The radio also impacted the spread of jazz“The rise of jazz coincided with the rise of radio broadcast and recording technology (the jazz age).” More freedom made it easier to do things such as dance “the Charleston, the Cake Walk, the Black Bottom, and the Flea Hop (history.com Staff).” Most people loved to dance so as the…
A key similarity between jazz and hip-hop is that they were both started by young African-Americans, who had nowhere else to turn but music. Jazz entered the United States at the turn of the 20th century in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. It only emerged after the introduction of the Jim Crow laws though. Before this, third-class black musicians played ragtime and blues, while the then superior second-class self-proclaimed creoles of color (light-skinned blacks of European decent) played more formal marching band type music, as they were above their fully African-American counterparts. This all changed with the introduction of Jim Crow, which said that all African-Americans, no matter how black they actually were, were second-class citizens. After, both communities combined their sounds and fused together to create the first sounds of jazz. Consequently, as jazz became popular amongst the African-Americans, it became unpopular in the eyes of the superior white community. The first places where jazz was being played was…
The Jazz Age was a cultural movement that began around 1918, post WWI. It was born in New Orleans but later spread around the world, it was a beautiful mixture of jazz and march banding styled music and was often played by African-Americans. It was the first time that people began to move to the cities rather than in rural areas. It was the first time that African American were given the opportunity to progress in a society that failed them since the ending our slavery. After the war, new trends began to surface, for example: dancing, music, fashion, theater and all the other arts in an attempt to help ease the post-war feeling of the nation.…
The “Globalization of Jazz” is occurred when musicians from all around the world that were assimilating bebop and post-bop styles into the music of their culture in interesting and creative ways and creating new hybrid styles. Jazz had absorbed musical influences from other cultures and the reciprocal absorption of jazz into other parts of the world was…
In the 1920’s there were many New Orleans jazz musicians that were truly great at what they done. When listening to West End Blues, by Louis Armstrong and Hit Hot Five, you see just how great these musicians were. This song was written in 1928, with the form being twelve-bar blues. At the very beginning Louis Armstrong enters with a monophonic texture, and fast tempo solo. In the third chorus Jimmy Strong, plays the main melody, after this there is one more soloists that occurs in the fourth chorus in which Earl Hines plays a highly decorative solo, fleshed out by complicated harmonic substitutions; as his solo goes on Hines becomes louder and more aggressive. The difference between “Dippermouth Blues” and “West End Blues”, is that there is…
The prohibition lead to places called speakeasies. Speakeasies were places where people could go to get alcohol illegally. Not only did they sell alcohol, they had ballrooms and stages for musicians. Many jazz musicians came to speakeasies to play their music which highly helped in the spread of jazz. It became popular and more and more people wanted it. Chicago and New York became the places where jazz thrived best and was most popular.In the early 1920’s jazz mainly was made of the cornet, clarinet, trombone and rhythm. There was a lot of racial dispute at the time which had cause some African American musicians to leave New…
Blues, work songs, ragtime, spirituals, and minstrel songs were, in their own ways, all part of the great "Africanization of American music" that was originated by enslaved Africans in the southern United States. But the greatest of the musical forms developed in this process was jazz--one of the major American contributions to world culture. Each of these forms of music made essential contributions to the development of jazz itself but each, more or less, retained its own integrity and none could be said to have been transformed into jazz. What differentiated Jazz from these earlier styles was the widespread use of improvisation, often by more than one player at a time. Jazz represented a break from Western musical traditions, where the composer…
Dancing was also greatly influenced by African Americans and the Harlem Renaissance. Many African Americans during this time contributed largely to the Harlem renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance was a movement the promoted a new African American cultural identity, some of the notable things from this movement were dancing, visual arts, and jazz. What became known as the ‘Jazz Age’ helped further developed the contemporary dances of the time such as the Foxtrot, the Waltz, the Charleston, and Salsa dancing. These dance moves became widely spread social dance moves, often reflecting African American culture of the time. These dance moves also include swing, lindy hop, and the charleston. The development of Tap dancing also developed during this time, reflecting the early fractions during the slave trade. Most Slaveholders of the time were fearful of slave revolts, which resulted in banning all forms of communications between each other. However, African Americans still held their rational roots in rhythm, by moving beats to their feet. As All About Tap Dance mentions “The skill of tapping out complex rhythmic passages was widely developed, and a subtle, intricate and vital physical code of expression was…
