Jazz test 1

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Which of the following instruments does NOT traditionally belong in a rhythm section

drums

How did Louis Armstrong change people's understanding of the blues?

established blues scales and blues feeling as the foundation of jazz style

In what way did Louis Armstrong help to shape our understanding of the role of improvisation within jazz practice

established jazz as music that prizes individual expression through solo improvisation

What was Art Hickman's main contribution to jazz style

established the saxophone section as an important component of the jazz ensemble

"Weather Bird" was an immediate hit for Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines as soon as they recorded it in 1928

false

All strains of a march are consistently the same length

false

As was common at the time, Gennett Records marketed the recordings of King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band to a black audience as race records

false

Because of Jim Crow laws, Creoles of Color and Uptown Negroes remained segregated from each other well into the twentieth century

false

Bix Beiderbecke enjoyed a long career as the most famous jazz trumpeter in America

false

Blackface minstrelsy involved only white performers

false

By the end of the 1920s, white jazz musicians were scorned and ostracized by black artists and white audiences

false

Drummers ALWAYS use drum sticks to get a sound out of the drums

false

From its earliest days, jazz was embraced across America.

false

George Gershwin cut all of his piano rolls in a single pass.

false

Harlem in the 1920s featured spacious apartments and mobility for residents.

false

Jelly Roll Morton invented jazz

false

Louis Armstrong lived a privileged childhood and was destined for success from the day he was born

false

Louis Armstrong was a featured soloist with the Duke Ellington Orchestra in the 1920s.

false

Louis Armstrong was the most popular singer of the first half of the twentieth century.

false

Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Hot Seven bands played in public with great frequency in the late 1920s

false

Louis Armstrong's birthdate is July 4, 1900

false

New Orleans style jazz provided many opportunities for musicians to change the form of a composition through improvisation

false

Other than the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, there were no significant white performers in the New Orleans jazz tradition

false

Paul Whiteman was respected within the jazz community but otherwise largely unknown

false

Ragtime is an entirely improvised style.

false

Seventeen years after his death, Louis Armstrong had a number 1 hit with the song "Hello, Dolly."

false

The Blues in its original form was always 12 bars

false

The Fisk Jubilee Singers were best known for their polished renditions of field hollers

false

Tin Pan Alley refers to the music written for stage and cinema after the birth of rock and roll in the mid-1950s.

false

In whose big band did Coleman Hawkins play for eleven years

fletcher henderson

Most major figures in American jazz history who are not of African descent came from immigrant families for all of the following nations EXCEPT:

france

Sidney Bechet spent a large part of his career, and became a beloved national figure, in which country

france

Which instrument was most important in accompanying country blues

guitar

Which Manhattan neighborhood was referred to as "the greatest Negro city in the world"

harlem

How did Prohibition affect the jazz community

It provided abundant work opportunities for jazz musicians in illegal speakeasies

What experience did Louis Armstrong gain through his work with Fate Marable

all of the above

Which of the following is a benefit of learning jazz through recordings?

all of the above

Why is Wilbur Sweatman's "Down Home Rag" significant

It provides crucial evidence for the transition between ragtime and jazz

Which is NOT true of blackface minstrelsy

It was only performed in the American South.

What effect did technological advances in radio and recording have on the jazz community

It led audiences to stay home and obsessively listen to specific broadcasts and recordings

How many copies were sold of Paul Whiteman's first recordings

1000000

In what year did the racial dialect of Stephen Foster's "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny" lead to the song's removal as the official state song of Virginia

1997

In her fourteen-year recording career, Bessie Smith recorded approximately how many songs

200

Why are hot five and hot seven recordings important

A representation of what jazz is like

The specific combinations of musical characteristics at the heart of jazz style—including polyrhythm, blue notes, timbre variation, and call and response—are the products of which cultural group

African american

W.C. Handy

American musician and composer. He was the first person to recognize the importance of blues as a legitimate musical form and the first to publish a blues composition, "The Memphis Blues" (1911).

empress of the blues

Bessie Smith

In 1922, Joe Oliver sent Louis Armstrong a message inviting him to join Oliver's band in which northern city

Chicago

clarinet player

Counter melody

Buddy Bolden

First jazz musician & trumpet player

2nd trumpet

Harmony lines and counter melody

What was unique about Louis Armstrong's song repertory

He broadened jazz repertoire by creating masterworks based on Tin Pan Alley tunes.

All of the following are musical elements of Duke Ellington's late 1920s and early 1930s "breakthrough" EXCEPT

He focused solely on blues style.

