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Jazz: The American Music

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Title: Jazz: The American Music


1
Jazz The American Music
  • "Jazz is a good barometer of freedom. In its
    beginnings, the United Statesspawned certain
    ideals of freedom and independence through
    which,eventually, jazz was evolved, and the
    music is so free that many people sayit is the
    only unhampered, unhindered expression of
    complete freedomyet produced in this country."
  • Duke Ellington

What a Wonderful World Louis Armstrong https//w
ww.youtube.com/watch?vE2VCwBzGdPM Blues
https//www.youtube.com/watch?v0zYzzmlK_9I
2
Historical and Cultural Perspectives
  • Definitions
  • Origins of the word jazz
  • African-American Roots

3
Definitions
  • Confluence of African and European Music
    Traditions
  • Jazz is a musical art form which originated at
    the beginning of the 20th century in African
    American communities in the Southern United
    States from a mingling of African and European
    music traditions. The styles West African
    influence is evident in its use of blue notes,
    improvisation, polyrhythms, syncopation and the
    swung note. (Wikipedia)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vwE2CtJ3hgvU
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vLVEoUkf-gN4
  • Jazz is a "form of art music which originated in
    the United States through the confrontation of
    blacks with European music jazz differs from
    European music in that jazz has a special
    relationship to time, defined as 'swing', a
    spontaneity and vitality of musical production in
    which improvisation plays a role and sonority
    and manner of phrasing which mirror the
    individuality of the performing jazz musician.
    Thus, improvisation is clearly one of the key
    elements in jazz. Jazz Critic Joachim Berendt
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?voVvF7S2hW5U

4
Word Origins
  • The word jazz began as a West Coast slang term of
    uncertain derivation. The earliest known
    references to jazz are in the sports pages of
    various West Coast newspapers covering the
    Pacific Coast League, a baseball minor league
  • Ben Henderson, Portland Beavers, 1912. BEN'S
    JAZZ CURVE. "I got a new curve this year," softly
    murmured Henderson yesterday, "and I'm goin' to
    pitch one or two of them tomorrow. I call it the
    Jazz ball because it wobbles and you simply can't
    do anything with it."

5
  • The first musical reference to jazz was in
    Chicago about 1915 as found in the Chicago Daily
    Tribune on July 11, 1915
  • Blues Is Jazz and Jazz Is Blues . . . The Worm
    had turned--turned to fox trotting. And the
    "blues" had done it. The "jazz" had put pep into
    the legs that had scrambled too long for the
    515. . . . At the next place a young woman was
    keeping "Der Wacht Am Rhein" and "Tipperary Mary"
    apart when the interrogator entered. "What are
    the blues?" he asked gently. "Jazz!" The young
    woman's voice rose high to drown the piano. . . .
    The blues are never written into music, but are
    interpolated by the piano player or other
    players. They aren't new. They are just reborn
    into popularity. They started in the south half a
    century ago and are the interpolations of darkies
    originally. The trade name for them is "jazz."

6
  • The first known use in New Orleans, discovered by
    lexicographer Benjamin Zimmer in 2009, appeared
    in the New Orleans Times-Picayune on Nov. 14,
    1916
  • Theatrical journals have taken cognizance of the
    "jas bands" and at first these organizations of
    syncopation were credited with having originated
    in Chicago, but any one ever having frequented
    the "tango belt" of New Orleans knows that the
    real home of the "jas bands" is right here.
    However, it remains for the artisans of the stage
    to give formal recognition to the "jas bands" of
    New Orleans.

7
African/American Roots
  • By 1808 the Atlantic slave trade had brought
    almost half a million Africans to the United
    States. The slaves largely came from West Africa
    and brought strong tribal musical traditions with
    them.
  • Lavish festivals featuring African dances to
    drums were organized on Sundays at Place Congo,
    or Congo Square, in New Orleans until 1843.
  • African music was largely functional, for work or
    ritual, and included work songs and field
    hollers. The African tradition made use of a
    single-line melody and call-and-response pattern,
    but without the European concept of harmony.
    Rhythms reflected African speech patterns, and
    the African use of pentatonic scales led to blue
    notes in blues and jazz.

