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Jazz ambassadors

Jazz ambassadors is the name often given to jazz musicians who were sponsored by the US State Department to tour Eastern Europe, the Middle East, central and southern Asia and Africa as part of cultural diplomacy initiatives to promote American values globally.[1][2][3]

Poster advertising a 1959 Louis Armstrong concert in Beirut, Lebanon

Starting in 1956, the State Department began hiring leading American jazz musicians such as Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Benny Goodman and Duke Ellington to be "ambassadors" for the United States overseas, particularly to improve the public image of the US in the light of criticism from the Soviet Union around racial inequality and racial tension.[4]

Background edit

In the early 1950s, against the backdrop of the civil rights movement, decolonialisation and the Cold War, U.S. policy makers realised a new approach to American cultural diplomacy was needed.[5][6] President Eisenhower was particularly concerned with how internal race relations affected America's international reputation.[6] He saw the Cold War as a battle of ideas and that a cultural exchange program could address some of these concerns.[5] Congress formalised the President's Special International Program for Participation in International Affairs, also known as the Cultural Presentations Program, in 1956. U.S. officials explained that the main purpose of the program was to "counteract Russian propaganda".[7]

The program was supervised by the State Department, who had final approval over artist selection,[8] and the American National Theatre and Academy (ANTA). The program was also sponsored by the government owned broadcaster Voice of America (VOA).[9] While the program included a wide variety of cultural and artistic forms, jazz was quickly embraced by the State Department due to being an indigenous American artform.[10] Jazz's association with African-Americans, as well as its racially mixed bands, also meant it could serve as a demonstration of racial equality and harmony.[11][12] The State Department made sure that selection panels only chose suitable artists, taking into account their musicianship, "Americanness" and integrity as well as the personal character and racial make-up of their bands.[8]

Armstrong's initial refusal of the Jazz ambassador tour edit

Initially Louis Armstrong was to tour in November 1955 as approved by the State Department, however Eisenhower's refusal to send in federal troops to enforce newly issued integration in Little Rock Central High School and to support the nine African American high schoolers outraged Armstrong. He refused his role as the first official jazz ambassador, stating ''The way they are treating my people in the South, the government can go to hell!'.[13]

Known as the Little Rock Crisis, this event highlighted the hypocrisy of the "US values" intended to be displayed through the jazz tours, namely democracy, equality and freedom. All of which were denied to the nine students of Little Rock and more widely all African Americans as the struggle for civil rights, particularly in the Southern states of the US, went on.

Jazz diplomacy played a more subtle and significant role in the Cold War than first envisioned, as not only Armstrong saw the irony in representing a country that preached democracy abroad while it was denied . Influential jazz musicians more often vocalized their opinions on, and often condemning, US government action (mainly concerning civil rights), the longer they played their highlighted jazz ambassador role. Ultimately US diplomats themselves played up Armstrong's initial defiance as an example of American's superiority in freedom of speech - 'even a black man could criticize his own government and not be punished - '[13] thus playing a weak hand well.

Jazz ambassador tours edit

First tours: 1956-1958 edit

Dizzy Gillespie headed the first State Department sponsored tour in March 1956 which lasted for ten weeks.[14] Democratic Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. had long been an advocate for including jazz in cultural tours and was crucial in setting up Gillespie's tour.[15][16] An 18-piece interracial band led by Gillespie, with Quincy Jones as music director, performed across Europe, Asia and South America including Iran, Pakistan, Lebanon, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Greece and Argentina.[14][17] An American ambassador reported back that "we could have built a new tank for the cost of this tour, but you can't get as much goodwill out of a tank as you can out of Dizzy Gillespie's band."[14] The Gillespie's tour was successful in improving America's reputation and created a template for subsequent tours by other musicians.[1][18] Gillespie drew criticism, however, for reports that while touring Brazil he had prioritised associating with local musicians over attending official events. He did not perform for the State Department again for over a decade.[19]

