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History of
Jazz
The roots of
Jazz. The
folk songs and plantation dance music of black Americans contributed much to
early jazz. These forms of music occurred throughout the Southern United
States during the late 1800's. Ragtime, a musical style that influenced
early jazz, emerged from the St. Louis, Missouri, area in the late 1890's.
It quickly became the most popular music style in the United States.
Ragtime was an energetic and syncopated variety of music, primarily for the
piano, that emphasized formal composition.
The blues is a form of
music that has always been an important part of Jazz. The blues was
especially widespread in the American South. Its mournful scale and simple
repeated harmonies helped shape the character of jazz. Jazz
instrumentalists have long exploited the blues as a vehicle for
improvisation.
Early jazz.
Fully developed jazz music probably originated in New Orleans at the
beginning of the 1900's. New Orleans style jazz emerged from the city's own
musical traditions of band music for black funeral processions and street
parades. Today, this type of jazz is sometimes called classic jazz,
traditional jazz, or Dixieland jazz. New Orleans was the musical home of
the first notable players and composers of jazz, including cornetists Buddy
Bolden and King Oliver, cornetist and trumpeter Louis Armstrong, saxophonist
and clarinetist Sidney Bechet, and pianist Jelly Roll Morton. Jazz soon
spread from New Orleans to other parts of the country. Fate Marable led a
New Orleans band that played on riverboats traveling up and down the
Mississippi River. King Oliver migrated to Chicago, and Jelly Roll Morton
performed throughout the United States. Five white musicians formed a band
in New Orleans, played in Chicago, and traveled to New York City, calling
themselves the Original Dixieland Jazz Band (the spelling was soon changed
to "Jazz"). This group made the earliest jazz gramophone recordings in
1917. Mamie Smith recorded "Crazy Blues" in 1920, and recordings of
ragtime, blues, and jazz of various kinds soon popularized the music to a
large and eager public.
The 1920's have been
called the golden age of jazz or the jazz age. Commercial radio
stations, which first appeared in the 1920's, featured live performances by
the growing number of jazz musicians. New Orleans, Memphis, St. Louis,
Kansas City, Chicago, Detroit, and New York City were all important centers
of jazz. A group of Midwest youths, many from Chicago's Austin High School,
developed a type of improvisation and arrangement that became known as
"Chicago style" jazz. These musicians included trumpeters Jimmy McPartland
and Muggsy Spanier; cornetist Bix Beiderbecke; clarinetists Frank
Teschemacher, Pee Wee Russell, Mezz Mezzrow, and Benny Goodman; saxophonists
Frankie Trumbauer and Bud Freeman; drummers Dave Tough, George Wettling, and
Gene Krupa; and guitarist Eddie Condon. They played harmonically inventive
music, and the technical ability of some of the players, especially Goodman,
was at a higher level than that of many earlier performers.
In New York City, James
P. Johnson popularized a new musical style from ragtime called stride
piano. In stride piano, the left hand plays alternating single notes and
chords that move up and down the scale while the right hand plays solo
melodies, accompanying rhythms, and interesting choral passages. Johnson
strongly influenced other jazz pianists, notably Count Basie, Duke
Ellington, Art Tatum, Fats Waller, and Teddy Wilson. Fletcher Henderson was
the first major figure in big band jazz. In 1923, he became the first
leader to organize a jazz band into sections of brass, reed, and rhythm
instruments. His arranger, Don Redman, was the first to master the
technique of scoring music for big bands. Various Henderson bands of the
1920's and 1930's included such great jazz instrumentalists as Louis
Armstrong and saxophonists Benny Carter and Coleman Hawkins.
Armstrong made some of
his most famous recordings with his own Hot Five and Hot Seven combos from
1925 to 1928. These recordings rank among the masterpieces of jazz, along
with his duo recordings of the same period with pianist Earl "Fatha" Hines.
Armstrong also became the first well-known male jazz singer, and popularized
scat singing--that is, wordless syllables sung in an instrumental manner.
