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Jazz: An Origin Story

Courtesy DALL-E 3
Music, like every other art, is invariably an expression of the times in which it was created.
R.W.S. Mendl
What (and Where) in the World
In 2014, Tropy (Fortuna), an album from the Polish trumpet/piano duo
Maciej Fortuna
trumpetThe history of jazz music parallels that of the United States. The music, like the country's behavior, is complex and sometimes ugly. Slavery, Jim Crow, the Jazz Age, political corruption, organized crime, war, Civil Rights, international diplomacy, gender inequality, and income disparity have been movements in an evolving soundtrack. The history is equal parts fairy tale and reality.
In five-plus years of research and dozens of interviews with musicians, composers, academics, curators, archivists, and writers, no two people have agreed on an identical definition of jazz. The book's purpose was not to explain those inconsistencies or to rework jazz's development. The intent, in part, was to let the art form breathe and go where it would. The broader purpose was to look at jazz as a pointer on the timeline of events. As a maplike the musicit leads to some unfamiliar places.
Henry O. Osgood's So This Is Jazz (Little Brown & Company, 1926) was the first jazz music book written. Osgood cites research to support the term "jazz," or some derivative, originating in an unspecified region of Africa; its meaning is "to speed up" or "energize." The Mississippi Delta blues musician Jazbo Brown has also been credited with coining the word around 1904. When the stage-frightened multi-instrumentalist/singer bolstered his confidence with shots of gin, the audience would encourage him with calls to "jaz" it up. Some academics have perceived the word's roots to be from Arabia, and others believe that it was based on the French verb "jaser," meaning "to chatter." There are numerous slang attributions of the word; the most common was its association with the jasmine-scented bordellos of Storyville.

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
In their book Jazz (Norton, 2009), Gary Giddins and Scott DeVeaux relate the now-familiar 1950s

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Common definitions of the music often include shared elements of rhythmtypically with an emphasis on swingsyncopation, and improvisation. Improvisation and "swing feel" are frequently considered the most important features of jazz though there is jazz that does not include either. Non-Western music, such as that of the Dom people of Jordan, Iranian " data-original-title="" title="">Kayhan Kalhor's kamancheh, and music from India and sub-Saharan Africa, freely utilize improvisation. Highlife music of the West African Gold Coast (present-day Ghana) is rooted in the rhythmic structures and melodies of traditional Akan music butsince the 1950shas sometimes incorporated Western swing elements. None of these styles is commonly considered a form of jazz.
Theoretically, Ragtime (~1890-1920) falls into the category of pre-jazz. However, the style ran concurrent with early New Orleans jazz, with an innocuous gradation of improvisation in the cornet/trumpet, clarinet, and trombone-led front line. Primarily dance music, New Orleans jazz had multiple names, including Hot Jazz and the racially charged Dixieland. The syncopated variation on marching music came from the African American neighborhoods of St. Louis, Chicago, New Orleans, and other major metropolitan areas. Scott Joplin, Ernest Hogan, Bert Williams,

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941

W.C. Handy
arranger1873 - 1958

James Reese Europe
composer / conductor1881 - 1919
Nick LaRocca
cornet1889 - 1961
Musician, composer, and author

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
In the early 1930s, new rhythmic ideas, changing instrumentation, and larger ensembles shepherded the Swing era, peaking from 1935 to 1940 when the growing popularity of solo vocalists sped its decline. The most profound variation in jazz came with the development of Bebop in the early 1940s, breaking from generally popular dance music to an art form. The least popular innovation in the genre to date, Bebop's sidestepping melodies and harmonic improvisations were the foundation for the most innovative future jazz.
No style of jazz created its own social geography more than Free Jazz. The father of the sub-genre,

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

Albert Ayler
saxophone, tenor1936 - 1970

Cecil Taylor
piano1929 - 2018

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
The English jazz critic Stanley Dance (1910-1999) wrote for a half-dozen prominent publications. He was a friend and biographer of Duke Ellington, consulted Ken Burns for his PBS series Jazz (2001), and was a prolific album producer. Dance coined the phrase "mainstream jazz" in the 1950s to describe what constituted "acceptable" jazz, specifically swing-era musicdanceable music. The influential critic did not hide his dislike for the Bebop style and believed that avant-garde jazz and non-Western influences diminished the genre. Ken Burns inflicted widespread damage with his popular and myopic ten-part documentary, essentially cutting out any relevance after the 1950s and crediting a handful of the most flamboyant and familiar names with creating or influencing the entire genre.
Jazz survives the incompatible dogma that encircles everything, including art. In his now rare book, The Appeal of Jazz (Philip Allan, 1927), Robert Mendl writes: "There is in truth no definable borderline between jazz music and the classics. To be frightened of the one is as unnecessary as to be contemptuous of the other." Composer/pianist

Satoko Fujii
pianob.1958
The next article will look at pre-jazz influences, including the work of James Reese Europe and the Castles.
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