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Dixieland jazz

Dixieland jazz, also referred to as traditional jazz, hot jazz, or simply Dixieland, is a style of jazz based on the music that developed in New Orleans at the start of the 20th century. The 1917 recordings by the Original Dixieland Jass Band (which shortly thereafter changed the spelling of its name to "Original Dixieland Jazz Band"), fostered awareness of this new style of music.

Dixieland
Stylistic originsJazz
Cultural originsNew Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Typical instruments
  • cornet
  • trumpet
  • trombone
  • clarinet
  • tuba
  • banjo
  • piano
  • keyboard
  • double bass
  • drums
  • guitar
  • vocals
Regional scenes
Other topics

History Edit

 
A traditionalist jazz band plays at a party in New Orleans in 2005. Shown here are Chris Clifton, on trumpet; Brian O'Connell, on clarinet; Les Muscutt, on banjo; Chuck Badie, on string bass; and Tom Ebert, on trombone.

The Original Dixieland Jass Band, recording its first disc in 1917, was the first instance of jazz music being called "Dixieland", though at the time, the term referred to the band, not the genre. The band's sound was a combination of African American/New Orleans ragtime and Sicilian music.[1] The music of Sicily was one of the many genres in the New Orleans music scene during the 1910s, alongside sanctified church music, brass band music and blues.[2]

Much later, the term "Dixieland" was applied to early jazz by traditional jazz revivalists, starting in the 1940s and 1950s. In his book "Jazz" the critic Rex Harris defined Dixieland as "Jazz played in a quasi-New Orleans manner by white musicians." The name is a reference to the "Old South", specifically anything south of the Mason-Dixon line. The term encompasses earlier brass band marches, French Quadrilles, biguine, ragtime, and blues with collective, polyphonic improvisation. While instrumentation and size of bands can be very flexible, the "standard" band consists of a "front line" of trumpet (or cornet), trombone, and clarinet, with a "rhythm section" of at least two of the following instruments: guitar or banjo, string bass or tuba, piano, and drums. Louis Armstrong's All-Stars was the band most popularly identified with Dixieland during the 1940s, although Armstrong's own influence during the 1920s was to move the music beyond the traditional New Orleans style.

The definitive Dixieland sound is created when one instrument (usually the trumpet) plays the melody or a recognizable paraphrase or variation on it, and the other instruments of the "front line" improvise around that melody. This creates a more polyphonic sound than the arranged ensemble playing of the big band sound or the straight "head" melodies of bebop.

During the 1930s and 1940s, the earlier group-improvisation style fell out of favor with the majority of younger black players, while some older players of both races continued on in the older style. Though younger musicians developed new forms, many beboppers revered Armstrong and quoted fragments of his recorded music in their own improvisations.

The Dixieland revival in the late 1940s and 1950s was formed in reaction to the orchestrated sounds of the swing era and the perceived chaos of the new bebop sounds (called "Chinese music" by Cab Calloway).[3] Led by the Assunto brothers' original Dukes of Dixieland, a band known for its virtuoso improvisation and recording history's first stereo record, the movement brought many semi-retired musicians a measure of fame late in their lives, as well as bringing retired musicians back onto the jazz circuit after years of not playing (such as Kid Ory and Red Nichols). Many Dixieland groups of the revival era consciously imitated the recordings and bands of decades earlier. Other musicians continued to create fresh performances and new tunes. For example, in the 1950s a style called "Progressive Dixieland" sought to blend polyphonic improvisation with bebop-style rhythm. Spike Jones & His New Band and Steve Lacy played with such bands. This style is sometimes called "Dixie-bop". Lacy went on to apply that approach to the music of Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Duke Ellington, and Herbie Nichols.

Etymology Edit

The word "Dixie" is the nickname of the Southern United States, wherein New Orleans – the birthplace of Dixieland Jazz – is located.

