Onttype6. What is Bebop?
Contents
Discussion[edit]
Introduction[edit]
Bebop evolved from earlier jazz[edit]
Gillespie states, as quoted at the 14th paragraph in Wikipedia: "Dizzy Gillespie," that Bebop was an extension and evolution of earlier jazz practices.
“Gillespie said of the Hines band, "[p]eople talk about the Hines band being 'the incubator of bop' and the leading exponents of that music ended up in the Hines band. But people also have the erroneous impression that the music was new. It was not. The music evolved from what went before. It was the same basic music. The difference was in how you got from here to here to here . . . naturally each age has got its own shit.” [1] (bold and bold italic not in original)
“[Bebop] got into more theoretical kinds of improvisation—chord change improvisation as opposed to the sort of theme and variations, the melodic embellishment playing that characterized swing.[2]
Mark C. Gridley, #1 jazz textbook author, supports that Bebop was developed based on musical technical innovations and not as a 'political' reaction to the events surrounding World War two. Gridley argues that commentators, such as Dave Banks and Amiri Baracka, miss the mark when they support the thesis the Gillespie and Parker developed Bebop as a reaction to the war. Rather, Gridley gives four considerations that accounts for the likely motivations had by the developers of Bebop. Gillespie's model pushing him towards Bebop was the stylistic playing of Roy Eldridge, who played with power and energy in upper registers on the trumpet. Gridley continues to account for Charlie Parker's penchant for fast playing, double timing, and increased harmonic sophistication coming from musical influences and not political ones resulting from experiencing World War two.
“Writing about the origins of bebop, Dave Banks, for example, contended that to understand bebop we must consider the "creative musician's psychological response toward the war" [italics added by Gridley] which had "forced the musical imagination further into the infinite reaches of its expression producing a revolutionary approach to music." ("Be-Bop Called Merely the Beginning of a New Creative Music Form," Downbeat magazine, February 11, 1948, 16.) LeRoi Jones (now Amiri Baraka) wrote "The period that saw bebop develop, during and after [italics added by Gridley] World War II, was a very unstable time for most Americans. There was a need for radical readjustment to the demands of the postwar world. The [race] riots throughout the country appear as directly related to the psychological tenor of that time as the emergence of the 'new' music." (Blues People, (New York: Harper/Collins, 1999), 210)
Banks, Jones, and others have overlooked at least four considerations that suggest sources other than such a sociopolitical origin for bebop.
- (1) The emergence of bebop culminated intense studying that its founders had already undertaken during the 1930s, not necessarily "during and after World War II."
- (2) Full-scale U.S. involvement in WWII was not achieved until 1942, although the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 and Germany had declared war on the U.S. December 11, 1941. Yet Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie had already formed bebop by 1943. Being only a year later would have provided insufficient time to develop an entire style.
- (3) Gillespie's main model was the virtuosic, explosive style of trumpeter Roy Eldridge, who was known for harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic surprises in the 1930s. Therefore, if bebop struck Banks and Jones as explosive, and they inferred that such character reflected the agitation of the times, they overlooked the fact that before gaining notoriety for bebop during the WWII years, Gillespie already had a taste for making music containing the exciting musical devices of Eldridge. They overlooked the fact that Gillespie had already been playing fast, and frequenting the high-register, as documented in his recordings with the Teddy Hill Band in 1937. Since these characteristics of his volcanic style were not unique to his work "during and after WWII," it is not likely that Gillespie created these aspects of his style in response to any sociopolitical "tenor of that time" that had also caused race riots in the 1940s.
- (4) Since Parker's new style was already apparent in the recordings that he made in Wichita during 1940 with Jay McShann, Banks and Jones missed the fact that Parker's bebop innovations predated WWII and predated the greatest sociopolitical upheavals for African Americans. If Banks and Jones were attributing the agitated character of Parker's playing to the "psychological tenor of that time," they may have been overlooking the facts that:
- (A) All Parker's models had already been prominent during the 1930s; and,
- (B) Several of them, including Art Tatum, had specialized in practices that could lead to listener agitation, such as double-timing, asymmetrical accents, and substitute chord changes. Parker's lines that run a sequence of different keys, often a half-step away from the tune's key, are likely to reflect instruction he received in his hometown of Kansas City from Efferge Ware during the 1930s. Being aware of Tatum, Ware, and other models of the 1930s, such as Buster Smith, Coleman Hawkins, and Lester Young, is a more likely inspiration for Parker's style than being aware of any sociopolitical "tenor of that time" as LeRoi Jones believed. (For discography and elaboration of these points, see Mark C. Gridley, Jazz Styles: History and Analysis, 10th edition, (Prentice-Hall, 2008), 198-99.)”[3] (bold not in original)
The Development of BeBop[edit]
- What is BeBop?
- Ten Famous Bebop Musicians
- Encyclopedia Brittanica on BeBop
- Is the Guitar the Dark Horse of Bebop? History, Technique, and Recommended Listening of BeBop Guitar by Jonathan Feist
- Joseph Goldberg, "BeBop," Encyclopedia of Music in the 20th Century, edited by Lee Stacy and Lol Henderson (London & New York: Routledge (an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group), 2013), (first published in 1999 by Fitzroy Dearborn), 54–55.
- Stump, Roger W. “Place and Innovation in Popular Music: The Bebop Revolution in Jazz.” 1998.
- The bebop Revolution in Jazz. Contributors: Roger W. Stump - author. Journal Title: Journal of Cultural Geography. Volume: 18. Issue: 1. Publication Year: 1998. Page Number: 11. COPYRIGHT 1998 Popular Press; COPYRIGHT 2002 Gale Group.
- Roychaudhury, Satyajit. "The Bebop Revolution in Jazz."
Question: Name three main melodic elements of Bebop.
Answer: Chromatic passing notes, Approach notes, and Surrounding approach notes.
NOTES[edit]
- ↑ Quoted in The World of Earl Hines, Stanley Dance, Da Capo Press, 1983, p. 260.
- ↑ A. B. Spellman, as quoted in "Charlie Parker: Confirmation: Best of the Verve Years," A. B. Spellman, NPR Music Review, August 1, 2001.
- ↑ "Misconceptions in Linking Free Jazz with the Civil Rights Movement," Mark C. Gridley, The College Music Symposium: Journal of the College Music Society, footnote 54 reformatted from original with no word changes or omissions. Published online October 1, 2007. Accessed May 9, 2020. PDF: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40374510.
The College Music Symposium, first issued in 1961, is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal that publishes research, comprehensive review articles, forums, and individual reviews, including those of books, film/video, audio, technologies, and online platforms. The journal also publishes, with transcriptions, Performances, Lectures, Lecture-Recitals (PLL) that have been captured on video.