Jazz is the art of expression set to music! Jazz is said to be the fundamental rhythms of human life and man’s contemporary reassessment of his traditional values. Volumes have been written on the origins of jazz based on black American life-styles. The early influences of tribal drums and the development of gospel, blues and field hollers seems to point out that jazz has to do with human survival and the expression of life.
The origin of the word "jazz" is most often traced back to a vulgar term used for sexual acts. Some of the early sounds of jazz where associated with whore houses and "ladies of ill repute." However, the meaning of jazz soon became a musical art form, whether under composition guidelines or improvisation, jazz reflected spontaneous melodic phrasing.
Those who play jazz have often expressed the feelings that jazz should remain undefined, jazz should be felt. "If you gotta ask, you’ll never know" ---Louis Armstrong.
The standard legend about jazz is that it was conceived in New Orleans and moved up the Mississippi River to Memphis, St. Louis and finally Chicago. Of course that seems to be the history of what we now refer to as jazz, however, the influences of what led to those early New Orleans sounds goes back to tribal African drum beats and European musical structures.
"Jazz, like any artistic phenomenon, represents the sum of an addition. The factors of this addition are, to my mind, African music, French and American music and folklore." ---Robert Goffin, 1934.
In reviewing the background of jazz one can not overlook the evaluation over the decades and the fact that jazz spanned many musical forms such as spirituals, cakewalks, ragtime and the blues. Around 1891 a New Orleans barber named Buddy Bolden reputedly pitcked up his cornet and blew the first stammering notes of jazz, thereby unconsciously breaking with several centuries of musical tradition. A half-century later, jazz, America’s great contribution to music, crossed the threshold of the universities and became seriously, even religiously considered.
Jazz functions as popular art and has enjoyed periods of fairly widespread public response, in the "jazz age" of the 1920s, in the swing era of the late 1930s and in the peak popularity of modern jazz in the late 1950s. Beginning in the 20s and continuing well into the 30s, it was common to apply the word "jazz" rather indiscriminately, melodically or tonally. Thus George Gershwin was called a jazz composer. For Gershwin’s concert work he was acclaimed to have made a respectable art form out of jazz. Somewhat similarly, Paul Whiteman, playing jazz-influenced dance music, was billed as the King of Jazz. Perhaps the broader definition of jazz, such as the one that would include the blues influence as well as those who shared our understanding of the art form, even if they did not perform it, would be the most useful historical approach.
"It has always intrigued me, that people like Ma Rainey, Al Jolson and Guy Lombardo are considered a part of jazz history, but they are!" ---Les Paul, 1994.
The influence and development of the blues can not be over looked when discussing the early years of jazz.
"The blues as such are synonymous with low spirits. Blues music is not. With all its so called blue notes and overtones of sadness, blues music of its very nature and function is nothing if not a form of diversion." ---Albert Murray.
Those feelings as expression of blues music fits very comfortably with the strains and phrases of jazz. Today, Bessie Smith is considered primarily a blues singers, however in the 1920s, she was most often referred to as a jazz singer. An ability to play the blues has been a requisite of all jazz musicians, who on first meeting one another or when taking part in a jam session, will often use the blues framework for improving. Blues, stemming from rural areas of the deep South, has a history largely independent of jazz. Exponents of blues usually accompanied themselves on guitar, piano or harmonica or were supported by small groups who often played unconventional or homemade instruments.
A number of the early jazz performers relied on the blues for more than the chord exchanged. Many of these jazz musicians used the blues for the driving force of their musical emotions, such as the work of Don Redman, Stuff Smith, Ma Rainey and the early works of Louis Armstrong and Benny Carter.
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Posted: Sunday October 11, 2009, 8:49 pm Tags: [add/edit tags]
She calls to me from
beyondout at the edge of
the reefI can not join
her thereor at least this
is my beliefI would walk
out at low tideand stand
on the edgeI would talk
to her thereas the water
lapped at the edgeAs it
rose higherI would
retreat to the...
Here is a meditative
practice called Metta, or
kindness meditation you
may want to try.
Metta cultivates a
sense of compassion for
yourself and for all
life, and gets you off
the hamster wheel of
worry and anxiety. Set
aside a few minu...
Forgiveness of others,
forgiveness of yourself
To practice forgiveness
meditation, let yourself
sit comfortably, allowing
your eyes to close and
your breath to be natural
and easy. Let your body
and mind relax. Breathing
gently into the area...
Heart meditation helps
you with your ability to
love and also your
ability to let things go,
both of which are very
important in everyday
life when dealing with
other people, whether its
loved ones or just
acquaintances. Your
ability to love effects
...
Thanks to all the members
and supporters
GROUPS World Wide - Legal
Action 4 animal rights
http://www.care2.com/c2c/
group/LAAR
http://groups.myspace.com
/LegalAction4AnimalRights
http://pets.groups.yahoo.
com/group/LegalAction4Ani
malRights...
Chilling Facts
Did you know that the
human body is more
sensitive to cold than to
warmth?
That's because cold can
more quickly damage vital
organs, says Diane
Ackerman in her book A
Natural History of the
Senses.
Most of the body's cold
receptors...
Stop and look around
you.
Look out from the
frameless window of a
long pause.
Let the images come to
you rather than chasing
outward after them.
Allow yourself to
reorient so that you're
no longer pulled along by
the stream of events.
If you want...
Good news for Puppy Mill
opponents.Â
In Pennsylvania, instead
of breeding dogs,
theyâre
“milking
cows.”Â
In an article appearing
in the Lancaster Online,
Edwin Zeiset, a kennel
owner licensed to br...
Description: Rigid
strong smelling annual
plant that
grows from a taproot with
slender stems and ferny
leaves. In midsummer
white or pink blooms
appear
followed by round red
seed capsules that are
very
aromatic when they are
ripe.
Use: The young le...
Blog: EMail to Senator Jim Webb (D-VA) by Paul P.
(0 comments
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discussions
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— Dear Senator Webb,For
several election cycles I
have voted against the
Republican party. I
will be returning to
voting for Republicans
beginning in 2010.The new
health reform bill being
pushed through the Senate
is bad legislation.
Transfe... more
Blog: A Green House saves money as well as lives by Past Member .
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discussions
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— A green house not only
saves you money but also
saves your health. Most
people spend at least 90%
of their time indoors and
harmful contaminants are
fare worse indoors than
they are outdoors.
Homeowners need to
prioritise indoor air
quality which wil... more
Blog: Three Really Irritating Habits of Conservationists by The Nature C.
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discussions
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— For years I have bitten
my tongue as my
coreligionists in
conservation have driven
me up the wall with their
infuriating behavior. No
more! It is time to let
the world in on our dirty
little secret:
Conservationists can be
as irritating as anyone.
And... more
Blog: Real-Life Vampires and Other Unpleasant Nature by The Nature C.
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discussions
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— In my eight years with
the Conservancy,
Iâve&Ac
irc; edited and
selected hundreds of
nature photos for
literally piles of
conservation
publications.
The pages of those
publications have been
populated
with images
of e... more
Blog: Family is tough by Veronica R.
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0 discussions
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—
Family is tough but they
are always there for you
even though you hate them
at the moment and even
was kicked out of your
house. You still love
them and always come back
for more.
It may hurt you when you
fight and you dont always
see them all them... more
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