Main forms Edit

Chicago style Edit

Dixieland largely evolved into Chicago style in the late 1910s and the new style was popularly called that name by the early 1920s.[4]

"Chicago style" is often applied to the sound of Chicagoans such as Jimmy McPartland, Eddie Condon, Muggsy Spanier, and Bud Freeman. The rhythm sections of these bands substitute the string bass for the tuba and the guitar for the banjo. Musically, the Chicagoans play in more of a swing-style 4-to-the-bar manner. The New Orleanian preference for an ensemble sound is deemphasized in favor of solos.[5] Chicago-style Dixieland also differs from its southern origin by being faster paced, resembling the hustle-bustle of city life. Chicago-style bands play a wide variety of tunes, including most of those of the more traditional bands plus many of the Great American Songbook selections from the 1930s by George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, and Irving Berlin. Non-Chicagoans such as Pee Wee Russell and Bobby Hackett are often thought of as playing in this style. This modernized style came to be called Nicksieland, after Nick's Greenwich Village night club, where it was popular, though the term was not limited to that club.

West Coast revival Edit

The "West Coast revival" is a movement that was begun in the late 1930s by Lu Watters and his Yerba Buena Jazz Band in San Francisco and extended by trombonist Turk Murphy. It started out as a backlash to the Chicago style, which is closer in development towards swing. The repertoire of these bands is based on the music of Joe "King" Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, and W.C. Handy. Bands playing in the West Coast style use banjo and tuba in the rhythm sections, which play in a two-to-the-bar rhythmic style.[6]

Much performed traditional Dixieland tunes include: "When the Saints Go Marching In", "Muskrat Ramble", "Struttin' with Some Barbecue", "Tiger Rag", "Dippermouth Blues", "Milenberg Joys", "Basin Street Blues", "Tin Roof Blues", "At the Jazz Band Ball", "Panama", "I Found a New Baby", "Royal Garden Blues" and many others. All of these tunes were widely played by jazz bands of the pre-WWII era, especially Louis Armstrong. They came to be grouped as Dixieland standards beginning in the 1950s.

Dutch "Old-style jazz" Edit

Largely occurring at the same time as the "New Orleans Traditional" revival movement in the United States, traditional jazz music made a comeback in the Low Countries. However, most Dutch jazz bands (such as The Ramblers) had long since evolved into the Swing-era while the few remaining traditional jazz bands (such as the Dutch Swing College Band) did not partake in the broader traditional revival movement, and continued to play ragtime and early jazz, greatly limiting the number of bands aspiring jazz musicians could join or (as they were using instruments unavailable to most Dutch musicians such as double basses and the piano) were forced to improvise, resulting in a new form of jazz ensemble generally referred to "Oude Stijl" ("Old Style") jazz in Dutch.

Influenced by the instrumentation of the two principal orchestral forms of the wind band in the Netherlands and Belgium, the "harmonie" and the "fanfare", traditional Dutch jazz bands do not feature a piano and contain no stringed instruments apart from the banjo. They include multiple trumpets, trombones and saxophones accompanied by a single clarinet, sousaphone and a section of Marching percussion usually including a washboard.

The music played by Dutch jazz bands includes both the original New Orleans tunes, as well as the songs of the revival era. In terms of playing style, Dutch jazz bands occupy a position between revivalist and original New Orleans jazz, with more solos than the latter but without abandoning the principle of ensemble playing. With the average band containing up to 15-players, Dutch jazz bands tend to be the largest ensembles to play traditional jazz music.

Styles influenced by traditional jazz Edit

Musical styles showing influences from traditional jazz include later styles of jazz, rhythm and blues, and early rock and roll. Traditional New Orleans second-line drumming and piano playing are prominent in the music of Fats Domino. The New Orleans drummer Idris Muhammad adapted second-line drumming to modern jazz styles and gained crossover influence on the R&B style of James Brown. Soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy combined New Orleans style polyphonic improvisation with bebop. Bassist Charles Mingus paid homage to traditional jazz styles with compositions such as Eat Dat Chicken and My Jellyroll Soul. The contemporary New Orleans Brass Band styles, such as the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, The Primate Fiasco, the Hot Tamale Brass Band and the Rebirth Brass Band have combined traditional New Orleans brass band jazz with such influences as contemporary jazz, funk, hip hop, and rap. The M-Base (Multi-Basic Array of Synchronous Extemporization) improvisational concept used by ensembles including Cassandra Wilson, Geri Allen, Greg Osby, Steve Coleman, Graham Haynes, Kevin Eubanks and others is an extension of the polyphonic improvisation of New Orleans jazz.

