What is Jazz
Re: What is Jazz
merlyn wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 6:58 pm Having a 7#9 in itself is not enough to make music jazz. Purple Haze is based on a 7#9, but it's not jazz. You could say that's partly because it doesn't resolve. A typical jazz progression using a 7#9 is
| Bm7b5 / E7#9 / | Am7 / / / |
You could then think that jazz involves chord progressions, but that's not always the case. Kind Of Blue has tunes like So What where there are long passages of one chord.
I agree harmony alone can't be the defining characteristic though it is an important one. I would suggest rhythm is a more defining characteristic - especially thinking back to the origins of jazz.
One of the earliest manifestations of jazz was Ragtime. If you remove the syncopations from say Scott Joplin's The Entertainer it sounds not unlike popular music of classical derivation like Sousa's marches.
Conversely, add some syncopation to The Liberty Bell (Monty Python theme music) and you arrive more or less at Ragtime. We still use the phrase "to jazz it up".
As Richard T states above, we know it when we hear it - usually.
Re: What is Jazz
Seems to me Jazz is actually a bunch of genres over times.
Perhaps the thing that links it all together is the approach of the players?
To me it feels like the common thread is a kind of "I will play this because I believe in it, I believe it's worthwhile, I love it and I'm playing it for me, if you like it too that's nice, but I will not dumb it down for you"
Perhaps the thing that links it all together is the approach of the players?
To me it feels like the common thread is a kind of "I will play this because I believe in it, I believe it's worthwhile, I love it and I'm playing it for me, if you like it too that's nice, but I will not dumb it down for you"
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- Random Guitarist
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Re: What is Jazz
What about Western Swing?
- Sam Spoons
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Re: What is Jazz
This bloke, in defining western swing........
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLVJenO26Js
Said western swing is hard to define, it is many things, but there is definitely one thing that what western thing isn't, and that's country?
I like west swing though......
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVT5saGp1Wc
Important thing is, I played guitar along with it, and the eSsential 7#9 chord fits!
Re: What is Jazz
They could be equally important. Jazz educator Mike Longo said :
Jazz is the marriage of African rhythm and European harmony.
The cyclic form is also important, which may be the influence of Scottish and Irish folk music. And, of course, improvisation. I think a lot of people don't get jazz because they hear the solos as random. They don't hear the form -- the tune -- going underneath the solos.
One thing jazz is is the only American art form.
Ragtime isn't jazz as such to me, as there is no improvisation.
I see what you're saying, that syncopation is important, but de-syncopate The Entertainer and there isn't much left. Here is the first phrase of The Entertainer, with the syncopation marked :
Now, take that out :
Pretty lame, don't you think?
The phrases in Liberty Bell end on downbeats, and there is not a lot of room to shuffle notes around.
Those with delicate sensibilities look away now. The fact is Scott Joplin, being black, was coming more from the black tradition, and Sousa, being white, was coming more from the white tradition.
It ain't what you don't know. It's what you know that ain't so.
Re: What is Jazz
Yes and that is more or less my point. I was trying to suggest that jazz is characterised by syncopated rhythms more so than the harmony or melodies. Without the syncopations we have a 'lame' parlour piece of more or less classical origin.
Put that Sousa march into a 4/4 beat with swing and that can easily be jazz. Sorry I don't have the technology on hand to show.
Well done for going to the trouble of demonstrating this in detail by the way!
And yes, I know ragtime isn't truly jazz, but it probably marks the point at which jazz separated from the mainstream at that time.
Re: What is Jazz
Really?????
Listen to the following, the full 11:00 minutes, and by the way, if this isn't jazz then what is it.
Gato Barbieri
Intro/Cancion/Tango (00:00 - 11:13) from the album The Third World (1969)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pp5XcEi8cvc
Re: What is Jazz
I haven't said that isn't jazz - I'm not quite sure what specific point you are alluding to.
My remarks on suggesting that rhythm was perhaps the supreme defining characteristic of jazz were placed in a context of early jazz because we can get some glimpses there into how it emerged from earlier genres and forms.
Modern jazz is much more free of course.
Re: What is Jazz
GilesAnt wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 12:31 pm
I haven't said that isn't jazz - I'm not quite sure what specific point you are alluding to.
My remarks on suggesting that rhythm was perhaps the supreme defining characteristic of jazz were placed in a context of early jazz because we can get some glimpses there into how it emerged from earlier genres and forms.
Modern jazz is much more free of course.
The point is.......just asking
Re: What is Jazz
We were discussing some of the most important musical elements that distinguish jazz. By looking at the origins of jazz it is easier to see what these elements might be. Obviously things are so diverse nowadays that the picture will be more obscured.
Jazz is about other things too of course, but we just happened to be talking about these aspects.
Re: What is Jazz
GilesAnt wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 4:15 pm
We were discussing some of the most important musical elements that distinguish jazz. By looking at the origins of jazz it is easier to see what these elements might be. Obviously things are so diverse nowadays that the picture will be more obscured.