Modern Day Congo Square
8
(No Transcript)
9
  • Congo Square Dancers

African Drumming Ensemble http//www.youtube.com/
watch?v-xQtpLU-NvI
10
  • In the early 19th century an increasing number of
    black musicians learned to play European
    instruments, particularly the violin, which they
    used to parody European dance music in their own
    cakewalk dances.
  • In turn, European-American minstrel show
    performers in blackface popularized such music
    internationally, combining syncopation with
    European harmonic accompaniment.
  • Another influence came from black slaves who had
    learned the harmonic style of hymns and
    incorporated it into their own music as
    spirituals.

11
Compendium of Jazz Styles and Performers
12
1890s to 1910s
  • The abolition of slavery in 1865 led to new
    opportunities for the education of freed
    African-Americans, though strict segregation
    limited employment opportunities for most blacks.
    However, blacks were able to find work as
    entertainmers in dances, minstrel shows, and in
    vaudeville. Black pianists also played in bars,
    clubs, and brothels, as ragtime developed.
  • Ragtime
  • Blues
  • New Orleans Dixieland

13
Ragtime
  • Origins and Style
  • Ragtime (alternately spelled Ragged-time) is an
    originally American musical genre which enjoyed
    its peak popularity between 1897 and 1918.
  • Its main characteristic trait is its syncopated,
    or "ragged", rhythm.
  • It began as dance music in the red-light
    districts of American cities such as St. Louis
    and New Orleans years before being published as
    popular sheet music for piano.
  • Ragtime fell out of favor as Jazz claimed the
    public's imagination after 1917, but there have
    been numerous revivals since as the music has
    been re-discovered.
  • Proponents Joseph Lamb, James Scott, Scott
    Joplin

14
Scott Joplin (1868 1917)Maple Leaf Rag
  • Joplin was an African-American and pianist, born
    near Texarkana, Texas into the first post-slavery
    generation.
  • He achieved fame for his unique ragtime
    compositions, and was dubbed the "King of
    Ragtime."
  • During his brief career, he wrote forty-four
    original ragtime pieces, one ragtime ballet, and
    two operas.
  • Joplin died at age 48 and his music was mostly
    forgotten by all but a small, dedicated community
    of ragtime aficionados until the major ragtime
    revival in the early 1970s.
  • In 1976 Joplin was posthumously awarded the
    Pulitzer Prize.

15
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vpMAtL7n_-rc

16
Aeolian Player Piano
  • Aeolian Company, founded in 1878, developed the
    player piano, a self-playing piano, containing a
    pneumatic or electro-mechanical mechanism that
    plays on the piano action pre-programmed music
    via perforated paper rolls.
  • Ragtime became a favorite selection for the
    player piano

17
Aeolian Player Piano
Player Roll
18
Blues
  • Origins and Style
  • Blues is the name given to both a musical form
    and a music genre created within the
    African-American communities in the Deep South of
    the United States at the end of the 19th century
    from spirituals, work songs, field hollers,
    shouts and chants, and rhymed simple narrative
    ballads.
  • The first appearance of the blues is not well
    defined and is often dated after the Emancipation
    Act in 1863, between 1870 and 1900.
  • This period corresponds to the transition from
    slavery to sharecropping, small-scale
    agricultural production and the expansion of
    railroads in the southern United States.
  • Several scholars characterize the early 1900s
    development of blues music as a move from group
    performances to a more individualized style.
  • The origins of the blues are also closely related
    to the religious music of the Afro-American
    community, the spirituals.
  • When the blues appeared, before blues gained its
    formal definition in terms of chord progressions,
    the blues was defined as the secular counter part
    of the spirituals.

19
  • Form
  • The blues form is characterized by
  • the use of specific chord progressions the
    twelve-bar chord progressions being the most
    frequently encountered
  • blue notes sung or played for expressive purposes
    and distinguished by the use of the flattened
    third, fifth and seventh of the associated major
    scale.

Chords played over a twelve-bar scheme Chords for a blues in C Chords for a blues in C
 
I I or IV I I7
IV IV I I7
V V or IV I I or V
C C or F C C7
F F C C7
G G or F C C or G
20
  • Lyrics
  • The traditional blues verse was probably a single
    line, repeated four times.
  • It was only later that the current, most common
    structure of a line, repeated once and then
    followed by a single line conclusion, became
    standard, the so-called AAB pattern.
  • Proponents
  • Jelly Roll Morton, Robert Johnson, Blind Boy
    Fuller, Gertrude Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith

21
Bessie Smith(1892 1937)
  • The Empress of the Blues
  • Major influence on subsequent jazz vocalists
  • Baby Wont You Please Come Home