Revival Edit

The Dixieland revival renewed the audience for musicians who had continued to play in traditional jazz styles and revived the careers of New Orleans musicians who had become lost in the shuffle of musical styles that had occurred over the preceding years. Younger black musicians shunned the revival, largely because of a distaste for tailoring their music to what they saw as nostalgia entertainment for white audiences with whom they did not share such nostalgia.[7][8] The Jim Crow associations of the name "Dixieland" also did little to attract younger black musicians to the revival.[9]

The Dixieland revival music during the 1940s and 1950s gained a broad audience that established traditional jazz as an enduring part of the American cultural landscape, and spawned revival movements in Europe. Well-known jazz standard tunes such as "Basin Street Blues" and "When the Saints Go Marching In" are known even to non-jazz fans thanks to the enduring popularity of traditional jazz. The Vietnam-era protest song "Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" is based on tonal centers and the "B" refrain from the New Orleans standard "Muskrat Ramble". Traditional jazz is a major tourist attraction for New Orleans to the present day. It has been an influence on the styles of more modern players such as Charles Mingus and Steve Coleman.

New Orleans music combined earlier brass band marches, French quadrilles, biguine, ragtime, and blues with collective, polyphonic improvisation. The "standard" band consists of a "front line" of trumpet (or cornet), trombone, and clarinet, with a "rhythm section" of at least two of the following instruments: guitar or banjo, string bass or tuba, piano, and drums. The Dixieland sound is created when one instrument (usually the trumpet) plays the melody or a variation on it, and the other instruments improvise around that melody. This creates a more polyphonic sound than the heavily arranged big band sound of the 1930s or the straight melodies (with or without harmonizing) of bebop in the 1940s.

The "West Coast revival", which used banjo and tuba, began in the late 1930s in San Francisco. The Dutch "old-style jazz" was played with trumpets, trombones and saxophones accompanied by a single clarinet, sousaphone and a section of Marching percussion usually including a washboard.

Festivals Edit

 
The International Dixieland Festival in Dresden

Periodicals Edit

There are several active periodicals devoted to traditional jazz: the Jazz Rambler, a quarterly newsletter distributed by San Diego's America's Finest City Dixieland Jazz Society, The Syncopated Times, which covers traditional jazz, ragtime, and swing; "Just Jazz" and "The Jazz Rag" in the UK, and, to an extent, Jazz Journal, an online-only publication based in Europe covering a variety of jazz styles.[11]

Quotations Edit

Arguably the happiest of all music is Dixieland jazz. The sound of several horns all improvising together on fairly simple chord changes with definite roles for each instrument but a large amount of freedom, cannot help but sound consistently joyful.

