Posts Tagged ‘music’

Whither jazz today?

September 22, 2008

I was talking to some people at a party yesterday, and we were talking about music.  The people at the party were almost all my age or older, so there weren’t too many folks there under 40.  No one there listens to “popular” music.

We were discussing why that was.  I was talking about the fact that most popular music today is based not on the melody, or the lyric, but on the beat.  Modern “composers” are only concerned about the rhythm.  They don’t seem to be concerned with melodic, lyrical, harmonic or emotional content.  It is very interesting to me that when modern singers, such as Queen Latifah, want to reach inside and sing really powerful songs, they turn to classic tunes from Cole Porter, the Gershwins, and the like.  Why?  Because modern popular music just isn’t concerned with writing music like that.

Also, most popular music today makes very little, if any, use of traditional instruments such as saxophones, trumpets, clarinets, trombones and the like.  When I was growing up, you heard tunes with those horns in them on the radio all the time.  Not any more.

Where do the high school or younger kids get the inspiration to play these instruments?  Not from what they hear on the radio.  It seems to me that we have to turn that around.  Modern music needs to include these instruments and the melody and emotion in music.  That is the only way we’ll keep it alive.  How do we do that?  In later posts I’ll discuss some ideas I have, but I’d like to hear yours.  Leave a comment and let me know what you think about this.

What is “jazz”?

September 14, 2008

I think it is important to define our terms.  My musical background is in jazz, and that is what we’ll be exploring here.  But what is this thing called jazz music?  It is important, because I’ve had many people tell me they don’t like jazz.  When I talk to them further, I find that they don’t like a particular type of jazz, but other types of jazz they do enjoy.  They just don’t really understand that jazz encompases many styles.

People have been trying to define jazz for years, so I know that we won’t get a perfect definition here.  The Wikipedia post, here, really doesn’t define it.  It just describes various aspects of it.  Leonard Feather, a British journalist who moved to the U.S. and was both a musician and journalist, stated in his Encyclopedia of Jazz that it includes improvisation, and discussed rhythmic elements such as syncopation and “swing”, as well as harmonic elements such as structured chord progressions.  In the end, though, he comes to the conclusion that one just knows it when one hears it. (more…)