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzCrtErmipXE
22
New Orleans Dixieland
  • Origins and Style
  • Dixieland is an early style of jazz that
    developed in New Orleans and it is the earliest
    recorded style of jazz music.
  • The style combined earlier brass band marches,
    French Quadrilles, ragtime and blues with
    collective, polyphonic improvisation.
  • The "standard" band consists of a "front line" of
    trumpet, trombone, and clarinet, with a rhythm
    section" of at least two of the following
    instruments guitar or banjo, string bass or
    tuba, piano and drums.
  • The definitive Dixieland sound is created when
    one instrument (usually the trumpet) plays the
    melody or a recognizable paraphrase or variation
    on it, and the other instruments of the "front
    line" improvise around that melody. This creates
    a more polyphonic sound.
  • The swing era of the 1930s led to the end of many
    Dixieland Jazz musicians' careers.
  • Proponents King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton,
    Original Dixieland Jass Band, Louis Armstrong

23
Louis Daniel Armstrong(1901 1971)
  • Nicknamed Satchmo or Pops
  • American jazz trumpeter and singer (scat)
  • Foundational influence on jazz was to shift
    musics focus from collective improvisation to
    solo performers

24
All-Star Band
Dream a Little Dream http//www.youtube.com/watc
h?vOFl97eZbruc
Hello Dolly http//www.youtube.com/watch?vkmfeK
UNDDYs
When the Saints Go Marching In http//www.youtub
e.com/watch?vwyLjbMBpGDA
25
1920s and 1930s
  • Swing
  • European Jazz

26
Swing
  • Origins
  • Prohibition in the United States (from 1920 to
    1933) banned the sale of alcoholic drinks,
    resulting in illicit speakeasies becoming lively
    venues of the Jazz Age.
  • Jazz started to get a reputation as being immoral
    and many members of the older generations saw it
    as threatening the old values in culture and
    promoting the new decadent values of the Roaring
    20s.
  • While New Orleans remained an important jazz
    center, Chicago became the main center during
    this timeframe.

27
  • Precursors and Influences of Big Band Swing
  • Bix Beiderbecke formed The Wolverines in 1924.
  • Therell Come a Time
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v7pj1ZEKz4Cw

(1903-1991)
The Wolverines
28
  • Also in 1924, Louis Armstrong joined the Fletcher
    Henderson Dance Band and then formed his
    virtuosic Hot Five Band.

(1901-1971)
Fletcher Henderson Dance Band Variety
Stomp http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhcYBwRjMqjg
listPL4BD19972C5BB458E
Hot Five Band
29
  • Jelly Roll Morton recorded with the New Orleans
    Rhythm Kings in an early mixed-race
    collaboration, then in 1926 formed his Red Hot
    Peppers.

(1890 1941)
30
  • There was a larger market for jazzy dance music
    played by white orchestras, such as Paul
    Whitemans orchestra. In 1924 Whiteman
    commissioned Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, which
    was premièred by Whiteman's Orchestra.

(1890 1967)
Paul Whiteman Orchestra
George Gershwin (1898 1937) Rhapsody in
Blue https//www.youtube.com/watch?v1U40xBSz6Dc
31
  • Other influential large ensembles included Duke
    Ellingtons band (which opened an influential
    residency at the Cotton Club in 1927) in New
    York, and Earl Hines Band in Chicago. All these
    performers and ensembles significantly influenced
    Big Band Swing.

Earl Hines (1903 1983)
Duke Ellington (1899 1974)
Grand Terrace Café Chicago
Duke Ellington Band
Earl Hines Band
Cotton Club New York City
32
  • Style
  • The 1930s belonged to popular swing big bands, in
    which some virtuoso soloists became as famous as
    the band leaders.
  • Swing was also dance music. It was broadcast on
    the radio 'live' nightly across America for many
    years especially by Hines and his Grand Terrace
    Cafe Orchestra broadcasting coast-to-coast from
    Chicago. Although it was a collective sound,
    swing also offered individual musicians a chance
    to 'solo' and improvise melodic, thematic solos
    which could at times be very complex.
  • Over time, social strictures regarding racial
    segregation began to relax in America white
    bandleaders began to recruit black musicians and
    black bandleaders white ones.
  • Proponents
  • Count Basie, Cab Calloway, Jimmy Dorsey and
    Tommy Dorsey, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman,
    Fletcher Henderson, Earl Hines, Glenn Miller,
    Artie Shaw and Louis Armstrong