For the next jazz ambassador tour the State Department's frontman was Benny Goodman. In December 1957 Goodman's band began a seven week tour of East and Southeast Asia.[20] This tour reaped benefits not only for its impact on the general public but also for strengthening American ties to the rulers of the countries he visited.[21] While in Thailand, Goodman made a significant impression on King Bhumibol Adulyadej, himself a musician and jazz enthusiast, and the king playing with Goodman's band.[22] Goodman promoted the idea that racism had already been defeated in America. He later said "I was constantly asked by the press over there about the colored people here. [...] I guess they had been fed a lot of Communist propaganda".[23] Much like Gillespie's tour, Goodman's tour was a diplomatic success.[24] Following the tour, Goodman, the child of Russian immigrants, unsuccessfully tried to gain an invitation to tour in the Soviet Union.[24]

Dave Brubeck's quartet toured for the State Department in 1958. He played in East Germany and Poland before touring Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka.[25] Secretary of State John Dulles himself extended the tour, and the group's engagements in the United States were cancelled. The band played in Iran and then Iraq. They had received no briefing on the political situation in Iraq but the musicians could sense the dangerous situation in the country. Only a few weeks after Brubeck had departed, Abd al-Karim Qasim overthrew the monarchy in a coup d'état.[26]

Similar tours and legacy edit

A few years later, when Louis Armstrong arrived in the Congo as part of a tour through Africa, drummers and dancers paraded him through the streets on a throne. When he played in Katanga Province, a truce was called in a long-standing civil war so the combatants on both sides could go see him play.[14]

In the decades since the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs in the US State Department has sponsored Jazz Ambassadors in partnership with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Alongside their performances, they also conduct master classes and lecture-recitals for local musicians. The State Department likewise sponsors hip-hop artists, particularly in the Middle East.[27]

Cultural legacy edit

The jazz ambassador tours exposed the American musicians to new musical styles and traditions from the countries they visited. Duke Ellington's albums Far East Suite, Latin American Suite and Afro-Eurasian Eclipse were inspired by his tours as a jazz ambassador.[28][17] Dizzy Gillespie's composition "Rio Pakistan" was similarly inspired by his 1956 tour.[29] Several albums recorded during Gillespie's tours were released including Dizzy in Greece and World Statesman.[17] Dave Brubeck's 1958 Jazz Impressions of Eurasia spawned from the music he had heard while touring as a jazz ambassador.[30] The syncopated rhythms Brubeck heard from Turkish street musicians inspired his standard Blue Rondo à la Turk.[31]

Dave Brubeck, who participated in the project, was critical of the experience. He and his wife Iola Brubeck later wrote a musical, The Real Ambassadors, based on his experiences.[32]