Jazz is about other things too of course, but we just happened to be talking about these aspects.
I'm still none the wiser. It seems if I play a piece of music, then add 7#9 chord it becomes jazz, really? Well I'll t'top of our stairs
Re: What is Jazz
Nobody is saying that. There are many elements to jazz, but the 7#9 is one characteristic feature. Most of the elements individually occur elsewhere in music, but when many are combined it looks and sounds a lot like jazz.
Re: What is Jazz
The question is good - the answer(s)? well good luck.
For me the tune has to swing. It’s as simple as that. Swing in the way that jazz would define the word. And there is the rabbit hole.
After many years I am still trying to decide if the James Bond theme actually breaks into jazz for a few bars. That section sort of swings but in a rather straight way. The ride cymbal pattern doesn’t quite make it into the land of swing for me. I love the tune but will always be on the fence about if it swings the way jazz does.
And now a lot of the younger jazzers are taking pop, rock and other tunes and interpreting them. Steely Dan? Joni Mitchell? Some of the arrangements blow my mind.
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Re: What is Jazz
ManFromGlass wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 6:28 pm
The question is good - the answer(s)? well good luck.
For me the tune has to swing. It’s as simple as that. Swing in the way that jazz would define the word. And there is the rabbit hole.
After many years I am still trying to decide if the James Bond theme actually breaks into jazz for a few bars. That section sort of swings but in a rather straight way. The ride cymbal pattern doesn’t quite make it into the land of swing for me. I love the tune but will always be on the fence about if it swings the way jazz does.
And now a lot of the younger jazzers are taking pop, rock and other tunes and interpreting them. Steely Dan? Joni Mitchell? Some of the arrangements blow my mind.
Swing is definitely an important factor. It’s key to the sound of big bands from mid last century, which is repertoire I’m very familiar with personally. It’s not so universal now as jazz has expanded to include elements from other genres such as rock and funk.
I think the James Bond theme does include swing sections.
Re: What is Jazz
ManFromGlass wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 6:28 pm
The question is good - the answer(s)? well good luck.
For me the tune has to swing.
Why? The question is hardly novel, it’s been asked before, an£ no one can come up with a definitive answer because like music itself, it takes many forms and is perceived in many different ways. Ok there are some fixed representations - a waltz has to be in 3/4 but an identity that establishes the ingredients of Jazz is more elusive. It certainly doesn’t have to have swing, listen to the likes of Egberto Gismonti, Keith Jarrett, Jan Garbarek et al Defining what is jazz is equally as futile as laying down a formula for classical music.
Last night I was noodling away on the piano, playing around with Mozart’s Lacrimosa, one of the most soulful compositions ever written, and definitely classical of course. Then something occurred, Gershwin’s Summertime, which lends itself to an infinity of ‘jazzy’ extemporisations, would sit right on top of Lacrimosa, I was in my element. Then I asked myself “Is this classical or is this jazz?” Of course I concluded it was jazz, because jazz allows the opportunity to be whimsical and carefree, but working within a framework, and that includes or can include all the complexity of what a classical piece may consist of, but having the luxury of tossing in the Blue 3rd, flattened 7th etc or go the whole hog and pull in some chromaticism, or simply hunkering down and getting a groove going, whatever tickles your fancy.
So jazz is the interface between all flavours of music, and one puts their own take on it. I haven’t heard anyone play jazz on the bagpipes yet, but I’m open to persuasion. If someone says “Jazz is this” someone will rock up and say “Well what about this then?”
What is Jazz? Well any fool knows the answer to that - it’s Freedom. In a musical sense of course
Re: What is Jazz
I'm so proud of you OW. You got it.
I'd treat you to your favourite cake.
I feel like patting your head.
I'm glad you are the fool that got it lol.
We are all fools one way or another.
It's our foolishness that's the common link of human beings.
Yes !
Freedom.
::
Freedom from Slavery.
Slavery can take many forms as we are aware.
Our personal slavery in our life from various factors : metal health issues, anxiety stress, struggles, mortgage, relationship, work, whichever.
Literal slavery as was faced by a large group of the audience at that time.
Hence my opening paragraph
tea for two wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 10:07 am goodness knows the struggles a particular large section of audience went through in those times.
::
The purpose of this thread is was to see Jazz not merely something musical technical rather something that represented the Humanity.
Hence the opening paragraphs of this thread.
tea for two wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 10:07 am Jazz, for me, up to and including Civil Rights era was on the whole to uplift those that were struggling, help them for a little while fly away from their struggles, help people dance and laugh have whale of a time, to find affinity within the music of their struggles :
goodness knows the struggles a particular large section of audience went through in those times.
Nina Simone said after the Civil Rights movement ended, She lost her purpose to make music to sing even.
Jazz after Civil Rights movement ended, from 70s onwards to now doesn't have that connection to those struggles.
