Is jazz a universal idiom or is it an African-American art form?
Although whites have been playing jazz almost since it first developed,
the history of jazz has been forged by a series of African-American
artists whose styles caught the interest of their musical
generation―masters such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, John
Coltrane, and Charlie Parker. Whether or not white musicians deserve
their secondary status in jazz history, one thing is clear: developments
in jazz have been a result of black people's search for a meaningful
identity as Americans and members of the African diaspora. Blacks are
not alone in being deeply affected by these shifts in African-American
racial attitudes and cultural strategies. Historically in closer contact
with blacks than nearly any other group of white Americans, white jazz
musicians have also felt these shifts. More importantly, their careers
and musical interests have been deeply affected by them. The author, an
active participant in the jazz world as composer, performer, and author
of several books on jazz and Latin music, hopes that this book will
encourage jazz lovers to take a rhetoric-free look at the charged issue
of race as has affected the world of jazz.
A work about the
formulation of identity in the face of racial difference, the book
considers topics such as the promotion of black Southern culture and
inner-city styles like rhythm and blues and rap as a means of achieving
black racial solidarity. It discusses the body of music fostered by an
identification to Africa, the conversion of black jazz musicians to
Islam and other Eastern religions, and the impact of a jazz community
united by heroin use. White jazz musicians who identify with black
culture in an unsettling form by speaking black dialect and calling
themselves African-American is examined, as is the assimilation of jazz
into the wider American culture.
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