Musc*2140 Exam Review Unit Four

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Musc*2140 Exam Review Unit Four"

Transcription

1 Musc*2140 Exam Review Unit Four Key Terms: Discography: The science of record classification. Flatted Scale Degree: Note played a half step lower. Big Bands: Large jazz orchestras featuring sections of saxophones, trumpets, and trombones, prominent during the Swing Era (1930s). Head Arrangement: A flexible unwritten arrangement created by a band. Standard: A popular song that has become part of the permanent repertory for jazz musicians. Swing: (1) Jazz from the period usually known as the Swing Era (2) A jazz specific feeling created by a rhythmic contrast within a particular rhythmic framework (usually involving a walking bass and a steady rhythm on the drummer s ride cymbal). Riff: A short, catchy and repeated melodic phrase. This term is the most relevant to big band Swing. A riff is a short, repeated, and persistent phrase. They can be altered a little upon repetition in order to take into account changes in the underlying harmony, but they don't change very much. Arrangers often use riffs in big band arrangements both as the main melodic content and as background material. They often function to build up momentum in the music. Motive: A short melodic or rhythmic idea. Jazz musicians rarely use the word "motive" although music theorists and historians use the term. Motives are short phrases all right, but they are often used as a basis for melodic development in some logical way. That is, the features of the motive, melodic or rhythmic, are used as a basis for the development of other phrases. Composers use motives in this way all the time. Licks: Short melodic ideas that form a shared basic vocabulary for jazz improvisers. Licks are small phrases that "are the building blocks of improvisation". A memorized

2 phrase is only the beginning. Jazz musicians creatively modify licks constantly, depending on the musical context and the spirit of the moment, to create unique solos. These modifications need not be "logical" in that they are systematically transformed based on the musical features of the original musical idea, the way motives are. If a jazz musician uses licks in a mechanical way, that is, using them in strings of memorized phrases without any creative input. Groove: A general term for the overall rhythmic framework of a performance. Grooves include swing, funk, ballad, and Latin. In most African American music there are a number of layers of music. There are the melodic, the harmonic and rhythmic layers. The rhythmic layer is further divided into sub-layers carried by a number of instruments, usually bass, drums and piano (or guitar). Both the bass and guitar serve pitch-related as well as rhythmic-related functions. A swing groove consists of a rhythmic gestalt (an organized whole that is perceived as a unitary phenomenon although it is made up of a number of individual parts) played by the right hand on the ride cymbal of the drum set, with the high-hat on beats two and four, the bass drum lightly played on every beat, and the left-hand playing (often improvising) other rhythms mostly on the snare drum. A groove happens when these are put together in one stream of rhythm. Soli: A passage for a section of a jazz band (saxophones, trumpets, trombones, in block-chord texture. Introduction to Unit Four In the 1930s jazz was known as swing. It s called the Swing Era to distinguish it form the jazz of the 1920s. It was mostly Big-Band music performed by large dance orchestras divided into sections of trumpets, saxophones, and trombones as well as rhythm. Swing retained the basic elements of jazz like polyrhythm blues phrasing, timbre variation. Swing used written music more then previous forms of jazz it continued to balance composition against spontaneous improvisation. The size of the bands transformed dance music into an orchestral music but the style

3 was not complex. Swing was a commercial phenomenon. Swing was central to a nationwide system of mass entertainment. With the advent of Swing, jazz became THE POPULAR music of America. The Depression Swing was defined by two crucial events in American history and culture. The first is the Great Depression, which began with the stock market crash of October 1929 and deepened slowly until in reached its peak in the 1930s. The crisis ruined the banking systems, and left thousands without jobs and shifted America s political landscape. Swing came of age during the Depression but it hardly caught the era s deep anxiety. Swing was a counterstatement to reality it was upbeat and could distract people from their daily lives, swing inspired action. It was a teenager s music, the first in America s history. Swing was loud and brash and demanded exuberant dance steps. Its improvisatory flair and buoyant energy encouraged American to recover from the country s economic disaster. World War II The second crucial event defining the Swing Era was Word War II ( ) a global conflict that transformed America into a powerhouse of strength. The bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941 launched American into World War II and all of its industries, resources, manpower, even entertainment were drawn into the worldwide fight against fascism. For many people, swing exemplified what Americans were fighting for: compared with authoritarian Nazi Germany, the casual participatory quality of swing, bringing together people from different backgrounds, was a rousing statement of democracy. At the end of the war thousands of soldiers returned home to their families and jobs shutting down the hyperactive dancing culture that had formed the basis for hundreds of large swing orchestras. It was the end of an era and with the explosion of the atomic bomb, the beginning of a new

4 one. Swing and Race Swing was situated on the fault line of race. It emerged out of African American culture, its dance steps worked out on the floor of black ballrooms and its arrangements mimicking the black church in call-and-response patterns. Its success boosted the careers of hundreds of musicians and pushed a handful of black bandleaders (Ellington, Armstrong) into stardom. Much of white American was dancing to an African American beat. Swing did not dissolve racial barriers. The white audience was enthusiastic about the music, but indifferent as to its origins. Most of them probably did not know that the hit tune Stompin at the Savoy referred to Harlem, or that their jive talk was black slang. Behind the scenes, racial bigotry was as alive as ever. Black and white musicians played together backstage in jam sessions, but racially mixed bands were not tolerated. As most of the money from swing went into white pockets, many black musicians felt that the music had been stolen from them a feeling that would later help fuel the musical revolution known as bebop. Swing and Economics The Depression nearly destroyed the recording companies. At a time when people could barely afford food and rent, the price of a record was too much to bear. Sales of records plunged from over 100 million in 1929 to only 4 million in Familiar jazz labels like Gennett, OKeh, and Columbia went bankrupt or were bought up by speculators. Commercial excitement made jazz possible. Musicians poured into the field from all over: from Georgia (Fletcher Henderson), Washington D.C. (Duke Ellington), Iowa (Glenn Miller), and New Jersey (Count Basie). As a competition for the best jobs increased, musical standards rose precipitously. Musicians were now expected to play their instrument flawlessly, to sight-read

5 efficiently, and to improvise. Dance bands offered steady work at a respectable salary; making music one of the few skilled crafts open to African Americans. Swing and Dance At the core of swing style was its groove: a steady, unaccented four-beats-tothe-bar foundation, perfect for dancing. This was neither revolutionary nor new: One could hear the same groove in recordings by Louis Armstrong, or emerging from passages by Jelly Roll Morton s Red Hot Peppers. But in the early 1930s the same time that Duke Ellington immortalized it in the title It Don t Mean a Thing (If It Ain t Got That Swing ) the four-beat groove became firmly established as the standard for hot dance music. The Savoy The swing dance style emerged from New York s Savoy Ballroom, which opened for business in The Savoy was an enormous space, filling an entire block in Harlem. Like many new dance halls, it offered a luxurious environment for a modest fee. Two bands were hired on a given night, alternating sets on opposite sides of the hall. Harlem was proud of the Savoy, and opened its door to white visitors from downtown and around the world; but unlike the Cotton Club, its primary constituency was the black neighborhood surrounding it. In the Savoy, social dancing was an intense, communal activity; the Savoy dance style came to be known as the Lindy Hop named after Charles Lindbergh, whose dramatic flight across the Atlantic in 1927 startled the nation. The steady four-four beat opened up new possibilities. The Rhythm Section To help bands adjust to the new groove, major changes were made in the rhythm section. While the bass drum continued to play a rock-solid four-beat pulse,