Although influenced by new music exposed to them in the toured countries, jazz ambassadors in turn were able to influence the people of non-aligned countries. By researching and incorporating the local music of each country they visited, it allowed the state-funded jazz musicians to also present an America that was capable of celebrating and appreciating foreign local traditions.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Perrigo, Billy (2019-12-22). "How the U.S. Used Jazz as a Cold War Secret Weapon". Time. Retrieved 2021-10-28.
  2. ^ Schnabel, Tom (2011-08-12). "America's Jazz Ambassadors". KCRW. Retrieved 2021-10-28.
  3. ^ Folser-Lussier, Danielle (January 2012). "Music Pushed, Music Pulled: Cultural Diplomacy, Globalization, and Imperialism". Diplomatic History. 36 (1): 53–64. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2011.01008.x. ISSN 0145-2096. JSTOR 44376135.
  4. ^ Von Eschen 2006, pp. 3-4.
  5. ^ a b Davenport 2009, p. 38.
  6. ^ a b Von Eschen 2006, pp. 5-6.
  7. ^ Davenport 2009, pp. 38-39.
  8. ^ a b Davenport 2009, p. 39.
  9. ^ Dillard, James (2012). "All That Jazz: CIA, Voice of America, and Jazz Diplomacy in the Early Cold War Years, 1955-1965". American Intelligence Journal. 30 (2): 39–50. JSTOR 26202013.
  10. ^ Von Eschen 2006, p. 6.
  11. ^ Davenport 2009, p. 7.
  12. ^ Kaplan, Fred (2008-06-29). "When Ambassadors Had Rhythm". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  13. ^ a b c Kaplan, Fred (2008-06-29). "When Ambassadors Had Rhythm". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  14. ^ a b c d Kaplan, Fred (2009). 1959 : The Year Everything Changed. Wiley. p. 128.
  15. ^ "'The Jazz Ambassadors': Cold War Diplomacy And Civil Rights In Conflict". All Things Considered, NPR.org. Retrieved 2021-11-03.
  16. ^ Davenport 2009, p. 46.
  17. ^ a b c Henry, Clarence Bernard (2021). Global Jazz : A Research and Information Guide. Milton: Taylor & Francis. pp. x–xi. ISBN 9780367724832.
  18. ^ Davenport 2009, p. 52.
  19. ^ Von Eschen 2006, pp. 41-43.
  20. ^ Von Eschen 2006, p. 44.
  21. ^ "Preaching to the Choir: American Jazz and Cold War Diplomacy in Southeast Asia". Yale University Library: Online Exhibitions. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  22. ^ Von Eschen 2006, pp. 45-47.
  23. ^ Von Eschen 2006, pp. 44-45.
  24. ^ a b Davenport 2009, p. 56.
  25. ^ Von Eschen 2006, p. 47.
  26. ^ Von Eschen 2006, p. 54.
  27. ^ Aidi, Hisham (16 April 2014). "Hip-Hop Diplomacy". Foreignaffairs.com. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  28. ^ Coyne, Rebecca E. (2021). "The Jazz Ambassadors: Intersections of American Foreign Power and Black Artistry in Duke Ellington's Far East Suite". Inquiries Journal. 13 (5).
  29. ^ Kamalakaran, Ajay (2019-09-20). "Jazz Diplomacy in South Asia". The Friday Times. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  30. ^ Fernandes, Naresh (2012-12-08). "America's original ambassador of cool". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  31. ^ Fred M. Kaplan (2009). 1959: The Year Everything Changed. New Jersey: J. Wiley & Sons. pp. 130–131. ISBN 978-0-470-38781-8.
  32. ^ Von Eschen 2006, pp. 81, 89-90.

Sources edit

  • Davenport, Lisa E., (2009). Jazz Diplomacy: Promoting American in the Cold Ear, University Press of Mississippi
  • Von Eschen, Penny, (2006). Satchmo Blows Up the World: Jazz Ambassadors Play the Cold War, Harvard University Press

