Widget FAQ Contact Koko is a jazz song that was composed and recorded by Charlie ‘Bird’ Parker in 1945, and ‘Almost Blue’ was composed by Elvis Costello in October 1981, but was recorded by Chet Baker in 1987. Charlie Parker played a massive role in defining jazz music during the Bebop era and is seen as a highly renowned musician because of his contribution to this era. Chet Baker is also seen in high regard due to the role that he played in the development of Cool Jazz. The differences and similarities…
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On March 23, 2012, UNC Jazz Band performed at the Rehearsal Room of Kenan Music Building for the 25th Annual Videmus Festival. UNC’s Videmus fest aims to change the perception that white males being dominate figures of today’s field of music1. In this way, the festival features the works of women and blacks, who are the underrepresented groups of composers1. The whole concert consisted of three pieces of music by Mary Lou Williams and 5 other pieces of music by Sherisse Rogers. Mary Lou Williams…
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was dissatisfaction about what was going on in Cuba. Livery Stable Blues The jazz tune “Livery Stable Blues” elicits a fun, free feeling for me. I think of this period as high-spirited and at times rowdy; The Jazz Age. Prohibition happened and speakeasies were a common thing, it was a time when races intermingled in these areas more. I think society’s atmosphere was divided; you had the side forbidding alcohol and the side of jazz revolution. During that time gambling was not allowed and my grandmother…
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Jazz and Hip-Hop Jazz and hip-hop, two forms of music born out of the historical and social struggles of the African-American culture. Jazz finds its origins in New Orleans, Louisiana, uniting military music with ragtime, Creole and European traditions, and finally the blues, with its painful history of slavery and racial abuse. Hip Hop however born out of the streets of New York City, reflecting on the treacherous gang violence and social inequalities for inner black kids. Most would say that hip-hip…
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My Favorite Things Introduction: I’ve found you’ve got to look back at the old things and see them in a new light.” — John Coltrane, 1960, Down Beat magazine In the 1960s, many jazz musicians, such as Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra, Charles Mingus, and Eric Dolphy, expanded the parameters of their music with respect to form, melody, harmony, rhythm, and texture. They broke down traditional techniques and incorporated previously unheard scales, harmonic progressions, and compositional structures. They…
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Free jazz is a jazz music subgenre with inceptions in the mid and late 1950s, came to its statures in 1960s and proceed with a real advance/advancement in the jazz world. Incongruity, atonality, transfer of general consonant structures and expanded cadenced changes are winning in the style. Showing up in the beginning of what might later turn into the more worldwide Avant-Garde jazz development, free jazz endeavors to break free from the protocols and examples enforced by prior jazz subgenres as…
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There is controversial argument on the difference between United States and Dominican Republic based on lifestyle, culture, food and music. Despite that, the reality is, the two countries have few but very important similarities. Because of high rate of immigration in Dominican Republic, the Americans have developed better understanding of the culture and lifestyle (Rappoport, 2010). This cultural interaction brings better understanding of cultural diversity that promote learning. A clear and real…
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Jamaica is an island nation in the West Indies located in the Caribbean Sea. It has an estimate population of 2.8 million people, more than double that of Rhode Island, and less than half that of Massachusetts. It is south of Cuba and for comparison it is just under the size of the state of Connecticut. Jamaica is 145 miles in length and 50 miles in width at its widest point, it's area being 4,243 square miles. The capital of the country is Kingston, and their government system is a…
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Black and Black Throughout the span of the Harlem Renaissance, black poets used their poems to tell the story of their people's struggles as a way to bring light to the injustice they had faced in America. They used their poems not only to reflect, but to empower the next generations to keep up the fight toward equality. Each poet during the time period was unique, but two of the poets used nearly opposite approaches to achieve the same goal, and each were very successful. Langston Hughes, a black…
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have reduced him to somebody melancholy and pale. This landscape is barren, as though left bereft and abandoned by God, and now the only eyes watching over it are the eyes of Dr T.J. Eckleburg, which ‘look out of no face,’ judgemental and cruel, are ‘blue and gigantic…one yard high,’ and framed by ‘a pair of enormous yellow spectacles which pass over a non-existent nose.’ The sight of a pair of glasses is familiar, but the absence of something for the glasses to rest on (namely a nose) and the overwhelming…
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