6 the tuba, commonly used in large dance bands of the 1920s, was replaced by the string bass. During the early years of recording, the tuba was able to project a clear, huffing sound. But the string bass had always been a specialty of New Orleans, and many players, including Wellman Braud with Duke Ellington s band, showed that the instrument had a special percussive flavor when the strings were given a pizzicato slap (plucked rather than bowed). Change came gradually in the late 1920s, once word had gotten around about how well the string bass worked; many tuba players realized that they d better switch instruments or lose their jobs. Arranging To fit the new groove, dance-band arranging became more inventive. To some extent, this was a belated influence of Louis Armstrong, whose rhythms continued to be absorbed by soloists and arrangers through the 1930s. Arrangers learned to write elaborate lines for an entire section, harmonized in block chords called soli. They were conversant with chromatic (complex) harmony and knew how to make the most of their flexible orchestra. Arrangements could arise spontaneously out of oral practice. This approach was popular in Kansas City. But in New York where bands prided themselves on their musical literacy, musicians could take improvised riffs and harmonize them on the spot. The result, known as a head arrangement created by the entire band. Fletcher Henderson Both kinds of arrangements, written and unwritten, could be heard in the hundreds of recordings made in the 1930s by Fletcher Henderson. For flashy pieces, Henderson relied on experienced arrangers, from his brother Horace to Don Redman and Benny Carter. But his biggest hits emerged from the bandstand. His genius for rhythmic swing and melodic simplicity was so effective that his music became the standard for numerous swing arrangers. Henderson was fond of short, memorable riffs simple, bluesy phrases in call and response: saxophones responding to trumpets for example. In some passages, he distorted the melody into

7 ingenious new rhythmic shapes, often in staccato (detached) bursts that opened up space for the rhythm section. Henderson was shrewd and efficient. He wrote only a few choice choruses, leaving the remainder of the arrangement open for solos accompanied by discreet, long- held chords or short riffs. As each piece headed toward its climax, the band erupted in an ecstatic wail. Blue Lou The early Henderson band was dramatically effective in person but notoriously imperfect in the studio. Some of the best-known records from the early 1930s sounded like cats and dogs fighting. By 1936, the band had perfected its public presentation, and is in particularly splendid form on Blue Lou. The piece was composed by Edgar Sampson, a saxophonist and arranger with the Chick Webb band who also wrote for Henderson and later for Benny Goodman (among his tunes are Stompin at the Savoy and Don t Be That Way ). It was arranged in the Henderson style by Fletcher s brother Horace, who oriented it toward the band s chief soloists: the brilliant trumpeter Roy Eldridge band one of Coleman Hawkin s gifted followers on tenor saxophone, Chu Berry. Like many swing tunes, Blue Lou is built around a simple idea. The tune is in major, but the opening riff- a descending two-note figure-introduces a flatted scale degree from the minor mode. Although Blue Lou begins with a relaxed two-beat feeling, the four-four-dance groove gradually takes over. The first chorus introduces the original tune (note how the tune is expanded in the second A section into an elaborate soli), while the fourth (and last) chorus deforms it through ecstatic starts and stops. But the piece doesn t end there: with half a minute to go, there is a sudden modulation to the unusual key of a major (notoriously difficult for brass instruments). The new sixteen-bar section doesn t last long, but its presence suggests that this arrangement may have been flexible. Perhaps the drum stroke that precedes the modulation was a cue to follow if the band wanted to keep dancers on the floor. Eldridge s solo at the end sounds as though it could have gone on forever. Blue Lou was performed by Fletcher Henderson and his Orchestra which consisted of: Dick Vance, Joe Thomas, Roy

8 Eldridge, trumpets; Fernando Arbello, Ed Cuffee, trombones; Buster Bailey, Scoops Carey, alto saxophones; Horace Henderson, piano; Bob Lessey, guitar; John Kirby, bass; Sidney Catlett; drums. The Label was Vocalion/OKeh 3211; Fletcher Henderson: (Giants of Jazz ). Date Style Big-Band Swing. Form 32-bar popular song (AABA). This is a typical Swing performance: extensive use of riffs in the lead and backgrounds, call and response between the brass and reeds, the move to four-four rhythm, homophonic textures, instrumental solos, and sectional soli. You already know that the recording technology at this time only allowed recordings to last up to around three minutes and a little bit. In live performance, bands often played longer especially if the dancers were into the music. This meant that bands had to have mechanisms for extending a performance if called for. Roy Eldridge's solo at the end of this recording sounds like it could have fulfilled this purpose in a live performance. Breakthrough In the early 1930s, the music industry resembled the nation by being firmly divided by race. In economic terms, segregation clearly worked to the advantage of white musicians. For a time, black musicians, who had never challenged the stereotype that insisted their music was naturally hot, kept jazz as their racial specialty. White musicians were keenly interested in jazz. In the 1920s, future swing bandleaders Artie Shaw, Glenn Miller, and Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey increasingly gravitated toward jazz, mastering it and even adding their own innovations. Some were hired by Paul Whiteman to play hot solos, while still others made small-group jazz with bands like Red Nichols and His Five Pennies. Most found jobs playing demanding if uninspiring arrangements in white dance bands and radio orchestras while dreaming of the chance to play some real jazz late at night in a jam session. All that changed with the surprising breakthrough of the orchestra led by Benny Goodman.

9 Benny Goodman ( ) Goodman grew up in the slums of Chicago, where his father, a recent immigrant from Warsaw, worked in the stockyards. The boy showed a prodigious talent on the clarinet, which gave him a way out of menial labour. He was accepted into the band at the Hull House and acquired a solid training from Franz Schoepp, the clarinetist from the Chicago Symphony. At the same time, he heard the jazz that was buzzing around him and modeled his improvisation on its clarinetists, both white (Leon Rappolo) and black (Jimmie Noone). By the 1920s, he was a bluesy and elegant soloist, distinguishing him in white bands that have an inclination toward jazz, like Ben Pollack s. Goodman s tastes led him to create a band that would bridge the gap between the jazz he loved and the realities of commercialism. He hired some of the best underemployed black arrangers he could find: Benny Carter, Edgar Sampson, and Fletcher Henderson. In 1935, Goodman s band was featured as the hot orchestra on a national radio program, Let s Dance! and went on a national tour. Goodman s success electrified the country. White fans celebrated him as a hero, the more extreme enthusiasts, known as jitterbugs, adopted black dancing and jive slang. Goodman s band blended swing rhythms with up-to-date arrangements of current pop songs. Goodman managed to both satisfy the jitterbugs and make swing acceptable to the cultured middle classes. One of his memorable acts was to bring jazz to New York s Carnegie Hall, a citadel of musical respectability, in January The musicians may have felt out of place (like a whore in church ) but the band s rousing success there cemented jazz s place on contemporary American culture. The Goodman Trio and Quartet Goodman was also a pioneer through launching various small groups that helped cast jazz as a king of chamber music relaxed and spontaneous, yet highly polished and refined. These groups revived an interest in small-combo improvisation that has faded since the rise of the big bands. They were even more remarkable in being among the few interracial groups in jazz. Goodman first heard

