The Earliest Jazz Artists MUH 271 JAZZ HISTORY. Buddy Bolden  "Sometime around 1897, the Charles "Buddy" Bolden band began filling the dance halls and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What is Jazz?? Improvisation is important in Jazz Jazz uses “bent” music notes Jazz expresses many emotions Jazz uses.
Advertisements

NOTES ON CHAPTER 4 – “NEW ORLEANS”. EARLY HISTORY OF THE CITY founded by France in 1718; sold to Spain in 1763 but “reclaimed” in 1803 cultural life from.
Notes Based on Chapter 6 LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND THE FIRST GREAT SOLOISTS.
“The Shift from Ragtime to Jazz” “jazz styles” [whatever that means] developed wherever musicians, encouraged by the spontaneous performance practices.
Harlem Renaissance Candace New Courtney Gordon Marquaja Harris Beginning of Jazz Beginning of Jazz.
 probable 1 st jazz artist (“inventor of jazz”)  loudness of his playing  distinctive timbre and attack  “seductive” style of playing, particularly.
BY TAYLOR CHASE JUSTIN TALABAN The Jazz Age. Jazz Age F. Scott Fitzgerald coined the term “Jazz Age” in the 20’s -African American artists developed Jazz.
The history of the BLUES
Louis Armstrong ( ) “Satchmo”. Daniel Louis Armstrong was born in a run-down cabin in New Orleans, Louisiana, slum. His mother was just fifteen.
Ragtime Originated in Sedalia, MO St. Louis became the Ragtime center around 1901 General Public first exposed to Ragtime at a series of World’s Fairs.
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Jazz Tenth Edition Chapter 4 PowerPoint by Sharon Ann Toman, 2004.
America’s Musical Gift to the World.  Name three cities that Jazz music was popular in, during the early 1900s. Give the years in which jazz was popular.
1920s Jazz Joe “King” Oliver Edward “Kid” Ory Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Jelly Roll Morton.
T HE J AZZ A GE. M ILES D AVIS An original, lyrical soloist and a demanding group leader, Miles Davis was the most consistently innovative musician in.
History of Jazz America’s Music. What is Jazz? A musical conversation: partly planned and partly spontaneous A dialogue among the musicians who perform.
New Orleans Possibly the Birth place of Jazz but… We must keep in mind that slaves were first brought to the America’s in 1619 to Virginia were African.
Chapter 9 Jazz.
By: Arisay Gonzalez & Ever Paz
The Emergence of Black Music
By: Jessica Micheli, Callie Oppenheimer, Savannah Ingle.
The Story of Louis Armstrong & His Music By Steven Tausinga.
Origins of Jazz in New Orleans By: Joe Reynolds and Devin Allen.
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What is Jazz?? Improvisation is important in Jazz Jazz uses “bent” music notes Jazz expresses many emotions Jazz uses.
Origins of Jazz. Elements unique to jazz “style” Rhythm  “swing” feel Pitch  Blue notes; bent pitches Sound  traditional instruments played in unusual.
By: Karissa Fults & Lyndee Dexter. Blues + ragtime + brass band = Dixieland First recording in 1917 by band “Original Dixieland Jazz Band” (the name Dixieland.
Begins on page 331 Chapter 37 Popular Music and Jazz to 1950.
He Created a style of sophisticated Jazz different from the rest of the Jazz He played the piano, led an orchestra, and made over 2000 pieces of music.
By Corbin Hamilton.  Louis Armstrong was born August 4, 1901, in New Orleans, Louisiana and died on July 6,1981 in Queens, New York, from a heart attack.
The Harlem Renaissance Give me some examples of intolerance during the 1920s.
1920’s Project By:Stephanie Rodriguez Lilian Serrano Yvette Mejia Shade White.
New Orleans Musicians. Joe “King” Oliver Joe “King”Oliver one of the most important figures in early Jazz. When we use the phrase Hot Jazz,
Musicians and Artist The Harlem Renaissance consisted of many great musicians and writers such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, and Edward Hopper.
By: Joel kersey.  Name given at birth: Joseph Oliver  Date born: 1885  Died: 1938  American jazz cornetist  Place of birth: Abend, LA  Oliver began.
HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC :. The USA is the homeland of unique musical styles.
Roaring Twenties: Music By Marc Latham, Taylor Smith, Aidan Fulton, & Dan English.
Dixieland (New Orleans Jazz). Origin Around 1910 a new style of music, Jazz, became popular in New Orleans, Louisiana. Jazz was influenced by many sources:
Louis Armstrong Joseph Hoke, Johns Hopkins. Louis Armstrong was a jazz trumpeter and singer from New Orleans, Louisiana. Louis was one of the most influential.
The Admirable Louis Armstrong By: Leah Colvin. Early life  Nobody is sure when Armstrong was born  Some say he was born July 4, 1900  Home town was.
Kathleen Murray.  Was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana in a poor family.  Louis replaced King Oliver in the band Kid Ory around 1918.
WAYNE COMMUNITY COLLEGE MUS Introduction to Jazz Fall, Tuesday/Thursday 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. SJAFB Library Bldg. Instructor Information Instructor:
SWING AND THE BIG BANDS MUH 271 Jazz History. JAZZ IN THE 1920S  much of the most popular music called jazz reflects a "slapstick" phase.  new interest.
Jazz Notes II. Characteristics of Jazz  The difference between New Orleans style Jazz and other cities’ Jazz was improvisation. –The true, individual.
1920 – 1945 History of American Music. Swing Big Band.
From Africa to BeBop. Early days of America In 1619, the first Africans were brought to the state of Virginia. They were taken from their happy homes.
Jazz of the 1920s and 1930s. What is Jazz? American style music that blended African rhythms with classical structure Musicians often “improvised” or.
Jazz History: The Advent of Jazz Dawn of the 20 th Century.
SECTION 13.4: FOCUS QUESTIONS
The Great Migration  Between 1910 and 1920, the Great Migration saw hundreds of thousands of African Americans move north to big cities  By 1920 over.
By: Mariah Boyd Summer 2010 Music Louis Armstrong was born in the Storyville district of New Orleans, Louisiana. He was born on August 4 th 1901.
 Born August 04, 1901 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  Died July 6, 1971 in New York, New York  Commonly known as Satchmo or Pops and is well known for.
Louis Armstrong By: Sean Avjian. Armstrong Childhood Born August 4, 1901 in New Orleans in a ghetto known as the “Back of Town” Armstrong was many times.
The Roots of Rock Ragtime and Jazz. Ragtime Emerges from mix of influences c Piano style, named for ragged melody line.
American Music History Jazz, Big Band, Swing, & R’n’B.
Something About Music By: Nicholas Nguyen. Sex Jazz.
Chapter 72 Early Jazz. Lecture Overview Can jazz be defined? Origins of jazz: ragtime, blues, popular songs, dance music Ragtime: –Scott Joplin and “Maple.
LOUIS ARMSTONG Blues and jazz pioneer. JAZZ & BLUES The blues was intensely personal, and was an expression and reflection of the individual facing hardships.
 Own musical genre considered to be the beginning of Jazz  Peaked between  Originated in African American communities of both.
American Popular Music Three Early Jazz Styles
Famous Pianists and the Blues Innovation & Fame Sing like RoyaltyLeaders & Politics In the Mood for some local improvisers?
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What do I already know about jazz?
Jazz Quiz Review. Types of Jazz Ragtime - one of the early musical styles that contributed to the development of jazz. It combined a sixteenth-note-based.
Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington was born on April 29, 1899, in Washington, D.C. He began studying the piano at the age of seven. He started playing.
Jazz. Mazurka The folk origins of the mazurek are two other Polish musical forms—the slow kujawiak, and the fast oberek. The mazurek is always found to.
The Devil´s Music..  Definition.  Origin of the word.  History.  Race.  Role of women.  Louis Armstrong.  Mamie Smith.
By John Nguyen & Chuan Phan
The origination and evolution of an ever-new music
History of Jazz and the Blues
The First American Art form
LIFE & CULTURE IN AMERICA IN THE 1920S
LIFE & CULTURE IN AMERICA IN THE 1920S
Presentation transcript:

The Earliest Jazz Artists MUH 271 JAZZ HISTORY

Buddy Bolden  "Sometime around 1897, the Charles "Buddy" Bolden band began filling the dance halls and streets of New Orleans with a new kind of music. Instead of following the notes on sheet music like they were a railroad track, Buddy made his cornet an extension of his emotions. To this rough Negro barber, popular melodies were only points of embarkation for funky, hip-swinging improvisation. Some twenty years later this new music would be called jazz." (Buerkle and Barker, p. vii)

