanee River played in ragtime......."
The early New Orleans "jass" style
A number of regional styles contributed to the early development of jazz.
Arguably the single most important was that of the
New Orleans, Louisiana area, which was the first to be commonly given the
name "jazz" (early on often spelled "jass").
The city of New Orleans and the surrounding area had long been a regional
music center. People from many different nations of Africa, Europe, and Latin
America contributed to New Orleans' rich musical heritage. In the French and
Spanish colonial era, slaves had more freedom of cultural expression than in the
English colonies of what would become the United States. In the Protestant
colonies African music was looked on as inherently "pagan" and was commonly
suppressed, while in Louisiana it was allowed. African musical celebrations held
at least as late as the 1830s in New Orleans' "Congo Square" were attended by
interested whites as well, and some of their melodies and rhythms found their
way into the compositions of white
Creole composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk. In addition to the slave population, New Orleans
also had North America's largest community of free people of color, some of whom
prided themselves on their education and used European instruments to play both
European music and their own folk tunes.
According to many New Orleans musicians who remembered the era, the key
figures in the development of the new style were flamboyant trumpeter
Buddy
Bolden and the members of his band. Bolden is remembered as the first to
take the blues — hitherto a folk music sung and self-accompanied on string
instruments or
blues harp
(harmonica) — and arrange it for brass instruments. Bolden's band played blues
and other tunes, constantly "variating the melody" (improvising) for both dance
and brass band settings, creating a sensation in the city and quickly being
imitated by many other musicians.
By the early years of the 20th century, travelers visiting New Orleans
remarked on the local bands' ability to play ragtime with a "pep" not heard
elsewhere.
Characteristics which set the early New Orleans style apart from the ragtime
music played elsewhere included freer rhythmic improvisation. Ragtime musicians
elsewhere would "rag" a tune by giving a syncopated rhythm and playing a note
twice (at half the time value), while the New Orleans style used more intricate
rhythmic improvisation often placing notes far from the implied beat (compare,
for example, the
piano rolls of Jelly Roll Morton with those of Scott Joplin). The New Orleans style players also adopted much of the vocabulary
of the blues, including bent and blue notes and instrumental "growls" and smears
otherwise not used on European instruments.
Key figures in the early development of the new style were Freddie Keppard, a
dark Creole of color who mastered Bolden's style; Joe Oliver, whose style was
even more deeply soaked in the blues than Bolden's; and Kid Ory, a trombonist
who helped crystallize the style with his band hiring many of the city's best
musicians. The new style also spoke to young whites as well, especially the
working-class children of immigrants, who took up the style with enthusiasm.
Papa Jack Laine led a multi-ethnic band through which passed almost all of
two generations of early New Orleans white jazz musicians (and a number of
non-whites as well).
Other regional styles
Meanwhile, other regional styles were developing which would influence the
development of jazz.
- African-American minister Rev. Daniel J. Jenkins of Charleston, South
Carolina, was an unlikely figure of far-reaching importance in the early
development of jazz. In 1891, Jenkins established the Jenkins Orphanage for
boys and four years later instituted a rigorous music program in which the
orphanage's young charges were taught the religious and secular music of the
day, including overtures and marches. Precocious orphans and defiant
runaways, some of whom had played ragtime in bars and brothels, were
delivered to the orphanage for "salvation" and rehabilitation and made their
musical contributions, as well. In the fashion of the Fisk Jubilee Singers
and Fisk University, the Jenkins Orphanage Bands traveled widely, earning
money to keep the orphanage afloat. It was an expensive enterprise. Jenkins
typically took in approximately 125 – 150 "black lambs" yearly, and many of
them received formal musical training. Less than 30 years later, five bands
operated nationally, with one traveling to England — again in the Fisk
tradition. It would be hard to overstate the influence of the Jenkins
Orphanage Bands on early jazz, scores of whose members went on to play with
jazz legends like Duke Ellington, Lionel Hampton and Count Basie. Among them
were the likes of trumpet virtuosos William "Cat" Anderson, Gus Aitken, and
Jabbo Smith.