33
Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey(1905 1956)
(1904 1957)
Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra
Tommy Dorsey Opus One http//www.youtube.com/wat
ch?v_7QjMZ4ckZc
34
Harry James(1916 1983)
Harry James Orchestra and Frank Sinatra Stardust
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vR_bI8ANUSLI
35
Artie Shaw(1910 2004)
Artie Shaw Orchestra
Moonglow
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vAKQ7v3S9atM
36
Glenn Miller(1904 1944)
Glen Miller Orchestra
Sing, Sing, Sing http//www.youtube.com/watch?v
r2S1I_ien6A
In the Mood http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_CI-0
E_jses
37
Beginnings of European Jazz
  • Outside of the United States the beginnings of a
    distinct European style of jazz emerged in France
    with the Quintette du Hot Club de France which
    began in 1934.

38
  • Belgian guitar virtuoso Django Reinhardt (1910
    1953) popularized gypsy jazz, a mix of 1930s
    American swing, French dance hall musette" and
    Eastern European folk with a languid, seductive
    feel. The main instruments are steel stringed
    guitar, violin, and double bass. Solos pass from
    one player to another as the guitar and bass play
    the role of the rhythm section.

Jattendrai Swing, 1959 http//www.youtube.com/wa
tch?vm6bZskQlY4w
Dark Eyes http//www.youtube.com/watch?v3WHQ0tw
HQgo
39
1940s and 1950s
  • Dixieland Revival
  • Bebop
  • Cool Jazz
  • Hard Bop
  • Modal Jazz
  • Free Jazz

40
Dixieland Revival
  • In the late 1930s there was a revival of
    Dixieland" music, harkening back to the original
    contrapuntal New Orleans style. This was driven
    in large part by record company reissues of early
    jazz classics by the Oliver, Morton, and
    Armstrong bands of the 1930s.
  • There were two populations of musicians involved
    in the revival. One group consisted of players
    who had begun their careers playing in the
    traditional style, and were either returning to
    it, or continuing what they had been playing all
    along, such as Bob Crosbys Bobcats, Max
    Kaminsky, Eddie Condon, and Wild Bill Davison.
    Most of these groups were originally
    Midwesterners, although there were a small number
    of New Orleans musicians involved.
  • The second population of revivalists consisted of
    young musicians such as the Lu Watters Band. By
    the late 1940s, Louis Armstrongs All-Stars Band
    became a leading ensemble. Through the 1950s and
    1960s, Dixieland was one of the most commercially
    popular jazz styles in the US, Europe, and Japan,
    although critics paid little attention to it.

41
Bob Crosby(1913 1993)
Jazz Me Blues http//www.youtube.com/watch?voQW
EMXyEAS8
The Bob Cats
42
Lu Watters(1911 1989)
Lu Watters Band
Love Me or Leave Me http//www.youtube.com/watch
?ved9p5XLGZn0
43
Bebop
  • Origins and Style
  • In the early 1940s bebop performers helped to
    shift jazz from danceable popular music towards a
    more challenging "musician's music." Differing
    greatly from swing, early bebop divorced itself
    from dance music, establishing itself more as an
    art form but lessening its potential popular and
    commercial value.
  • Since bebop was meant to be listened to, not
    danced to, it used faster tempos. Beboppers
    introduced new forms of chromaticism and
    dissonance into jazz the dissonant tritone (or
    "flatted fifth") interval became the "most
    important interval of bebop" and players engaged
    in a more abstracted form of chord-based
    improvisation which used "passing" chords,
    substitute chords, and altered chords.
  • The style of drumming shifted as well to a more
    elusive and explosive style, in which the ride
    cymbal was used to keep time, while the snare and
    bass drum were used for unpredictable, explosive
    accents.
  • Proponents Thelonious Monk, trumpeters Dizzy
    Gillespie and Clifford Brown, tenor sax player
    Leston Young, and drummer Max Roach

44
Charlie Parker (1920 1955)Dizzie Gillespie
(1917 1993)
  • Hot House
  • Charlie Parker
  • Dizzie Gillespie
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_3rZ5mpGqlc

Charlie Parker
Dizzie Gillespie
45
Thelonious Monk(1917 1982)
  • Blue Monk
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vcWOz9mILqbA