1 st Jazz Artist  Probably first to embellish melodies in the jazz style  first "King of Jazz" in New Orleans  remembered by musicians of the time as “one of the finest horn players they had ever heard”  became known around 1895 playing in New Orleans parades and dances  his band eventually rose to become one of the most popular in the city  his health deteriorated by 1907 and he was committed to a mental institution

Jelly Roll Morton (Ferdinand Joseph La Menthe)  first jazz composer  an important transitional figure between ragtime and jazz piano  born into Creole society and studied classical piano  In 1912, briefly settled in Chicago's South Side; published "The Jelly Roll Blues.“  recorded for the Gennett label in 1923 and 1924  formed the Red Hot Peppers and recorded for Victor  Morton died just before the Dixieland revival

Joe “King” Oliver  Born in or near New Orleans in  Began playing with brass bands in New Orleans around  First called “the King” by Kid Ory in 1917, although possibly already “past his prime.”  Moved to Chicago in 1919 to play with Bill Johnson’s Original Creole Orchestra.

King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band  formed in  1923 recordings introduced Louis Armstrong to the world.  group fell apart in 1924.

Poor Business Decisions  Rejected offer to open Cotton Club as house band.  Eventual move to New York probably too late; by 1925 his style had been superseded by Armstrong’s.  (problems with teeth and gums interfered with ability to perform).  final "mistake" was an extended tour of the South beginning in By 1936 he had ended up in Savannah selling fruit and vegetables and sweeping out a pool parlor. He died there in April 1938.

Contributions  he "had a repertory of expressive deviations of rhythm and pitch, some verging on theatrical novelty effects and others derived from blues vocal style...”  “He frequently used timbre modifiers of various sorts and was especially renowned for his wa- wa effects, as in his famous three-chorus solo on ‘Dipper Mouth Blues’.“  “Oliver was a good band leader, and his cornet playing was well integrated into the ensemble. By 1925 his performance style had been superseded by Louis Armstrong, but he had a significant impact on Bubber Miley as well as on Armstrong himself.”

Louis Armstrong  “Louis Armstrong is the single most important figure in the development of jazz.”  1 st virtuoso jazz soloist (arguably with Sidney Bechet).  Influential as both vocalist and instrumentalist.

Innovations  Blues – established the blues scale (pitches) and blues feeling as jazz’s harmonic foundation  Improvisation – established jazz as a soloist’s art form  Singing – introduced a true vocal jazz style (pitch, time, imagination); “scat singing”  Repertory – showed that Tin Pan Alley/pop music could be performed in a jazz style

Early Years  Although Armstrong apparently believed that he was born on July 4, 1900, a birth certificate shows the date as August 4,  sent to reform school at age 12, where he learned to play cornet.  took lessons from King Oliver and took Oliver’s place in Kid Ory’s band when Oliver moved to Chicago.  played with Fate Marable's band from 1919 to 1921 on riverboats.

Chicago and New York  Armstrong moved to Chicago in 1922 to play with Oliver's Creole Jazz Band.  made the first of his famous Gennet recordings with Oliver in April  moved to New York to play with Fletcher Henderson's Orchestra in September 1924; also recorded with several blues singers including Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith and with Sidney Bechet.

Return to Chicago  made first Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings.  “Weather Bird” released in  Briefly moved to Los Angeles in 1930 to form Louis Armstrong and his Sebastian New Cotton Club Orchestra, but he returned to Chicago in  By the 1940s Armstrong's style of jazz was losing popularity, and Armstrong had no interest in the newer styles. He traveled extensively with an All-Star band during the revival of interest in New Orleans and Dixieland.  recorded "Hello Dolly“ in 1963, "What A Wonderful World“ in  On July 6th 1971, Armstrong died in his sleep.

Original Dixieland Jazz Band  led by Nck LaRocca (cornet)  LaRocca claimed that he and the ODJB had played an important role In the formation of jazz (typically discounted)  1 st jazz group to record (1917)  residency at Reisenweber's Restaurant from January 1917  Helped popularize the New Orleans style in the US and Europe