- Avant-garde jazz
Infobox Music genre
name=Avant-garde jazz
color = black
bgcolor = pink
stylistic_origins=Jazz Bebop Free jazz Modernism (music) 20th century classical music
cultural_origins=mid-1950sUnited States
instruments=drums -Saxophone -Trumpet -Trombone -Clarinet -Piano -Double bass
popularity=Low.Avant-garde jazz (also known as avant-jazz) is a style of music and
improvisation that combinesavant-garde art music and composition withjazz . Avant-jazz often sounds very similar tofree jazz , but differs in that, despite its distinct departure from traditional harmony, it has a predetermined structure over whichimprovisation may take place. This structure may be composed note for note in advance, partially or even completely.History
1950s
The origins of avant-garde jazz are in the innovations of the immediate acolytes of
Charlie Parker . Based inNew York City , now-canonical musicians such asCharles Mingus ,Miles Davis , andJohn Coltrane introduced modal improvisation and experimented withatonality and dissonance.Sun Ra ,Cecil Taylor , andOrnette Coleman became a new vanguard of controversial jazz innovators, outside the range of what many fans considered listenable.1960s
John Coltrane 's increasingly experimental work, and the Impulse! label became the flagbearers of the avant-garde jazz scene. Musicians associated with this high-volume variety of avant-garde jazz (sometimes referred to as "fire music") includedArchie Shepp ,Albert Ayler ,McCoy Tyner , Don Cherry,Pharaoh Sanders and Coltrane's wife Alice. Some of these musicians also began to take on an oppositional relationship to the mainstream music industry, preferring to release records themselves through independent labels such asESP-Disk . This wing of avant-garde jazz was taken as emblematic of theBlack Power movement, and also sometimes hadmystical intentions.Musicians who incorporated the innovations of free and avant-garde jazz, but remained within a more conventional framework, recorded for
Blue Note Records .Miles Davis 's second quintet (Wayne Shorter ,Herbie Hancock ,Ron Carter , andTony Williams ), as well as others such asEric Dolphy andAndrew Hill , are the best-remembered representatives of this style.Meanwhile, in Chicago, the
Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians began pursuing their own variety of avant-garde jazz, sometimes described as "postmodern" jazz. The AACM musicians (Muhal Richard Abrams ,Anthony Braxton ,Roscoe Mitchell , andthe Art Ensemble of Chicago ) tended towards eclecticism, and incorporated developments in20th century classical music (particularlyKarlheinz Stockhausen andJohn Cage ) as well asfunk andska , in addition toDixieland and other elements of jazz history.Rahsaan Roland Kirk also made use of pastiche.1970s
The 1970s saw the development of
jazz fusion . It is questionable whether this can be considered a form of avant-garde jazz, thoughMiles Davis 's recordings of this period, in particular, appear quite innovative and take inspiration fromserialism andaleatoric music , just as the AACM did. In any case, hardcore jazz fans tended to regard early jazz fusion as a commercial sell-out move. However, by the mid-'70s, many free jazz icons, such asAlbert Ayler ,Archie Shepp , andOrnette Coleman were experimenting with rock andfunk . Coleman would eventually develop thefree funk style, which would be further explored by theM-Base musicians in the 1980s.Jazz also became considerably more international in the 1970s, as saxophonists
Gato Barbieri (Argentine),Kaoru Abe (Japanese),Peter Brötzmann (German), and pianistSergey Kuryokhin (Russian), attest.European free jazz , in particular, began to develop.Evan Parker andDerek Bailey were pioneers of the new non-idiomatic style. Some veteran avant-garde jazz musicians (Charlie Haden ), and much of the new blood, including a number who had played withMiles Davis in the 1970s (Dave Holland ,Keith Jarrett ,Chick Corea ) and several Europeans (Jan Garbarek , among them), began to record for the ECM label. The ECM sound, invariably recorded byManfred Eicher , tended towards an elegant, refined, polished style that owed a great deal to the history ofclassical music . ECM also released recordings of minimalist andmedieval music , and work bythe Art Ensemble of Chicago (who were considerably messier than the ECM stereotype would indicate). A number of the AACM and ECM musicians would collaborate with one another, for example in the group Circle.Many of the AACM musicians moved to New York City, where they provided the nucleus of the
loft jazz scene. TheWorld Saxophone Quartet also emerged from this milieu.1980s
The 1980s saw the pre-eminence of
Wynton Marsalis and his classicist approach, and a resulting diminution of the visibility of the avant-garde. However, as avant-garde jazz was a prime influence onno wave , New York City became the center of a new crop of aggressive improvisors:John Zorn ,Borbetomagus ,the Lounge Lizards ,James Chance ,James Blood Ulmer ,Sonny Sharrock ,Diamanda Galás ,Bill Laswell (who also worked onHerbie Hancock 'sfunk and electro recordings) andBill Frisell (who had also recorded with the ECM musicians) among them. This development is referred to aspunk jazz .John Zorn , in particular, became an iconic figure in the "downtown" music scene, performing infree jazz ,free improvisation , and a variety of rock andextreme music styles. Many of these musicians actually resided in Brooklyn;Tim Berne is a prominent representative.1990s
The 1990s saw a return in visibility to the Chicago jazz scene, including players with links to the AACM. Most prominent are David Boykin, Aaron Getsug, Nicole Mitchell,
Karl E. H. Seigfried , andIsaiah Spencer - all of who came up throughFred Anderson 'sVelvet Lounge . Other players includeKen Vandermark ,Jeff Parker , andKevin Drumm ; these musicians had connections to thepost-rock ornoise rock scenes.Likewise, there was an increase in vitality in the remnants of the
loft jazz scene in New York, centered aroundDavid S. Ware .Matthew Shipp ,Susie Ibarra , andWilliam Parker practised a more traditional variety of avant-garde jazz than the punk jazz-inflected downtown musicians, though some collaboration did occur between the two camps.Matthew Shipp eventually collaborated withillbient andalternative hip hop musicians (DJ Spooky ,Anti-Pop Consortium ,El-P ), and moved towards a distinctive brand ofnu jazz comparable to that ofCraig Taborn .Notable avant-jazz musicians
*
Muhal Richard Abrams
*George Adams
*Fred Anderson
*Art Ensemble of Chicago
*Albert Ayler
*Derek Bailey
*Django Bates
*Han Bennink
*Ed Blackwell
*Anthony Braxton
*Circle (Altschul, Braxton, Corea, Holland)
*Ornette Coleman
*Don Cherry
*John Coltrane (later period)
*Ernest Dawkins
*Eric Dolphy
*Hamid Drake
*Mike Garson
*Globe Unity Orchestra
*Charlie Haden
*Joe Harriott
*Roy Haynes
*Dave Holland
*Andrew Hill
*Theo Jörgensmann
*Jeanne Lee
*Joe McPhee
*Medeski, Martin, & Wood
*Misha Mengelberg
*Charles Mingus
*Roscoe Mitchell
*Evan Parker
*Don Pullen
*Sam Rivers
*Pharoah Sanders
*Karl E. H. Seigfried
*Archie Shepp
*Sun Ra
*Cecil Taylor
*Arto Tunçboyacıyan (folk-jazz)
*Alexander von Schlippenbach
*John Zorn
*The Bad Plus ee also
*
Free jazz
*European free jazz
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