jazz, ambassadors, name, often, given, jazz, musicians, were, sponsored, state, department, tour, eastern, europe, middle, east, central, southern, asia, africa, part, cultural, diplomacy, initiatives, promote, american, values, globally, poster, advertising, . Jazz ambassadors is the name often given to jazz musicians who were sponsored by the US State Department to tour Eastern Europe the Middle East central and southern Asia and Africa as part of cultural diplomacy initiatives to promote American values globally 1 2 3 Poster advertising a 1959 Louis Armstrong concert in Beirut LebanonStarting in 1956 the State Department began hiring leading American jazz musicians such as Louis Armstrong Dizzy Gillespie Dave Brubeck Benny Goodman and Duke Ellington to be ambassadors for the United States overseas particularly to improve the public image of the US in the light of criticism from the Soviet Union around racial inequality and racial tension 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Armstrong s initial refusal of the Jazz ambassador tour 3 Jazz ambassador tours 3 1 First tours 1956 1958 3 2 Similar tours and legacy 4 Cultural legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesBackground editIn the early 1950s against the backdrop of the civil rights movement decolonialisation and the Cold War U S policy makers realised a new approach to American cultural diplomacy was needed 5 6 President Eisenhower was particularly concerned with how internal race relations affected America s international reputation 6 He saw the Cold War as a battle of ideas and that a cultural exchange program could address some of these concerns 5 Congress formalised the President s Special International Program for Participation in International Affairs also known as the Cultural Presentations Program in 1956 U S officials explained that the main purpose of the program was to counteract Russian propaganda 7 The program was supervised by the State Department who had final approval over artist selection 8 and the American National Theatre and Academy ANTA The program was also sponsored by the government owned broadcaster Voice of America VOA 9 While the program included a wide variety of cultural and artistic forms jazz was quickly embraced by the State Department due to being an indigenous American artform 10 Jazz s association with African Americans as well as its racially mixed bands also meant it could serve as a demonstration of racial equality and harmony 11 12 The State Department made sure that selection panels only chose suitable artists taking into account their musicianship Americanness and integrity as well as the personal character and racial make up of their bands 8 Armstrong s initial refusal of the Jazz ambassador tour editInitially Louis Armstrong was to tour in November 1955 as approved by the State Department however Eisenhower s refusal to send in federal troops to enforce newly issued integration in Little Rock Central High School and to support the nine African American high schoolers outraged Armstrong He refused his role as the first official jazz ambassador stating The way they are treating my people in the South the government can go to hell 13 Known as the Little Rock Crisis this event highlighted the hypocrisy of the US values intended to be displayed through the jazz tours namely democracy equality and freedom All of which were denied to the nine students of Little Rock and more widely all African Americans as the struggle for civil rights particularly in the Southern states of the US went on Jazz diplomacy played a more subtle and significant role in the Cold War than first envisioned as not only Armstrong saw the irony in representing a country that preached democracy abroad while it was denied Influential jazz musicians more often vocalized their opinions on and often condemning US government action mainly concerning civil rights the longer they played their highlighted jazz ambassador role Ultimately US diplomats themselves played up Armstrong s initial defiance as an example of American s superiority in freedom of speech even a black man could criticize his own government and not be punished 13 thus playing a weak hand well Jazz ambassador tours editFirst tours 1956 1958 edit Dizzy Gillespie headed the first State Department sponsored tour in March 1956 which lasted for ten weeks 14 Democratic Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr had long been an advocate for including jazz in cultural tours and was crucial in setting up Gillespie s tour 15 16 An 18 piece interracial band led by Gillespie with Quincy Jones as music director performed across Europe Asia and South America including Iran Pakistan Lebanon Turkey Yugoslavia Greece and Argentina 14 17 An American ambassador reported back that we could have built a new tank for the cost of this tour but you can t get as much goodwill out of a tank as you can out of Dizzy Gillespie s band 14 The Gillespie s tour was successful in improving America s reputation and created a template for subsequent tours by other musicians 1 18 Gillespie drew criticism however for reports that while touring Brazil he had prioritised associating with local musicians over attending official events He did not perform for the State Department again for over a decade 19 For the next jazz ambassador tour the State Department s frontman was Benny Goodman In December 1957 Goodman s band began a seven week tour of East and Southeast Asia 20 This tour reaped benefits not only for its impact on the general public but also for strengthening American ties to the rulers of the countries he visited 21 While in Thailand Goodman made a significant impression on King Bhumibol Adulyadej himself a musician and jazz enthusiast and the