Ragtime

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    Comparing King Oliver's 'Dipper Mouth Blues Creole Jazz Band'

    Jazz Band. What makes it interesting to me is that both musicians started their art in New Orleans and both later moved north to Chicago, with Louis Armstrong playing second cornet in King Creole’s swinging band. New Orleans style jazz is similar to ragtime in that it rhythm is steady and swinging that creates a happy and warm feeling. King Oliver’s band was a swing band. The players would improvise at once, making up their own music while playing together. Even

    Words: 570 - Pages: 3

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    Harlem Renaissance Influence

    these artists wanted to leave a mark, they wanted people to know how they truly felt. “As Samuel Floyd points out, in his brilliant essay on the Harlem Renaissance, “The music of the black theater shows, the dance music of the cabarets, the blues, ragtime of the speakeasies and the rent parties, the spirituals, and the art songs of the recitals and

    Words: 458 - Pages: 2

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    Market

    BACKGROUND INFORMATION African Music Role of Music: African music is a vital part of everyday life in Africa. It is a part of religious ceremonies, festivals, and social rituals. Songs are used for the important events in a person's life (birth, coming of age, marriage, and death). They are used for curing the sick, bringing rain, and religious dances. Many Africans believe that music serves as a link with the spirit world. Everyone plays an active part in the musical life of the community. Music

    Words: 566 - Pages: 3

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    The Influence Of Jazz In The 1920's

    Jazz had a big impact on the 1920’s. When people needed and escape from what was really happening in the world, jazz was an outlet for that. When people didn't have anything to look forward too, or be happy about, jazz was there. Jazz gave people hope when there was little hope to be found. Jazz impacted American lives in many ways, from clothes all the way to changing how people thought after African Americans. Jazz changed American life in many different ways. In fact, jazz had a large effect

    Words: 526 - Pages: 3

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    Iidk

    and response. It is when a statement in music is made, either vocally or instrumentally, so that it may be responded to. The response can be the repetition of the first statement or the completion of it. This musical attribute is popular in jazz, ragtime, blues, gospel, and R&B. This is one of the many ways in which African music has greatly helped to shape American popular music. Other musical attributes derived from African music include different vocal styles (such as guttural effects, lyric

    Words: 608 - Pages: 3

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    Return to Normalcy

    Return to Normalcy In the presidential election of 1920 a candidate by the name of Warren G. Harding made a campaign promise to the people of the United States for a “return to normalcy”. By this he meant to restore American society back to it’s pre- world war mentality. Harding stated that “ America’s present need is not heroics, healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not revolution, but restoration; not agitation, but adjustment; not surgery, but serenity; not the dramatic, but the dispassionate;

    Words: 658 - Pages: 3

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    Random

    1. In music, the early twentieth century was a time of revolt and change 2. The most famous riot in music history occurred in Paris in 1913 at the first performance of Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring. 3. Composers in the twentieth century drew inspiration from folk and popular music from all cultures, the music of Asia and Africa, and European art music from the Middle Ages through the nineteenth century. 4. Twentieth-century composers incorporated elements of folk and popular music within

    Words: 1777 - Pages: 8

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    Women in Music

    WOMEN IN MUSIC Read the article “Black Music Critics and the Classic Blues Singer” by Phillip McGuire and answer the following discussion questions: 1. Why were the Blues considered “distasteful” by society? Blues was considered “distasteful” by society because there were so many people going around preaching and brainwashing the public. They wanted people to believe that blues was crude, barbaric, vulgar, suggestive

    Words: 683 - Pages: 3

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    Embracing Technology Through Clever Adaptation

    Science, and its inevitable advancement surrounds us. Whether it is a smartphone or an alarm clock that wakes people around the world in the morning, or that cup of coffee which begins the day with a smile, engineers are at work. The universe is constantly adapting to progress and one thing is for sure, change can always be counted on. There are many exciting computers, notebooks and cell phones available to purchase, along with their unique programs, which tend to promise the lifestyle of importance

    Words: 819 - Pages: 4

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    James Weldon Johnson's Autobiography Of An Ex-Colored Man

    As history tells us that Slavery was abolished after the Civil War. Even then, African Americans were still not welcomed as equals to everyone else. One way we can better understand those struggles faced during this period is to look at its’ literature. James Weldon Johnson’s book, “Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man”, does a great job depicting an accurate account of the struggles faced in the Civil Rights Movement. In hindsight, it also reflects racial problems still facing today’s society. In

    Words: 778 - Pages: 4

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