10 pianist Teddy Wilson on passing through Chicago from California in Wilson grew up studying the piano and violin. Wilson s style was smooth and carefully polished, cool and controlled even at high speed. When Goodman jammed with Wilson at an after-hours private party, he was thrilled by the pianist s panache, but also dismayed at the unspeakable risk of forming a mixed-race trio with his white drummer Gene Krupa. Recordings by the trio sold well inspiring Goodman to present the trio not as full members of the band, but as special guests. Within a few years, Goodman s band-within-the-band had been widely imitated in the industry Cab Calloway (the Cab Jivers), Artie Shaw (the Gramercy Five), Tommy Dorsey (the Clambake Seven), and Woody Herman (the Woodchoppers). The trio expanded to a quartet when Goodman added Lionel Hampton in Hampton was originally a drummer who had played with Louis Armstrong s big band in the early 1930s. While with Armstrong, he stumbled over the vibraphone in a recording studio, a then-new instrument that used rotating discs and amplification to enhance the sound of a metal xylophone. Within a few years he shifted to the vibes as his main instrument. Hampton was a tireless entertainer who used his whole body to communicate with audiences. Hampton s extroverted energy, combined with the sweaty glamor of drummer Gene Krupa, was a crucial part of quartet s popular appeal. After leaving Goodman in the early 1940s to form his own band Hampton carried his reckless energy into rhythm and blue, ultimately linking jazz with rock and roll. Dinah Dinah, a thirty-two-bar A A B A pop song composed in 1925, first became popular in Goodman s teenage years. Such tunes normally had a short shelf life, lasting no more than six moths. But jazz musicians were attracted to its harmonic structure, which was similar to the of I Got Rhythm : an opening section firmly in the tonic, followed by a bridge with more elaborate harmonic movement. Dinah became an evergreen aka a standard: a permanent addition to jazz repertory. In the Goodman Quartet s 1936 recording the mood is exuberant and playful even

11 bewildering during Lionel Hampton s introduction it s virtually impossible to hear where the downbeat is. The four musicians play in an informal jam-session spirit exercising their freedom to listen and interact spontaneously. In the first A section, Goodman plays the melody with delicacy and circumspection; but in the bridge, he obliterates it in a lengthy string of fast notes. When Hampton plays in the second chorus he shifts between simple riff figures and complicated harmonic substitutions of his own devising. This is still Swing but in a small group setting. One interesting aspect of this recording is its references to New Orleans jazz with its polyphonic out chorus and breaks. More important is the racially integrated nature of the band. In 1936, this was practically unheard of. John Hammond and Other Jazz Enthusiasts The interracial Goodman Quartet was encouraged by John Hammond ( ), the most influential entrepreneur and activist of his period. A list of artists whose careers he would include Bessie Smith, Fletcher Henderson, Goodman, Billie Holiday, and Count Basie and in a later generation, Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, and Bruce Springsteen. Hammond was no musician (although he was an amateur violinist for a while), but his intense commitment and political convictions made him a crucial figure in jazz history. Born into a wealthy New York family (his mother was connected to the Vanderbilt s), Hammond grew up in an atmosphere of privilege on the Upper East Side. Hammond developed two passions. The first was a love of black jazz and folk music, which to him seemed infinitely superior to any other kind. Although raised on prejudice typical of his time he became outraged by inequality. He never joined the Communist party but he did join NAACP. Hammond used a long running association with Columbia Records to champion the music he loved. He was responsible for hundreds of recording dates, having shepherded his latest discoveries into the studio. Some black musicians did not relish his overbearing insistence. Duke Ellington, for example broke publicly with him after

12 Hammond complained in 1935 that Ellington s longer pieces were vapid and without the slightest semblance of guts. But few nonmusicians came close to Hammond in shaping the course of jazz. Early Jazz Fans The Swing Era saw the emergence of jazz record collectors young men of privileged backgrounds who combed through the discarded vinyl at the flea markets and junk shops looking for forgotten old recordings. To distinguish one recording from another, they duly noted all the pertinent information: personnel, dates, matrix numbers (the codes inscribed on the disc that identify a particular master disc, or matrix), and release numbers. These data formed the beginnings of the science of record classification, or discography. Hot Clubs were formed in towns throughout the country, bringing together fans and sponsoring public jam sessions. To suit their reading tastes, new mass-market magazines like Downbeat and Metronome and smaller fan based journals like Jazz Information emerged. From their pages came the first American jazz critics (Leonard Feather, George Simon). While jazz enthusiasts were excited that their favorite music had achieved popular success, their attitude toward which was mixed. Many were uneasy about commercialism the tainting of the music through the marketplace. They also felt that the real jazz was beyond most people s understanding. Joining their ranks was like joining a cult. Major Swing Bands As the dance business boomed the number of new bands exploded. By 1940, there were hundreds of bands some leaning toward conventional dance music (the sweet-swing bands), others specializing in hard-driving swing. Benny Goodman s own band was a seedbed for bandleaders: they emerged from his trumpet section (Harry James and Bunny Berigan), saxophone section (Vido Musso and Toots Mondello), and quartet (Wilson, Krupa, and Hampton). Early jazz heroes like Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines switched to big bands.

13 Artie Shaw ( ) Born Arthur Arshawsky on the Lower East side of Manhattan he was the son of recent Jewish immigrants who used his skill on saxophone and clarinet to rise in the world of dance orchestras. By 1931, he was studying with Harlem pianist Willie the Lion Smith and listening to Armstrong, pianist Earl Hines, and clarinetist Jimmie Noone in the nightclubs of Chicago. During the early 1930s, Shaw lived a double life. He had completely fallen in love with jazz and spent his time jamming regularly in Harlem with the Lion and others. At the same time he made ends meet with a job in a radio orchestra playing what he disdained as soap and cereal programs in an all-white band. He became successful after the band he had formed in 1938 sold millions of copies of its hit record Begin the Beguine. Shaw dissolved his band to brood in silence, only to return to even greater acclaim. Finally in 1954 he retired from playing altogether. Author Insights Add that the style of Swing was in place earlier, by 1932, with black bands such as Fletcher Henderson's. It didn't really become mainstream popular culture until Women have been pretty much ignored in the history of jazz until recently. The expectations of women at the time as home makers and mothers precluded many women from playing jazz. If they did play jazz, they were often considered morally loose (on the road, playing late at night where were their men?) or gay ( All these women traveling together without men what else could it be?).