46
Bud Powell(1924 1966)
  • A Night in Tunisia
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vpthRYbt3JCE

47
Max Roach(1924 2007)
  • Mr. Hi Hat
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vH8syiOwwVyY

48
Cool Jazz
  • Origins and Style
  • By the end of the 1940s, the nervous energy and
    tension of bebop was replaced with a tendency
    towards calm and smoothness, with the sounds of
    cool jazz, which favored long, linear melodic
    lines. It emerged in New York City, as a result
    of the mixture of the styles of predominantly
    white jazz musicians and black bebop musicians,
    and it dominated jazz in the first half of the
    1950s.
  • Proponents
  • Chet Baker, Dave Brubeck, Bill Evans, Gil Evans,
    Stan Getz, the Modern Jazz Quartet. An important
    recording was trumpeter Miles Davis Birth of
    Cool (tracks originally recorded in 1949 and 1950
    and collected as an LP in 1957).

49
Miles Davis(1926 1991)
  • Jeru from Birth of the Cool
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vGXARxrBozOs
  • Cool Jazz
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1P5xZyK4cFw

50
Dave Brubeck(1920 - 2009)
  • Take Five
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vPQLMFNC2Awo

51
Hard Bop
  • Origins and Style
  • Hard bop is an extension of bebop (or "bop")
    music that incorporates influences from rhythm
    and blues, gospel music, and blues, especially in
    the saxophone and piano playing.
  • Hard bop was developed in the mid-1950s, partly
    in response to the vogue for cool jazz in the
    early 1950s.
  • The hard bop style coalesced in 1953 and 1954,
    paralleling the rise of rhythm and blues.
  • Proponents
  • Miles Davis' performance of "Walkin'" the title
    track of his album of announced the style to the
    jazz world.
  • The quintet Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers,
    fronted by Blakey and featuring pianist Horace
    Silver and trumpeter Clifford Brown, were also
    leaders in the hard bop movement.

52
Miles Davis(1926 1991)
Walkin http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJhVnWRqQ8
sA
53
Art Blakey(1919 1990)
  • Buhainas Delight
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vAh68wqyYcRs

The Jazz Messengers
54
Modal Jazz
  • Origins and Style
  • Modal jazz is a development beginning in the
    later 1950s which takes the mode, or musical
    scale, as the basis of musical structure and
    improvisation.
  • Previously, the goal of the soloist was to play a
    solo that fit into a given chord progression.
    However, with modal jazz, the soloist creates a
    melody using one or a small number of modes. The
    emphasis in this approach shifts from harmony to
    melody.
  • Proponents
  • Miles Davis recorded the best selling jazz album
    of all time in the modal framework Kind of Blue
  • Other innovators in this style include John
    Coltrane (1926 1967) and Herbie Hancock (b.
    1940).

55
Miles Davis Kind of Blue
All Blues http//www.youtube.com/watch?vrFuHKvE
uFbU
56
Free Jazz
  • Origins and Style
  • Free jazz broke through into an open space of
    "free tonality" in which meter, beat, and formal
    symmetry all disappeared, and a range of world
    music from India, Africa, and Arabia were melded
    into an intense, even religiously ecstatic style
    of playing.
  • While rooted in bebop, free jazz tunes gave
    players much more latitude the loose harmony and
    tempo was deemed controversial when this approach
    was first developed.
  • Proponents
  • Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor. John Coltrane,
    Archie Shepp,
  • Sun Ra, Albert Ayler and Pharoah Sanders

57
John Coltrane(1926 1967)
  • A Love Supreme
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vWbbLP4vSe9k

58
Farrell Pharoah Sanders(B. 1940)
  • Thembi
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlyirrcT5a6QlistPL
    EC920898469FB539

59
Sun Ra(1914 1993)
  • Sun Ra and His Arkestra
  • Face the Music
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1qjiQwD7VCI

60
1960s and 1970s
  • Latin Jazz
  • Post Bop
  • Soul Jazz
  • Fusion

61
Latin Jazz
  • Origins and Style
  • Latin jazz combines rhythms from African and
    Latin American countries, often played on
    instruments such as conga, timbale, guiro, and
    claves, with jazz and classical harmonies played
    on typical jazz instruments (piano, double bass,
    etc.)
  • There are two main varieties Afro-Cuban jazz and
    Brazilian jazz