- In the northeastern United States, a "hot" style of playing ragtime
developed. While centered in
New York City, it could be found in African-American communities from
Baltimore to Boston. Some later commentators have categorized it after the
fact as an early form of jazz, while others disagree. It was characterized
by rollicking rhythms, but lacked the distinctly bluesy influence of the
southern styles. The solo piano version of the northeast style was typified
by such players as noted composer Eubie Blake, the son of slaves, whose
musical career spanned an impressive eight decades. James P. Johnson took
the northeast style and around 1919 developed a style of playing that came
to be known as "stride." In stride piano, the right hand plays the melody,
while the active left hand "walks" or "strides" from upbeat to downbeat,
maintaining the rhythm. Johnson influenced later pianists like Fats Waller
and Willie Smith.
- The top orchestral leader of the style was
James Reese Europe, and his 1913 and 1914 recordings preserve a rare glimpse
of this style at its peak. It was during this time that Europe's music
profoundly influenced a young George Gershwin, who would go on to compose
the jazz-inspired classic "Rhapsody in Blue." By the time Europe recorded
again in 1919, he was in the process of incorporating the influence of the
New Orleans style into his playing. The recordings of Tim Brymn give later generations another look at the northeastern hot
style with little of the New Orleans influence yet evident.
- In Chicago at the start of the 1910s, a popular type of dance band
consisted of a saxophone vigorously ragging a melody over a 4-square rhythm
section. The city soon fell heavily under the influence of waves of New
Orleans musicians, and the older style blended with the New Orleans style to
form what would be called "Chicago Jazz" starting in the late 1910s.
- Along the banks of the Mississippi around Memphis, Tennessee to St.
Louis, Missouri, another band style developed incorporating the blues. The
most famous composer and bandleader of the style was the "Father of the
Blues," W.C. Handy. While in some ways similar to the New Orleans style (Bolden's
influence may have spread upriver), it lacked the freewheeling improvisation
found further south. Handy, indeed, for many years denounced jazz as
needlessly chaotic, and, in his style, improvisation was limited to short
fills between phrases and was considered inappropriate for the main melody.
Jazz in the 1920s
The King & Carter Jazzing Orchestra photographed in Houston, Texas, January
1921.
Two disparate, but important, inventions of the second half of the nineteenth
century quietly had set the stage for jazz to capture the spotlight in American
popular music by the 1920s. George Pullman's invention of the sleeping car in
1864 brought a new level of luxury and comfort to the nation's railways; and
Thomas Edison's invention, in 1877, of the phonograph record made quality music accessible to virtually everyone.
Pullman's ingenious, rolling sleeping quarters provided employment to legions
of African-American men, who criss-crossed the nation as sleeping car porters;
and by the second decade of the twentieth century, the Pullman Company employed
more African-Americans than any single business concern in the United States.
But Pullman porters were more than solicitous, smiling faces in smart, navy blue
uniforms. The most dapper and sophisticated of them were culture bearers,
spreading the card game of bid whist, the latest dance crazes, regional news, and a heightened sense of black pride to
cities and towns wherever the railways reached. Many porters also shared, traded
and even sold "race records" to augment their income, speeding artistic
innovations to musicians eager to hear the latest; spreading among the general
public an awareness of and appreciation for this rapidly evolving musical form;
and, in the process, putting jazz on the fast track to first U.S., then
worldwide, acclaim.
With Prohibition, the constitutional amendment that forbade the sale of
alcoholic beverages, the legal saloons and cabarets were closed; but in their
place hundreds of speakeasies appeared, where patrons drank and musicians entertained. The
presence of dance venues and the subsequent increased demand for accomplished
musicians meant more artists were able to support themselves by playing
professionally. As a result, the numbers of professional musicians increased,
and jazz—like all the popular music of the 1920s—adopted the 4/4 beat of dance
music.
Another nineteenth-century invention, radio, came into its own in the 1920s,
after the first commercial radio station in the U.S. began broadcasting in
Pittsburgh in 1922. Radio stations proliferated at a remarkable rate, and with
them, the popularity of jazz. Jazz became associated with things modern,
sophisticated, and decadent. The third decade of the new century, a time of
technological marvels, flappers,
flashy automobiles, organized crime, bootleg whiskey, and bathtub gin, would
come to be known as the Jazz Age.
