Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Upon Entering A Modern Record Store, One Is Confronted With A Essays
  Upon entering a modern record store, one is confronted with a  wide variety of choices in recorded music. These choices not only  include a multitude of artists, but also a wide diversity of music  categories. These categories run the gamut from easy listening dance  music to more complex art music. On the complex side of the scale are  the categories known as Jazz and Classical music. Some of the most  accomplished musicians of our time have devoted themselves to a  lifelong study of Jazz or Classical music, and a few exceptional  musicians have actually mastered both. A comparison of classical and    Jazz music will yield some interesting results and could also lead to  an appreciation of the abilities needed to perform or compose these  kinds of music.    Let's begin with a look at the histories of the two. The music  called classical, found in stores and performed regularly by  symphonies around the world, spans a length of time from 1600 up to  the present. This time frame includes the Renaissance, Baroque,    Classical, Romantic and Contemporary periods. The classical period of  music actually spans a time from of 1750 to 1800; thus, the term    Classical is a misnomer and could more correctly be changed to Western    Art Music or European Art Music. European because most of the major  composers up till the 20th century were European. Vivaldi was Italian,    Bach was German, Mozart and Beethoven were Austrian; they are some of  the more prominent composers. Not until the twentieth century with    Gershwin and a few others do we find American composers writing this  kind of art music. For the sake of convention, we can refer to Western    Art Music as Classical music.    Jazz is a distinctively American form of music, and it's history  occupies a much smaller span of time. Its origins are found in the  early 1900s as some dance band leaders in the southern U.S. began  playing music that combined ragtime and blues. Early exponents of this  dance music were Jelly Roll Martin (a blues player) and Scott Joplin  (ragtime). The terms "Jazz" and "Jazz Band" first surfaced in the year    1900. Some say this occurred in New Orleans, although similar music  was played at the same time in other places. The most prominent  exponents of this early music, called Dixieland Jazz, included Louis    Armstrong and Sidney Bechet. After World War I, Jazz music had evolved  and was aided by the development of the recording industry. The  small dance band ensemble grew into the larger orchestra known as the    "Big Band". The music of the Big Bands became known as "Swing." Two of  the more famous Swing band leaders were Tommy Dorsey and Harry James.    In the late 40s and through the 50s, a different kind of Jazz became  popular. This music, played by a very small ensemble, was much more  sophisticated and complex . Its rich harmonic changes and melodic  counterpoint were not conducive to dance. It became known as "Bop,"  with Charlie Parker and Dizzie Gillespie being the early proponents.    In the last twenty years there has been a combination of Jazz with  popular music of the US and Latin America. This modern Jazz music has  been called "Fusion." Present day exponents include Pat Metheny and    Chic Corea. There has also been a return to the sound of Bop in the  last ten years by such musicians as trumpeter Winton Marsalis and his  brother Branford, a saxophonist.    Let's focus on the instrumentation of the two kinds of music. In    Classical music, both large orchestras and small ensembles are used.    But generally, the greatest and most prominent compositions are for  the larger symphony orchestra. The largest part of the orchestra is  the string section consisting of violins, violas, cellos and string  basses. These instruments were invented very early in medieval times  but really matured into their present form during the late 18th  century. The wind instruments, comprised of brass and woodwinds, took  longer to mature. The brass section in particular did not posses the  ability to play chromatically (in all keys) until the advent of valves  which allowed the length of the instrument to be changed while  playing. This occurred around the middle to late 19th century.    Consequently, the brass instruments are less prominent in the music of    Bach, Mozart and Beethoven along with their contemporaries. Late 19th  and early 20th century composers make use of a very large orchestra  with all the fully developed wind instruments. Some of the master  orchestrator/composers of this time were: Wagner, Rimskey-Korsakov,    Ravel and Stravinsky. Currently, composers also make use of the full  orchestra but with the addition of increasingly larger percussion  sections    
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