Understanding Jazz
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Words: 1544
Pages: 6
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 6
(approximately 235 words/page)
Essay Database > Arts & Humanities > Music
Understanding Jazz
A mellow vibration lingers throughout a smoke-filled room, as eloquent music escapes the callused fingers of relaxed musicians. The tempo speeds up and grows into a fusion of spontaneous and uneven chords, exploding with rhythmic soul and life. The sound of jazz embraces the room.
Jazz is primarily a dazzling, spellbinding, introspective beauty. The musician and the listener find they can derive meaning from the music. The music exists first, and its meaning
showed first 75 words of 1544 total
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showed first 75 words of 1544 total
showed last 75 words of 1544 total
s Press, 1981. Piaget, Jean. Structuralism. London: Routledge, 1971. Piazza, Tom, ed. Setting the Tempo: Fifty Years of Great Jazz Liner Notes. New York: Anchor Books, 1996. Rinzler, Paul. "Preliminary Thoughts on Analyzing Musical Interaction Among Jazz Performers." Annual Review of Jazz Studies 4 (1995): 153-160. Sawyer, R. Keith. "The Semiotics of Improvisation: The Pragmatics of Musical and Verbal Performance." Semiotica 108 3/4 (1996): 269-306. Softing, Anne. "Carnival and Black American Music as Counterculture in The Bluest Eye and Jazz." American Studies 27.2 (1997): 81-102
s Press, 1981. Piaget, Jean. Structuralism. London: Routledge, 1971. Piazza, Tom, ed. Setting the Tempo: Fifty Years of Great Jazz Liner Notes. New York: Anchor Books, 1996. Rinzler, Paul. "Preliminary Thoughts on Analyzing Musical Interaction Among Jazz Performers." Annual Review of Jazz Studies 4 (1995): 153-160. Sawyer, R. Keith. "The Semiotics of Improvisation: The Pragmatics of Musical and Verbal Performance." Semiotica 108 3/4 (1996): 269-306. Softing, Anne. "Carnival and Black American Music as Counterculture in The Bluest Eye and Jazz." American Studies 27.2 (1997): 81-102