Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Periods of Jazz History
- Early Jazz/New Orleans & Chicago style Dixieland (1920-1930)
- Characteristics
- Use of collective improvisation (polyphony)
- Frontline of Trumpet/Cornet, Clarinet, Trombone
- Chicago Style also
typically adds saxophone
to the front line.
- New Orleans style typically included
banjo and tuba, later replaced by guitar
and string bass in Chicago Style.
- Use of flat four in New Orleans Style, later
replaced by lighter two beat feel in Chicago Style.
- Modern drum set emerges when New Orleans
musicians begin to consolidate the drum
section (bass, snare, cymbals) commonly found
in early New Orleans brass bands.
- Important Musicians
- Louis Armstrong (cornet,trumpet)
- Jelly Roll Morton
(piano/composer)
- Sidney Bechet (soprano sax, clarinet)
- Swing/Big Band Era (1930-1945)
- Characteristics
- Most popular period in jazz history. Large
ensembles, less improvisation, more
emphasis on written arrangements.
- Emphasis on showmanship (band uniforms, theme
songs, logos on stands, choreography, singers).
- Development of sections (saxes, trumpets, trombones,
rhythm) based on the early model of the front line in
New Orleans/Chicago Style Dixieland.
- Smoother swing feel (steady 4/4
time with emphasis on 2 & 4,
walking bass, ride cymbal.
- Important Musicians
- Duke Ellington (piano/composer)
- Count Basie (piano/bandleader)
- Lester Young (tenor sax)
- Bebop (1940-1955)
- Characteristics
- Bebop was primarily played by small groups (combos)
- Focus on improvisation rather than on
complex arrangements. Rarely written down.
- Bebop, developed through jam sessions -
informal, non-rehearsed gatherings of
musicians where they play together,
challenge each other (who can “outplay”
whom), and learn from each other.
- Bebop was and still is the music most played at
jazz jam sessions because all the musicians need
to know are the head and chord progression
- More musically complex than swing,
faster tempos, extended chords.
Bebop requires musical virtuosity
and artistry to play it
- Important Musicians
- Charlie Parker (alto sax)
- Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet)
- Thelonious Monk (piano/composer)
- Cool Jazz (1949-1955)
- Characteristics
- Thinner textures, softer dynamics,
smoother melodic phrasing.
- Use of Classical” instruments such as flute, French horn, tuba, and vibraphone (vibes)
- Wider variety of size and instrumentation
- often included counterpoint - two or more
melodic lines occurring at the same time
- Whereas bebop was “hot,” i.e., loud, exciting, and loose, cool
jazz was “cool,” i.e., soft, more reserved, and controlled
- Usually arranged (written) ahead of time;
unlike Bebop, both the arrangement and
the improvised solos were important.
- Important Musicians
- Miles Davis (trumpet)
- Dave Brubeck (piano/composer)
- Stan Getz (tenor sax)
- Hard Bop (1951-1960)
- Characteristics
- A reaction to cool jazz,
musicians thought the music
had become too classical, too
European. Hard bop was a
return to music that was more
Afro-centric, more blues based
- Primarily black musicians from New York City, Detroit and Philadelphia
- The most important hard bop group was the Miles Davis Quintet of the mid 1950s.
- The size and instrumentation of hard bop combos was similar to that
of its bebop forbearer: usually two or three horns plus rhythm section
- Raw, hard driving style with an emotional emphasis
- Important Musicians
- Art Blakey (drums) & The Jazz Messengers
- Cannonball Adderley (alto sax)
- Charles Mingus
(bass/composer)
- Free Jazz/Avant Garde (1960s)
- Characteristics
- Open or free forms; tunes often complete
improvisations. Collective improvisation of a
more dissonant, atonal nature.
- Experimental instruments & instrumentations.
Ensembles omit use of a piano or chord instrument.
- Use of unorthodox sounds (squeaks, screams, noise, etc.) and
extended techniques (altissimo register, multiphonics, etc.)
- Interest in non-western musical concepts (world music) and 20th century
classical composers such as Cage and Stockhausen.
- Important Musicians
- Ornette Coleman (alto sax/composer)
- Cecil Taylor (piano/composer)
- Anthony Braxton (saxophones/composer)
- Fusion/Jazz Rock (1970s)
- Charcteristics
- Extensive use of electronic instruments e.g. Fender Rhodes
- Focus of attention on the rhythm section, studio recording
technology and the process of recording
- More emphasis on straight eight note
feel (rock) than swing.
- Pieces range from simple melodies with vamps
and open forms to complex through-composed,
sectionalized compositions.
- Important Musicians
- Miles Davis (trumpet/bandleader: In A Silent Way)
- Chick Corea (keyboards/leader)
- Weather Report (group)
- Eclecticism (1980s & 1990s)
- Characteristics
- No single dominant stylistic trend has emerged in the 1980s or 1990s. Instead, a continuation of
previous styles, crossovers, and new styles derived from various sources are common.
- Some notable trends within this
eclecticism seem to be:
- 1) a further sophistication of electronic jazz
through the use of computers
- 2) a resurgent neo-bop and neo-traditionalist
movement (Neo-Classicism)
- 3) expanded instrumental & vocal techniques
- 4) a greater involvement of women
- 5) the growth of European and "world music" jazz styles.
- Important Musicians
- Pat Metheny Group (fusion band)
- Wynton Marsalis (trumpet/composer: associated
with Neo-Classic movement)
- Michael Brecker (tenor sax: also founding member
of fusion group Steps Ahead)