During the late 1920's
and early 1930's, jazz advanced from relatively simple music played by
performers who often could not read music to a more complex and
sophisticated form. Among the musicians who brought about this change were
saxophonists Benny Carter, Coleman Hawkins, and Johnny Hodges; the team of
violinist Joe Venuti and guitarist Eddie Lang; and pianist Art Tatum. Many
people consider Tatum the most inspired and technically gifted improviser in
jazz history. The swing era flourished from the mid-1930's to the
mid-1940's. In 1932, Duke Ellington recorded his composition "It Don't Mean
a Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing." "Swing" was soon adopted as the name
of the newest style of jazz. Swing emphasizes four beats to the bar. Big
bands dominated the swing era, especially those of Count Basie, Benny
Goodman, and Duke Ellington.
Benny Goodman became
known as the "King of Swing." Starting in 1934, Goodman's bands and combos
brought swing to nationwide audiences through ballroom performances,
recordings, and radio broadcasts. Goodman was the first white bandleader to
feature black and white musicians playing together in public performances.
In 1936, he introduced two great black soloists--pianist Teddy Wilson and
vibraphonist Lionel Hampton. Until then, racial segregation had held back
the progress of jazz and of black musicians in particular. In 1938, Goodman
and his band, and several guest musicians, performed a famous concert at
Carnegie Hall in New York City. Their performance was one of the first by
jazz musicians in a concert hall setting.
Other major bands of
the swing era included those led by Benny Carter, Bob Crosby, Jimmy Dorsey,
Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman, Earl Hines, Andy Kirk, Jimmie Lunceford, Glenn
Miller, Artie Shaw, Chick Webb, and, toward the end of the period, Stan
Kenton. The bands in Kansas City, Missouri, especially the Count Basie
band, had a distinctive swing style. These bands relied on the 12-bar blues
form and riff backgrounds, which consisted of repeated simple melodies.
They depended less heavily on written arrangements, allowing more leeway for
rhythmic drive and for extended solo improvisations. Boogie-woogie was
another jazz form that became popular during the 1930's. Chiefly a piano
style, it used eight beats to the bar instead of four. Boogie-woogie
featured the traditional blues pattern for most themes. The music had an
intense quality that created excitement through the repetition of a single
phrase. Albert Ammons, Pete Johnson, Meade Lux Lewis, and Pinetop Smith
were among its most important artists.
Jazz vocalists came
into prominence during the swing era, many singing with big bands. Many
fine jazz singers emphasized popular songs. These singers included Mildred
Bailey, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Nat "King" Cole, Carmen McRae, and
Sarah Vaughan. Blues singing at its best can be heard in recordings by
Jimmy Rushing, Jack Teagarden, Joe Turner, and Dinah Washington. In
addition to singing, Nat "King" Cole was a superb jazz pianist and Jack
Teagarden was a great jazz trombonist. Bebop. In the early 1940's, a group
of young musicians began experimenting with more complicated chord patterns
and melodic ideas in a combo setting. The group included trumpeter Dizzy
Gillespie, alto saxophonist Charlie Parker, pianists Bud Powell and
Thelonious Monk, and drummers Kenny Clarke and Max Roach. The style they
developed was bebop or bop.
Most bop musicians had
an exceptional technique. They played long, dazzling phrases with many
notes, difficult intervals, unexpected breaks, and unusual turns in melodic
direction. On slower tunes, they displayed a keen ear for subtle changes of
harmony. Only extremely skilled musicians were able to play bebop well, and
only sophisticated listeners at first appreciated it. In bebop performances,
musicians usually played an intricate melody, followed with long periods of
solo improvisation, and restated the theme at the end. The bassist
presented the basic beat for the group by plucking a steady, moving bass
line. The drummer elaborated the beat with sticks or brushes on cymbals,
snare drum, and tom-tom. The bass drum was reserved for unexpected accents
called "bombs." The pianist inserted complex chords at irregular intervals
to suggest, rather than state, the complete harmonies of the piece. Hard
bop. Bebop was followed in the 1950's by hard bop, or funky, jazz. This
form emphasized some of the traditional values of jazz derived from gospel
and blues music, including rhythmic drive, uninhibited tone and volume, and
freedom from restricting arrangements. The hard bop leaders were drummer
Art Blakey and pianist Horace Silver. Blakey led a combo called the Jazz
Messengers from the mid-1950's until his death in 1990. The Jazz Messengers
served as a training ground for many of the greatest soloists in jazz
history. Trumpeter Clifford Brown and drummer Max Roach were co-leaders of
another outstanding hard bop combo.
