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BTAN011MA02 Jazz: A Uniquely American Art Form Format: seminar, 2 hours; graded Place: 111 Time: MON 16-17.40 Tutor: Gabor TURI Office Hours: MON 15-16, and by appointment ([email protected], phone 512-900/23108, or 20 549 0581) Description of Course Jazz originated in the United States through the confrontation of Afro-Americans with European music. During its hundred years of history, jazz, serving for dance and entertainment in its first decades, has evolved into an art form characterized by a flow of creative energies and inventiveness. Music of vital and forward motion, jazz is a symbol of an improvisational process, guided by the instinct for freedom. Jazz has become a genuine contribution to the cultural history of the United States and a special component of America’s consciousness as well as a means of artistic expression that, in various forms incorporating all sorts of elements, is being performed all over the world. The course, which is based on open ears and minds rather than on pre-existing knowledge of music theory, examines jazz in a broad cultural and sociological context. Course Goals Through weekly lectures, readings, oral presentations, discussion and listening to music samples, the students will develop a better understanding of the history and the nature of rhythmic improvised music in the US. Since this is predominantly a seminar course, emphasis will be on analyzing the characteristics, styles, human conditions and the environment of this indigenous American phenomenon. Language skills in reading, writing, listening and speaking (including musical terms) are expected to be improved. Students will be asked to prepare an internet discography on selected musicians by the end of the course. Class Attendance and Participation Students may not miss more than three classes under any circumstances. As sources on jazz are hardly obtainable from the department’s library, it is of primary interest for everyone to attend classes to gain all necessary information to pass the in-class written exam at the end of the course, which may not be missed or rescheduled. Students are expected to keep up with the readings and the music samples to participate in the discussion. Oral Presentation The five to ten-minute oral presentations will supplement the required readings and music samples and should highlight different aspects of the issue under discussion. These oral presentations will have to start discussion. Students are asked to hand out a one-page outline of their presentation to each member of the class before the session starts. In grading, both the content and the presentation (handout, lecturing skills) will be taken into consideration. Grading Attendance and participation in class discussion: 20% Oral presentation: 20% Internet research: 20% In-class exam: 40% A=85-100; B=75-84; C=65-74; D=55-64; F is 54 or below. In case of borderline grades, participation in class discussion and the individual student’s pattern of work (progress) will be considered. No extra credits are available. Grades and grading policy will only be discussed in person. Sources Power point presentations on each class can be downlowded at the department’s library. A set of annotated CDs containing music samples presented during the course are available at the same library. Books on jazz, jazz CDs and DVDs are available at the Music Collection of the University Library. Recommended web sites on styles, musicians, and recordings: http://www.wikipedia.org http://www.allmusic.com/ http://www.smithsonianjazz.org/ http://www.apassion4jazz.net/ FOR DISCUSSION IN WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN: WEEK 1, February 7: How to Recognize Jazz Jazz as a separate and distinct art form. The elements of jazz: the blues, spiritual and gospel song, sound and phrasing, rhythm. harmony, melody, arrangement, improvisation. The instruments of jazz. A definition of jazz in terms of its origins and characteristics. WEEK 2, February 14: The Birthplace: New Orleans The early backgrounds. The roles of the slave, the free Negro, and the Creoles of Color. Encounter of cultures. The musical melting pot: Protestant hymns, German and French Marches, ’Latin’ and West Indian rhythms, European melodies. Ragtime. Pioneering jazzmen in the transitional era of minstrelsy, and their early travels.The process of blending; the emergence of patterns, forms, and styles. Second line. Storyville, the hothouse. Oral presentation: Way Down Yonder in New Orleans (in: Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff, ed: Hear Me Talkin’ to Ya. Dover Publications, 1955) 3-25. WEEK 3, February 21: North to Chicago and New York (1917-) World War I, and the Jazz Age. The migration North to Chicago by land or riverboats: King Oliver, Jimmy Noone, Johnny Dodds and others. The rise of the soloist: Louis Armstrong. The white response: Bix Beiderbecke, and the Austin High Gang. The effect of the new environment on music. Race records. Stride piano/boogie-woogie/barrelhouse The Harlem renaissance. Oral presentation: W. H. Kenney: White Chicago Jazz: Cultural Context (in: Chicago Jazz. A Cultural History, 19041930.) 