Music Director & 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes Concert Producer Richard Pite Takes Us On A Whirlwind Tour Of Jazz History.
2000 – 2015:
Jazz has never been more varied or diverse. So many different styles come under the jazz heading that listeners often wonder where the boundaries are. What started off as a music that grew out of the melting pot of New Orleans at the turn of the century has now turned into a music of the world and because almost all the musicians who play it and the audiences who listen to it have access to everything on YouTube and Spotify every style is thrown into the mix and the barriers and boundaries have come down. The big names include the Scandinavian trio EST, Americans Bad Plus and Diane Krall and from the UK Polar Bear and JamieCullum.
2000 – 2015:
Jazz has never been more varied or diverse. So many different styles come under the jazz heading that listeners often wonder where the boundaries are. What started off as a music that grew out of the melting pot of New Orleans at the turn of the century has now turned into a music of the world and because almost all the musicians who play it and the audiences who listen to it have access to everything on YouTube and Spotify every style is thrown into the mix and the barriers and boundaries have come down. The big names include the Scandinavian trio EST, Americans Bad Plus and Diane Krall and from the UK Polar Bear and JamieCullum.
1980s - 2000:
At the
start of the 80’s many of jazz’s great names from the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s are
still performing but by 2000 many have gone and a new generation replaces them
and radically changes the music once again.
At the forefront of the new wave are jazz rappers and hip hoppers like
Gang Starr and A Tribe Called Quest. Continuing
the more recognisably jazzy styles are new stars Joshua Redman, Roy Hargrove
and Christian McBride and championing the jazz legacy of Duke Ellington and
Louis Armstrong is the trumpeter, bandleader and composer Wynton Marsalis. In the UK at the start of the 80’s there is a
jazz revival with musicians Courtney Pine and Loose Tubes leading the way.
The 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes Band - Less Georgina Jackson
1960–1979:
Work Song (1961) - from 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes
The
beginning of the 1960s heralds the jazz of Ornette Coleman - a radically new
approach which delights the young hipsters and horrifies the rest! Then the 60’s get ever more radical –
particularly the musicians who are caught up in the civil rights campaign in
America and the more extreme revolutionary black politics -musicians such as JohnColtrane, Archie Shepp, Sun Ra, Albert Ayler, and Max Roach encapsulate this
era. Miles Davis launches the jazz-rock
of the 70’s with his album Bitches Brew.
Over the next decade Herbie Hancock, Weather Report, Donald Byrd,
Freddie Hubbard bring the music popularity with rhythms borrowed from dance
clubs mixed with the rhythms of the world.
In the UK jazz musicians such as Stan Tracey and Tubby Hayes become
international stars.
Work Song (1961) - from 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes
Performed By The Jazz Repertory Company at Boisdale Of Canary Wharf
1940-1959:
It Don't Mean A Thing (1931) - from 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes
Performed By The Jazz Repertory Company at Boisdale Of Canary Wharf
WWII - During the war whilst the dancers in America and the UK are still jiving to the big bands a new music is developing in the clubs of New York. It’s called Be-Bop and its three biggest names are Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker and Thelonius Monk. The music is difficult to play and doesn’t appeal to dancers but its importance in jazz history is immense. After the popularity of swing the audience declines for the new jazz and rhythm and blues and later rock ‘n’ roll takes up the slack and brings the dancers back on to the floor. In the 1950’s there is cool jazz from Chet Baker, jazz in strange time such as Take 5 by Dave Brubeck and an increasing influence of Latin American rhythms on modern jazz.
1920-1939:
Cake Walkin' Baby (1924) - from 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes
The Roaring 20s and the emergence of the first
big stars in jazz and the greatest of them all, Louis Armstrong. Other important names from the 1920s are
Jelly Roll Morton, Duke Ellington, Sidney Bechet and Bix Beiderbecke – the
first white jazz star who played in the most successful band of the 1920’s, the
Paul Whiteman Orchestra. The 1930s saw
the emergence of the Swing Era when jazz was at its most commercially
successful – many thousands of dancers would go and see the greatest names of
the day, Artie Shaw, Jimmy Lunceford, Glenn Miller and Cab Calloway. The music business was still racially
segregated but the King of Swing, Benny Goodman, began to change all that when
he featured both black and white musicians on stage together for the first
time.
Cake Walkin' Baby (1924) - from 100 Years Of Jazz In 99 Minutes
Performed By The Jazz Repertory Company at Boisdale Of Canary Wharf
1900-1919:
At the turn of the century Ragtime was the new
sensation in America and it soon spread throughout Europe too. The most famous Ragtime composer was ScottJoplin but the biggest Ragtime hit came in 1911 with Irving Berlin’s
Alexander’s Ragtime Band. New Orleans
was the birthplace of jazz – the unschooled black musicians would take popular
songs, opera, polkas, ragtime and other styles and play them by ear and play
around with the melodies. Both black and
white bands existed from the earliest days but they were strictly segregated –
the most legendary name in this era was the black trumpeter Buddy Bolden but he
never made a record. The first jazz
record was made by a white band called The Original Dixieland Jazz Band and it
was released in 1917.
The Original Dixiland Jazz Band
The Jazz Repertory Company Concert Showreel
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