The Growth Of Jazz Music
In the turn of the century around 1920, many artists made their
mark by playing in the discreet underground nightclubs known as
"Speakeasies" which are high class , "Blind pig" lower class or
"Smokeasy" for smokers. The United States once prohibited the sale
of alcoholic beverages and smoking tobacco in clubs as a
constitutional amendment. One could usually find an underground
nightclub by the doors without a sign to indicate that there was
such as establishment inside. Those dives also had a secret door
that lead out to a passageway or alley in case the police came to
investigate. The police had the power to arrest everyone in the
place due to the fact that they were broke the law by being
there.
However, thing were beginning to look up for Jazz Music once the
invention of the record player or phonograph was made to play jazz
albums. In addition, radio stations helped promote Jazz music, and
made it popular among the public. Jazz Music became a music of
class that earned the era a nick name known as the "Jazz age". The
band leaders who became famous as Jazz musicians were Paul
Whiteman, Ted Lewis, Harry Reser, Leo Reisman, Abe Lyman, Nat
Shilkret, Earl Burnett, Ben Bernie, George Olson, Bob Haring,
Vincent Lopez, Ben Salvin and many more. Paul Whiteman claimed to
be the king of Jazz music due to his popularity. He earned the
title when he hired some white Jazz musicians with Bix Beiderbecke
included to combine jazz with larger orchestrations.
In fact George Gershwin's "Rhapsody In Blue' was commissioned by
Whiteman as his debut for the orchestra.
Ten years after Jazz music became popular it was reinvented into
a style that would be suitable for radio and dancing. This style
was known as "Swing" which allowed musicians to improvise their own
interpretation of the melody or theme that was sometimes difficult
to do. In the Swing era Jazz bands grew into a larger size which
was often referred to as "Big Band" music that would always feature
a soloist.
The band leaders and music arrangers for Jazz music who became
famous for this style of music was Cab Calloway, Duke Ellington,
Earl Hines, Fletcher Henderson, Walter Page, Benny Goodman, Don
Redman, Chick Webb, Jimmie Lunceford, and Jay McShann. During this
time there were racial issues of segregation between black and
white people, but it slowly died down enough for the white band
leaders to find black musicians to perform with them. In the middle
of the 1930's Benny Goodman invited Teddy Wilson(pianist), Lionel
Hampton (vibraphonist), and Charlie Christian (guitarist) to be a
part of a group. Each musician learned from the style of other
musicians in order to form their own. For example, Cab Calloway,
Dizzy Gillespie(trumpeter), Bing Crosby (vocalist) were influenced
by the improvising of Louis Armstrong. Later, the vocalists Ella
Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Frank Sinatra, and Sarah Vaughn joined
the scene with Jazz Improvisation known as the scat. To Scat is to
vocally imitate musical instruments using such non verbal language
as doot 'n doo bee yah bah loo bey doo ee ya boy lay bah doo doot
'n doo yah doo doy.
In the beginning of the 1940's Jazz music evolved yet again into
a new style known as "Jump Music" which was upbeat music using
blues chords performed by small music groups. These small music
groups are the forms many bands make today. Later, another style of
Jazz music came using the music of the 1930's as an inspiration
called "Boogie-Woogie" where the usual 4 beat bar section expanded
into an eight beat bar section in the rhythm which Big Joe Turner
took the lead in the 1940's.
In the 1950's, music reinvented again when turner turned to
"Rock and Roll music". As for the Swing era music it was reborn in
the use of the modern dance trends. Kansas City made memorial for
Charlie Parker in their American Jazz Museum that displays the
history of the music and the people who made Jazz music what it has
become.
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