Essential Jazz Albums: Time Out

Posted in Essential Jazz Albums with tags , , , , on October 28, 2007 by A. M. Perkins

time_out_album_cover.jpg

The Dave Brubeck Quartet: Time Out (1959). The album features some of the finest rhythmic innovations from Dave Brubeck and his quartet, including the simple yet elegant masterpiece Take Five. Consisting of nothing but tracks with irregular or changing meters, Time Out is one the finest and most unusual examples of West Coast Cool Jazz. Read more »

Bix Beiderbecke

Posted in Jazz History: Biography with tags , , , , , , on October 26, 2007 by A. M. Perkins

Bix Beiderbecke in 1924

Leon Bismark ‘Bix’ Beiderbecke (March 10, 1903 – August 6, 1931) was an early jazz cornetist, who was most famous for his work with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra starting in 1927 but was also respected as a pianist and composer. Read more »

What is Jazz?

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on October 18, 2007 by A. M. Perkins

What exactly is jazz? What kinds of music can be called jazz? Where did jazz come from and where is it going? What about education: does jazz have a place in schools, and if so, what is it? And what about all the modern technology, how is jazz affected by it? These are a few of the questions that I am going to examine in this blog.

In my experiences with music, I have learned that the best way to learn jazz is to experience it: listen to it, play it, go and watch it. You can learn far more about jazz by going to a jazz concert than you could ever hope to learn from a book. But once you’ve heard the what that is a jazz musician’s sound, you should want to know the why, the reason why that musician sounds the way they do. Why does John Coltrane sound like Coltrane and not like Charlie Parker or Dizzy Gillespie or Theolonius Monk? And it’s not just because they play different instruments.

Something else I have learned is that no one should ever stop learning, and music is certainly no exception. There is always something else out there: some things are old, and there’s always something new. Music cannot be perfected because no one is perfect, it can always be better, and that’s what I like most about it. Jazz is a perfect example of this because even as new genres of jazz are born, all the old styles are still alive and kicking.

My main goal with this blog is to share my knowledge and love of jazz music. In the upcoming weeks, I will be writing new posts about different jazz musicians, genres of jazz, and charts that changed the jazz world, as well as a few articles about jazz in music education, jazz in technology, as well as a few other topics. Until then, God Bless.