Key figures of the decade
This
USPS stamp celebrates the rise of jazz in the 1920s
King Oliver was "jazz king" of Chicago in the early 1920s, when Chicago was
the national hub of jazz. His band was the epitome of the New Orleans hot
ensemble jazz style. Unfortunately, his band's recordings were little heard
outside of Chicago and New Orleans, but the ensemble was a powerful influence on
younger musicians, both black and white.
Sidney Bechet was the first master jazz musician to take up what previously
often had been dismissed as a novelty instrument, the
saxophone.
Bechet helped propel jazz in more individualistic personality- and solo-driven
directions.
In this last point, Bechet was joined by a young protege of King Oliver,
Louis Armstrong, who was to become one of the major forces in the development of
jazz. Armstrong was an extraordinary improviser, capable of creating endless
variations on a single melody. Armstrong also popularized scat singing, an improvisational vocal technique in which nonsensical syllables
or words are sung or otherwise vocalized, often as part of a call-and-response
interaction with other musicians onstage. His unique, gravely voice and innate
sense of swing made scat an instant hit.
Arguably,
Bix Beiderbecke was both the first white and the first non-New Orleanian to
make major original contributions to the development of jazz with his legato
phrasing, bringing the influence of classical romanticism to jazz.
Paul Whiteman was the most commercially successful bandleader of the 1920s,
billing himself as "The King of Jazz." Sacrificing spontaneous improvisation for
the sake of elaborate written arrangements, Whiteman claimed to be "making a
lady out of jazz." Despite his hiring Bix and many of the other best white jazz
musicians of the era, later generations of jazz lovers have often judged
Whiteman's music to have little to do with real jazz. Nonetheless, his notion of
combining jazz with elaborate orchestrations has been returned to repeatedly by
composers and arrangers of later decades. It was Whiteman who commissioned
Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue," which was debuted by Whiteman's Orchestra.
Fletcher Henderson led the top African American band in New York City. At
first he wished to follow the lead of Paul Whiteman, but after hiring Louis
Armstrong to play in his band, Henderson realized the importance of the
improvising soloist in developing jazz bands. Henderson's arrangements would
play a significant role in the development of the Big Band era in the following
decade.
Young pianist and bandleader
Duke Ellington first came to national attention in the late 1920s with his
tight band making many recordings and radio broadcasts. Ellington's importance
would grow in the coming decades. Today he is widely regarded as one of the most
important composers in jazz history.
1930s to 1950s
While the solo became more important in jazz, popular bands became larger in
size. The Big
band became the popular provider of music for the era. Big bands varied in
their jazz content; some (such as Benny Goodman's Orchestra) were highly jazz
oriented, while others (such as Glenn Miller's) left little space for improvisation. Most were somewhere in
between, having some musicians adept at jazz solos playing with section men who
kept the rhythm and arrangements going. However even bands without jazz soloists
adopted a sound owing much to the jazz vocabularity, for example sax sections
playing what sounded like an improvised variation on a melody (and may have
originated as a transcription of one).
Key figures in developing the big jazz band were arrangers and bandleaders
Fletcher Henderson, Don Redman and the man sometimes deemed the most prolific
composer in U.S. history, Duke Ellington.
In the early 1920s, popular music was still a mixture of things—current dance
numbers, novelty songs, show tunes. "Businessman's bounce music," as one horn
player put it. But musicians with steady jobs, playing with the same companions,
were able to go far beyond that. The Ellington band at the Cotton Club and the
various Kansas City groups that became the Count Basie band date from this period.
Over time, social strictures regarding racial segregation began to relax in
entertainment. White bandleaders, who tended to mold the music more to orthodox
rhythms and harmony, began to recruit black musicians. In the mid-1930s, Benny
Goodman hired pianist Teddy Wilson, vibraharpist Lionel Hampton, and guitarist
Charlie Christian to join small groups. During this period, the popularity
of
swing (genre) and
big
band music was at its height, making stars of such men as Glenn Miller and Duke Ellington. Swing, the popular music of its time, covered a
broad spectrum from "sweet" to "hot" bands, with the jazz content varying across
the range.