14

A. began in New Orleans during 1890s. B. Jazz a mix of African and European traditions. 1. Storyville District w/ Creoles of Color

A. began in New Orleans during 1890s. B. Jazz a mix of African and European traditions. 1. Storyville District w/ Creoles of Color A. began in New Orleans during 1890s 1. Storyville District w/ Creoles of Color B. Jazz a mix of African and European traditions 1. African influences: tonal coloration, blues notes, instrumental and vocal

More information

REVIEW SESSION, EXAM 1

REVIEW SESSION, EXAM 1 REVIEW SESSION, EXAM 1 MUSIC 331: History of Jazz, Summer 2012 Short Answer Questions Development of jazz in New Orleans Storyville brothels, opportunities for musicians Black Codes (1894) racial reclassification,

More information

New Orleans. Storyville, French Opera House, 1900

New Orleans. Storyville, French Opera House, 1900 Jazz Jazz is a genre of music born in the African- American community in New Orleans in the early 20th century. It is a form of music that relies heavily on improvisation, syncopation, polyrhythms, and

More information

REHEARSAL STRATEGIES HARLEM CONGO BY LOREN SCHOENBERG,

REHEARSAL STRATEGIES HARLEM CONGO BY LOREN SCHOENBERG, REHEARSAL STRATEGIES HARLEM CONGO BY LOREN SCHOENBERG, Like most big band leaders, drummer Chick Webb relied heavily on composers and arrangers to write material that would give his band a distinctive

More information

Advanced Lesson Plan for Young Performers Initiative: Rockin In Rhythm BEFORE THE VIDEO

Advanced Lesson Plan for Young Performers Initiative: Rockin In Rhythm BEFORE THE VIDEO Advanced Lesson Plan for Young Performers Initiative: Rockin In Rhythm NOTE TO TEACHER: This lesson plan is designed to encourage focused listening as well as individual and group recognition of the contrast

More information

Concise Guide to Jazz

Concise Guide to Jazz Test Item File For Concise Guide to Jazz Seventh Edition By Mark Gridley Created by Judith Porter Gaston College 2014 by PEARSON EDUCATION, INC. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458 All rights reserved

More information

All That Jazz: History

All That Jazz: History All That Jazz: History Courtesy of library.thinkquest.org Beginnings: 1890-1932 Jazz Music emerged as a recognizable musical form around the turn of the 20the century. The roots of jazz, however, extend

More information

ETHN 179A and MUSIC 127A Music of African Americans ANTHONY DAVIS JAZZ: ROOTS AND DEVELOPMENT (19OO-1943)

ETHN 179A and MUSIC 127A Music of African Americans ANTHONY DAVIS JAZZ: ROOTS AND DEVELOPMENT (19OO-1943) ETHN 179A and MUSIC 127A Music of African Americans ANTHONY DAVIS JAZZ: ROOTS AND DEVELOPMENT (19OO-1943) This course will trace the early development of Jazz and the diverse traditions that helped create

More information

Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum

Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum Select the BEST answer 1. One reason for the demise of swing was Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum Test Bank 5 - The Bebop Era A. World War II and the draft B. ragtime C. too many soloists D.

More information

DEVELOPMENTS IN INSTRUMENTAL JAZZ; 1910 TO THE PRESENT DAY: AOS3

DEVELOPMENTS IN INSTRUMENTAL JAZZ; 1910 TO THE PRESENT DAY: AOS3 DEVELOPMENTS IN INSTRUMENTAL JAZZ; 1910 TO THE PRESENT DAY: AOS3 195 Duke Ellington Edward Kennedy Duke Ellington (1899 1974) was from Washington D.C. and was introduced to classical piano by music-loving

More information

Miles Davis 4. So What (1959)

Miles Davis 4. So What (1959) Quartile harmony: Chords constructed using consecutive 4ths Miles Davis 4 So What (1959) Key Features of Cool Jazz/Modal Jazz: Slower tempos, use of modes, quartile harmony, increased emphasis on melody,

More information

transcends any direct musical culture. 1 Then there are bands, like would be Reunion from the Live at Blue Note Tokyo recording 2.

transcends any direct musical culture. 1 Then there are bands, like would be Reunion from the Live at Blue Note Tokyo recording 2. V. Observations and Analysis of Funk Music Process Thousands of bands have added tremendously to the now seemingly infinite funk vocabulary. Some have sought to preserve the tradition more rigidly than

More information

Composition Portfolio Year 12

Composition Portfolio Year 12 Composition Portfolio Year 12 5 th November, 2013 What is a Rag? A form of Jazz (Ragtime) For Piano Was popular between 1895 and 1918. Modification of march Usually major Right-hand syncopated melody Leaping

More information

JAZZ STANDARDS OF A BALLAD CHARACTER. Key words: jazz, standard, ballad, composer, improviser, form, harmony, changes, tritone, cadence

JAZZ STANDARDS OF A BALLAD CHARACTER. Key words: jazz, standard, ballad, composer, improviser, form, harmony, changes, tritone, cadence Article received on February 25, 2007 UDC 785.161 JAZZ STANDARDS OF A BALLAD CHARACTER Abstract: In order to improvise, jazz musicians use small form themes often taken from musicals and movies. They are

More information

Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music

Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music Modal Jazz Was Much More Popular Than Swing-big Band Music twentieth century, few musicians or composers affected jazz as much John Coltrane Coltrane's 1960s playing included modal and free jazz approaches

More information

REVIEW III MUSIC 331: History of Jazz, Summer 2012

REVIEW III MUSIC 331: History of Jazz, Summer 2012 REVIEW III MUSIC 331: History of Jazz, Summer 2012 Short Answer Questions Characteristics of Free Jazz Highly dissonant Lack of formal harmonic or rhythmic structure Use of polytonal approach Emphasis

More information

Chapter 4 Origins of Jazz -originated from pop music styles of the 1800s -blended to satisfy social dancers

Chapter 4 Origins of Jazz -originated from pop music styles of the 1800s -blended to satisfy social dancers Chapter 4 Origins of Jazz -originated from pop music styles of the 1800s -blended to satisfy social dancers 3 trends caused the birth of jazz: 1) Improvisation -liberties with melodies & accompaniment

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Mid-Riff. BILLY STRAYHORN Edited and Transcribed by JEFF LINDBERG INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Mid-Riff. BILLY STRAYHORN Edited and Transcribed by JEFF LINDBERG INSTRUMENTATION Mid-Riff BILLY STRAYHORN Edited and Transcribed by JEFF LINDBERG INSTRUMENTATION Conductor 1st Eb Alto Saxophone 2nd Eb Alto Saxophone 1st Bb Tenor Saxophone (Clarinet) 2nd Bb Tenor Saxophone Eb Baritone

More information

An Interview with Pat Metheny

An Interview with Pat Metheny An Interview with Pat Metheny When did you discover you had a passion for composing music? Who would you consider the five most influential composers on your work, especially in your formative years? In

More information

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name I. Listening Skill For each excerpt, answer the following questions. Excerpt One: - Vivaldi "Spring" First Movement 1. Regarding the element

More information

Contents 2 SITTING IN: JAZZ PIANO. Songs by Category BLUES. About the Authors Acknowledgments How to Use This Book...