87-111. Jelly Roll Morton: The “Inventor of Jazz”. (in: Robert Walser, ed.: Keeping Time. Readings on Jazz History. Oxford University Press, 1999.) 16-22. WEEK 4, February 28: Great Individuals: Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington Armstrong: the first soloist in jazz. Introducing swing. Popular appeal: Ambassador of jazz. Ellington: the orchestra as a musical instrument. A personal touch. The greatest oeuvre of all. Oral presentation: Gary Giddins: Louis Arsmtrong (in: Visions of Jazz. Oxford University Press, 1998) 83-101. 2 Rex Stewart: The Duke and His Man (in: Boy Meets Horn, The University of Michigan Press, 1991) 163179 WEEK 5, March 7: The Swing Era (1930-) The Depression and its effect on jazz in the late twenties and early thirties. New York becoming the focal point of the sheet music, radio, recording, and booking business. The evolution of big bands in Harlem. Jazzmen in big commercial bands and radio studios. Social dance. The beginnings of swing: Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, the Dorsey Brothers. Territory bands. Kansas City and environs in the Pendergast era. Prosperity in Prohibition as a magnet for musicians: Count Basie. Oral presentation: The Big Bands (in: Ted Goia: The History of Jazz. Oxford University Press, 1997.) 145-157. Rudolph Fisher: Comon Meter (in: Marcela Breton, ed.: Hot and Cool. Jazz Short Stories. Bloomsbury, 1991.) 12-28. WEEK 6, March 14: National holiday Week 7, March 21: Modern Jazz: The Bebop Revolution (1940-) Transitional years. The recording ban, World War II, and the developments in technology. Death of the big band era. The evolution of bop: Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Kenny Clarke and others at Minton’s. Further developments in the musical language. A psychological shift. The jazz musician as artist. Junkie and Hipster. Oral presentation: Ross Russell: Bird at Work (in: Bird Lives! Quartet Books, 1973.) 255-268. Ralph Ellison: Minton’s (in: Robert Gottlieb, ed.: Reading Jazz. Pantheon Books, 1996.) 545-554. WEEK 8, March 28: Consultation week WEEK 9, April 4: Cool/West Coast, Third Stream (1949-) Birth of the cool: its origins and definiton. The Miles Davis recordings of 1949. White intellectualism: the new school of Lennie Tristano. West Coast directions: Dave Brubeck, Shorty Rogers, Chet Baker, Gerry Mulligan. An attempt to mix jazz with classical music: Third Stream Music. Oral Presentation: James Lincoln Collier: The Old-World Cool of Tristano, Mulligan, and Brubeck (in: The Making of Jazz. Delta Book, 1978.) 408-420. André Hodeir: Situation of Jazz at the Death of Parker (in: André Hodeir: Jazz. Its Evolution and Essence. Grove Press, 1956.) 267-280. WEEK 10, April 11.: Hard bop, Soul, Latin (1955-) Black vitality gains new expression in hard bop: Art Blakey, Horace Silver, Clifford Brown, Sonny Rollins. The advent of long play recordings: improvisation extended. Blue Note Records. Return to an earthy way of expression: soul jazz. The influence of world music: Afro-cuban jazz, the Latin ’tinge’, bossa nova. A flourishing decade. Richard Cook: Seven (in: Blue Note Records.Justin, Charles and Co., 2001.) 117-136. WEEK 11, April 18.: Great Individuals: Miles Davis and John Coltrane Davis: the pioneer. Stylistic progress from bebop to fusion. Great bands and historic recordings. An intimate trumpet sound. Popular appeal. 3 Coltrane: search for new aesthetic principles. An overwhelming voice: sheets of sounds. Freedom of expression. Cosmic spirituality. Oral presentation: Nat Hentoff: John Coltrane (in: Robert Gottlieb, ed.: Reading Jazz. Pantheon Books, 1996.) 620-628. Miles Davis Speaks His Mind (in: Robert Walser, ed.: Keeping Time. Readings on Jazz History. Oxford University Press, 1999.) 365-376. WEEK 12, April 25: Easter holiday WEEK 13, May 2: The New Thing (1959-) The racial element: segregation and its consequences on black ideology. Music and politics. The process of liberation: energy, intensity, atonality, and the opening of musical sounds into the realm of noise. The new type of avant-garde jazzmen. The pioneers of free jazz: Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, Albert Ayler. Chicago revisited: the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. The New York loft scene. Towards a new definition: contemporary improvised music. Oral presentation: Valerie Wilmer: Ornette Coleman – The Art of the Improviser (in: As Serious As Your Life. The Story of the New Jazz. Quartet Books, 1977.) 