The influence of Louis Armstrong also continued to grow. Musicians and
bandleaders like
Cab Calloway — and, later, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and Pop vocalists like Bing
Crosby embraced Armstrong's style of improvising on the melody, and U.S. pop
singers seldom since have rendered a tune "straight," in the pre-jazz style. In
Crosby's mould, artists famed for their vocals rather than instrumental skills
also began to emerge as great 'jazz singers' in the form of vocalists like Ella
Fitzgerald, Billie Holliday and later, Frank Sinatra and Sarah Vaughan, all of
whom jumped on the scat bandwagon that galvanised the genre till the 1950s.
A development of swing in the early
1940s known as
"jumping the blues" or
jump music
anticipated rhythm and blues and rock and roll in some respects. It involved the
use of small combos instead of
big bands
and a concentration on up-tempo music using the familiar blues chord
progressions. Drawing largely upon the evolution of boogie-woogie in the 1930s,
it used a doubled rhythm—that is, the rhythm section played "eight to the bar,"
eight beats per measure instead of four. Big Joe Turner, a Kansas City singer
who worked in the 1930s with Swing bands like Count Basie's, became a
boogie-woogie star in the 1940s and then in the 1950s was one
of the first innovators of
rock
and roll, notably with his song "Shake, Rattle and Roll". Another jazz
founder of rock and roll was saxophonist Louis Jordan.
Development of bebop
The next major stylistic turn came in the
1940s with
bebop, led by such distinctive stylists
as the saxophonist Charlie Parker (known as "Yardbird" or "Bird"), Bud Powell
and Dizzy Gillespie. This marked a major shift of jazz from
pop music
for dancing to a high-art, less-accessible, cerebral "musician's music."
Thelonious Monk, while too individual to be strictly a bebop musician, was
also associated with this movement. Bop musicians valued complex improvisations
based on
chord progressions rather than
melody.
Hard bop
moved away from
cool jazz,
incorporating influences from soul music, gospel music, and the blues. Hard bop
was at the peak of its popularity in the
1950s and 1960s, and was associated with such figures as Sonny Rollins, John
Coltrane, Miles Davis, Art Blakey and Charles Mingus. Later, bebop and hard bop
musicians, such as trumpeter Miles Davis, made more stylistic advances with
modal jazz,
where the harmonic structure of pieces was much more free than previously, and
was frequently only implied -- by skeletal piano chords and bass parts. The
instrumentalists then would improvise around a given mode of the scale.
Latin jazz
Main article:
Latin jazz
Latin jazz has two varieties: Afro-Cuban and Brazilian.
Afro-Cuban jazz was played in the U.S. directly after the bebop period,
while Brazilian jazz became more popular in the 1960s and 1970s.
Afro-Cuban jazz began as a movement after the death of Charlie Parker.
Notable bebop musicians such as
Dizzy Gillespie and Billy Taylor started Afro-Cuban bands at that time.
Gillespie's work was mostly with big bands of this genre. While the music was
influenced by such Cuban and Puerto Rican musicians as Tito Puente and, much
later, Arturo Sandoval, there were many Americans who were drawing upon Cuban
rhythms for their work.
Brazilian jazz is, in North America at least, nearly synonymous with bossa
nova, a Brazilian popular style which is derived from samba with
influences from jazz as well as other 20th-century classical and popular music. Bossa is generally slow, played around 80 beats per minute or so. The music uses
straight eighths, rather than swing eighths, and also uses difficult polyrhythms.
The best-known bossa nova compositions are considered to be jazz standards in
their own right.
The related term jazz-samba essentially describes an adaptation of bossa nova
compositions to the jazz idiom by American performers such as Stan Getz and
Charlie Byrd, and usually played at 120 beats per minute or faster. Samba
itself is actually not jazz but, being derived from older Afro-Brazilian music,
it shares some common characteristics.
Free jazz
Main article:
Free jazz
Free jazz, or avant-garde jazz, is a subgenre that, while rooted in
bebop, typically
uses less compositional material and allows performers more latitude in what
they choose to play. Free jazz's greatest departure from other styles is in the
use of harmony
and a regular, swinging
tempo: Both are
often implied, utilized loosely, or abandoned altogether. These approaches were
rather controversial when first advanced, but have generally found acceptance —
though sometimes grudgingly — and have been utilized in part by other jazz
performers.
