Jazz

Louis Armstrong's
Hot Five
Photo Source:
symposium.music.org/ cgi-bin/m_symp_show.pl?id=835
Text Source: "Jazz
Lives" Author Graham Lees "Jazz A Multimedia History"
http://musicandyou.com/musichistory.htm
"Jazz started out with a mixture of many types of
music. It's roots date back to the 1880's with African origins. Jazz combines
elements of African music with elements of Western European music. The
birthplace of that combination, which is Jazz, is said to be New Orleans. One
theory as to why New Orleans is the birthplace is contributed to the black
Creole subculture.The Creoles were originally from the West Indies and lived
under the Spanish and French rule in Louisiana. They became free Americans under
the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. The Creoles spoke Spanish and French and lived
in the high society of the French district in New Orleans. The Creoles took
pride in their formal knowledge of the Western European music and their social
and cultural values that classified them as upper class. Their music focused on
sight-readings and correct performances for they played at the Opera House and
chamber ensembles.
On the West Side of New Orleans live the uneducated, culturally and economically
poor American blacks. Their music was based on simple melodies and complex
cross-rhythms mixed in with verbal slurs, vibrato, syncopated rhythms, and
"blues notes". The songs they sang were mostly spiritual or sung to pass the
time of hardship and hard labor. The songs were actually encouraged because the
workers seem to work better with the soothing effects of the music. Their music
was characterized more by memorization and improvisation, and not of formal
training.
In 1894, the segregation laws were in effect in New Orleans, which forced the
upper class Creoles to live on the West Side with the poor, uneducated American
blacks. The mixture of the two styles of music and two cultures clashed and
created the start of Jazz.
Jazz changed and new forms were developed often. Between the 1890 and the 1900,
"Ragtime" and the Blues was the new craze. New Orleans seemed to be the Mecca of
new artists and sounds that included everything including but not limited to
brass band, Ragtime, marches, pop, dances, and Blues. The music spread to the
north and west through migrating travelers and records. Jazz really came into
effect by the 1920's when the whites adapted and imitated it. Some of the
leaders of the popular Jazz bands include Joe "King" Oliver, Louis Armstrong,
and Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton. These bands played in a style that would come
to be known as Dixieland.Dancing became the latest craze during the late 30's.
Many people wanted to shake off the depression by dancing. So Jazz music
developed into new types of music to dance to.
By the 1940's Jazz has developed into many styles of music. There were Bop,
Traditional, Swing, Dixieland, and Latin influences of Jazz. Jazz has a variety
of forms, even today. Acid Jazz is the most recent form of Jazz. It is becoming
more and more popular these days. Jazz has such a great mixture of rhythm and
beats that Jazz will never cease to exist. To view great photographs and listen
to some great Jazz songs from the golden age of Jazz visit the American Memory
Library of Congress."
