American Jazz
Jazz is one of the most important music in the
History of Jazz
Before 1850- Folk music based on African forms; white dance and band music
Circa 1850-
During the Civil War- Slave songs of the
Post Civil War- Prison songs
Late 1800s- Blues develops and is complete by 1910
1890s- Ragtime develops and is the most popular music in
Early 1900s- Marching band music, Ragtime and the Blues begin to fuse into early jazz roots.
1910-1920- Jazz is born in
1920’s- New Orleans Jazz is the thing. The Jazz Age is born
1930s- Swing is king and this is the only time that Jazz and popular are the same thing
1940s- Bebop is born. It is later called simply Bop
1950s- Hard Bop or Funk and Cool Jazz take over
1960s- Modal and Free Jazz find followers
1970s- Jazz fuses with one of its derivatives to form Jazz-Rock or Fusion
1980s- Contemporary Jazz age begins
1990s- Hip-Hop and other forms emerge. Hard Bop revival.
Source: www.allaboutjazz.com
Instruments
Rhythm section- these instruments keep the beat and form the backbone of the band
Drum set- idiophone and membranophone
Piano- chordophone
Guitar- chordophone
Bass- chordophone
Lead- These instruments improvise and play the melody of the song, and are all aerophones
Trombone
Trumpet
Clarinet
Saxophone (bar saxophone, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone)
Characteristics of Jazz
Improvisation- Musicians have a chord progression and have no notes written down to read, but instead make up melodies on the spot.
Blue Notes- transform regular scales into blues scales by flatting certain notes in a scale.
Swing- playing a pair of notes in a way which elongates the first and shortens the second.
Call and Response- one instrument will initiate a call, and another will respond
Polyrhythm- two rhythms played simultaneously
Syncopation- Rhythmic manipulation in which a musician will fail to sound a beat on the accent.
Famous Jazz Musicians
Louis Armstrong (1901-1971)
John Coltrane (1926-1967)
Miles Davis (1926-1991)
Duke Ellington (1899-1974)
Dizzy Gillespie (1917-1993)
Charlie Parker (1920-1955)
Listening Examples
Miles Davis- So What
Dave Brubeck- Take Five
Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong- Let’s Call the Whole Thing off
These are song of the most famous Jazz songs, and these artists are monumental in the Jazz genre. These songs encompass all the elements of jazz such as improvisation, syncopation, blue notes, and call and response.
1 comment:
Your outline was detailed on this history of jazz and some of its most famous artists. You didn't provide a very convincing explanation of why you chose only to focus on one type of music. You could make the case more fully as to why giving a lecture on jazz would show America's diversity, society, cultures, etc. Your final grade is a 10
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