There were earlier precedents, but free jazz crystalized in the late 1950s,
especially via Ornette Coleman and Cecil Taylor, and probably found its greatest
exposure in the late 1960s with John Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Albert Ayler, Sun
Ra, Pharoah Sanders, Sam Rivers, Leroy Jenkins, Don Pullen
and others.
While perhaps less popular than other styles, free jazz has exerted an
influence to the present. Peter Brötzmann, Ken Vandermark, William Parker, Derek
Bailey and Evan Parker are leading contemporary free jazz musicians, and
musicians such as Coleman, Taylor and Sanders continue to play in this style.
Keith Jarrett has been prominent in defending free jazz from criticism by
traditionalists in recent years.
Jazz and rock music: jazz fusion
Main article:
Jazz
fusion
Bitches Brew is often cited as the most influential record in the history
of jazz fusion.
With the growth of
rock
and roll in the 1960s, came the hybrid form jazz-rock fusion, again
involving Miles Davis, who recorded the fusion albums In a Silent Way and
Bitches Brew in 1968 and 1969 respectively. Jazz was by this time no longer
center stage in popular music, but was still breaking new ground and combining
and recombining in different forms. Notable artists of the 1960s and 1970s jazz
and fusion scene include: Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock and his Headhunters band,
John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Al Di Meola, Jean-Luc Ponty, Sun
Ra, Soft Machine, Narada Michael Walden (who would later enjoy huge success as a
music producer), Wayne Shorter, Jaco Pastorius, the Pat Metheny Group and
Weather Report. Some of these have continued to develop the genre into the
2000s.
Recent developments
The stylistic diversity of jazz has shown no sign of diminishing, absorbing
influences from such disparate sources as
world
music and
avant garde classical music, including African rhythm and traditional
structure,
serialism, and the extensive use of chromatic scale, by such musicians as
Ornette Coleman and John Zorn.
Beginning in the 1970s with such artists as Keith Jarrett, Paul Bley, Billy
Childs, the Pat Metheny Group, Jan Garbarek, Ralph Towner, and Eberhard Weber,
the ECM record label established a new chamber-music aesthetic, featuring mainly
acoustic instruments, and incorporating elements of
world
music and
folk music.
This is sometimes referred to as "European" or "Nordic" jazz, despite some of
the leading players being American.
However, the jazz community has shrunk dramatically and split, with a mainly
older audience retaining an interest in traditional and "straight-ahead" jazz
styles, a small core of practitioners and fans interested in highly experimental
modern jazz, and a constantly changing group of musicians fusing jazz idioms
with contemporary popular music genres. The latter have formed such styles as
acid jazz
which contains elements of 1970s
disco, acid swing
which combines 1940s style big-band sounds with faster, more aggressive
rock-influenced drums and electric guitar, and
nu jazz which
combines elements of jazz and modern forms of
electronic dance music.
Exponents of the "acid
jazz" style which was initially
UK-based included the Brand New Heavies, James Taylor Quartet, Young Disciples,
and Corduroy. In the United States, acid jazz groups included the Groove
Collective, Soulive, and Solsonics. In a more pop or
smooth
jazz context, jazz enjoyed a resurgence in the 1980s with such bands as
Pigbag and Curiosity Killed the Cat achieving chart hits in Britain. Sade Adu
became the definitive voice of smooth jazz.
There have been other developments in the 1980s and 1990s that were less
commercially oriented. Many of these artists, notably Wynton Marsalis, called
what they were doing jazz and in fact strove to define what the term actually
meant. They sought to create within what they felt was the tradition, creating
extensions of small and large forms initially pioneered by such artists as Louis
Armstrong and Duke Ellington. In the case of Marsalis these efforts met with critical
acclaim.
Others musicians in this time period - although clearly within the tradition
of the great spontaneous composers such as Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Fats
Navarro and many others – choose to distance themselves from the term jazz and
simply define what they were doing as music (this in fact was suggested by the
great composer Duke Ellington when the term jazz first began to be
popular). Alternatively they created their own names for what they were doing
(such as M-Base).
