Popular Jazz Music
Posted on Friday, January 30th, 2009 at 1:19 pmPopular Jazz Music
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Ahmad Jamal, Johnny Griffin, Ralph Sharon
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I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry Poster Brazilian 27x40 Jessica Biel Adam Sandler
$8.49 I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry reproduction poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon's largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, poster and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc... |
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Speed Racer Poster D 27x40 Emile Hirsch Christina Ricci Susan Sarandon
$8.49 Speed Racer reproduction poster print Pop Culture Graphics, Inc is Amazon's largest source for movie and TV show memorabilia, poster and more: Offering tens of thousands of items to choose from. We also offer a full selection of framed posters.. Customer satisfaction is always guaranteed when you buy from Pop Culture Graphics,Inc... |
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Benny Golson & Tubby Hayes [VHS]
$26.99 ... |
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Rock Video Monthly: Alternative Release Aug 1995
$12.00 10 musical video selections from popular artists: 1) OUR LADY PEACE "Naveed" from the album Relativity; 2) TRIPPING DAISY "I Got A Girl" from the album I Am An Elastic Firecracker; 3) BABES IN TOYLAND "Sweet '69" from the album Nemesisters; 4) CHARLIE SEXTON SEXTET "Everyone Will Crawl" from the album Under The Wishing Tree; 5) JENNIFER TRYNIN "Happier" from the album Cockamamie; 6) SPONGE "Molly"... |
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Times Ain't Like They Used to Be: Early Rural & Popular American Music (From Rare Original Film Masters, 1928-35) [VHS]
$12.99 Fans of early country and blues won't want to miss this compilation of newsreel footage from the '20s and '30s, capturing both the famous (Jimmie Rodgers, Bob Wills's Texas Playboys) and the anonymous. The 23 painstakingly compiled clips focus mostly on the musicians where they lived or played, at home, at barn dances, and on street corners. Some of the highlights include Georgia field hands,... |
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The Caterina Valente Collection: The Breeze and I
$8.96 From Crystorama Lighting, this Paris Flea Semi Flush 5823 CHAM has dimensions of 12"W x 12"H and a bulb requirement of 3 x 60W Cand.. Design inpiration and name recognition comes from a city known worldwide for it's unique and inventive style-Paris, France. The innovative compilation of color crystal drops and Murano color fruit draped onto wrought iron frames will turn any setting into a romantic... |
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Pull - European Railing Pull
$12.11 406mm(16") European Railing Pull.... |
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Desperate Man Blues: Discovering the Roots of American Music
$16.98 ... |
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Times Ain't Like They Used to Be - Early Rural & Popular Music
$13.25 Fans of early country and blues won't want to miss this compilation of newsreel footage from the '20s and '30s, capturing both the famous (Jimmie Rodgers, Bob Wills's Texas Playboys) and the anonymous. The 23 painstakingly compiled clips focus mostly on the musicians where they lived or played, at home, at barn dances, and on street corners. Some of the highlights include Georgia field hands,... |
What types of jazz music was popular in the 1920’s?
What types of jazz music was popular in the 1920s, also known as the Jazz Age or Roaring Twenties?
There were many, from Dixieland to Blues to “White” symphonic jazz. It’s impossible to characterize the decade’s music in a few paragraphs when volumes have been written.
Here are some important figures you should look at:
Paul Whiteman – Labeled the “King of Jazz” he helped popularize jazz among white audiences. In 1924 he commissioned George Gershwin to write a symphonic jazz piece that became “Rhapsody in Blue.” Out of his band came the greatest white musicians: Bix Beiderbecke, Frankie Trumbauer, Eddie Lang, Joe Venuti, and Jack Teagarden. He also hired some kid by the name of Bing Crosby.
Louis Armstrong – Perhaps the most important musician of the 20th century, he took his New Orleans Dixieland horn to Chicago and made significant contributions to the “hot jazz” of the era. Crosby and Armstrong became great friends in the twenties. He taught Bing to scat and how to put humor into music and Crosby was an influence for Armstrong’s way of handling a ballad. This duo, therefore, probably did more to shape American music than any other.
Duke Ellington – Duke’s band was the prototype that would fuse jazz and popular music and lead to the rise of the white “swing” orchestras of the 1930’s.
(Note on above posters: Ragtime was a much earlier era of American music. It’s biggest star and composer, Scott Joplin, was dead by 1917)