By the mid-1930s the word 'Dixieland' was being applied freely to certain circles of white musicians. First by the trade press, then by the public. By the end of the decade it all but lost any direct 'Southern' association.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Viale, Valerio (10 March 2017). "First Recording in Jazz History has strong Sicilian roots". italoamericano.org. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  2. ^ "The Sicily-New Orleans Connection: Jazz is the Art of Encounter par Excellence". 19 May 2018.
  3. ^ Edwards, Brent Hayes (Spring 2002). "Louis Armstrong and the Syntax of Scat". Critical Inquiry. University of Chicago Press. 28 (3): 618–649. doi:10.1086/343233. S2CID 224798051.
  4. ^ Calkins, Caroll C.; Balaban, Priscilla B.; Kelleher, Mary; Latham, Frank B.; Conefrey, Rosemarie; Huber, Robert V.; Pace, Georgea A.; Woodward, Robert J., eds. (1975). The Story of America. United States: Reader's Digest. p. 398.
  5. ^ Wyndham, Tex. "Chicago Style Dixieland". The Syncopated Times. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  6. ^ Wyndham, Tex. "West Coast Revival Style Dixieland". The Syncopated Times. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  7. ^ Baraka, Amiri (1999). Blues People: Negro Music in White America. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0688184742.
  8. ^ Davis, Miles & Troupe, Quincy (1990). Miles: The Autobiography. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-63504-2.
  9. ^ Bebco, Joe. "Reconsidering "Dixieland Jazz", How The Name Has Harmed The Music". The Syncopated Times. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  10. ^ "Festival Internacional de Dixieland — Ajuntament de Tarragona". tarragona.cat.
  11. ^ Wyndham, Tex. "Dixieland Periodicals". Syncopatedtimes.com. Retrieved 2019-09-15.
  12. ^ Du Noyer, Paul (2003). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music (1st ed.). Fulham, London: Flame Tree Publishing. p. 124. ISBN 1-904041-96-5.
  13. ^ Du Noyer, Paul (2003). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music (1st ed.). Fulham, London: Flame Tree Publishing. p. 132. ISBN 1-904041-96-5.

External links Edit

  • The Red Hot Jazz Archive
  • The Syncopated Times
  • Jazz History Database
  • Dixieland Jazz – John P. Birchall
  • Listen to Australian Graeme Bell's 'Swanston St Shamble' and 'Two Day Jag' on australianscreen online