Many of these artists agree with the creative guitarist
Jean-Paul Bourelly who feels that "You shouldn't categorize according to
styles of music, you should categorize in terms of creative levels". These
musicians feel that
rhythm is the key for further progress in the music.
Bourelly, similar to
M-Base,
believes that the rhythmic innovations of
James Brown and other
Funk pioneers can
provide an effective rhythmic base for
spontaneous composition. However, the ideas of these musicians go far beyond
simply playing over a
funk groove,
extending the rhythmic ideas in a way analogous to what had been done with
harmony in
previous times. Some of the musicians involved in the approach called
M-Base even
view this as
Rhythmic Harmony. Others, like Wynton Marsalis, disagree with this point of view, preferring instead to
retain the rhythmic base of
swing for
creating their music. However, all of these artists participate in
spontaneous composition and only differ in creative focus and what could be
called groove emphasis.
With the rise in popularity of various forms of
electronic music during the late
1980s and 1990s, some jazz
artists have attempted a fusion of jazz with more of the experimental leanings
of
electronica (particularly
IDM and
Drum
and bass) with various degrees of success. This has been variously dubbed
"future jazz", "jazz-house" or "nu
jazz". The more experimental and improvisional end of the spectrum
includes Scandinavia-based artists such as pianist Bugge Wesseltoft, trumpeter
Nils Petter Molvær (who both began their careers on the ECM record label), and
the trio Wibutee, all of whom have gained their chops as instrumentalists in
their own right in more traditional jazz circles. The Cinematic Orchestra from
the UK or Julien Lourau from France have also gained praise in this area. Toward
the more pop or pure dance music end of the spectrum of nu jazz are such
proponents as St Germain and Jazzanova, who incorporate some live jazz playing with more metronomic
house
beats.
In the 2000s, "jazz" hit the pop charts and blended with contemporary Urban
music through the work of artists like Norah Jones, Jill Scott, Jamie Cullum,
Erykah Badu, Amy Winehouse and Diana Krall and the jazz advocacy of performers
who are also music educators (such as Jools Holland, Courtney Pine and Peter
Cincotti). Some of these new styles may be light on improvisation, a
key characteristic of jazz. However, their instrumentation and rhythms are
similar to other jazz music, and the label has stuck.
Improvisation
Reggie Workman, Pharaoh Sanders, and Idris Muhammad, c. 1978
Jazz is often difficult to define, but
improvisation is unquestionably a key element of the form. Improvisation has
been since early times an essential element in African and African-American
music and is closely related to the pervasiveness of call and response in West
African and African-American cultural expression. The exact form of
improvisation has changed over time. Early folk blues music often was based
around a call and response pattern, and improvisation would factor into the
lyrics, the melody, or both. Part of the Dixieland style involves musicians
taking turns playing the melody while the others make up counter lines to go
with it. By the Swing era, big bands played carefully arranged sheet music, but
the music often would call for one member of the band to stand up and play a
short, improvised solo. In bebop, however, the focus shifted from the cleverness
of arrangement to the cleverness of improvisation over the form; musicians gave
comparably little attention to the composed melody, or "head," which was played
at the beginning and the end of the performance.
As previously noted, later styles of jazz, such as modal jazz, abandoned the
strict notion of a chord progression, allowing the individual musicians to
improvise more freely within the context of a given scale or mode. The
best-known example of this is the classic
Miles Davis album Kind of Blue. When a pianist or guitarist improvises an
accompaniment while a soloist is playing, it is called comping
or vamping.
See also
References
- Ken Burns, Geoffrey C. Ward: Jazz - A History of America´s Music. Alfred
A. Knopf, NY USA. 2000. or: The Jazz Film Project, Inc.
- “What is this thing called Jazz? African American Musicians as Artists,
Critics and Activists.” University of California Press, Ltd. London England.
2002.
- “Jazz 101: A Complete Guide to Learning and Loving Jazz.” John F. Szwed
- “The History of Jazz.” Thomson-Gale Books.
- “Chicago Jazz: A Cultural History, 1904-1930.” Oxford University Press,
Inc.
External links
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