Contents 2 SITTING IN: JAZZ PIANO. Songs by Category BLUES. About the Authors Acknowledgments How to Use This Book... SITTING IN: AZZ PIANO Contents About the Authors Acknowledgments How to Use This Book Working with the DVD-ROM Bu s Blues (Blues) 6 The Phinest Blues (Blues) 0 Mr Dee Gee (Blues) Boppin with -Mac (Bebop)

More information

Jelly Roll Morton Music

Jelly Roll Morton Music 1 Jelly Roll Morton Music King Porter Stomp - 2 Original Jelly Roll Blues - 1915-4 Cannon Ball Blues - 1926-31 Kansas City Stomp - 1923-7 Ted Lewis Blues - 1927-32 London Blues - 1923-8 Billy Goat Stomp

More information

The Swing Era ( ) Chapter 5: The Swing Era (Pgs ) Fletcher Henderson ( ) The Swing Era ( )

The Swing Era ( ) Chapter 5: The Swing Era (Pgs ) Fletcher Henderson ( ) The Swing Era ( ) The Swing Era (1935-1945) Chapter 5: The Swing Era (Pgs 131-161) 1920-1933 Prohibition 1929 Great Depression begins (stock market crash, bank failures) 1935 Benny Goodman @ Palomar Ballroom, L.A. 1939

More information

44. Jerry Goldsmith Planet of the Apes: The Hunt (opening) (for Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding)

44. Jerry Goldsmith Planet of the Apes: The Hunt (opening) (for Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding) 44. Jerry Goldsmith Planet of the Apes: The Hunt (opening) (for Unit 6: Further Musical Understanding) Background information and performance circumstances Biography Jerry Goldsmith was born in 1929. Goldsmith

More information

Jazz Clinic Wallace Roney August 3, 2012

Jazz Clinic Wallace Roney August 3, 2012 Jazz Clinic Wallace Roney August 3, 2012 You know the names: Duke, Basie, Satchmo, Dizzy, Charlie Parker, Monk, Bud Powell, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Herbie Hancock, and Clark Terry. They are some of

More information

You may not own many jazz CDs now, and you may not think you know anything

You may not own many jazz CDs now, and you may not think you know anything In This Chapter Chapter 1 In the Beginning: Entering the World of Jazz Surveying jazz s traits and roots Knowing some elements of jazz theory Looking at jazz s instruments Traveling through jazz history

More information

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Bite-Sized Music Lessons Bite-Sized Music Lessons A series of F-10 music lessons for implementation in the classroom Conditions of use These Materials are freely available for download and educational use. These resources were

More information

SECTION A Aural Skills

SECTION A Aural Skills SECTION A Aural Skills The CD will play the examination questions for you. Listen carefully! 40 Marks 1. Six Intervals will now be played for you to identify them. You will hear each interval twice. Make

More information

Jazz Artist Project Directions:

Jazz Artist Project Directions: Jazz Artist Project Directions: Choose one jazz artist from the designated list Create a poster that includes: - Artist s Name - Birth and Death Dates - Instrument (Including vocal) - Time era (Blues,

More information

Music Study Guide. Moore Public Schools. Definitions of Musical Terms

Music Study Guide. Moore Public Schools. Definitions of Musical Terms Music Study Guide Moore Public Schools Definitions of Musical Terms 1. Elements of Music: the basic building blocks of music 2. Rhythm: comprised of the interplay of beat, duration, and tempo 3. Beat:

More information

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY OF POPULAR MUSIC A/B /656600

MUSIC DEPARTMENT MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY OF POPULAR MUSIC A/B /656600 MUSIC DEPARTMENT All courses fulfill the Fine Arts Credit. All music classes must be taken for the entire academic year. Many Music Classes may be taken for repeated credit. MUSIC PERSPECTIVES: HISTORY

More information

The Classical Period

The Classical Period The Classical Period How to use this presentation Read through all the information on each page. When you see the loudspeaker icon click on it to hear a musical example of the concept described in the

More information

WORLD WAR II AND THE SHRINKING OF THE ENSEMBLE

WORLD WAR II AND THE SHRINKING OF THE ENSEMBLE OVERVIEW ESSENTIAL QUESTION How did wartime restrictions and other factors cause popular music ensembles to shrink in size during the 1940s, helping to set the stage for the small combos of Rock and Roll?

More information

Norman Public Schools MUSIC ASSESSMENT GUIDE FOR GRADE 8

Norman Public Schools MUSIC ASSESSMENT GUIDE FOR GRADE 8 Norman Public Schools MUSIC ASSESSMENT GUIDE FOR GRADE 8 2013-2014 NPS ARTS ASSESSMENT GUIDE Grade 8 MUSIC This guide is to help teachers incorporate the Arts into their core curriculum. Students in grades

More information

Courtney Pine: Back in the Day Lady Day and (John Coltrane), Inner State (of Mind) and Love and Affection (for component 3: Appraising)

Courtney Pine: Back in the Day Lady Day and (John Coltrane), Inner State (of Mind) and Love and Affection (for component 3: Appraising) Courtney Pine: Back in the Day Lady Day and (John Coltrane), Inner State (of Mind) and Love and Affection (for component 3: Appraising) Background information and performance circumstances Courtney Pine

More information

BOPLICITY / MARK SCHEME

BOPLICITY / MARK SCHEME 1. You will hear two extracts of music, both performed by jazz ensembles. You may wish to place a tick in the box each time you hear the extract. 5 1 1 2 2 MINS 1 2 Answer questions (a-e) in relation to

More information

TERM 3 GRADE 5 Music Literacy

TERM 3 GRADE 5 Music Literacy 1 TERM 3 GRADE 5 Music Literacy Contents Revision... 3 The Stave... 3 The Treble clef... 3 Note Values and Rest Values... 3 Tempo... 4 Metre (Time Signature)... 4 Pitch... 4 Dynamics... 4 Canon... 4 Unison...

More information

SAMPLE THE COMPOSER THE COMPOSITION INSTRUMENTATION LIST

SAMPLE THE COMPOSER THE COMPOSITION INSTRUMENTATION LIST 2 THE COMPOSER Fred Sturm is Director of Jazz and Improvisational Music at the Lawrence University Conservatory of Music and has served as guest conductor/composer/arranger of professional jazz ensembles

More information

Elements of Music - 2

Elements of Music - 2 Elements of Music - 2 A series of single tones that add up to a recognizable whole. - Steps small intervals - Leaps Larger intervals The specific order of steps and leaps, short notes and long notes, is

More information

ON IMPROVISING. Index. Introduction

ON IMPROVISING. Index. Introduction ON IMPROVISING Index Introduction - 1 Scales, Intervals & Chords - 2 Constructing Basic Chords - 3 Construct Basic chords - 3 Cycle of Fifth's & Chord Progression - 4 Improvising - 4 Copying Recorded Improvisations

More information

Jazz is a music genre that started in the early 1900's or earlier, within the African-American communities of the Southern United States.