Cool jazz originated in
the works of such musicians as tenor saxophonist Lester Young, who starred
with Count Basie, and guitarist Charlie Christian, who played with Benny
Goodman. In the late 1930's and early 1940's, these musicians made changes
in the sound and style of jazz improvisation. For example, they softened
the tones of their instruments, used syncopation more subtly, and played
with a more even beat.
In 1948, tenor
saxophonist Stan Getz recorded a slow, romantic solo of Ralph Burns's
composition "Early Autumn" with the Woody Herman band. This work profoundly
influenced many younger musicians. In 1949 and 1950, a group of young
musicians that included trumpeter Miles Davis, alto saxophonist Lee Konitz,
baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan, and arranger Gil Evans recorded several
new compositions. These recordings emphasized a lagging beat, soft
instrumental sounds, and unusual orchestrations that included the first
successful use of the French horn and the tuba in modern jazz. The
recordings, with Davis as leader, were later released as "The Birth of the
Cool."
During the 1950's, many
combos became identified with the cool movement. Some of the most
successful combos were the Gerry Mulligan Quartet, the Modern Jazz Quartet,
and the Dave Brubeck Quartet.
The spread of jazz.
In the 1940's and 1950's, the sophisticated forms of bebop and cool jazz
began to gain wide acceptance among intellectuals and college students.
Jazz concerts became popular. Groups of jazz stars made a series of
international tours called Jazz at the Philharmonic. The international
growth of jazz resulted in many successful overseas tours by U.S. bands. The
introduction of the 331/3 rpm long-playing (LP) record, which was first
produced commercially in 1948, also helped spread the popularity of jazz.
For 30 years, jazz recordings had been limited to 78 rpm records that
restricted performances to about 3 minutes in length. The LP allowed
recorded performances to run many minutes. The LP also permitted a number
of shorter performances to be issued on a single record.
During the 1950's,
musicians in other countries began to improve greatly as jazz performers as
they were exposed to performances by American musicians through recordings
and concerts. Sweden, France, Germany, Japan, and other countries developed
players and composers whose work compared favourably with that of the
leading Americans. The first non-American jazz musicians to influence
Americans were Belgian-born guitarist Django Reinhardt in the late 1930's,
and George Shearing, a blind, English-born pianist who went to live in the
United States in 1947.
In 1954, the first
large American jazz festival was held at Newport, Rhode Island. Since then,
annual festivals also have been held in Monterey, California, U.S.A.; New
York City; Chicago; Nice, France; Montreux, Switzerland; Warsaw, Poland;
Berlin, Germany; and many other locations throughout the world. These
festivals have featured almost all of the most popular jazz musicians and
have introduced many extended concert works by Duke Ellington, Billy
Strayhorn, John Lewis, and others.
The U.S. government
began to use jazz as an instrument of international goodwill in 1956. The
U.S. Department of State sponsored tours of the Near and Middle East and
Latin America by a big band led by Dizzy Gillespie. In 1962, Benny Goodman
toured the Soviet Union as part of a cultural exchange programme.
New directions.
