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-dance oriented music
-dance style: "lindy hop"
-Harlem Renaissance |
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-arranger/band leader (piano)
-section vs. section arrangements (dialogue between instruments)
-"four beat" swing rhythm- more danceable and driving |
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-important musician out of Fletcher Henderson's band
-tenor sax
-sequencing: connecting ideas, using a single idea as a motive |
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-important musician associated with Duke Ellington
-bass
-played melody (unusual for bass)
-used a bow (trained violinist)
-great soloist and improviser
-developed more linear bass lines (melodic and fluid) |
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-Helped Duke Ellington write (writing styles remarkably similar)
-composer/arranger/pianist |
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-blind pianist
-"cutting contest" (trying to outplay each other)
-combined classical, stride, and boogie
-reharmonization (creating more tension) |
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-"Lady Day"
-singer
-very personable style: instrumental voice (imitates horn players)
-emotional storytelling (had a difficult life) |
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-guitar
-first great (best) guitar soloist |
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-amazing scat singer, very instrumental
-sang fair amount of traditional jazz AND pop
-broke mold of stereotypical female singer (larger girl) |
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-swing vocal style (doo-wop)
-first black group to be on a national/network radio group
-influenced the Andrews sisters |
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-singer/pianist
-first black to have weekly radio show & also a TV variety show
-broke color barrier in the business (compared to Jackie Robinson) |
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-singer/ stereotypical big band singer
-appealed to younger (female) audience
-unique phrasing style |
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-alto sax, bass clarinet, flute (virtuoso for all 3)
-dissected Charlie Parker's notes
-strange sound but more logical
-Picasso of the jazz world: real picture but very disjointed and strange |
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-alto sax
-took piano out of his music completely: no chord progression
-lots of complicated melodies: CHAOS |
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-took be-bop and made it more legitimate
-took be-bop to the concert halls
-tried to find a wider audience in their music
-mixed classical, jazz, and ethnic styles together
-"3rd stream"- mixing classical and jazz |
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-piano player for the Modern Jazz Quartet |
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-vibrophone player for the Modern Jazz Quartet |
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-piano/composer -best selling jazz musician of all time -w/ Paul Desmond: experimented with odd meter in "5" and "9" |
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-piano -British; legally blind -pop orientation: shorter tunes, arranging -"Shearing sound"= piano, guitar, vibes all playing melody |
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-piano/composer -most famous for his trio -brilliant organization, classical influence, technical -collective improvisation: let bass and drummers be more experimental and melodic |
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-Bill Evans: piano -Scott Lafaro: bass -Paul Motian: drums |
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-Ellington player -trumpet |
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-Ellington player -alto sax -most innovative soloist |
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-Ellington player -tenor sax -shifted sound of the band |
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-Special effects used by Ellington's players -"growls" imitated animals with their instruments |
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-most popular big band leader of his era -23 #1 hira -NOT jazz: no improvisation (jazz-like) -popular because it was predictable |
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Duke Ellington: importance, history, style |
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-most recorded jazz musician ever -composer/arranger/pianist -brought jazz to the classical world (crossover -wrote personal arrangements for individual players -cross-section writing |
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-alto sax -"Yardbird" -most important sax player of his period -1st major Bebop sax player -Kansas City -wrote new, complex faster melodies based on old tunes -worked closely with Dizzy Gillispie -after Armstrong, most important improviser -Charlie Parker W/ Strings= effort to reach more pop audience |
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-trumpet -experimented with Bebop and Cuban salsa/mambo -worked closely with Charlie Parker -complex chords= more extension (color) |
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-piano/composer -Bebop harmonic/chordal genius -mixed old and new: stride + melodies/blues -didn't catch on real widely b/c of dissonance and not "pretty" sounds -improv made it hard to dance to |
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-piano -"Best Bebop piano player" -adapted Parker's style to piano -piano trio (modern: piano/bass/drums) |
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-2nd important quintet: hard bop (crazier, more intense) : 1. Herbie Hancock-piano 2. Wayne Shorter- tenor sax 3. Ron Carter -bass 4. Tony Williams- drummer |
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Miles Davis Classic Quintet |
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-"mature" bebop- model for typical jazz -a.k.a. mainstream jazz period 1. Paul Chambers- Bass 2. Philly Jo Jones- Drums 3. Red Garland -Piano 4. John Coltrane -Tenor Sax 5. Cannonbal Adderly -Alto sax [Late Replacements] 1. Wynton Kelly -piano 2. Jimmy Cobb -drums |
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"Birth of the Cool"
=Jane |
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-Miles Davis/Gil Evans recording -smoother, more chilled out, listenable bebop |
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-Miles Davis/Bill Evans recording -most important album in jazz history (influential: one of the best selling of all time) -classic sextet -atypical/revolutionary experimentation style with "modal" jazz (mode = scale not used to hearing- lack of chord/harmonic progression) |
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-rock mixed with jazz -"psychadellic" -1970s "Bitches Brew" most innovative fusion album (mostly improvised) -David didn't want to play the same music over again: makes jazz fit with time period and culture |
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-developed the 8 track recording machine |
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John Coltrane Famous Quartet |
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1. McCoy Turner - piano 2. Elvin Jones -drums 3. Jimmy Garrison -bass |
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Post-war era intro/technology |
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-magnetic tape allowed higher quality and more tracks on a single tape -1948: First tape recorder available (Ampex) -1949: Two track stereo (Ampex) -1939: FM radio -1939-1951: TVs |
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a.k.a. "avant-garde" -improv not tied to any chord progression agreed upon before the performance -most free jazz groups got rid of piano b/c the pianist had the assumed role of chord progressions |
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-clarinet/ white band leader -bought Henderson and Carter's arrangements |
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Change from N.O. jazz -> Big Band |
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-more players -no banjo in rhythm section -more arrangements and more specific ORGANIZED arrangement style -conversation-type playing |
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1. RHYTHM 2. BRASS 3. SAX -trumpet -trombone -saxophone -piano -drums -bass |
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-Count Basie -Blues/rural -Riff based -Head charts = improvised parts |
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-drummer for Basie -quiet, relaxed style |
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-led consistent, smooth, rhythm section -amazing pianist and bandleader -timing of a drummer, used silence |
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-not written down -spontaneously created during performances and memorized |
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-sax/composer/bandleader -intense, fast -chord changes -modal ("my favorite things") -free jazz/ bebop hard bop -"Giant Steps" |
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-small combo -less emphasis on arrangement -more complex improv -complex melodies and harmonies -surprise |
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