Transcript Title

JAZZ. THE AMERICAN ARTFORM
THE ORIGINS OF JAZZ
‘Whose music is it anyway?’ and other
stupid questions
• Approaches to jazz history:
–Tracing cultural influences
• African influences
• European influences
• West Indies influences
–Tracing social trends which influenced jazz history
–Tracing demographic trends which influenced jazz
history
• Jazz – in its early history often referred to as ‘race
music’ IS NOT ‘race music’, which is not to say race did
not play a part in its creation and evolution
• The American artform
New Orleans
•Most ethnically diverse and racially integrated American
city of the 19th century
•Part of Lousiana purchase
•French and Spanish influences
•Descendants of French and Spanish colonists and African
slaves – Creoles of Color – the largest non-slave Black
population in the South
•Significant presence of Carribean culture
African influences in jazz
• Slave songs and dances
–Original African rhythms / Syncopation
–Congo Square, New Orleans
• Plantation worksongs
• Baptist Church’s Gospel spirituals
–Call and response
–Ring shouts
• Blues
–Simple chord structure – three chords
–Stress on individual performer’s skill and aptitude –
technique and the feeling
–The story (uplifting rather than depressing)
First confusions: Minstrelsy
• Minstrel shows
– White performers with ‘blackface’
to pass for Black performers
– At times Black performers blacked
to pass for white performers blacked
to pass for Black performers
– A wide repertoir of hugely popular
songs (including ‘Jim Crow’)
– Original American popular culture
– Strengthening racist stereotypes
European influences
•Military bands popular in New Orleans after the Civil War
•Dixieland
•European instrumentation
•European folk music
•Further confusions:
•Creoles of color – classically trained musicians, playing
‘European music’ for mostly white audiences
»This changes after Civil Rights Cases of 1880’s and after Jim
Crow laws are introduced in Lousiana
»Creole musicians are now forced to seek new audiences and
look for new artforms
»Ragtime (the most popular music of the turn of the century)
Further confusions: Creole culture
•Mardi Gras parade
– introducing the Brass band
•Ragtime
–Scott Joplin
•Creole musicians combine brass band tradition with new
syncopated music (ragtime), the blues, West Indies
influences – earliest jazz
–roots of the traditional New Orleans Jazz Band
Before jazz was jazz
Territory bands
Jass bands
Further confusions – ‘inventors of jazz’:
First recorded jazz (or jass)
Original Dixieland Jassband (1917)
Massive commercial success
Other recordings follow
Jelly Roll Morton
The Jazz Age (1920’s)
Migrations to the north - two
directions: Chicago, New York
Prohibition Era
The Speakeasy
Louis Armstrong
scat singing
(Heebie Jeebies 1926)
Duke Ellington
‘jungle music’
first broadcast from the
Cotton Club – jazz goes national
The Blues
Besie Smith
Ethel Waters
The Swing Era
• Jazz primarily dance music
–Charlston
–Foxtrot
• Swing
–Strong swing rhythm – strong rhythm section
–Improvised solos
• Benny Goodman
• Count Basie
Towards improvisation – jazz is no longer
about dancing
• Virtuosity
– Louis Armstrong
– Art Tatum
• The birth of Bebop
– Usually fast tempos (although the blues returns as a major
inspiration)
– Arrangements not as crucial as in swing – certain harshness of
form / Departure from the Big Band format
– Virtuosity
– Improvisation (against a strong rhythm section, following simple
chord progressions taken from swing melodies or blues)
• Shifts of tempo, departures from the theme
– Coleman Hawkins, Body and Soul
– Dizzie Gilespie
– Charlie Parker
– Clifford Brown
Cool Jazz / West Coast Jazz
• Arrangments again important
• Smoothing out the dissonances of bebop
• Gerry Mulligan
• Stan Getz
• Lester Young
• Early records by Miles Davis
• Yet – revolutionary compositional techniques are
often incporporated: The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Time
Out (1959)
–Sometimes leading to avantgarde, anticipating free
improvisation: Jimmy Giuffre
• Later – influenced massively by Brazilian music –
Bossa nova (João Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Stan
Getz, Charlie Byrd, Coleman Hawkins, etc.)
Hard Bop
• Extension of Bebop – reaction to Cool Jazz (yet
obviously influenced by later cool jazz)
• Simpler melodies, even more blues based, often
incorporating other influences
• Rhythm sections often playing outside 4/4 time
signatures
• Blue Note – the birth of the ‘hard bop label’
• The golden age of modern jazz (approx. 1955 – 1970)
• Massive influence of hard bop on later (and
contemporary) avantgarde forms of jazz
• Sonny Rollins, Saxophone Collossus (1956)
• Some hard bop artists became major figures of the
avantgarde (John Coltrane, Giant Steps, 1960)
Modal Jazz
• In bebop improvisations built around
specific keys (tonal centers) -whole
compositions were also built ‘in keys’
• Modal music builds from changes of
modes – several within one composition,
improvisation is then built around not
specific keys but the musician’s choice of
mode. As the modes are changed – the
tonal center of music is also changed, so
these changes of modes are often
surprising, challangeing not only to
musicians, but also listeners. Hence –
modal musicians often stick to melodic
playing, not to make the music too
complex and dissonant.
• Result – for laymen listeners – more
‘abstract’, ‘meditative’ (repetitions)
sound
• Miles Davis, Kind of Blue (1959)
Avantgarde / Free improvisation / Free
jazz
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Free Jazz is not all avantgarde jazz
OUT is in
Cecil Taylor, Jazz Advance (1956)
Ornette Coleman, The Shape of Jazz to Come (1959)
Free Jazz
– John Coltrane, A Love Supreme (1964)
Anthony Braxton, For Alto
Albert Ayler
Andrew Hill
Eric Dolphy
Roland Kirk
Collective improvisation
– Joe Harriott, Free Form (1960)
– Jimmy Giuffre, Free Fall (1964)
– Art Ensemble of Chicago
What I did not manage to speak about
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Fusion / electric jazz
Jazz in 1970s-1980s (crisis…)
European jazz
Contemporary jazz scene
Jazz and other art forms
– Jazz as subculture
– Beat generation
– Political activism and jazz
• Jazz in contemporary popular music
– Hip hop influences
– Funk
– R’n’B
– Smooth ‘jazz’
• Etc, etc, etc.