62
Afro-Cuban Latin Jazz
  • Afro-Cuban jazz was played in the US right after
    the bebop period
  • It began as a movement in the mid-1950s as bebop
    musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie and Billy
    Taylor started Afro-Cuban bands influenced by
    such Cuban and Puerto Rican musicians as
  • Proponents Xavier Cugat, Tito Puente and Arturo
    Sandoval

63
Xavier Cugat(1900 1990)
  • Tico Taco
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vG8LEnGmnF3o

64
Tito Puente(1923 2000)
  • Oye Como Va
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzZQh4IL7unM

65
Brazilian Jazz
  • Brazilian jazz became more popular in the 1960s
  • Brazilian jazz such as bossa nova is derived from
    samba, with influences from jazz and other 20th
    century classical and popular music styles
  • Bossa is generally moderately paced, with
    melodies sung in Portuguese or English. This
    style was pioneered by Brazilians Joao Gilberto
    and Antonio Carlos Jobim.
  • The related term jazz-samba describes an
    adaptation of bossa nova compositions to the jazz
    idiom by American performers such as Stan Getz
    and Charlie Byrd.

66
Joao Gilberto(b. 1931)
  • Desafinado
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vZuNEuzMzryA

67
Stan Getz(1927 1991)
  • Bossa Nova Medley
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlo1SiVwVqiclistPL
    7302F398326C31BB

68
Post Bop
  • Origins and Style
  • Post-bop is a term for a form of small-combo jazz
    music that evolved in the early-to-mid sixties
    from earlier bop styles.
  • Generally, the term post-bop is taken to mean
    jazz from the mid-sixties onward that assimilates
    influence from hard bop, modal jazz, avant-garde
    jazz, and free jazz, without necessarily being
    immediately identifiable as any of the above.
  • By the early seventies, most of the major
    post-bop artists had moved on to jazz fusion of
    one form or another.
  • Proponents
  • John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Charles
    Mingus, Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock

69
Wayne Shorter(b. 1933)
  • Fee Fi Fo Fum
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhEzAJJfTtBE

70
Herbie Hancock(b. 1940)
  • Dolphin Dance from Maiden Voyage
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?viB2Z2DY17yQ

71
Soul Jazz
  • Origins and Style
  • Soul jazz was a development of hard bop which
    incorporated strong influences from blues, gospel
    and rhythm and blues in music for small groups,
    often the organ trio which featured the Hammond
    organ. Tenor saxophone and guitar were also
    important in soul jazz
  • Soul jazz was developed in the late 1950s and was
    perhaps most popular in the mid-to-late 1960s,
  • Although the term "soul jazz" contains the word
    "soul," soul jazz is only a distant cousin to
    soul music, with its origins in gospel and RB
    rather than jazz.
  • Unlike hard bop, soul jazz generally emphasized
    repetitive grooves, melodies, and melodic hooks.
    The kinds of rhythms used tend to vary as well.
  • Proponents Lee Morgan, Herbie Hancock, Horace
    Silver

72
Lee Morgan(1938 1972)
  • The Sidewinder
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5a4n6yZIXxI

73
Herbie Hancock(b. 1940)
  • Cantaloupe Island
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vcqwmDNPegnM

74
Fusion
  • Origins and Style
  • Fusion or, more specifically, jazz fusion or jazz
    rock, was developed in the late 1960s from a
    mixture of elements of jazz such as its focus on
    improvisation with the rhythms and grooves of
    funk and RB and the beats and heavily amplified
    electric instruments and electronic effects of
    rock.
  • While the term "jazz rock" is often used as a
    synonym for "jazz fusion", it also refers to the
    music performed by late 1960s and 1970s-era rock
    bands when they added jazz elements to their
    music such as free-form improvisation.
  • After a decade of development during the 1970s,
    fusion split into different branches in the
    1980s. While some 1980s performers continued the
    improvisatory and experimental approaches of the
    1970s, others moved towards a lighter, more
    pop-infused easy-listening style called smooth
    jazz which often included vocals.
  • Fusion music is typically instrumental, often
    with complex time signatures, meters, rhythmic
    patterns, and extended track lengths, featuring
    lengthy improvisations.
  • Many prominent fusion musicians are recognized as
    having a high level of virtuosity, combined with
    complex compositions and musical improvisation in
    complex or mixed meters.
  • Proponents Gary Burton, Larry Coryell, Miles
    Davis

75
Miles Davis(1926 1991)
  • Black Comedy from Miles in the Sky
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1aXx_CkSzfo