::
I also understand that such a question will also open up technical discussions.
I'm glad it has as this is a Theory forum.
tea for two wrote: ↑Sat Feb 04, 2023 10:07 am Perhaps this thread will include posts about certain technicalities of certain types of Jazz, appropriate as this is a Theory forum.
Every such is welcome.
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- tea for two
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Re: What is Jazz
Actually I think jazz is as much or more about discipline than freedom - the great players have gone through the tough discipline of learning how to improvise which takes enormous work to master. Without the discipline they wouldn't be able to express themselves freely. The freedom is almost a by-product of the discipline.
Dave Brubeck said:
Dave Brubeck said:
Jazz is about freedom within discipline. Usually a dictatorship like in Russia and Germany will prevent jazz from being played because it just seemed to represent freedom, democracy and the United States.
Re: What is Jazz
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Re: What is Jazz
RichardT wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 10:31 pm Actually I think jazz is as much or more about discipline than freedom - the great players have gone through the tough discipline of learning how to improvise which takes enormous work to master. Without the discipline they wouldn't be able to express themselves freely. The freedom is almost a by-product of the discipline.
Dave Brubeck said:Jazz is about freedom within discipline. Usually a dictatorship like in Russia and Germany will prevent jazz from being played because it just seemed to represent freedom, democracy and the United States.
Anyone who tries to play jazz will see the truth of this. It's easy to say 'just improvise', but it takes a lot of technical skill and musical ability to actually do it.
Re: What is Jazz
RichardT wrote: ↑Sun Feb 05, 2023 10:31 pm Actually I think jazz is as much or more about discipline than freedom - the great players have gone through the tough discipline of learning how to improvise which takes enormous work to master. Without the discipline they wouldn't be able to express themselves freely. The freedom is almost a by-product of the discipline.
Dave Brubeck said:Jazz is about freedom within discipline. Usually a dictatorship like in Russia and Germany will prevent jazz from being played because it just seemed to represent freedom, democracy and the United States.
".....more about discipline than freedom - the great players have gone through the tough discipline of learning how to improvise which takes enormous work to master.."
So you are claiming discipline and freedom are mutually exclusive - that is fundamentally, philosophically dissonant. It's like a bishop not believing in god. Consider the logic of it. Do I really need to elaborate?
In fact the explanation is there in your quote from Dave Brubeck
"Jazz is about freedom within discipline" Usually a dictatorship like in Russia and Germany will prevent jazz from being played because it just seemed to represent freedom, democracy and the United States.
But the second part "Usually a dictatorship like in Russia and Germany will prevent jazz from being played" is absolute bosh.
A friend of mine, a producer, spent considerable time in Russia - albeit some years ago, and he sent himself on a quest to discover music of Russia, he said he felt instinctively that a country so big, and had experienced such a tortured and extreme history, and had produced the likes of Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, Scriabin, Stravinski, the list goes on and on and on, could only produce mundane balalaika music. And my friend was soon proved correct. He came across legions of musicians trained at the conservatories (Disciplined) but outside of their formal trained played everything from punk, goth, to modern jazz.
My friend started to bring the best of these to tour in the UK - one of his better failures, after all certainly back in the day (and more so right now) who would go to a club and pay to watch the Lenigrad Be-Bopskis?
Well I did. I tipped up my fiver went upstairs to the club and was confront by 2 gals bouncing off the walls and singing retro-revolutionary pop, a drummer that who thrashed the drums so hard I am sure he was hard of hearing, a double bass player who put his bass through a cluster of effects that made his playing quite eccentric, a lead guitarist who was in complete command of his instrument, and didn't play to impress us with speed but with versatility - it was complete chaos. That said they described themselves Thrash-Jazz, and at first I thought well yep, but it's more thrash than jazz.
However, they settled into their set, and I became acclimatized to it, after all I'd paid my fiver and got my beer, I wasn't about to run for cover. And I thought, hang on a minute, this isn't half bad, I get it, in fact it is quite impressive and they certainly blew the local pub rock bands off stage.
After they finished their set, I bought them all a pint and was interested in having a chat to them - they were such a fun and engaging combo. I asked about life in Russia and their circumstances - they said "We do whatever anyone else does - we get on with things, what do people expect us to do, give up? No difficulties drive us on"
Did the roots of jazz flourish and come into creation in a climate of lush days and langorous nights, or a lifetime of dictatorship? If slavery wasn't dictatorship then what was it? Many forms of music come into being in difficult times, the lamentable lives these people live leads them to at least find some relief in music, and that remains today, hip-hop and rap came up from the ghettoes, not Sunset Boulevard. If you are so poor you don't have a pot to pi*s in nor a window to throw it out of, you don't give a hoot whether you live in a dictatorship or de-mock-racy.
And remember, when 'Black' music first left the plantations and ghettoes, it was verboten, in fact before 1962 a black person couldn't even sit on any seat they chose on the bus! What kind of freedom was that?