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Jazz Origins

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Jazz Origins

Jazz Beige Braided Rug Size: 5' x 7'6 Jazz Beige Braided Rug Size: 5' x 7'6
$280.00

JAZ17000576 Size: 5' x 7'6" Features: -Construction: Handmade. -Technique: Woven. -Material: Cotton / Jute. -Origin: India. -Collection: Jazz. -Color: Beige. -Pile height: 0.5''. -Available in the following sizes:. -2'' x 3''. -2''6'' x 7''6'' runner. -5'' x 7''6''. -7''9'' x 10''6''. Note: Please be aware that actual colors may vary from those shown on your screen. Accent Rug may also not show t...
Jazz Hand-woven Braided Rug Size: 2' x 3' Jazz Hand-woven Braided Rug Size: 2' x 3'
$45.00

JAZ1700423 Size: 2' x 3' Features: -Construction: Handmade. -Technique: Woven. -Material: Cotton / Jute. -Origin: India. -Collection: Jazz. -Pile height: 0.5''. -Available in the following sizes:. -2'' x 3''. -5'' x 7''6''. Note: Please be aware that actual colors may vary from those shown on your screen. Accent Rug may also not show the entire pattern that the corresponding area rugs have. Addit...
Jazz Hand-woven Braided Rug Size: 5' x 7'6 Jazz Hand-woven Braided Rug Size: 5' x 7'6
$280.00

JAZ17004576 Size: 5' x 7'6" Features: -Construction: Handmade. -Technique: Woven. -Material: Cotton / Jute. -Origin: India. -Collection: Jazz. -Pile height: 0.5''. -Available in the following sizes:. -2'' x 3''. -5'' x 7''6''. Note: Please be aware that actual colors may vary from those shown on your screen. Accent Rug may also not show the entire pattern that the corresponding area rugs have. Ad...
Touch Touch
$10.58

Adding to her already transcendent collection of solo piano recordings for Origin Records, Jessica Williams furthers her legacy with Touch, recorded live at the Triple Door concert hall in Seattle. In her detailed and expansive liner notes, Ms. Williams reveals a thought process obsessed with voicing's and touch - apparent in this program of originals and classics such as Goodbye, Porkpie Hat - an...
Harlem Renaissance / Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Nat King Cole Harlem Renaissance / Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Nat King Cole
$10.76

Recounts the vibrant personalities and remarkable cultural movements that flourished in America's leading Black community during the 1920s and 1930s.Genre: DocumentaryRating: NRRelease Date: 27-JUL-2004Media Type: DVD...
Bobby Broom Plays For Monk Bobby Broom Plays For Monk
$10.92

For his third Origin release, master guitarist Bobby Broom pays tribute to one of the most important voices in jazz with a set of Thelonious Monk compositions and several standards Monk recorded during his time on Riverside Records. He is joined by his long standing trio-mates, bassist Dennis Carroll and drummer Kobie Watkins, as he again puts his own very personal spin on the classic repertoire. ...
United States History Video Collection-Vol. 17: Origins-WWII: The Roaring Twenties United States History Video Collection-Vol. 17: Origins-WWII: The Roaring Twenties

Includes the Return to Normalcy, Auto culture, flappers and the Revolution in manners and morals, the consumer revolution, the rise of advertising, motion pictures, Harlem Renaissance, Jazz Age, social polarization, Prohibition, the rise of the KKK, the Scopes Trial, The Golden Age of sports...
The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story
$17.11

Kansas City in the 1930s was a wild, wide-open place. Under political boss Tom Pendergast, the booze flowed freely, prostitution and gambling flourished, and the Depression pretty much passed the city by, making it an ideal spawning ground for some great music. Pianist-bandleader Count Basie, saxophone immortals Lester Young and Charlie Parker, and blues belters Big Joe Turner and Jimmy Rushi...
Two for the Road Two for the Road
$30.99

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Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular Music (Clarendon Paperbacks) Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular Music (Clarendon Paperbacks)
$19.95

Analyzing popular music from a musical, rather than a sociological or political viewpoint, this book examines the nineteenth-century split between classical and popular music and surveys all styles of Western popular music to uncover the musical language uniting them....

Do you love listening to that smooth, toe-tapping music we call jazz? Do you love to dance with your significant other to the sounds of Fats Domino, Louis Armstrong, or Duke Ellington?

While it’s undoubtedly cool to use words like ‘Swing’, ‘Bebop’ or ‘Bossa Nova’ when describing a jazz style, not very many people really know the difference between Hot Jazz, Classic Jazz or Afro-Cuban Jazz. If you don’t know the difference between one style of jazz and another, this article is for you. Read on if you want to up your cool quotient while discussing Hot Jazz:

Classic Jazz: More popularly called ‘New Orleans jazz’ because of its origins, classic jazz originated in the late 1800’s – early 1900’s with brass bands performing for dances and parties using an assortment of musical instruments including the trombone, saxophone, tuba, clarinet, cornet, guitar, bass, drums and cornet. At the time, musical arrangements varied significantly from one performance to another.

Hot Jazz: Pioneered by Louis Armstrong, hot jazz was characterized by improvised solos that built up to an emotional and ‘hot’ crescendo that was supported by bass, drums and guitar or banjo.

Chicago Style Jazz: If New Orleans was the birth place of jazz, Chicago was the breeding ground. Several young, dynamic players including Bud Freeman, Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa and Eddie Condon significantly furthered jazz improvisations with a combination of high technical ability and harmonic, innovative arrangements.

Swing: During the classic 1930’s, most Jazz groups were Big Bands who played a robust and invigorating version of Classic Jazz. More popularly called Swing, for the first time jazz was used as dance music. Many of the most famous musicians the world has every heard were swing jazz musicians. The famous jazz swing players include people such as Duke Ellington, Count Basie, The Dorsey Brothers, Glenn Miller, and Louis Armstrong, to name a few. Of course, the genre of ballroom dance called swing grew out of jazz swing music.

Bebop: Immortalized by trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and alto saxophonist Charlie Parker who engaged in chordal improvisations, Bebop was a complete deviation from mainstream jazz that was typically derived from the melodic line.

Bossa Nova: Initiated as “Brazilian jazz” by Brazilian’s Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joao Gilberto, Bossa Nova is a blend of seductive Brazilian samba rhythms, classical European harmonies and West Coast cool. Adopting the Bossa Nova style, West Coast saxophonist Stan Getz and guitarist Charlie Byrd gave this jazz form a huge boost in the United States around 1962.

Afro-Cuban Jazz: Also known as Latin jazz, Afro-Cuban jazz can be traced back to percussionist Chano Pozo and trumpeter- arranger Mario Bauza. Characterized by its highly infectious rhythms combined with Jazz improvisations, Afro-Cuban jazz is typically played using rhythm instruments including bongo, timbale, conga along with assorted Latin percussion instruments and is often accompanied by guitar or piano and joined by vocals or horns.

Now that you know what the different types of jazz music are, you can speak intelligently about the music that you love! So get out there and have some great jazzy fun!

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Article Source: ArticlesBase.comThe Different Styles Of Jazz