76
1980s to 2010
  • In the 1980s, the jazz community shrank
    dramatically and split. A mainly older audience
    retained an interest in traditional and
    straight-ahead jazz styles.
  • Pop Fusion
  • Hip-Hop
  • Straight Ahead
  • Experimental

77
Pop Fusion
  • Origins, Style and Proponents
  • In the early 1980s, a lighter commercial form of
    jazz fusion called pop fusion or smooth jazz"
    became successful.
  • A smooth jazz track is downtempo, layering a
    lead, melody-playing instrument over a backdrop
    that typically consists of programmed rhythms and
    various pads and/or samples radio airplay.
  • Proponents include Grover Washington, Jr., Kenny
    G, Najee and Michael Lington.

78
Kenny G. Kenneth Gorelick(b. 1956)
  • Sentimental
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vro_dQ6cb09E
  • Baby G
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtNAeQQdR7ls

79
Hip Hop
  • Origins and Style
  • Hip hop originated in the 1970s in New York City
    (Bronx)
  • Hip hop's "golden age" is a name given to a
    period usually from the late 1980s to early 90s -
    said to be characterized by its diversity,
    quality, innovation and influence. There were
    strong themes of Afrocentricity and political
    militancy, while the music was experimental and
    the sampling was eclectic. There was often a
    strong jazz influence
  • Hip hop music may be based around either live or
    produced music, with a clearly defined drum beat
    (almost always in 4/4 time signature), presented
    either with or without vocal accompaniment.
  • Hip hop was almost entirely unknown outside of
    the United States prior to the early 1980s.
    During that decade, it began its spread to every
    inhabited continent and became a part of the
    music scene in dozens of countries.
  • Proponents Public Enemy, KRS-One, Eric B and
    Rakim, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Jungle
    Brothers

80
Public Enemy
  • Dont Believe the Hype from It Takes a Nation
    of Millions to Hold Us Back
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vgWna-0J27Mwfeature
    PlayListpBBE920EB875C4A1Bplaynext1playnext_f
    romPLindex19

81
KRS-One Lawrence Krishna Parker(b. 1965)
  • MCs Act Like They Dont Know
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vt2tAYWZLlMQ

82
Straight Ahead
  • In the 2000s, straight ahead jazz continues to
    appeal to a core group of listeners.
  • Well-established jazz musicians, such as Dave
    Brubeck, Wynton Marsalis, Wayne Shorter and
    Jessican Williams continue to perform and record.
  • In the 1990s and 2000s, a number of young
    musicians emerged, including US pianists Brad
    Mehldau, Jason Moran, and Vijay Iyer, guitarist
    Kurt Rosenwinkel, vibrophonist Stefon Harris,
    trumpeters Roy Hargrove and Terence Blanchard,
    and saxophonists Chris Potter and Joshua Redman.

83
Joshua Redman(b. 1969)
  • Live in Lausanne 2008
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v9xQZRDpDJhE

84
Experimental
  • The more experimental end of the spectrum has
    included US trumpeters Dave Douglas and Rob
    Mazurek, saxophonist Ken Vandemark, Norwegian
    pianist Bugge Wesseltoft, the Swedish group
    E.S.T, and US bassist Christian McBride.

85
Christian McBride(b. 1972)
  • Bye-Bye Blackbird
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vUHu7ow9Kepw

86
Dance or Pop Music
  • Toward the more dance or pop music end of the
    spectrum are St. Germain Ludovic Navarre , who
    incorporates some live jazz playing with house
    beats, and
  • Jamie Cullum, who plays a particular mix of jazz
    standards with his own more pop-oriented
    compositions.

87
St. GermainLudovic Navarre
  • Pseudodementia from Boulevard
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vp7NTuwX6v6cfeature
    PlayListp5585FE6930591AA2playnext1playnext_f
    romPLindex4

88
Jamie Cullum(b. 1979)
  • What a Difference a Day Made
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vF1r6GcPqFSo

89
Postlude
  • In 1987, the US House of Representatives and
    Senate passed a bill proposed by Democratic
    Representative John Conyers, Jr. to define jazz
    as a unique form of American music stating, among
    other things, "...that jazz is hereby designated
    as a rare and valuable national American treasure
    to which we should devote our attention, support
    and resources to make certain it is preserved,
    understood and promulgated."

90
Prelude The Advent of Rock
Bill Haley and the Comets Rock Around the
Clock http//www.youtube.com/watch?vF5fsqYctXgM
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