Jazz

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Jazz is a group of musical styles that originated in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The etymology and history of the term "jazz" is obscure and disputed, but not much less than the history and precise nature of the music itself.

Jazz arose in a number of U.S. cities at the end of the nineteenth century, but its first great centre was without doubt New Orleans. It grew from the combination of a variety of black musical traditions, including ragtime, blues, spirituals, and marching band music. It was distinguished by (especially group) improvisation, and took over various elements of the earlier traditions, especially syncopation.

By the 1920s, the leading jazz musicians had begun to move out from New Orleans to cities such as Chicago, and New York, looking for better lives. This inevitably led to the evolution of regional styles, given the distances involved and the scarcity of recordings and mass-media outlets. The most significant development, however, soon became a national phenomenon: swing.

History of jazz

Antecedents and influences

One of the most important influences on or roots of jazz was ragtime. This was a genre of black American popular music that appeared in the late nineteenth century, growing out of the music of black bands in the Northern urban U.S.[1] Despite its origins in black culture, the first ragtime works to be published were by white men: the first was Ben Harney's song "You've Been a Good Old Wagon" (published 1895), and the first intrumental rag was William Krell's "Mississippi Rag" (published in January 1897). The first piece by a black musician to be published was Tom Turpin's "Harlem Rag" in late 1897.[2] By the early twentieth century ragtime had become an extremely popular musical form among both black and white audiences, the latter largely through the availability of piano sheet music. Its origins in the music of marching bands meant that rags were generally written in 2/4 or 4/4 time with a predominant left-hand pattern of bass notes on odd-numbered beats and chords on even-numbered beats accompanying a syncopated melody in the right hand. Other time signatures were also popular, however, including ragtime waltzes in 3/4 time.

Another major influence on jazz was the popular black musical form known as the blues; indeed, the blues is part of the history of almost all Western (and much non-Western) popular music developed since the beginning of the twentieth century. The blues grew out of various African musical traditions taken over to North America by slaves, and for the first part of its existence existed as a purely oral tradition. Although one of the major influences on the genesis and development of jazz, it didn't itself achieve wider (and especially commercial) success until after jazz had established itself. W.C. Handy, who is known as the "Father of the Blues", was the first to publish a song with the word "blues" in the title ("Memphis Blues", 1912); many of his other compositions, such as "Beale Street Blues", "Yellow Dog Blues", and "St. Louis Blues", also became jazz standards.

Early jazz

But the first great soloist of jazz (to have survived on record, unlike fellow trumpeter Buddy Bolden) was Louis Armstrong. Despite his smiling 'Satchmo' persona and the films with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, the youthful Armstrong's Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings are landmarks of early jazz.

The 1930s

Duke Ellington (piano), a major composer and bandleader

Count Basie (piano) also

Lester Young, tenor saxophone-player, whose friend Billie Holliday is one of the great singers and tragic heroines (heroin) of jazz

Ella Fitzgerald, another great singer, not quite so tragic

Benny Goodman, king of swing, who had a classical background, and made celebrated recordings of Mozart's Concerto and Quintet.

The 1940s

Until the forties jazz was the mainstream pop music of America and the English speaking world: F. Scott Fitzgerald was the novelist of the Jazz Age, and he began writing in the twenties. Typical of this was the dance band music of Glenn Miller, and there are exist films of Ellington's band (among others) playing with members of the public dancing. But the middle of the decade saw the emergence of be-bop, which was a faster, more cerebral musical language, with the beat subdivided. Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis were among the pioneers of modern jazz, as it became known, though the short-lived guitarist Charlie Christian had had similar ideas some years before.

The 1950s

Erroll Garner, individual pianist with an unclassifiable style, unlike Bill Evans, whose sensitive piano style (another heroin addict) came to typify the jazz piano trio, alongside more robust performers such as Ray Bryant and two technical wizards, the obscure Phineas Newborn, Jr. and very famous Canadian Oscar Peterson.

John Coltrane was one of many notable jazz musicians who came to prominence during the 1950s. He featured in groups with eccentric composer-pianist Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis.

The 1960s

Charles Mingus, bassist, pianist, composer and leader of medium-sized groups, Ellington meets the avant-garde

The Modern Jazz Quartet, chamber music with a swing, featuring composers John Lewis (piano) and Milt Jackson (vibraphone)

Ornette Coleman: free jazz, free of key

Miles Davis married jazz with rock

The 1970s

The 1980s

The 1990s to the present

Notes

  1. van der Merwe 1989, p.63
  2. Jerome J. Wolbert "The Ragtime Story"

Bibliography

  • Peter van der Merwe Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. ISBN 0-19-316121-4

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