Which best describes Freddie Keppard's historical importance

He traveled widely, spreading jazz style throughout the United State

Why did Louis Armstrong claim that his birthdate was July 4, 1900

He wanted to perform on Mississippi riverboats, but he was underag

Bid Beiderbecke

His music is hot and sweet A good dichotomy More orchestral

leader of hell fighter

James Reese Europe

brass band leader

John Phillip sousa

In 1918, Louis Armstrong replaced Joe Oliver in the band led by

Kid Ory

Which is NOT a reason why the change from acoustic to electrical recording was significant for jazz

Live recording on location became the standard practice for jazz recording

Louis Armstrong's "Hotter Than That" features which musician as a guest

Lonnie Johnson, guitarist

Which musician was NOT a featured soloist with the Paul Whiteman orchestra

Louis armstrong

Which trumpet player made a strong impact on Coleman Hawkins's tenor saxophone style

Louis armstrong

mother of blues

Ma Rainey

Which borough of New York has been the focus of American jazz culture since the 1920s?

Manhattan

Who led the Onward Brass Band, a group that blended Creole sophistication with improvisational artistry

Manuel Perez

Fletcher Henderson served as a musical mentor for all of the following musicians EXCEPT

Miles Davis

Later in his career, Louis Armstrong had great success in all of the following international locations EXCEPT

Moscow

Is ragtime improvised

Most is written down

Ragtime music features

Much syncopation - 2/4 meter - A lively tempo - d. major keys

trumpet player

Play the melody

What does trumbone player plaY

Plays root notes fundamental

composer of piano rags

Scott Joplin

Sidney Bouchet

Suprano saxaphone

In acoustic recordings such as the ones made at Gennett studios, how was the relative volume of the instruments adjusted

The musicians adjusted their volume by their physical placement in the studio during the recording.

Which of the following parts of America's entertainment infrastructure formed in late-nineteenth-century New York?

all of the above

In "polishing" the rural blues that he heard in Mississippi, W. C. Handy did which of the following

all the above

Which is NOT true of the Austin High Gang

Their ranks included only horn players.

Why are Jelly Roll Morton's 1923 recording sessions with the New Orleans Rhythm Kings significant

They are the first significant racially integrated jazz recording session

Buddy Bolden's repertoire demonstrates what characteristic of professional musicians of the period

They could play a wide variety of styles and tempos using both notation and improvisation.

All of the following are true of "race records" EXCEPT

They did not sell many copies.

Which of the following was true of the social position of Uptown Negroes in nineteenth-century New Orleans

They were considered by other social groups to be unprofessional.

How did the "animal dance" crazes differ from popular dances of earlier eras?

They were uninhibited in their lower body movements

What was the instrumentation of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band

cornet, clarinet, trombone, piano, drums

Freddie Keppard

Turned down the opportunity to become the first musician to make a jazz record. Trumpet Becomes inspiration for shift from New Orleans to Chicago

A short solo improvisation at the end of a phrase in New Orleans jazz is called

a break

What is a rent party

a fundraising party to help the host pay his or her rent

The saxophonist in the Lincoln Center video played

a tenor saxophone

Paul Whiteman

a white band leader who played jazz for white audiences King of jazz

Which element of Tin Pan Alley songs made them into a modern body of American standards

advanced harmonies

According the the Jazz at Lincoln Center video, what is Swing

all of the above

In what setting did brass bands perform

all of the above

Which of the following describes Earl Hines's approach to rhythm

an idiosyncratic style that played constant games with the rhythmic pulse

All of the following factors were causes of the Great Migration EXCEPT

an increasing reliance on agricultural labor

Which African American musical genre involved the retelling of local history in song

ballad

At what sorts of events did the majority of New York jazz musicians perform in the 1920s

ballroom dances

A measure of 4/4 swing emphasizes

beats 2 and 4

All of the following are aspects of Louis Armstrong's legacy EXCEPT

became the most influential composer in the jazz community

Which describes the racial dynamics of Fletcher Henderson's engagement at the Roseland Ballroom

black ensembles playing for white audiences

The ballad tempo of "Singin' the Blues" is novel, because such slow tempos were usually reserved for performances in which genre

blues

The most distinctive feature of New Orleans jazz is

collective improvisation

W. C. Handy's initial appreciation of the blues was based on its:

commercial appeal

The authors cite scholar Lawrence Levine in support of an interpretation of the blues as an expression of

individualism

In what way was Louis Armstrong's approach to rhythm innovative

introduced an energetic, joyful approach to swing

What was unusual about the front line of King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band

it featured two cornets

When James Reese Europe's Hellfighters performed in ballrooms for social dances, what type of instrumentation did they use

large military-style band

What did Louis Armstrong's second wife, musician Lil Hardin, encourage him to do

leave King Oliver's band and establish himself as a bandleader

Members of Louis Armstrong's Hot Five

lil hardin (piano) Kid ory (trombone) Johnny dodds (clarinet) Johnny cyr (banjo) Louis(trumpet/vocals)

Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings updated conventional ideas about small group jazz in all of the following ways EXCEPT

limited improvisations to two- and four-measure breaks

Ragtime Music

music popular from 1900-1920 that that preceded jazz, was influenced by African American songs and featured syncopated, or "ragged," rhythm