dixieland, jazz, dixieland, redirects, here, nickname, southern, united, states, dixie, other, uses, dixieland, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, source. Dixieland redirects here For the nickname of the Southern United States see Dixie For other uses see Dixieland disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dixieland jazz news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dixieland jazz also referred to as traditional jazz hot jazz or simply Dixieland is a style of jazz based on the music that developed in New Orleans at the start of the 20th century The 1917 recordings by the Original Dixieland Jass Band which shortly thereafter changed the spelling of its name to Original Dixieland Jazz Band fostered awareness of this new style of music DixielandStylistic originsJazzCultural originsNew Orleans Louisiana U S Typical instrumentscornettrumpettromboneclarinettubabanjopianokeyboarddouble bassdrumsguitarvocalsRegional scenesNew Orleans ChicagoOther topicsList of jazz venues jazz standards jazz word Contents 1 History 2 Etymology 3 Main forms 3 1 Chicago style 3 2 West Coast revival 3 3 Dutch Old style jazz 4 Styles influenced by traditional jazz 5 Revival 6 Festivals 7 Periodicals 8 Quotations 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory Edit nbsp A traditionalist jazz band plays at a party in New Orleans in 2005 Shown here are Chris Clifton on trumpet Brian O Connell on clarinet Les Muscutt on banjo Chuck Badie on string bass and Tom Ebert on trombone The Original Dixieland Jass Band recording its first disc in 1917 was the first instance of jazz music being called Dixieland though at the time the term referred to the band not the genre The band s sound was a combination of African American New Orleans ragtime and Sicilian music 1 The music of Sicily was one of the many genres in the New Orleans music scene during the 1910s alongside sanctified church music brass band music and blues 2 Much later the term Dixieland was applied to early jazz by traditional jazz revivalists starting in the 1940s and 1950s In his book Jazz the critic Rex Harris defined Dixieland as Jazz played in a quasi New Orleans manner by white musicians The name is a reference to the Old South specifically anything south of the Mason Dixon line The term encompasses earlier brass band marches French Quadrilles biguine ragtime and blues with collective polyphonic improvisation While instrumentation and size of bands can be very flexible the standard band consists of a front line of trumpet or cornet trombone and clarinet with a rhythm section of at least two of the following instruments guitar or banjo string bass or tuba piano and drums Louis Armstrong s All Stars was the band most popularly identified with Dixieland during the 1940s although Armstrong s own influence during the 1920s was to move the music beyond the traditional New Orleans style The definitive Dixieland sound is created when one instrument usually the trumpet plays the melody or a recognizable paraphrase or variation on it and the other instruments of the front line improvise around that melody This creates a more polyphonic sound than the arranged ensemble playing of the big band sound or the straight head melodies of bebop During the 1930s and 1940s the earlier group improvisation style fell out of favor with the majority of younger black players while some older players of both races continued on in the older style Though younger musicians developed new forms many beboppers revered Armstrong and quoted fragments of his recorded music in their own improvisations The Dixieland revival in the late 1940s and 1950s was formed in reaction to the orchestrated sounds of the swing era and the perceived chaos of the new bebop sounds called Chinese music by Cab Calloway 3 Led by the Assunto brothers original Dukes of Dixieland a band known for its virtuoso improvisation and recording history s first stereo record the movement brought many semi retired musicians a measure of fame late in their lives as well as bringing retired musicians back onto the jazz circuit after years of not playing such as Kid Ory and Red Nichols Many Dixieland groups of the revival era consciously imitated the recordings and bands of decades earlier Other musicians continued to create fresh performances and new tunes For example in the 1950s a style called Progressive Dixieland sought to blend polyphonic improvisation with bebop style rhythm Spike Jones amp His New Band and Steve Lacy played with such bands This style is sometimes called Dixie bop Lacy went on to apply that approach to the music of Thelonious Monk Charles Mingus Duke Ellington and Herbie Nichols Etymology EditThe word Dixie is the nickname of the Southern United States wherein New Orleans the birthplace of Dixieland Jazz is located Main forms EditChicago style Edit Further information Music of Chicago Dixieland largely evolved into Chicago style in the late 1910s and the new style was popularly called that name by the early 1920s 4 Chicago style is often applied to the sound of Chicagoans such as Jimmy McPartland Eddie Condon Muggsy Spanier and Bud Freeman The rhythm sections of these bands substitute the string bass for the tuba and the guitar for the banjo Musically the Chicagoans play in more of a swing style 4 to the bar manner The New Orleanian preference for an ensemble sound is deemphasized in favor of solos 5 Chicago style Dixieland also differs from its southern origin by being faster paced resembling the hustle bustle of city life Chicago style bands play a wide variety of tunes including most of those of