king playing with Goodman s band 22 Goodman promoted the idea that racism had already been defeated in America He later said I was constantly asked by the press over there about the colored people here I guess they had been fed a lot of Communist propaganda 23 Much like Gillespie s tour Goodman s tour was a diplomatic success 24 Following the tour Goodman the child of Russian immigrants unsuccessfully tried to gain an invitation to tour in the Soviet Union 24 Dave Brubeck s quartet toured for the State Department in 1958 He played in East Germany and Poland before touring Turkey Afghanistan Pakistan India and Sri Lanka 25 Secretary of State John Dulles himself extended the tour and the group s engagements in the United States were cancelled The band played in Iran and then Iraq They had received no briefing on the political situation in Iraq but the musicians could sense the dangerous situation in the country Only a few weeks after Brubeck had departed Abd al Karim Qasim overthrew the monarchy in a coup d etat 26 Similar tours and legacy edit A few years later when Louis Armstrong arrived in the Congo as part of a tour through Africa drummers and dancers paraded him through the streets on a throne When he played in Katanga Province a truce was called in a long standing civil war so the combatants on both sides could go see him play 14 In the decades since the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs in the US State Department has sponsored Jazz Ambassadors in partnership with the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Alongside their performances they also conduct master classes and lecture recitals for local musicians The State Department likewise sponsors hip hop artists particularly in the Middle East 27 Cultural legacy editThe jazz ambassador tours exposed the American musicians to new musical styles and traditions from the countries they visited Duke Ellington s albums Far East Suite Latin American Suite and Afro Eurasian Eclipse were inspired by his tours as a jazz ambassador 28 17 Dizzy Gillespie s composition Rio Pakistan was similarly inspired by his 1956 tour 29 Several albums recorded during Gillespie s tours were released including Dizzy in Greece and World Statesman 17 Dave Brubeck s 1958 Jazz Impressions of Eurasia spawned from the music he had heard while touring as a jazz ambassador 30 The syncopated rhythms Brubeck heard from Turkish street musicians inspired his standard Blue Rondo a la Turk 31 Dave Brubeck who participated in the project was critical of the experience He and his wife Iola Brubeck later wrote a musical The Real Ambassadors based on his experiences 32 Although influenced by new music exposed to them in the toured countries jazz ambassadors in turn were able to influence the people of non aligned countries By researching and incorporating the local music of each country they visited it allowed the state funded jazz musicians to also present an America that was capable of celebrating and appreciating foreign local traditions 13 See also editUnited States Army Field BandReferences edit a b Perrigo Billy 2019 12 22 How the U S Used Jazz as a Cold War Secret Weapon Time Retrieved 2021 10 28 Schnabel Tom 2011 08 12 America s Jazz Ambassadors KCRW Retrieved 2021 10 28 Folser Lussier Danielle January 2012 Music Pushed Music Pulled Cultural Diplomacy Globalization and Imperialism Diplomatic History 36 1 53 64 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2011 01008 x ISSN 0145 2096 JSTOR 44376135 Von Eschen 2006 pp 3 4 a b Davenport 2009 p 38 a b Von Eschen 2006 pp 5 6 Davenport 2009 pp 38 39 a b Davenport 2009 p 39 Dillard James 2012 All That Jazz CIA Voice of America and Jazz Diplomacy in the Early Cold War Years 1955 1965 American Intelligence Journal 30 2 39 50 JSTOR 26202013 Von Eschen 2006 p 6 Davenport 2009 p 7 Kaplan Fred 2008 06 29 When Ambassadors Had Rhythm The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 02 15 a b c Kaplan Fred 2008 06 29 When Ambassadors Had Rhythm The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2024 01 13 a b c d Kaplan Fred 2009 1959 The Year Everything Changed Wiley p 128 The Jazz Ambassadors Cold War Diplomacy And Civil Rights In Conflict All Things Considered NPR org Retrieved 2021 11 03 Davenport 2009 p 46 a b c Henry Clarence Bernard 2021 Global Jazz A Research and Information Guide Milton Taylor amp Francis pp x xi ISBN 9780367724832 Davenport 2009 p 52 Von Eschen 2006 pp 41 43 Von Eschen 2006 p 44 Preaching to the Choir American Jazz and Cold War Diplomacy in Southeast Asia Yale University Library Online Exhibitions Retrieved 2022 02 15 Von Eschen 2006 pp 45 47 Von Eschen 2006 pp 44 45 a b Davenport 2009 p 56 Von Eschen 2006 p 47 Von Eschen 2006 p 54 Aidi Hisham 16 April 2014 Hip Hop Diplomacy Foreignaffairs com Retrieved 18 January 2018 Coyne Rebecca E 2021 The Jazz Ambassadors Intersections of American Foreign Power and Black Artistry in Duke Ellington s Far East Suite Inquiries Journal 13 5 Kamalakaran Ajay 2019 09 20 Jazz Diplomacy in South Asia The Friday Times Retrieved 2022 02 03 Fernandes Naresh 2012 12 08 America s original ambassador of cool The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 2022 02 03 Fred M Kaplan 2009 1959 The Year Everything Changed New Jersey J Wiley amp Sons pp 130 131 ISBN 978 0 470 38781 8 Von Eschen 2006 pp 81 89 90 Sources editDavenport Lisa E 2009 Jazz Diplomacy Promoting American in the Cold Ear University Press of Mississippi Von Eschen Penny 2006 Satchmo Blows Up the World Jazz Ambassadors Play the Cold War Harvard University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jazz ambassadors amp oldid 1203394789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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