60-74. WEEK 14, May 9: Fusion and After (1970-) Popular culture, beat music and their impact on jazz. New devices of sound production and the electronization of intsruments. The integration of jazz and rock: Weather Report, Return to Forever, Mahavishnu Orchestra. African and Indian influences. A new conservative agenda: Wynton Marsalis. The New York downtown scene. Influential personalities: Keith Jarrett, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea. Jazz becomes world music. Oral Presentation: Stuart Nicholson: Ticket to Ride (in: Jazz-Rock. A History. Schirmer Books, 1998.) 1-13. Wynton Marsalis and Herbie Hancock: Soul, Craft and Cultural Hierarchy (in: Robert Walser, ed.: Keeping Time. Readings in Jazz History. Oxford University Press, 1999.) 339-350. WEEK 15. May 16: The Profession of Jazz The morality of jazz. The Musicians of jazz. The language of jazz. The preservation of jazz. Jazz and business. The jazz public. Jazz criticism. Oral Presentation: Frances Newton: The Musical Achievement (in: The Jazz Scene. MacGibbon and Kee, 1959) 136-147. Marshall W. Stearns: The Appeal of Jazz (in: The Story of Jazz. Oxford University Press, 1956.) 197207. In-class exam (test + essays) READINGS: Nat Hentoff: Junk (in: The Jazz Life. Da Capo, 1961.) 75-97. Michael J. Budds: Extra- Musical Connotations: New Perspectives (in: Jazz in the Sixties. University of Iowa Press. 1990.) 97-127. LeRoi Jones: Jazz and the White Critic (in: LeRoi Jones: Black Music. Da Capo, 1968.) 1120. DISCOGRAPHY (A one page summary of the recording career and a list of the most important CDs by one of these artists to be submitted by May 16.) 4 Count Basie Billie Holiday Charlie Parker Dizzy Gillespie Thelonious Monk Charles Mingus Sonny Rollins Art Blakey Sarah Vaughan Albert Ayler Art Ensemble of Chicago Chick Corea Keith Jarrett Herbie Hancock Wynton Marsalis GLOSSARY A list of the most important terms in jazz Arrangement. A new version of a previously written piece. Jazz arrangements often include new chords for the piece as well as new material to be played during and between solos, and so on. Avant-garde. Jazz (usually atonal) not based on preconceived chord changes; jazz played in a freely improvised nature (but which is not entirely "free" as it generally shows evidence of a structure or blueprint); the term first came into widespread use in the 1960s to describe some of the more freely improvised music of artists. Bebop. Virtuosic jazz style with irregularly accented, long phrases and sophisticated harmonies. Most prominent between 1944 and 1950. Also called “rebop,” or “bop.” Block chords. A series of big chords played with the hands moving in parallel (c.f. locked hands). Big band. A jazz ensemble of 12 to 20 members, consisting of a rhythm section plus sections of trumpets, trombones and saxophones. Black & Tan. A night club with customers of all races. Blue note. The lowered 3rd, 5th, and 7th degrees of a key. Blues. Frequently used song form in jazz. Also a separate tradition of African-American music. Usually a twelve-bar form. Blues songs have a fairly standardized chord progression. The notes are found "between" the keys of the piano; the lowered 3rd, 5th, and 7th notes of a major scale are often referred to as blue notes, having a "bluesy" sound common in blues compositions and performances. Boogie woogie. A piano blues style based on a driving repeated left hand part, playing eight notes to the measure in an exaggerated swing style. Became very popular from late 1930’s on. Bossa nova. A fusion of the harmonies and languid approach of cool jazz with several ostinato patterns (two slow beats to the measure) derived from the Brazilian samba. Originated around 1960, soon became hugely popular. Break. A momentary pause in the rhythm section, usually just one or two measures, which a band member will “fill,” usually with an improvised phrase. 5 Bridge. The B section of an AABA form, generally eight bars long. Also called “channel” or “release.” Call and response. A means whereby instruments or sections of instruments in a band or combo play a passage which is in turn responded to by another instrument or section; a musical conversation: one musician or section will play a short melodic idea and is answered by another musician or section. Changes. Jazz terminology for chords (e.g., the changes of a tune = the chords of tune); a tune's chord progression. Chord progression. A sequence of chords that underlies a composition, often twelve or thirty-two bars in length. The progression is repeated over and over during improvised solos. Chorus. The form of a song, often twelve or thirty-two bars in length. In jazz the chord progression (q.v.) of the chorus, but not its melody, is repeated over and over during improvisations. Collective improvisation. Concurrent improvisation by the musicians in a combo; two or more musicians improvising at the same time. Combo. Same as