Thomas Haynes
Student number 1521078
Did country, blues and jazz evolve stylishly
It Is difficult to define what exactly music is in today's standards you can quite easily offend anyone.
However, there Is truth behind the fact that music is constantly changing as when it changed decades leading up to the age of rock, soul and hip-hop influencing genres. In ten years time, there will potentially be different music.
However the discussion I will discuss is styles of country, blues and jazz and how it evolved.
Honky-Tonk-
The key Artists for Hony tonk are Hank Williams, Webb Piece, Lefy Frizzell and Hank Thompson
Honky-tonk was described as a style of music which was popular during the 1950s and early 1960s how it evolved is
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to define jazz music is difficult because of its numerous different styles Louie Armstrong once said “Man if you gotta ask You'll never know”
however, there has been an evolution of jazz with style and technique
Ragtime
Often known as the founding style of jazz with origins in southern united states during the late 1800s. it was composed most of the time for piano. Its characteristics are explained as vibrant and enthusiastic. It is often associated with African dance.
The Blues
The Blues had an influence on the development of jazz blue style songs it is part of the vocal tradition that expresses emotion in African Americans during the early 20th century they sang with the instrumentation of guitar piano and harmonica.
some artists that were key include Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, and W.C Handy.
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Big Band was performed in a group with ten or more musicians. Instruments included saxophone, trumpets, piano, drums, guitar and bass. The musicians of big band jazz collaborated to create swing music it was a success and jazz fans danced into the late 1940s.
Big Band musicians include Duke Ellington Benny Goodman and Paul Whiteman.
Bebop
Bebop emerged in the 1940s carrying on from the popular sub-genre Big Band. However, it was very different in style from its predecessor it usually consisted of around four to six musicians Bebop was seen as something you could not dance to using complicated melody's and chord progressions the vocal style was called scat where unrecognisable syllables are sung to improvise the melody.
Bebop is largely regarded to trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie
Concrete Detail 3: Later popular forms of music would evolve out of the African American styles. The blues and jazz would become major styles of music in American culture and would show the impact of African Americans on American society.
On the other hand, Blues were basically from work songs of African Americans slaves at the time. “It is a native American music, the product of the black man in this country, or, to put it more exactly the way I have come to think about it, blues could not exist if the African captives had not become American captives”(pp.17), said Jones and Baraka. In Jazz – A History, Frank Tirro wisely analyzes and explains the relationship between the unique background and
a. The Triangular trade is a phrase that links the trade route of three continents, Europe, Africa, and the American continent. b. The first stage of the Triangular Trade involved merchant ships taking manufactured goods from Europe to West Africa. Reports show that Europe approximately exported $10 million dollars worth of goods to Africa annually. Manufactured goods included cloth, gin, tobacco, beads, iron goods, gunpowder and weapons.
Jazz is the world - famous music genre that originated from the African - American communities that existed during the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the town of New Orleans, United States. The genre of jazz has many subgenres which have evolved over time to give us current modern day jazz. The two jazz genres which will be compared and contrasted in this essay will be the two subgenres; Bebop, and Ragtime Jazz, which differ but at the same time have some similarities.
In "This is How we Roll" Florida Georgia Line transitions from singing their lyrics to a country rap where the beat slows and the lyrics are sped up on a rhyme scheme. Similarly, Future took a step away from an overload of modulated bass to incorporate a piano rift instead. We as listeners use these genres of music to describe the music we like to listen to. However, the spectrum is so broad that it is important to understand what composes a specific genre. There are hundreds of sub-genres included in the overall label of country or hip-hop music, and the list continues to expand as artists proceed to develop new creative ideas that make it to the top of the billboards. Both of these songs are examples of songs that swept the nation with popularity but experimented with new styles the diverged from the norms of the genre. I believe genres will always stay true to their cultural origins; however, I'm excited for the future of music as artists continue to dip into various new
Rhythm and blues, also known today as “R & B”, has been one of the most influential genres of music within the African American Culture, and has evolved over many decades in style and sound. Emerging in the late 1940's rhythm and blues, sometimes called jump blues, became dominant black popular music during and after WWII. Rhythm and blues artists often sung about love, relationships, life troubles, and sometimes focused on segregation and race struggles. Rhythm and blues helped embody what was unique about black American culture and validate it as something distinctive and valuable.
Blues became music art in 1890. It has no standard form. It is music that tell about
Knowledge of jazz has fallen far behind its development. Most people do not know the facts on jazz, only some generalities and stereotypes. Often being called America’s only original art form, jazz began as an ethnic music, but there is much more to jazz than music. It is difficult to think of jazz without thinking of African-American
The roots of Jazz lie in the southern plantations, where slaves used to sing songs about overcoming adversity, and the troubles that they have encountered. The Blues may possibly be the most emotional form of music and also had the greatest impact on jazz. The twelve bar blues chorus profoundly influenced Jazz’s musical structure gaining mass near the Mississippi Delta, the Blues developed very close to New Orleans - where Jazz was beginning to take shape. To this day, the relationship between Jazz and the Blues remains unbroken. Without New Orleans there would
Music is an art that has united people all over the world for centuries and centuries. Evolving throughout the years, music is split up into many different genres. These genres have derived from diverse time periods and cultures throughout the years. Jazz and Country music both originated in the early 1900s, but have had lasting impacts on completely different cultures. The detailed elements of each piece are dissimilar, but are equally effective in providing entertainment for each audience.
Well, perhaps for the Americans it was, although they went against others words, because imperialism or colonialism was viewed negatively from an international standpoint, but they managed to take Hawaii and to keep Puerto Rico, and helping it with commonwealth. They helped Cuba out for their own independence, but managed it through its government, as well as some other Latin American countries. They also controlled the Philippines, despite the fact that they achieved their independence. Guam, and American Samoa, however is still a U.S colony today, along with Puerto Rico, and any other small islands.
I used to always go over to my grandparent’s house and watch my grandfather go crazy over this “Jazz” music. He explained to me that it wasn’t Jazz unless it swung like the greats. I listened to a song “Sing Sing Sing” the other day from one of my Jazz collections that my grandpa gave to me and realized that their was so much energy and pizzazz in this music. He explained to me that it was all put together by a guy named Benny, and I understood why.
Other developments led to the ``trumpet-piano'' style of Earl Hines and Teddy Weatherford and to the swing style of Duke Ellington. Some Historians consider ragtime to be the very first jazz style. Although it cannot actually be classified as jazz, ragtime is definitely a very influential part of jazz. In Louisiana at this time there was music everywhere. Ragtime bands and marching bands were joining together. Mexican bands were also and influence especially in the way the trumpets and horns were played. All this merging of different band sounds was important in the creation of jazz. Eventually the instruments used in marching bands crossed over into jazz instruments. The drums and clarinet filled in for the marching band instruments. New Orleans was such a melting pot for music and culture but it was also a party town. This party scene was also a part of how jazz was molded. The demand for fresh new music was high, which caused musicians to alter and elongate their styles. All the new creations and variations on the music in the end fused into jazz.
What could our culture be without music today? Music has been around for thousands of years, but it wasn't the same as what we have today. Music would be classified differently back in the “Stone Age”. It would composed of various sounds and crafted into a single music piece. As centuries went by, music evolved without holding back. Day after day, music is still growing at a tremendous rate. So should music that glorifies a criminal lifestyle be banned? A very controversial topic among social media freaks and conservative people, who could be the one that gets their way.
Looking back at the history of Blues music, one can see the influence of the African-American community, tradition, and culture very apparent in it. The Blues music genre came into being from the songs