The birth of jazz music is often accredited to African Americans but both black and white Americans are responsible for its immerse rise in popularity. It is present in black vocals, music-spirituals, work songs, field hollers, and the blues. Jazz united people across the world and had powerful meanings about their lives. Jazz music was completed with a trumpet, clarinet, trombone and section of drums. The music was created with passion inspired by people’s lives. Ragtime was a musical style emerged from St. Louis in the late 1890s. The swing was the new style for Jazz. Benny Goodman was the “king of swing.” and he was the first white bandleader to feature black and white musicians playing together in public. There were other different styles…
Jazz is one of the musical genres that represent America. It had a combination of influences from Africa and Europe. When Africans were brought to the United States as slaves, they brought their music and culture with them. Samuel A. Floyd Jr. stated “…particular musical tendencies were brought with Africans to the New World…and spread throughout African-derived populations in the United States, eventually becoming an integral part of the music we know as jazz.” African slaves used musical expression for social purpose in the 1800s; they sang songs when they are working or they played drums. The immigration of Europeans started in the seventeenth century. They brought the instrumentations, the tonality, the chords, and the form into the United…
Jazz became attributed all throughout the United States. Jazz music inspired many Americans and contributed with social, political, and economic changes in America. “Throughout America’s turbulent 20th century, jazz has entertained, interested, affected, and inspired Americans; it has contributed to and been a reflection of American culture” ( ). Jazz had many impacts on the Americans, which affected how the culture changed. New music meant new ideas, which allowed people to have their own thoughts on the world. “The youth of the 1920's was influenced by jazz to rebel against the traditional culture of previous generations” (The Jazz Age). Americans now had a chance to rebel against something because of the ideas jazz brought to them. Good things could come out of rebellion and young Americans were taking the chances they could. “Jazz was affecting the whole nation, not just the men on the battlefield, but also the hard working people within the nation’s borders that had their own hardships to deal with” (Jazz During WWII). People all around the country involved or not with the war, were impacted by the development of…
New York City was the cultural center of the U.S. and was the jazz center as well. Most of the city’s black jazz musicians lived in Harlem, which had been the creative focal point of…
The varieties of jazz dance reflect the diversity of American culture. Jazz dance mirrors the social history of the American people, reflecting ethnic influences, historic events, and cultural changes. Jazz dance has been greatly influenced by social dance and popular music. But, like so much that is “from America”, the history of jazz dance begins somewhere else.…
I am doing my end of the semester paper on Jazz music. Jazz was created in the twentieth century and was said that it was, “created to bring people together.” Jazz was also known in many cities around the time of the jazz age, but the city that was known as the birthplace of jazz was New Orleans. There are many important names that people still know today from the jazz ages. One important name during the jazz age was Louis Armstrong is known for many Jazz songs like “What a Wonderful World”, “When the Saints Go Marching In” and “Go down Moses.” Another name was Billie Holiday and she was known for “God Bless the Child” and “Billie’s Blues.” The other name was Duke Ellington, who have many recordings like “Take the A Train”, “Black and Tan Fantasy”,…
The talented composers and musicians that assembled in Harlem and other large cities drew inspiration and energy from each other, causing the brilliant formation of a mighty stream of exciting new music. The Whites became fascinated with Black culture, due to the popularity of jazz and blues. The Blacks were referred to as “New Negroes” and were viewed as confident and self aware African Americans who were determined to assert both their civil rights and pride in their ethnic heritage. Technological advancements were key factors in the rise of jazz music. Jazz and its bouncy rhythms seemed to embody America’s quickening economic pulse and growing industrial power. Jazz was then incorporated into the communication and entertainment industries which caused the genre of music to be spread at a rapid rate. Phonograph records and commercial radio, for example, enabled jazz orchestras and blues singers based in New York, Chicago, and New Orleans to spread their music to American cities and towns thousands of miles…