small band or small ensemble (duo to nonet); an assemblage of musicians with a common purpose. Comping. Syncopated chording which provides improvised accompaniment for simultaneously improvise solos, flexibly complementing the rhythms and implied harmonies of the solo line. Congo Square. The area in New Orleans where musicians met for social activities and to play music. Cool jazz. A jazz style using a mellow tonal quality and smooth, flowing melodic lines partly inspired by Lester Young. Often classical instruments and techniques were used. Most prominent throughout the 1950’s. Sometimes called “West Coast jazz.” Creole. Louisiana residents with African heritage mixed with Spanish or French ancestry. Cutting contest. Musical game of one-upmanship, a competitive jam session, where the performers attempt to outdo each other. Dixieland. Early instrumental jazz band music. The name given to New Orleans style jazz when it began to be played in Northern cities. This style of jazz is also known as New Orleans style jazz, Chicago style jazz or traditional jazz. Double time playing. Playing twice as fast as the other members of the band. It also refers to the whole band going into a tempo twice as fast as what preceded it. Embellishment. Musical decoration of a note or a phrase. Extramusical devices. Sounds not normally associated with the instrument, like squeaks, vocal yelps, electronic feedback. Free jazz. A name often used throughout the 1960’s for jazz performances that do not follow a repeating chord progression, and in some cases do not have a steady beat. Also, the name of an influential album by Ornette Coleman. Funky. 1. Earthy or dirty. 2. mean, „low down” or sexy. 3. Bluesy. 4. Gospel-flavored. Fusion. A combination or “fusing” of jazz with other types of music, especially soul music and rock. Amplified and electronic instruments are used. Prominent since around 1970. Growl style. A methord used by some trumpeters and trombonists in which by unorthodox use of mutes, lips, mouth and blowing techniques a sound is produced that resembles the growl of an animal. 6 Hard bop. An aggressive, exuberant style that grew naturally out of bebop. Prominent beginning in the early 1950’s. Harlem. The best known African American neighborhood in the United States, located in Manhattan, north of Central Park. It has been a center for black business and cultural activities for more than sixty years. Head. The melody statement of the tune; usually played as the first and last chorus. Head arrangement. A band arrangement that was extemporaneously by the musicians and is not written down. Improvisation. The spontaneous creating of an original piece of music. It requires a great deal of practice and an intimate knowledge of the style of music in which one desires to create. Jam session. Informal performance where musicians improvise at their leisure, often without an audience but just for the benefit of the musicians themselves. Jazz-rock. A variety of tsyles beginning in the late 60s that used electric instruments, funk rhythm and accompaniment and jazz improvisation. Also known as fusion music. Jukebox. An automatic phonograph that plays recordings when money is inserted into a coin slot. Lick. A little melodic idea that a musician uses frequently. Jazz players can be identified by their characteristic licks. In classical analysis licks are called “formulas.” Mainstream. Originally a term that embraced certain music (particularly small bands) which extended the swing jazz tradition into the present; an umbrella term that includes all postbebop acoustic jazz except that which is considered free or avant garde jazz; jazz reflecting hard bop sensibilities. Measure. The space between vertical bar-lines in notated music. The bar-lines group beats together in specific, consistent numbers. For example, in common 4/4 time, each measure has four beats. Modal jazz. A repertoire of jazz pieces, as opposed to a particular style of improvising. Modal pieces stay on each mode (and thus each scale and chord as well) for a long time, usually at least four bars per mode, in contrast with standard repertory which changes chords at least once per measure. Modal pieces often employ modes other than the familiar major and minor, such as the dorian (q.v.). Prominent since the late 1950’s. Motive. A short musical idea that the musician develops by creating some variations of it. A typical jazz solo will have several short stretches during which the artist becomes involved in developing a particular motive. Mute. An attachment which reduces an instrument’s loudness and alters its tone color. Piano roll. A roll of paper with holes cut into it while a pianist plays. When played back on a specially designed player piano, the original performance can be reproduced. Most prominent in the early 1900’s. Playing in/out. Improvisation in which all