American Popular Music Test 2

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Irene and Vernon Castle

Dancers who codified the parallel stepping dads, giving the fox trot steps to dignity and form, and christened the Castle Walk

Microphone

This technological advancement in electronic broadcasting was the "device/instrument" that made it possible for male singers to "croon"

Improvisation

To create new music in the moment -Spontaneous musical creation and the essence of what jazz music is all about

Boogie-Woogie

A Blues piano style that "chases the blues away"

Hi-Hat

A cymbal which is part of the standard drum set. (Often sounds like the backbeat)

Duke Ellington

A feature that made his music distinct came from his use of musicians with unique timbres

Taking Film

A film with synchronized sound, or sound technologically coupled to image

Rhythm Song

A song in which the primary interest comes from its rhythm rather than the flow and contour of its melody

Album

Originally was used to describe recordings bundled together (originally used for classical music)

Ma Rainey

The Mother of the Blues

Blues

Style of music evolving from African American spirituals and noted for its melancholy sound

Sweet

Style played by a big band that was melodious, slow, and without much syncopation

Benny Goodman

The "King of Swing" whose band launched the Swing Era in 1935

Bing Crosby

The dominant popular singer of the 30's and 40's

WC Handy

The Father of the Blues

Flapper

The stereotypical new woman of the 1920s

Speakeasy

A bar or night club that operated illegally during prohibition

Swing (as a style and as a technique)

A fundamental element of jazz that your book defines as rhythmic play over a four-beat rhythm -Relaxed, Long-short rhythm

Dance Orchestra

A group of musicians playing popular music for dancing

Rhythm Section

A heterogeneous group of instruments that includes at least one chord instrument, one bass instrument, and one percussion instrument -To provide band with rhythm and harmony (banjo, piano, tuba, and drums)

Crooning

A kind of singing associated with Bing Crosby

Electric Blues

A post-WWII blues style characterized by the use of a full rhythm section, including electric guitar; most popular form of contemporary blues Features: -Regular blues form -Rough-edged vocals -Vocal-like responses and solos from the lead guitar or harmonica -Dense texture, with several instruments playing melody-like lines behind singer -Rhythm section laying down a strong beat, usually some form of a shuffle rhythm

Deep Blues

A powerful music that gave expression to, and release from, the brutal conditions of the Delta

Song Interpretation

A rendition of a song which emphasizes a performer's unique understanding and emotions

Ragtime

A type of music characterized by syncopation in the melody. Syncopated rhythms called "ragged." Musical Characteristics: -Fully composed instrumental music -Notated and sold as sheet music and piano rolls for player pianos -Short, syncopated melodies in the right hand of the piano -Heavy best and march-like rhythms in left hand of piano imitating foot stomping

Billie Holidy

Ability to transmute popular song into personal statement using song interpretation

Acoustic vs Electronic Recording

Acoustic Recording: sound vibrations were transferred directly to the recording medium by means of a large horn or cone. Electronic Recording: converts sound into an electric signal before recording and then converts the electric signal back into sound for playback.

Storyville

All brothels in New Orleans where Jazz music was being performed -The core of the early jazz scene moved from New Orleans to Chicago in the 1918 due to the closing of Storyville

Blue Note

An African inspired alteration of certain conventional scale tones

Amplifier

An electric device that boosts sound to a level that everyone can hear clearly

Hokum

An upbeat, good-times blues style which emerged between the first and second world wars

Foxtrot

Became the dominant social dance of the 1920's and 1930's

Classic Blues

Blues written by professional songwriters and performed by professional female blues singers such as Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey -Were often viewed as blues influenced popular songs -Performed in cities or in Vaudeville tours -Recored and marketed as race records

Singles

During the modern era, popular songs were typically recorded on singles

B.B. King

Electric blues musician who named his guitar Lucille

Creoles

Group of Europeans that created cultural mix in Early Jazz Music

Robert Johnson

He is considered jazz music's greatest composer

Louis Armstrong

He is known as the first great soloist in jazz, inspiring jazz and popular musicians of the era

Joe "King" Oliver

He was a bandleader and corner player who was one of the major figures of "New Orlean's Jazz"

Muddy Walker

He was one of the most influential Electric Blues musicians

Glenn Miller

His death marked the end of the Swing Era

Griot

In West African culture he was a healer, historian, and a musician

Jim Crow Laws/Legislation

Legislation which passed in 1892 which favored racial segregation

Scott Joplin

Most popular Ragtime composer

12 Bar Blues

Most widely used form for a blues song

Front Line

Responsible for Melody and Improvisation (clarinet, trumpet, and trombone) In a jazz band, this phrase refers to the horn soloists

Melisma

Several notes sung to a single syllable

Riffs

Short melodic (usually instrumental) ideas

Race Records

Slang term for recordings featuring African-American performers

Country Blues

The earliest form of the blues performed by solo male singers accompanying themselves on guitar Characteristics: -The purest form of the blues -Free of commercial influences -No pop, no jazz, no horns -Words were rough but expressive and usually about the lives of the performer -Melismas -Call and response -Rough untrained voice

Fletcher Henderson

The man most responsible for shaping the sound of big-band swing

Bessie Smith

The most influential and greatest of the classic blues singers

The Charleston

The most popular and enduring of the vigorous new dances of the early 1920's

Congo Square

The place in New Orleans where people of African descent could use drums and perform the traditional rhythmic music of their heritage

Prohibition

This made purchasing alcohol illegal

Urban Blues

Urban Blues focuses lyrically on life in the city. The term "Urban Blues" was initially used to distinguish between Uptown and Country Blues styles, but came into its own as a style in the 1940s

T. Bone Walker

Was among the first musicians to use the electric guitar as a solo blues instrument

Collective Improvisation

When you improvise collectively as a group -Not easy (had to be skilled)


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