Jazz is a music genre that started in the early 1900's or earlier, within the African-American communities of the Southern United States. Jazz is a music genre that started in the early 1900's or earlier, within the African-American communities of the Southern United States. It combines African rhythms and European harmony to create a new

More information

PRACTICAL ARRANGING FOR THE JAZZ COMBO

PRACTICAL ARRANGING FOR THE JAZZ COMBO PRACTICAL ARRANGING FOR THE JAZZ COMBO Wyoming Music Educators All-State Conference Sheridan, WY Tuesday, 20 January 2015 Dr. Eric Richards Director of Bands and Jazz Studies Sheridan College Sheridan

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Song for Bilbao JAZZ. PAT METHENY Arranged by ALAN BAYLOCK INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Song for Bilbao JAZZ. PAT METHENY Arranged by ALAN BAYLOCK INSTRUMENTATION a division of Alfred JAZZ Song for Bilbao Conductor 1st E% Alto Saxophone 2nd E% Alto Saxophone 1st B% Tenor Saxophone 2nd B% Tenor Saxophone E% Baritone Saxophone 1st B% Trumpet 2nd B% Trumpet 3rd B%

More information

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certifi cate of Secondary Education

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certifi cate of Secondary Education Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certifi cate of Secondary Education MUSIC 040/0 Paper Listening For examination from 05 MARK SCHEME Maximum Mark: 70 Specimen The syllabus

More information

Jazz Fundamentals Academy for Lifelong Learning Cape Cod Community College Greg Polanik Spring Chapter 2 Early Jazz Music Links

Jazz Fundamentals Academy for Lifelong Learning Cape Cod Community College Greg Polanik Spring Chapter 2 Early Jazz Music Links Chapter 2 Early Jazz Music Links New Orleans Style Livery Stable Blues https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wojnau4-ki The First Jazz Recording No, they did not invent Jazz! Tailgate Ramble Preservation Hall

More information

HORNS SEPTEMBER 2014 JAZZ AUDITION PACKET. Audition Checklist: o BLUES SCALES: Concert Bb and F Blues Scales. o LEAD SHEET/COMBO TUNE: Tenor Madness

HORNS SEPTEMBER 2014 JAZZ AUDITION PACKET. Audition Checklist: o BLUES SCALES: Concert Bb and F Blues Scales. o LEAD SHEET/COMBO TUNE: Tenor Madness SEPTEMBER 2014 JAZZ AUDITION PACKET HORNS Flute Oboe play flute part Clarinet play a trumpet part Alto Sax 1 Alto Sax 2 Tenor Sax 1 Tenor Sax 2 Trumpet 1 Trumpet 2 Trumpet 3 Trumpet 4 Horn Trombone 1 Trombone

More information

Haydn: Symphony No. 101 second movement, The Clock Listening Exam Section B: Study Pieces

Haydn: Symphony No. 101 second movement, The Clock Listening Exam Section B: Study Pieces Haydn: Symphony No. 101 second movement, The Clock Listening Exam Section B: Study Pieces AQA Specimen paper: 2 Rhinegold Listening tests book: 4 Renaissance Practice Paper 1: 6 Renaissance Practice Paper

More information

All Blues Miles Davis. Year 10

All Blues Miles Davis. Year 10 All Blues Miles Davis Year 10 Section INTRO HEAD 1 Bars and timings 1-8 0:00-0:21 9-20 0:21-0:52 Musical Features. Begins with drums (playing with brushes), bass riff and piano (playing trills (A-G and

More information

Preview Only STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER. JOHN PHILIP SOUSA Arranged by WYCLIFFE GORDON INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER. JOHN PHILIP SOUSA Arranged by WYCLIFFE GORDON INSTRUMENTATION STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER Conductor 1st E% Alto Saxophone 2nd E% Alto Saxophone 1st B% Tenor Saxophone 2nd B% Tenor Saxophone E% Baritone Saxophone 1st B% Trumpet 2nd B% Trumpet 3rd B% Trumpet 4th B% Trumpet

More information

Hi Larry, Cheers, Jeff

Hi Larry, Cheers, Jeff Hi Larry, I just want to start off by thanking you for jumping in with me here at Jazz Wire. We are going to get a lot done together, and we are going to have plenty of fun doing it. My personal guarantee

More information

Music Curriculum Glossary

Music Curriculum Glossary Acappella AB form ABA form Accent Accompaniment Analyze Arrangement Articulation Band Bass clef Beat Body percussion Bordun (drone) Brass family Canon Chant Chart Chord Chord progression Coda Color parts

More information

Marshal Royal: The Art of Lead Alto. An Analysis by Seth Carper. Marshal Royal is arguably the most important lead alto player in the history

Marshal Royal: The Art of Lead Alto. An Analysis by Seth Carper. Marshal Royal is arguably the most important lead alto player in the history Marshal Royal: The Art of Lead Alto An Analysis by Seth Carper Marshal Royal is arguably the most important lead alto player in the history of big band. Royal nearly single handedly changed the role of

More information

REHEARSAL STRATEGIES I AIN T GOT NOTHIN BUT THE BLUES BY LOREN SCHOENBERG

REHEARSAL STRATEGIES I AIN T GOT NOTHIN BUT THE BLUES BY LOREN SCHOENBERG REHEARSAL STRATEGIES I AIN T GOT NOTHIN BUT THE BLUES BY LOREN SCHOENBERG Duke Ellington managed many miracles in his long life, but none is more worthy of study than how he managed to write music that

More information

WEST END BLUES / MARK SCHEME

WEST END BLUES / MARK SCHEME 3. You will hear two extracts of music, both performed by jazz ensembles. You may wish to place a tick in the box each time you hear the extract. 5 1 1 2 2 MINS 1 2 Answer questions (a-f) in relation to

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Moondance JAZZ. Words and Music by VAN MORRISON Arranged by VICTOR LÓPEZ INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Moondance JAZZ. Words and Music by VAN MORRISON Arranged by VICTOR LÓPEZ INSTRUMENTATION a division of Alfred JAZZ Moondance Words and Music by VAN MORRISON Arranged by VICTOR LÓPEZ INSTRUMENTATION Conductor 1st Eb Alto Saxophone 2nd Eb Alto Saxophone 1st Bb Tenor Saxophone 2nd Bb Tenor Saxophone

More information

Origins of Jazz in America

Origins of Jazz in America Parkland College A with Honors Projects Honors Program 2016 Origins of Jazz in America Megan MacFalane Recommended Citation MacFalane, Megan, "Origins of Jazz in America" (2016). A with Honors Projects.

More information

Jazz Lines Publications. Arranged by EDDIE SAUTER. prepared for publication by jeffrey sultanof and rob duboff. full score.

