Transcript Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Jazz
What is Jazz?
► Relies
heavily on improvisation within a
certain formal structure
► Rhythmic urgency, shifting accents to weak
beats, emphasizing syncopation
► Commonly features polyrhythm (two or
more simultaneous rhythms)
The Birth of Jazz
► In
and around the New Orleans area in 19th
century
► Brass bands, spirituals, and blues form the
roots of jazz music
► In its early stages, jazz was called “novelty”
or “minstrel” music
► Highlights the skill and inventiveness of its
performers, particularly with improvisation
► “stride” piano style built on steady rhythmic
bass line in left hand (influence of ragtime)
“Jelly Roll” Morton
► Ferdinand
“Jelly Roll” Morton
► Pianist and bandleader
► Perfected New Orleans Dixieland jazz style
Simultaneous improvisations
► “Jelly
Roll” Morton and His Red Hot Peppers
► Driving, swinging style
The Mississippi Connection
► Jazz
music began attracting non-African
American musicians along the Mississippi
River
► Small bands featuring Dixieland style
March-like feeling and duple meter
Trumpet, clarinet, trombone featured
Banjos and Mandolins may be included
► Embellishing
existing melodies (usually in
call-and-response
► Derived from spirituals and work songs
Louis Armstrong
► Produced
distinct timbre with his trumpet
► Influenced countless other jazz musicians
with his improvisational style and scat
singing
Complemented trumpet improvisations with scat
singing (He had a distinct, gravelly voice.)
► Worked
in Broadway, radio, films, recording,
etc.
► Nicknamed “Satchmo” (short for “satchel
mouth”)
Chicago and the Emergence of
Swing
► By
the time jazz reached Chicago, swing style
had developed
► Jazz style meant for dancing and entertainment
► Making duple meter sound like loose triple
meter
► Label for style and era of jazz (1935-1945)
► Fletcher Henderson enlarged jazz band and
created standard instrumentation (trumpets,
trombones, saxes, drums, piano, guitar, double
bass
The Big Band Era
► Dance
orchestras; performed in primarily
quadruple meter instead of duple
► Teens preferred jazz dances to their parents’
ballroom dances
► Benny Goodman, the “King of Swing”
From poor Russian-Jewish family
Founded a big band orchestra and was featured
on national radio show “Let’s Dance”
Performed as both a jazz and classical artist on
the clarinet
► Clarinet
replaced by sax as preferred reed
instrument in jazz bands; i.e., Lester Young
32-Bar Song Form
► Improvisation
occurs in specific structure
► Adaptation of melodies from popular songs
that were 32 bars long
► Most common form is A A B A, where each
letter is 8 bars
► B section functions as a musical bridge
The Legendary Duke Ellington
► Edward
Kennedy “Duke” Ellington
► Credited with having written more music
than any composer ever
► Made jazz a sophisticated art form
► Combined own creativity and skill with that
of his band members
► Melodies generated by harmony and
rhythmic vitality
Mary Lou Williams
► Women
found it difficult to gain acceptance
in jazz during big band era
► Mary Lou Williams – pianist, composer,
arranger whose career spanned all eras of
jazz
► Played with her own band and composed
and arranged for top swing orchestras
(Ellington’s and Goodman’s)
► Composed more than 350 songs (jazz and
non-jazz)
The 1940s and Bebop
► Interest
in jazz grew after WWII
► Younger musicians wanted creativity outside of
swing; created bebop style
Different from swing in that it was for listening, not
dancing and was a return to small ensembles (as
opposed to large swing orchestras)
Trumpeter John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie and
Saxophonist Charlie “Yardbird” Parker regarded as
pioneers of bebop
Chromatic melodies, complex rhythms, rapid
tempos, dazzling technicality
Cool Jazz, Fusion, and Beyond
► Dissatisfaction
with bebop led to some
reviving older forms of jazz
► Some invented simpler style of jazz using
modal scales
► Trumpeter Miles Davis and pianist
Thelonious Monk leading players of modal
jazz
► Major trends in jazz following 1940s: rhythm
& blues, modal jazz, progressive (or cool)
jazz, free jazz, fusion, smooth jazz, etc.
Vocabulary
► Jazz
– a musical form
distinguished by its
reliance on improvisation
and its rhythmic urgency
► Polyrhythmic –
juxtaposing two or more
different rhythms
► Break – a measure or
two where everyone
stops playing except the
sololist
► Scat
singing – a form of
vocal improvisation on
nonsense syllables
► Swing – the special
rhythmic character that
jazz musicians add to the
music
► Bridge – a connective
part of the composition
Vocabulary, cont.
► Chromatic
–
incorporating tones
from a musical scale
consisting entirely of
half steps
► Bebop – a complex
and sophisticated
type of improvised
jazz
► Fusion
– combination
of jazz and rock
► Dorian mode – a
scale with the pattern
of whole step, half,
whole, whole, whole,
half, and whole