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  2. The music that eventually became jazz evolved out of a wide-ranging, gradually assimilated mixture of Black and white folk musics and popular styles, with roots in both West Africa and Europe. It is only a slight oversimplification to assert that the rhythmic and structural elements of jazz, as well as some aspects of its customary instrumentation (e.g., banjo or guitar and percussion), derive ...

  3. jazz summary | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/summary/jazz

    jazz, Musical form, often improvisational, developed by African Americans and influenced by both European harmonic structure and African rhythms. Though its specific origins are not known, the music developed principally as an amalgam in the late 19th- and early 20th-century musical culture of New Orleans. Elements of the blues and ragtime in ...

  4. Jazz Music Portal | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/browse/Jazz-Music

    Although any attempt to formulate an all-encompassing definition of jazz may be hopeless, jazz music is often identified with the use of syncopated rhythms, polyphonic ensemble playing, varying degrees of improvisation, deliberate deviations of pitch, and original timbres. ... Dave Brubeck was a popular American jazz pianist who brought ...

  5. Swing | Description, Artists, & Facts | Britannica

    www.britannica.com/art/swing-music

    swing, in music, both the rhythmic impetus of jazz music and a specific jazz idiom prominent between about 1935 and the mid-1940s—years sometimes called the swing era. Swing music has a compelling momentum that results from musicians’ attacks and accenting in relation to fixed beats. Swing rhythms defy any narrower definition, and the music ...

  6. blues, secular folk music created by African Americans in the early 20th century, originally in the South.The simple but expressive forms of the blues became by the 1960s one of the most important influences on the development of popular music—namely, jazz, rhythm and blues, rock, and country music—throughout the United States.. Form. Although instrumental accompaniment is almost universal ...

  7. Improvisation | Jazz, Classical & Creative Techniques |...

    www.britannica.com/art/improvisation-music

    alapa. improvisation, in music, the extemporaneous composition or free performance of a musical passage, usually in a manner conforming to certain stylistic norms but unfettered by the prescriptive features of a specific musical text. Music originated as improvisation and is still extensively improvised in Eastern traditions and in the modern ...

  8. jazz-rock, popular musical form in which modern jazz improvisation is accompanied by the bass lines, drumming styles, and instrumentation of rock music, with a strong emphasis on electronic instruments and dance rhythms. Since the recordings of 1920s bands, notably Paul Whiteman ’s, there have been fusions of jazz and popular music, usually ...

  9. jazz - Kids | Britannica Kids | Homework Help

    kids.britannica.com/kids/article/jazz/353314

    Louis Armstrong was an important jazz musician from this time. Armstrong’s style of jazz became known as swing. It was popular throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Other famous swing musicians included orchestra leader Benny Goodman and singer Billie Holiday. Another popular type of jazz music was called big-band jazz.

  10. bebop, the first kind of modern jazz, which split jazz into two opposing camps in the last half of the 1940s. The word is an onomatopoeic rendering of a staccato two-tone phrase distinctive in this type of music. When it emerged, bebop was unacceptable not only to the general public but also to many musicians. The resulting breaches—first ...

  11. ragtime, propulsively syncopated musical style, one forerunner of jazz and the predominant style of American popular music from about 1899 to 1917. Ragtime evolved in the playing of honky-tonk pianists along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers in the last decades of the 19th century. It was influenced by minstrel-show songs, African American ...