Which city was most important to jazz in the 1920s—Chicago or New York? Why? What role did social, economic, and racial conditions play in creating the particular climate for jazz in that city? Was there a Chicago or Harlem style of jazz? If so, what was it, who played it, and what distinguished it from others? Whose (band or individual) art best represents the culture and community of the city you chose? Why? Please provide references.
The most monumental figures in the development of creative phrasing within New York were James P. Johnson, Willie "The Lion" Smith, and Fats Waller. Gioia captures the immense importance of Harlem stride piano in the development of jazz when he states that Johnson would use musical devices as various as classical interpolations, counterpoint exercises, and he even experimented with jazz combos (p. 97-8). Without the evolution of ragtime and boogie-woogie into stride piano, New York jazz would only be a representative of thoroughly composed, tightly performed European music, and would have been lacking the improvisational energy of African American dance music. While Chicagoans such as Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa developed a hot dance style nearing swing while they performed in Chicago, the Harlem stride piano greats also captured this rhythmic energy, while supplementing a much tighter big band style which satisfied the harmonic and melodic tastes of upper class consumers of European music
I think it's important to mention the Harlem environment whenever people talk about the development of Jazz in New York. It seems to me that one of the most important parts of the development of Jazz in New York was the diverse and close nature of Harlem. The rent parties and stuff like that helped to give musicians jobs and helped to spread the music from one building to the next.
ReplyDeleteI strongly agree that the work of musicians such as James P. Johnson were pivotal in the creation and promotion of New York jazz. I also believe that it is important to mention the appetite of white audiences for black, big band performers, such as Duke Ellington, who drew much inspiration from Harlem Stride. Duke Ellington and his band made their living performing in a glamorous (though mob-owned) nightclub for a “whites only” audience. The fact that New York jazz was able to cross the racial boundary in such a ritzy way is, I think, a testament to its solidity and general appeal.
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