Beginning in the 1950's, jazz became even more experimental. Jazz music
began to feature nontraditional instruments, such as French horn and bass
flute. Jazz musicians began to take an interest in non-Western music,
especially the modes (different arrangements of scales), melodic forms, and
instruments of Africa, India, and the Far East. In the late 1950's, John
Lewis, musical director of the Modern Jazz Quartet, worked with classical
musician and composer Gunther Schuller to write and play orchestral works
that combined elements of modern jazz and classical concert music. Stan
Kenton also played this so-called third stream music when he toured the
United States with a 40-piece orchestra. Also during this period, pianist
George Russell developed a jazz theory of modes. In 1959, the Miles Davis
combo, with pianist Bill Evans and saxophonists John Coltrane and Cannonball
Adderley, recorded compositions and improvised solos based on modes rather
than on patterns of chords.
In 1960, saxophonist
Ornette Coleman reshaped the thinking of younger jazz musicians when he
recorded the album Free Jazz with a double quartet. In this recording,
Coleman discarded harmony, melody, and regular rhythms. He substituted
unstructured improvisation played atonally (in no definite key). Pianist
Cecil Taylor and bassist Charles Mingus conducted similar atonal
experiments.
In the 1960's, the
influence of the music of India entered jazz through the adaptations of John
Coltrane. Jazz musicians also began to use more unusual metres, such as
5/4, 7/4 and 9/8.
Fusion.
In the 1970's, many
musicians blended jazz and rock music into fusion jazz. Fusion combined the
melodic and improvisational aspects of jazz with the rhythms and instruments
of rock. Electronic music played an important part in fusion. Jazz
pianists began exploring the increased sound potential of synthesizers.
Horn and string players began to use electronics to intensify, distort, or
multiply their sounds. Many well-known jazz musicians gained new popularity
by playing fusion. Some of the best-known fusion musicians were guitarist
George Benson, trumpeters Donald Byrd and Miles Davis, pianist Herbie
Hancock, and two combos, Weather Report and the Mahavishnu Orchestra.
At the same time, many
veteran jazz musicians retained their popularity by leading groups that
played in the swing, bebop, and cool styles. These leaders included Stan
Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Herman, Gerry Mulligan, and Oscar Peterson. The
late 1900's. During the 1980's, a number of young jazz musicians returned
to mainstream jazz. Mainstream jazz includes elements of the swing, cool,
and bebop styles. The most widely acclaimed young musician of the 1980's
was trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, a performer of both jazz and classical
music. Marsalis plays with brilliant technique and tone. He and his
brother, saxophonist Branford Marsalis, have led excellent hard bop combos.
Many young musicians
continued to forge ahead with fusion groups. Two of the most widely
respected fusion artists are the brothers trumpeter Randy Brecker and
saxophonist Michael Brecker. In addition, Jane Ira Bloom displays a mastery
of the soprano saxophone and the synthesizer.
In the 1980's, some
so-called New Wave musicians adopted minimalism, a style that often repeats
simple patterns for long periods of time. Trombonist George Lewis has
experimented with combinations of free jazz, synthesized sound, African
rhythms, and unusual horn techniques. Another trombonist of dazzling
technique is Ray Anderson. Bebop, rock, popular, free, and various mixtures
are all blended in his recordings. One group, the World Saxophone Quartet,
omitted the rhythm section while preserving most of the other traditional
rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic elements of jazz. Today, jazz continues to
feature a variety of styles. Many musicians play in historic styles such as
swing and bebop. Others seek a more experimental approach. For example,
the Art Ensemble of Chicago blends free jazz, African costumes and makeup,
exotic instruments, and surprise techniques into theatrical musical events.
Ornette Coleman's group, Prime Time, mixes free and fusion jazz in new and
interesting ways. Electronics technology is gaining a greater role in jazz
music. Such young jazz composers as Michael Daugherty are demonstrating
that live musicians can interact creatively with computer-generated sound.
By the early 1990's, a
new generation of young jazz musicians had emerged, inspired by the
commercial and artistic success of Wynton Marsalis. Those who have gained
critical praise include saxophonists Scott Hamilton, Donald Harrison, and
Christopher Hollyday; pianist Marcus Roberts; trumpeters Terence Blanchard,
Philip Harper, and Roy Hargrove; trombonist Dan Barrett; and guitarist
Howard Alden.
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