WHAT IS JAZZ?
HISTORY OF JAZZ MUSIC
Jazz is a musical art form originally characterized by blue notes, syncopation,
swing, call and response, polyrhythms, and improvisation. The style of
performance tends to be predominantly playful, a style which, if it were
applied to classical music, would carry the notation scherzo or scherzando, but
allowing even more free playful expressiveness to the performer. It has been
called the first original art form to develop in the United States of America.
Jazz has roots in North and West Africaan cultural and musical expression,
particularly that of Mali and the Sahara region, and in African American music
traditions including blues and ragtime, as well as European military band music.
After originating in African American communities near the beginning of the 20th
century, jazz gained international popularity by the 1920s. Since then, jazz has
had a profoundly pervasive influence on other musical styles worldwide. Today,
various jazz styles continue to evolve.
According to Pulitzer Prize-winning African American composer and classical and
jazz trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis:
Jazz is something Negroes invented, and it said the most profound things -- not
only about us and the way we look at things, but about what modern democratic
life is really about. It is the nobility of the race put into sound ... jazz has
all the elements, from the spare and penetrating to the complex and enveloping.
It is the hardest music to play that I know of, and it is the highest rendition
of individual emotion in the history of Western music.
The word jazz itself is rooted in American slang, probably of sexual origin,
although various alternative derivations have been suggested.
History
Roots of jazz
At the root of jazz is the blues, the folk music of former African slaves in the
U.S. South and their descendants, heavily influenced by West African cultural
and musical traditions, that evolved as black musicians migrated to the cities.
Early jazz influences found their first mainstream expression in the marching
band and dance band music of the day, which was the standard form of popular
concert music at the turn of century. The instruments of these groups became the
basic instruments of jazz: brass, reeds, and drums.
Black musicians frequently used the melody, structure, and beat of marches as
points of departure; but says "North by South, from Charleston to Harlem," a
project of the National Endowment for the Humanities: "...a black musical spirit
(involving rhythm and melody) was bursting out of the confines of European
musical tradition, even though the performers were using European styled
instruments. This African-American feel for rephrasing melodies and reshaping
rhythm created the embryo from which many great black jazz musicians were to
emerge." Many black musicians also made a living playing in small bands hired to
lead funeral processions in the New Orleans African-American tradition. These
Africanized bands played a seminal role in the articulation and dissemination of
early jazz. Traveling throughout black communities in the Deep South and to
northern big cities, these musician-pioneers were the Hand helping to fashion
the music's howling, raucous, then free-wheeling, "raggedy," ragtime spirit,
quickening it to a more eloquent, sophisticated, swing incarnation.
For all its genius, early jazz, with its humble, folk roots, was the product of
primarily self-taught musicians. But an impressive post-bellum network of
black-established and -operated institutions, schools, and civic societies in
both the North and the South, plus widening mainstream opportunities for
education, produced ever-increasing numbers of young, formally trained
African-American musicians, some of them schooled in classical European musical
forms. Lorenzo Tio and Scott Joplin were among this new wave of musically
literate jazz artists. Joplin, the son of a former slave and a free-born woman
of color, was largely self-taught until age 11, when he received lessons in the
fundamentals of music theory from a classically trained German immigrant in
Texarkana, Texas.
Also contributing to this trend was a tightening of Jim Crow laws in Louisiana
in the 1890s, which caused the expulsion from integrated bands of numbers of
talented, formally trained African-American musicians. The ability of these
musically literate, black jazzmen to transpose and then read what was in great
part an improvisational art form became an invaluable element in the
preservation and dissemination of musical innovations that took on added
importance in the approaching big-band era.
The source of this article is
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The text of this
article is licensed under the
GFDL