Arranger Bill Challis included all of the following in his arrangement of "Changes" EXCEPT:

novelty percussion

In the front line of a New Orleans ensemble, the clarinet typically

plays a harmony or counter-melody line

In the front line of a New Orleans ensemble, the trumpet typically

plays the melody

In the front line of a New Orleans ensemble, the trombone typically

plays the root notes or lower fundamentals

On Bessie Smith's "Reckless Blues," which household item does Louis Armstrong use to modify the timbre of his trumpet

plunger

New Orleans jazz primarily featured which of the following musical textures?

polyphonic—collective improvisation

Which is the trumpet or cornet's role in the New Orleans jazz band

present the melody with improvised variations

What was the form of most New Orleans jazz compositions

rag form

What is the overall musical form of Fletcher Henderson's "Copenhagen"

ragtime/march form

"Stride" refers to which aspect of a pianist's performance

regular left-hand alternation between bass notes and chords

On "One Hour," Coleman Hawkins demonstrated a new approach to jazz saxophone through his use of

relaxed, expressive legato playing

Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers recordings are significant because they

represent an ideal balance between composition and improvisation

Tin Pan Alley gave birth to which of the following careers

rofessional songwriter

Timbre of a sound can be described as

round/harsh

Nineteenth-century New Orleans shows the influence of all of the following cultures EXCEPT

russian

idney Bechet is responsible for establishing this instrument as a jazz instrument:

saxophone

Louis Armstrong took a controversial public stand on which civil rights issue?

segregation

The short, detached articulation prominent at the beginning of "Dixie Jass Band One-Step" is referred to as

staccato

A single sixteen-bar unit within a march is known as a

strain

Which aspect of Buddy Bolden's playing did contemporary observers note most often

the loudness of his playing

Great Migration

the relocation of more than 6 million African Americans from the rural South to the cities of the North, Midwest and West from 1916 to 1970, had a huge impact on urban life in the United States. Go to Chicago and New York

Which band did Bix Beiderbecke join in 1923

the wolverines

How did Scott Joplin make most of the money to support his compositional career

through publishing royalties

What was Paul Whiteman's goal with his "An Experiment in Modern Music" concert of 1924

to reveal that jazz elements could form the foundation of highbrow art music

What does it mean to "rag" a piece of music

to subject it to a process of rhythmic complication

Match each number to the correct instrumentation of Fletcher Henderson's big band.

trombones-2-3 reeds -5 vocal soloists-0 rhythm section-4 trumpets-3

Buddy Bolden is widely considered the first jazz musician to develop a distinct personal style

true

Country blues artists used musical form more flexibly than vaudeville or classic blues artists did

true

During the Civil Rights era, Louis Armstrong became deeply invested in American politics

true

In 1924, Louis Armstrong worked extensively with blues singers such as Bessie Smith

true

In large part because of the legacy of minstrelsy, white audiences expected black jazz performers to enact characteristics of the performing fool

true

In nineteenth-century America, people were legally considered black if their heritage included a "single drop" of black blood

true

In the early twentieth century, classically trained black musicians went into jazz because of racial discrimination in the classical music world

true

Jazz is considered African American music because its folk origins are most commonly traced to black American roots

true

King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band favored collective improvisation over soloistic features

true

Louis Armstrong's recordings did not sell nearly as well as those of his white contemporaries

true

Ragtime compositions share many formal elements with the march

true

Recordings of black music and marketed to black audiences were referred to as "race records" until the 1940s

true

The Blues is the foundation of most American popular music.

true

The Cotton Club, where the Duke Ellington Orchestra played, admitted African Americans as performers but not as patrons

true

The Fletcher Henderson Orchestra's instrumentation remains a standard for modern jazz ensembles

true

The Original Dixieland Jazz Band helped to popularize jazz in Europe

true

The majority of Tin Pan Alley songs were composed by songwriting teams of composers and lyricists.

true

The majority of Uptown Negroes could not read music

true

The majority of jazz performers have belonged to ethnic minorities

true

The solos by Frank Trumbauer and Bix Beiderbecke on "Singin' the Blues" are believed to be the first jazz solos to which lyrics were later added by later musicians

true

The trombonist in a New Orleans jazz band usually plays fewer notes than the clarinetist

true

When Louis Armstrong began performing with King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, his brilliant trumpet timbre was a revelation to other Chicago musicians.

true

Which instruments are included in the front line of a New Orleans jazz band

trumpet, clarinet, trombone

Unusual about king Oliver's frontline

two trumpets

the first blues musician was

unknown

Louis Armstrong's performance in Shine

uses minstrel imagery and tropes, but also demonstrates his mastery of the trumpet and captivating stage presence

Which best describes Louis Armstrong's innovative approach to singing

with his scat vocals and his delivery of lyrics, introduced a true jazz vocal style


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