the more traditional bands plus many of the Great American Songbook selections from the 1930s by George Gershwin Jerome Kern Cole Porter and Irving Berlin Non Chicagoans such as Pee Wee Russell and Bobby Hackett are often thought of as playing in this style This modernized style came to be called Nicksieland after Nick s Greenwich Village night club where it was popular though the term was not limited to that club West Coast revival Edit The West Coast revival is a movement that was begun in the late 1930s by Lu Watters and his Yerba Buena Jazz Band in San Francisco and extended by trombonist Turk Murphy It started out as a backlash to the Chicago style which is closer in development towards swing The repertoire of these bands is based on the music of Joe King Oliver Jelly Roll Morton Louis Armstrong and W C Handy Bands playing in the West Coast style use banjo and tuba in the rhythm sections which play in a two to the bar rhythmic style 6 Much performed traditional Dixieland tunes include When the Saints Go Marching In Muskrat Ramble Struttin with Some Barbecue Tiger Rag Dippermouth Blues Milenberg Joys Basin Street Blues Tin Roof Blues At the Jazz Band Ball Panama I Found a New Baby Royal Garden Blues and many others All of these tunes were widely played by jazz bands of the pre WWII era especially Louis Armstrong They came to be grouped as Dixieland standards beginning in the 1950s Dutch Old style jazz Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Largely occurring at the same time as the New Orleans Traditional revival movement in the United States traditional jazz music made a comeback in the Low Countries However most Dutch jazz bands such as The Ramblers had long since evolved into the Swing era while the few remaining traditional jazz bands such as the Dutch Swing College Band did not partake in the broader traditional revival movement and continued to play ragtime and early jazz greatly limiting the number of bands aspiring jazz musicians could join or as they were using instruments unavailable to most Dutch musicians such as double basses and the piano were forced to improvise resulting in a new form of jazz ensemble generally referred to Oude Stijl Old Style jazz in Dutch Influenced by the instrumentation of the two principal orchestral forms of the wind band in the Netherlands and Belgium the harmonie and the fanfare traditional Dutch jazz bands do not feature a piano and contain no stringed instruments apart from the banjo They include multiple trumpets trombones and saxophones accompanied by a single clarinet sousaphone and a section of Marching percussion usually including a washboard The music played by Dutch jazz bands includes both the original New Orleans tunes as well as the songs of the revival era In terms of playing style Dutch jazz bands occupy a position between revivalist and original New Orleans jazz with more solos than the latter but without abandoning the principle of ensemble playing With the average band containing up to 15 players Dutch jazz bands tend to be the largest ensembles to play traditional jazz music Styles influenced by traditional jazz EditMusical styles showing influences from traditional jazz include later styles of jazz rhythm and blues and early rock and roll Traditional New Orleans second line drumming and piano playing are prominent in the music of Fats Domino The New Orleans drummer Idris Muhammad adapted second line drumming to modern jazz styles and gained crossover influence on the R amp B style of James Brown Soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy combined New Orleans style polyphonic improvisation with bebop Bassist Charles Mingus paid homage to traditional jazz styles with compositions such as Eat Dat Chicken and My Jellyroll Soul The contemporary New Orleans Brass Band styles such as the Dirty Dozen Brass Band The Primate Fiasco the Hot Tamale Brass Band and the Rebirth Brass Band have combined traditional New Orleans brass band jazz with such influences as contemporary jazz funk hip hop and rap The M Base Multi Basic Array of Synchronous Extemporization improvisational concept used by ensembles including Cassandra Wilson Geri Allen Greg Osby Steve Coleman Graham Haynes Kevin Eubanks and others is an extension of the polyphonic improvisation of New Orleans jazz Revival EditThe Dixieland revival renewed the audience for musicians who had continued to play in traditional jazz styles and revived the careers of New Orleans musicians who had become lost in the shuffle of musical styles that had occurred over the preceding years Younger black musicians shunned the revival largely because of a distaste for tailoring their music to what they saw as nostalgia entertainment for white audiences with whom they did not share such nostalgia 7 8 The Jim Crow associations of the name Dixieland also did little to attract younger black musicians to the revival 9 The Dixieland revival music during the 1940s and 1950s gained a broad audience that established traditional jazz as an enduring part of the American cultural landscape and spawned revival movements in Europe Well known jazz standard tunes such as Basin Street Blues and When the Saints Go Marching In are known even to non jazz fans thanks to the enduring popularity of traditional jazz The Vietnam era protest song Feel Like I m Fixin to Die Rag is based on tonal centers and the B refrain from the New Orleans standard Muskrat Ramble Traditional jazz is a major tourist attraction for New Orleans to the present day It has been an influence on the styles of more modern players such as Charles Mingus and Steve Coleman