Jazz Lines Publications. Arranged by EDDIE SAUTER. prepared for publication by jeffrey sultanof and rob duboff. full score. Presents Jazz Lines Publications I M JUST WILD ABOUT HARRY recorded by BENNY GOODMAN Arranged by EDDIE SAUTER reared or ublication by jerey sultano and rob dubo ull score jl-899 Lyrics by Noble Sissle,

More information

2) Their musicals included one based on a book written by James Michener. The Musical was titled

2) Their musicals included one based on a book written by James Michener. The Musical was titled Read Chapters 20-35 including 1 the following summaries. 1) According to the text, Rodgers and Hart were important because 2) Their musicals included one based on a book written by James Michener. The

More information

The Art of Jazz Singing: Working With The Band

The Art of Jazz Singing: Working With The Band Working With The Band 1. Introduction Listening and responding are the responsibilities of every jazz musician, and some of our brightest musical moments are collective reactions to the unexpected. But

More information

Unit Outcome Assessment Standards 1.1 & 1.3

Unit Outcome Assessment Standards 1.1 & 1.3 Understanding Music Unit Outcome Assessment Standards 1.1 & 1.3 By the end of this unit you will be able to recognise and identify musical concepts and styles from The Classical Era. Learning Intention

More information

By Jack Bennett Icanplaydrums.com DVD 12 JAZZ BASICS

By Jack Bennett Icanplaydrums.com DVD 12 JAZZ BASICS 1 By Jack Bennett Icanplaydrums.com DVD 12 JAZZ BASICS 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS This PDF workbook is conveniently laid out so that all Ezybeat pages (shuffle, waltz etc) are at the start of the book, before

More information

The Impact of Motown (Middle School)

The Impact of Motown (Middle School) The Impact of Motown (Middle School) Rationale This 50- minute lesson is intended to help students identify the impact that Motown music and its artists had on the 20 th century as well as today s popular

More information

Name: Class: Date: ID: A

Name: Class: Date: ID: A Name: Class: _ Date: _ Final Exam Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The two principal centers of nineteenth-century ballet were France and:

More information

How Bebop Came to Be: The Early History of Modern Jazz

How Bebop Came to Be: The Early History of Modern Jazz Student Publications Student Scholarship 2013 How Bebop Came to Be: The Early History of Modern Jazz Colin M. Messinger '17, Gettysburg College Follow this and additional works at: http://cupola.gettysburg.edu/student_scholarship

More information

Perdido Rehearsal Strategies

Perdido Rehearsal Strategies Listen, Dance, Sing & Play! Though these words may seem like a mantra for a happy life, they actually represent an approach to engaging students in the jazz language. Duke Ellington s Perdido arrangement

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. My Ship JAZZ. Lyrics by IRA GERSHWIN Music by KURT WEILL Arranged by DAVE RIVELLO INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. My Ship JAZZ. Lyrics by IRA GERSHWIN Music by KURT WEILL Arranged by DAVE RIVELLO INSTRUMENTATION a division of Alfred JAZZ Conductor 1st Eb Alto Saxophone 2nd Eb Alto Saxophone 1st Bb Tenor Saxophone 2nd Bb Tenor Saxophone Eb Baritone Saxophone 1st Bb Trumpet 2nd Bb Trumpet 3rd Bb Trumpet 4th Bb Trumpet

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. The Wayfaring Stranger. TRADITIONAL Arranged by MIKE COLLINS-DOWDEN INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. The Wayfaring Stranger. TRADITIONAL Arranged by MIKE COLLINS-DOWDEN INSTRUMENTATION The Wayfaring Stranger TRADITIONAL Arranged by MIKE COLLINS-DOWDEN INSTRUMENTATION Conductor 1st Eb Alto Saxophone 2nd Eb Alto Saxophone 1st Bb Tenor Saxophone 2nd Bb Tenor Saxophone (Optional) Eb Baritone

More information

Lisa Hallen. Mr. Pecherek MUS

Lisa Hallen. Mr. Pecherek MUS Lisa Hallen Mr. Pecherek MUS 1000-02 On Sunday, September 21, 2014 the Illinois Valley Symphony Orchestra (IVSO) presented a Pops Concert in the Princeton High School Auditorium. The IVSO is conducted

More information

Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide

Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide Music = Sounds that are organized in time. Four Main Properties of Musical Sounds 1.) Pitch (the highness or lowness) 2.) Dynamics (loudness or softness) 3.) Timbre

More information

Classical Time Period

Classical Time Period Classical Time Period 1750-1825 Return to Greek ideas General Characteristics Expanded middle class Conflict between classes Age of the enlightenment-used reason to reform society Patronage system-support

More information

The Elements of Music. A. Gabriele

The Elements of Music. A. Gabriele The Elements of Music A. Gabriele Rhythm Melody Harmony Texture Timbre Dynamics Form The 7 Elements Rhythm Rhythm represents the element of time in music. When you tap your foot, you are moving to the

More information

jingle Bells full score

jingle Bells full score Presents Jazz Lines Publications jingle Bells Arranged by Ernie Wilkins transcribed by dylan canterbury full score JLP-8006 Words and Music by James Pierpont Copyright 2018 The Jazz Lines Foundation, Inc.

More information

Flint School of Performing Arts Ensemble Audition Requirements

Flint School of Performing Arts Ensemble Audition Requirements Flint School of Performing Arts Ensemble Audition Requirements FLINT YOUTH SYMPHONY STRINGS 1. 2-minute excerpt of solo of your choice which demonstrates your playing level (no piano accompaniment necessary)

More information

IronClad. Sean O Loughlin Grade 1.5 (Hutton) 2011 Carl Fischer, LLC

IronClad. Sean O Loughlin Grade 1.5 (Hutton) 2011 Carl Fischer, LLC IronClad Sean O Loughlin Grade 1.5 (Hutton) 2011 Carl Fischer, LLC History Sean O Loughlin (b. 1972) grew up in Syracuse New York. His career began to take shape with the help of the Vice President of

More information

Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum

Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum Select the BEST answer 1. Jazz is Jazz in America The National Jazz Curriculum Test Bank 1 - What is Jazz A. early symphonic music B. music based on strictly planned notation C. a combination of a partly

More information

Teach Your Students to Compose Themselves!

Teach Your Students to Compose Themselves! Teach Your Students to Compose Themselves! Robert Sheldon Composer/Conductor/Clinician/Concert Band Editor Alfred Music www.robertsheldonmusic.com rsheldon@alfred.com 1) Where to begin? What does the composer

More information

Power Standards and Benchmarks Orchestra 4-12

Power Standards and Benchmarks Orchestra 4-12 Power Benchmark 1: Singing, alone and with others, a varied repertoire of music. Begins ear training Continues ear training Continues ear training Rhythm syllables Outline triads Interval Interval names:

More information

Melodic Minor Scale Jazz Studies: Introduction

Melodic Minor Scale Jazz Studies: Introduction Melodic Minor Scale Jazz Studies: Introduction The Concept As an improvising musician, I ve always been thrilled by one thing in particular: Discovering melodies spontaneously. I love to surprise myself

More information

MUSIC. An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era

MUSIC. An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era MUSIC An Introduction to the Music of the World War II Era I. BASIC ELEMENTS OF MUSIC THEORY 20% A. Sound and Music 1. Definitions a. Music is sound organized in time b. Music of the Western world 2. Physics

More information

What do you know about Jazz? Explain in a short paragraph in your notebook.

