Friday, September 20, 2019
Jazz Essay -- essays research papers
   Jazz           Jazz is a type of music developed by black Americans about 1900       and possessing an identifiable history and describable  stylistic evolution. It is rooted in the mingled musical traditions of  American blacks. More black musicians saw jazz for the first time a  profession. Since its beginnings jazz has branched out into so many  styles that no single description fits all of them with total accuracy.  Performers of jazz improvise within the conventions of their chosen  style. Improvisation gave jazz a personalized, individualized, and  distinct feel. Most jazz is based on the principle that an infinite  number of melodies can fit the cord progressively of any cord.       The twenties were a crucial period in the history of music.       Revolutions, whether in arts or matter of state, create a new  world only by sacrificing the old. By the late twenties, improvisation  had expanded to the extent of improvisation we ordinarily expect from  jazz today. It was the roaring twenties that a group of new tonalities  entered the mainstream, fixing the sound and the forms of our popular  music for the next thirty years. Louie Armstrong closed the book on the  dynastic tradition in New Orleans jazz.    The first true virtuoso soloist of jazz, Louie Armstrong was a dazzling  improviser, technically, emotionally, and intellectually. Armstrong,  often called the "father of jazz," always spoke with deference,  bordering on awe, of his musical roots, and with especial devotion of  his mentor Joe Oliver. He changed the format of jazz by bringing the  soloist to the forefront, and in his recording groups, the Hot Five and  the Hot seven, demonstrated that jazz improvisation could go far beyond  simply ornamenting the melody. Armstrong was one of the first jazz  musicians to refine a rhythmic conception that abandoned the stiffness  of ragtime, employed swing light-note patterns, and he used a technique  called "rhythmic displacement." Rhythmic displacement was sometimes  staggering the placement of an entire phrase, as though he were playing  behind the beat. He created new melodies based on the chords of the  initial tune. He also set standards for all later jazz singers, not  only by the way he altered the words and melodies of songs but also by  improvising without words...              ...ner and the classical pieces of twentieth-century  composers Paul Hindemith and Bela Bartok. Latin-American music also  inspired Corea^s style. Early in his career, Corea had played in  several bands that featured Latin-American music. Corea^s crisp,  percussive touch enhances the Latin feeling. It is also consistent  with his bright, very spirited style of comping. Like Tyner, Corea  voiced chords in fourths. Voicing in fourths means that chords are  made up of notes four steps away from each other. Chick Corea joined  Miles Davis^ band in 1968, and played electric piano on the landmark In  a silent way, album and the influential "Bitches Brew" session. His  own trio recording with Miroslav Vitous and Roy Haynes, "Now He sings,  Now He sobs," became a staple in the record collection of modern jazz  lovers during the late sixties. Corea was a prominent composer during  the 1960s and 1970s. Corea wrote pieces that made good use of preset  bass lines in accompaniment, particularly those with a Latin-American  flavor. In 1985, Chick Corea formed the Elektric Band, which became  known for its use of synthesizers. The band^s debut was with Chick  Corea Eleckric Band, on GRP Records.                       
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