New Orleans music combined earlier brass band marches French quadrilles biguine ragtime and blues with collective polyphonic improvisation The standard band consists of a front line of trumpet or cornet trombone and clarinet with a rhythm section of at least two of the following instruments guitar or banjo string bass or tuba piano and drums The Dixieland sound is created when one instrument usually the trumpet plays the melody or a variation on it and the other instruments improvise around that melody This creates a more polyphonic sound than the heavily arranged big band sound of the 1930s or the straight melodies with or without harmonizing of bebop in the 1940s The West Coast revival which used banjo and tuba began in the late 1930s in San Francisco The Dutch old style jazz was played with trumpets trombones and saxophones accompanied by a single clarinet sousaphone and a section of Marching percussion usually including a washboard Festivals Edit nbsp The International Dixieland Festival in DresdenIn the United States the largest traditional jazz festival the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee was held in Sacramento California annually on Memorial Day weekend with about 100 000 visitors and about 150 bands from all over the world It ended in 2017 after 44 years Other smaller festivals and jazz parties arose in the late 1960s as the rock revolution displaced many of the jazz nightclubs The New Orleans Jazz amp Heritage Festival in New Orleans Louisiana features jazz and many other genres by local national and internationally known artists In Tarragona Catalonia the Tarragona International Dixieland Festival Catalan Festival Internacional Dixieland de Tarragona Spain s only dixieland festival has been held annually the week before Easter since 1994 with 25 bands from all over the world and 100 performances in streets theatres cafes and hotels 10 In Dresden Germany a week long international Dixieland festival has been held every year since 1970 the Internationales Dixieland Festival Dresden The event culminates in a parade with floats In Davenport Iowa the Bix Beiderbecke Memorial Jazz Festival is held on the Mississippi River waterfront each summer celebrating Dixieland music and the life of cornetist Bix Beiderbecke a 1920s musician from Davenport It is combined with a prestigious road race the Bix 7 In Ghent Belgium every year during the second week of July there is an international Jazz festival the Gent Jazz Festival In Weiz Steiermark Austria every year in August the Dixie and Swing Festival includes indoor concerts a street music festival and evening jam sessions Periodicals EditThere are several active periodicals devoted to traditional jazz the Jazz Rambler a quarterly newsletter distributed by San Diego s America s Finest City Dixieland Jazz Society The Syncopated Times which covers traditional jazz ragtime and swing Just Jazz and The Jazz Rag in the UK and to an extent Jazz Journal an online only publication based in Europe covering a variety of jazz styles 11 Quotations EditArguably the happiest of all music is Dixieland jazz The sound of several horns all improvising together on fairly simple chord changes with definite roles for each instrument but a large amount of freedom cannot help but sound consistently joyful Scott Yanow 12 By the mid 1930s the word Dixieland was being applied freely to certain circles of white musicians First by the trade press then by the public By the end of the decade it all but lost any direct Southern association Richard Sudhalter 13 See also Edit nbsp Jazz portalList of Dixieland standards Music of Chicago Second Line Trad jazzReferences Edit Viale Valerio 10 March 2017 First Recording in Jazz History has strong Sicilian roots italoamericano org Retrieved 23 August 2018 The Sicily New Orleans Connection Jazz is the Art of Encounter par Excellence 19 May 2018 Edwards Brent Hayes Spring 2002 Louis Armstrong and the Syntax of Scat Critical Inquiry University of Chicago Press 28 3 618 649 doi 10 1086 343233 S2CID 224798051 Calkins Caroll C Balaban Priscilla B Kelleher Mary Latham Frank B Conefrey Rosemarie Huber Robert V Pace Georgea A Woodward Robert J eds 1975 The Story of America United States Reader s Digest p 398 Wyndham Tex Chicago Style Dixieland The Syncopated Times Retrieved 2019 09 27 Wyndham Tex West Coast Revival Style Dixieland The Syncopated Times Retrieved 2019 09 27 Baraka Amiri 1999 Blues People Negro Music in White America Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0688184742 Davis Miles amp Troupe Quincy 1990 Miles The Autobiography Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 63504 2 Bebco Joe Reconsidering Dixieland Jazz How The Name Has Harmed The Music The Syncopated Times Retrieved 2019 09 27 Festival Internacional de Dixieland Ajuntament de Tarragona tarragona cat Wyndham Tex Dixieland Periodicals Syncopatedtimes com Retrieved 2019 09 15 Du Noyer Paul 2003 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music 1st ed Fulham London Flame Tree Publishing p 124 ISBN 1 904041 96 5 Du Noyer Paul 2003 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music 1st ed Fulham London Flame Tree Publishing p 132 ISBN 1 904041 96 5 External links EditThe Red Hot Jazz Archive The Syncopated Times Jazz History Database Dixieland Jazz John P Birchall Listen to Australian Graeme Bell s Swanston St Shamble and Two Day Jag on australianscreen online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dixieland jazz amp oldid 1169660548, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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