Synopses & Reviews
Bebop music is more than a jazz movement that seemed to have burst suddenly upon the jazz scene—it is an outgrowth of the sociocultural environment dating from the 1920s through the 1940s. In this consideration of the period and its music, noted jazz scholar Eddie S. Meadows traces the cultural and ideological context that produced Bebop and advocates that Cool Jazz was a reaction to Bebop, a natural outgrowth of its predecessor. Unlike most jazz research on the subject, ^IBebop to Cool^R features insider perspectives on both the social context of the music and the music itself, as a means of capturing the musical aesthetics and the cultural spirit of the time.
The volume includes the perspectives of Marcus Garvey, W. E. B. DuBois, and other leaders of the Harlem Renaissance; also discussed here for the first time is the role that Islam played in the music's development. Finally, in identifying and discussing the work of such significant musicians as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, and Stan Getz, Meadows demonstrates their unique musical identities within the respective genres that compose the revolutionary Bebop and Cool Jazz movements.
Synopsis
Traces the cultural and ideological context that produced Bebop music, from the 1920s though the period of Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius Monk, Charlie Parker, and many other revolutionary musicians.
Synopsis
Includes bibliographical references (p. [347]-356) and indexes.
Synopsis
Bebop music is more than a jazz movement that seemed to have burst suddenly upon the jazz scene--it is an outgrowth of the sociocultural environment dating from the 1920s through the 1940s. In this consideration of the period and its music, noted jazz scholar Eddie S. Meadows traces the cultural and ideological context that produced Bebop and advocates that Cool Jazz was a reaction to Bebop, a natural outgrowth of its predecessor. Unlike most jazz research on the subject, Bebop to Cool features insider perspectives on both the social context of the music and the music itself, as a means of capturing the musical aesthetics and the cultural spirit of the time. The volume includes the perspectives of Marcus Garvey, W. E. B. DuBois, and other leaders of the Harlem Renaissance; also discussed here for the first time is the role that Islam played in the music's development. Finally, in identifying and discussing the work of such significant musicians as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, and Stan Getz, Meadows demonstrates their unique musical identities within the respective genres that compose the revolutionary Bebop and Cool Jazz movements.
Table of Contents
Introduction
New Thoughts, New Directions
Sociocultural Context
Ideology
Musical Appropriation
The Transformation to Bebop
Bebop: Articulating Language and Identity
Playing Bebop
General Musical Characteristics of Bebop
Bebop Scales
The Musical Language of Dizzy Gillespie
The Musical Language of Charles Parker
The Musical Language of Thelonious Monk
Cool: Articulating Language and Identity
Cool Jazz
The Musical Language of Miles Davis
The Musical Language of Stan Getz
The Musical Language of Lennie Tristano
Conclusions
Appendix: Transcriptions Discussed in the Book
Glossary
References
Index