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Origins of Jazz

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Title: Origins of Jazz


1
Origins of Jazz
2
Intro to Jazz
  • Jazz is a strictly American style of music
  • Created by musicians who were predominantly
    African American
  • Created for performing in the streets, bars,
    brothels, and dance halls in New Orleans other
    Southern cites

3
What is Jazz?
  • Jazz is characterized by
  • Improvisation
  • Syncopation
  • Steady beat
  • Unique tone colors and performance techniques
  • Term jazz became popular in 1917

4
When did Jazz get its start?
  • Probably as early as 1900, but because early jazz
    did not exist in notation, its impossible to
    know when jazz was first heard
  • First jazz recording was the Dixieland Jazz Band
    in 1917
  • Has since developed into several styles,
    including
  • New Orleans
  • Swing
  • Bebop
  • Cool Jazz
  • Free Jazz
  • Jazz Rock

5
Jazz and Society
  • Center of jazz has shifted from New Orleans to
    Chicago, Kansas City, and New York
  • No center for jazz exists today, as the music
    has spread worldwide
  • Originally intended as dance music, but since the
    1940s, newer styles are intended for listening
  • As likely to hear jazz in a concert hall as in a
    bar or nightclub

6
Jazz as a part of musical culture
  • Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall have regular
    jazz series
  • Jazz Masterworks Orchestra has been founded at
    the Smithsonian National Museum of American
    History
  • Colleges offer course and majors in jazz

7
Roots of Jazz
  • Blend of many cultures, mostly West African,
    American, and European
  • West African influences include
  • Improvisation
  • Drumming and percussive sounds
  • Complex rhythms
  • Call and Response- a voice or instrument is
    answered by another voice or instrument

8
Roots of Jazz
  • American influences included the body of music
    developed by African Americans
  • Work songs
  • Spirituals
  • Gospel Hymns
  • Dances like the cakewalk
  • Marching Band instruments were included in early
    jazz bands
  • Band music helped shape the forms and rhythms of
    early jazz

9
Ragtime (1890s to about 1915)
  • Ragtime is a style of piano music developed by
    black pianists who played in saloons and dance
    halls
  • Characterized by
  • Duple meter
  • Moderate tempo
  • Highly syncopated right hand
  • Left hand maintains steady beat with oom-pah

10
Listening Maple Leaf Rag
  • Composed by Scott Joplin in 1899
  • One of the most famous piano rags in history and
    first piece by an African American to sell well
  • March form Two sixteen measure strains, followed
    by a trio a fourth higher, than two more strains
  • AABBACCDD
  • This recording is from a player piano in 1916

11
Blues
  • Refers to both a form of vocal and instrumental
    music and style of performance
  • Grew out of African American folk music
  • Uncertain when blues originated, but sung in
    rural areas in the south by 1890s
  • Original country blues sung with guitar
    accompaniment and no standardized form or style

12
Rise of the Blues
  • Form of blues began to standardize with WC
    Handys Memphis Blues(1912) and St. Louis Blues
    (1912)
  • Became a national craze among African Americans
    in the 1920s
  • 12 bar blues became standard form in blues music
  • 1940s saw emergence of urban blues in Chicago-
    used electric guitar and amps

13
12-bar Blues
  • Involves only three chords Tonic (I),
    Subdominant (IV), and Dominant (V)
  • Line 1 Four measures of I
  • Line 2 Two measures IV, two measures I
  • Line 3 Two measures of V, two measures I
  • Each stanza sung or played to the same series of
    chords, though other may be inserted between the
    main ones
  • Usually in Duple Meter

14
Blues Vocals
  • Use bent notes, scoops, slides
  • Blue notes and scales used
  • Produced by lowering the 3rd, 5th, and 7th of the
    scale approximately one half step
  • Rhythm is flexible- often around the beat
  • Jazz instrumentalists used 12-bar blues and blue
    notes as a basis for improvisation

15
Listening Lost Your Head Blues
  • Performed by Bessie Smith, the empress of the
    blues- most famous blues singer in the 1920s
  • Each stanza is a 12-bar blues pattern
  • Improvised cornet imitates the vocal lines
  • Listen for the inflections in her voice-
    characteristic of jazz and blues singers
  • Smith varies the pitch and rhythm of line to
    create interest and build to the end of the song
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