What do you know about Jazz? Explain in a short paragraph in your notebook. Work from Previous Lesson Warm-Up What do you know about Jazz? Explain in a short paragraph in your notebook. Make sure you are seeing me about make up quizzes and missing work We are going to get this

More information

the don redman all-stars

the don redman all-stars 1 the don redman all-stars vol. 2 featuring coleman hawkins and more bears RECORDINGS designed for repeated listening 2 the don redman all-stars featuring coleman hawkins vol. 2 1. Peetni Petite (Don Redman)...

More information

The Classical Period-Notes

The Classical Period-Notes The Classical Period-Notes The Classical period lasted from approximately 1750 1810. This was a fairly brief period but contains the work of three of the greatest composers of all time. They were... Joseph

More information

MUJS 5780 Project 4. Group Interaction Project. The term Jazz is often applied to many different nuances in music.

MUJS 5780 Project 4. Group Interaction Project. The term Jazz is often applied to many different nuances in music. MUJS 5780 Project 4 Group Interaction Project The term Jazz is often applied to many different nuances in music. In a very general review the idea of improvisation and interaction seem paramount to a constant

More information

GCSE MUSIC REVISION GUIDE

GCSE MUSIC REVISION GUIDE GCSE MUSIC REVISION GUIDE J Williams: Main title/rebel blockade runner (from the soundtrack to Star Wars: Episode IV: A New Hope) (for component 3: Appraising) Background information and performance circumstances

More information

THE MUSICAL DOMINANCE OF BIG BAND MUSIC

THE MUSICAL DOMINANCE OF BIG BAND MUSIC BIG BAND MUSIC: The dominating factors This essay will focus on mainstream musical changes, between 1945-1955, while considering music s relationship to the rest of the entertainment industry. The main

More information

BIG IDEAS. Music is a process that relies on the interplay of the senses. Learning Standards

BIG IDEAS. Music is a process that relies on the interplay of the senses. Learning Standards Area of Learning: ARTS EDUCATION Music: Instrumental Music (includes Concert Band 10, Orchestra 10, Jazz Band 10, Guitar 10) Grade 10 BIG IDEAS Individual and collective expression is rooted in history,

More information

Grade Level Music Curriculum:

Grade Level Music Curriculum: Grade Level Music Curriculum: All the grade levels will experience sing alone and with others, a diverse repertoire representing various cultures and styles (for example, folk songs, poems, play-party

More information

Page 7 Lesson Plan Exercises 7 13 Score Pages 70 80

Page 7 Lesson Plan Exercises 7 13 Score Pages 70 80 1 Page 7 Lesson Plan Exercises 7 13 Score Pages 70 80 Goal Students will progress in developing comprehensive musicianship through a standards-based curriculum, including singing, performing, reading and

More information

13 Matching questions

13 Matching questions Musical Genres NAME 13 Matching questions 1. jazz A. F. 2. pop 3. country 4. blues 5. hip hop B. G. 6. rap 7. reggae 8. heavy metal C. H. 9. classical 10. electronic 11. folk 12. dance D. I. 13. rock and

More information

Section 1: The Basic Elements of Music

Section 1: The Basic Elements of Music 1 Section 1: The Basic Elements of Music Unit 1.1 Rhythm and melody Page 2 2. The ords are dramatic, the dynamics varied, the tempo/speed changes, the rhythm is free. The teacher should encourage students

More information

Instruments. Of the. Orchestra

Instruments. Of the. Orchestra Instruments Of the Orchestra String Family Wooden, hollow-bodied instruments strung with metal strings across a bridge. Find this family in the front of the orchestra and along the right side. Sound is

More information

2019 NAfME All-Northwest Jazz Audition Materials Saxophones and Brass

2019 NAfME All-Northwest Jazz Audition Materials Saxophones and Brass 2019 NAfME All-Northwest Jazz Audition Materials Saxophones and Brass Track 1 Track 2 Track 3 Basic Audition The following three tracks are required of all wind applicants ALTO SAXOPHONE (pages 5-6) TENOR

More information

Lawrence University Performing Arts Series Filled with Music Legends, Rising Stars

Lawrence University Performing Arts Series Filled with Music Legends, Rising Stars Lawrence University Lux Press Releases Communications 4-10-2013 2013-14 Lawrence University Performing Arts Series Filled with Music Legends, Rising Stars Lawrence University Follow this and additional

More information

A series of music lessons for implementation in the classroom F-10.

A series of music lessons for implementation in the classroom F-10. A series of music lessons for implementation in the classroom F-10. Conditions of Use These materials are freely available for download and educational use. These resources were developed by Sydney Symphony

More information

DELAWARE MUSIC EDUCATORS ASSOCIATION ALL-STATE ENSEMBLES GENERAL GUIDELINES

DELAWARE MUSIC EDUCATORS ASSOCIATION ALL-STATE ENSEMBLES GENERAL GUIDELINES DELAWARE MUSIC EDUCATORS ASSOCIATION ALL-STATE ENSEMBLES GENERAL GUIDELINES DELAWARE ALL-STATE SENIOR BAND Flute, Piccolo, Soprano Clarinet, Saxophones (Alto, Tenor, Baritone), Bass Clarinet, Oboe, Bassoon,

More information

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Poultry In Motion JAZZ KRIS BERG INSTRUMENTATION

Preview Only. Legal Use Requires Purchase. Poultry In Motion JAZZ KRIS BERG INSTRUMENTATION a division of Alfred JAZZ Poultry In Motion Conductor 1st Eb Alto Saxophone 2nd Eb Alto Saxophone 1st Bb Tenor Saxophone 2nd Bb Tenor Saxophone Eb Baritone Saxophone 1st Bb Trumpet 2nd Bb Trumpet 3rd Bb

More information

University of Kansas American Studies Fall 2006 JAZZ, ROOTS TO 1955

University of Kansas American Studies Fall 2006 JAZZ, ROOTS TO 1955 University of Kansas American Studies Fall 2006 JAZZ, ROOTS TO 1955 INSTRUCTOR: Kevin Whitehead COURSE REQUIREMENTS How you ll be graded: On the basis of: two in-class exams (each counting 20% toward your

More information

Tonality Tonality is how the piece sounds. The most common types of tonality are major & minor these are tonal and have a the sense of a fixed key.

Tonality Tonality is how the piece sounds. The most common types of tonality are major & minor these are tonal and have a the sense of a fixed key. Name: Class: Ostinato An ostinato is a repeated pattern of notes or phrased used within classical music. It can be a repeated melodic phrase or rhythmic pattern. Look below at the musical example below

More information

Department Curriculum Map

Department Curriculum Map Department Curriculum Map 2014-15 Department Subject specific required in Year 11 Wider key skills Critical creative thinking / Improvising Aesthetic sensitivity Emotional awareness Using s Cultural understing

More information

Music Theory. Fine Arts Curriculum Framework. Revised 2008

Music Theory. Fine Arts Curriculum Framework. Revised 2008 Music Theory Fine Arts Curriculum Framework Revised 2008 Course Title: Music Theory Course/Unit Credit: 1 Course Number: Teacher Licensure: Grades: 9-12 Music Theory Music Theory is a two-semester course

More information