notes selected are contained within the given chord/improvisation in which few, if any, of the selected notes are contained in the given chord or scale. Polymetric. The simultaneous occurrence of two or more time signatures (meters). Polyphony. The simultaneous sounding of two or more melodies of equal importance; also known in jazz as "collective improvisation;" the simultaneous expression of two or more 7 instruments improvising with equal individual melodic and counter-melodic significance (e.g., polyphony is a key element in Dixieland jazz.). Polyrhythm. Two or more contrasting rhythms played simultaneously; two or more rhythms superimposed. Ragtime. A non-improvised, notated late 19th-early 20th century style of piano-based music characterized by its syncopated, distinctive so-called "ragged" right hand movement on the keyboard; an influence on and direct precursor of early jazz; a piano style with stride left hand and highly syncopated right hand; ragtime was composed music. Rent party. A gathering in one's home for which an admission fee is charged in order to raise money to pay the rent or other bills. Rhythm and blues. A driving, riff-based, urban blues style relying on jazz instrumentation, especially tenor saxophone. Also called “r&b” for short. Most prominent during the middle 1940’s through the 1950’s. Rhythm section. The musicians in the band whose primary function is to provide and maintain the pulse, rhythm, and feel of the music as well as its underlying chord structure; the rhythm section consists of piano, bass, guitar, and drums. Riff. A little melodic idea that is repeated over and over again even though the chords are changing underneath, creating a great deal of rhythmic momentum. The riff must be compatible with the underlying chords, or else one or two notes of the riff may be changed to accomodate the chords as they change. Ring shout. An African-American dance and music, originally described in religious settings during the 1800’s, in which dancers move in a circle, making short shuffling steps. Music accompanying the dance consisted of short repeated melodies. Scat singing. A vocalist's improvisatory device whereby he/she sings in nonsense syllables rather than lyrics, often in imitation of an instrumental jazz solo. Sideman. A musician who is not the leader of a band or recording session. Also called “sideperson.” Solo. A featured improvisation in a jazz piece. Also a verb, to solo. In jazz it is not truly “solo” because the rhythm section usually continues to provide accompaniment. Soul jazz. Jazz based on the style and rhythms of African-American popular music of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s. Speakeasy. A nightclub which operated illegally during Prohibition. Many musicians found employment in speakeasies. Standards. Familiar, well-established popular or jazz tunes; those songs which through widely repeated performance have become part of the standard jazz repertoire. Straight ahead. Term used to suggest a manner of playing which adheres closely to the tradition of jazz, as in played straight, moving in a straight forward manner; also used as a stylistic designation related to mainstream (see mainstream) playing; acoustic jazz based on the hard bop tradition and sensibilities. Stride. A style of piano playing named for its left hand figures, with a characteristic “oompah” sound, made by striking a single note low in the bass on the first and third beats of a measure, and filling in with a chord in midrange on beats two and four. Differs from ragtime in the swing feeling and the right hand improvisation. Swing. The feeling projected by a jazz performance which succesfully combines constant tempo, syncopation, swing eighth notes, rhythmic lilt, liveliness and rhythmically cohesive group playing. It appears to result partly from the push and pull between layers of syncopated rhythms and the constant underlying beat. 8 Syncopation. The accenting of a normally weak beat or weak part of a beat; the accenting of "upbeats;" placement of accents in unexpected places; placement of notes between the steady beats. Third Stream. A repertoire of music consciously combining jazz and classical music in various degrees. The composers are usually, but not always, from jazz backgrounds. The term was coined by Gunther Schuller in 1957. Timbre. Tone quality. Time signature. A numerical symbol of the number of beats in a measure and the value of the note that will receive one beat of duration. Vibrato. A regulated wavering of pitch on a sustained note, warming its sound. It closely resembles the tremolo, which is a regulated wavering of amplitude (volume). Walking bass. A bass line that moves like a scale, four notes per bar. Work song. A song sung in the same rhythm as a task being done. Groups would sometimes sing together to keep the workers moving at a steady pace. 9