AASP 298Z
JAZZ AS A CULTURAL ART FORM
(African American Classical Music)

Spring Semester, 2008
Dr. Ronald
Zeigler, Instructor and Saxophonist, nyumbz@umd.edu, Telephone: (301) 314-7760
Course Meeting Day: AASP 298Z, (Section: 0101), Monday Time:
2:00 P.M. to 4.30 P.M.
(OFFICE HOURS: Monday - 1:00-1:30 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.-6:00 p.m. or by Appointment) Room 1120H Nyumburu Building
Location: Nyumburu Cultural Center Multi Purpose Room or
Conference Room, Rm.0120
In
Memorial to: J. Otis Williams, Stanley Turentine, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Artie
Shaw, Alice Coltrane, Michael Brecker, James Brown, Oscar Peterson, Frank Morgan, and Grover Washington Jr.
Course
Objectives
- To examine the creators, creation and
evolution of the music known as Jazz from the standpoint of:
- Historical, social,
political and economic conditions in the U.S. (past and present).
- National policy as
it impacts upon the economics of popular American music, European
classical music and the music known as Jazz and the artists who play it.
- The behavior and
history of the great innovators in the music known as Jazz as impacted by
national and local public policy, ethnocentrism and racism.
- The artistic creations
and contributions of some of the great innovators.
- The Future of Jazz
Music in the 21st Century.
- Styles of Jazz Music
and Sociocultural influences (e.g., Ragtime, "Swing", "Dixieland",
"Free Jazz", "Modern", Fusion, "Latin
Jazz", etc.).
2. To enjoy the music and know its place
in our culture.
3. To learn the fundamental elements of
music and related jazz styles.
Required
Textbook & Concert Attendance
Title:
Vision of Jazz - The First Century Author:
Gary Giddins
Title:
Dancing in your Head Author: Gene Santoro
Title:
The Jazz Scene Author: W. Royal Stokes
Required
Concerts: All students are REQUIRED to attend two concerts and to
write a reaction paper (On and off-campus concerts, fee and non-fee).
Concerts: [For Additional
CSPAC Information, telephone (301) 405-ARTS]
Jazz Big Band
Concert Pt. 1(UM Jazz Band and Lab Band)
Date: To Be Announced
Time:
Location: Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, Kay Theatre
Jazz Big Band Concert Pt. 2 (UM Jazz Ensemble
and Alumni Band)
Date: To Be Announced
Time:
Location: Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, Kay Theatre
Jazz Combo Concert
Date: To Be Announced
Time: To Be Announced
Location: Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, Gildenhorn Recital Hall
Jazz Combo Concert
Date: To Be Announced
Time: To Be Announced
Location: Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, Gildenhorn Recital Hall
Jazz Big Band Festival
Date: To Be Announced
Time: To Be Announced
Location: University of the District of Columbia (Paid Admission)
Jazz Big Band Concert
Date: To Be Announced
Time: To Be Announced
Location: Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center, Patio/Kay Theatre
Recommended
Textbooks, Video and Audio Recordings, and Web Sites
- Celebrating Bird - The Triumph of
Charlie Parker, by Gary Giddins. Recommended. (Call no. ML419.P4 C43 1999)
- Blues People -The Negro
Experience in White America and the Music that Developed from it by Leroi
Jones. Recommended (Call no. ML3556 .B16 1999)
- Thinking in Jazz, Paul Berliner (
1994) -- Advanced but important study (Call no. ML3506 .B475 1994).
- Selected video and audio presentations
(To Be Announced) Web Site Reference Below:
(
http://www.claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/index.cfm?content=performances/calendar)
- Live musical Presentations, Guest
Performing Artists and Lecturers.
- Jazz, PBS Video database of America's
History and Culture (Ken Burns).
Course Offerings
Required readings
are to be completed on day of class.
- In The Beginning Was The Blues: a) Orientation, b)
What is Jazz, where did it come from? some terms to listen and learn by.
- Anybody Here Been Saved: Background and
context addresses its creators and the conditions under which was formed.
The role of spirituals and gospel music in the liberation of African
Americans as a precursor to blues and jazz.
- Goin' Down Behind The Sun: Municipal
Code III. New Orleans and its role in the development of Jazz. The politics,
customs and the people. Migration and spread of Jazz. Major players on the
Jazz scene. (Joplin, Morton, Armstrong, Bolden, etc.).
- It Don't Mean A Thing: The Jazz eras,
select giants-history shapers-profiles of Black giants.
- Kansas City, Here I Come: The Kansas City
Movement. Emergence of the Parker Movement. The tragedy of Charlie Parker.
- The Eagle Flies On Friday: The Economics of
Black Music. Exile of the Jazz Musician. The Return of the King of the
Tenor Horn (Poetry of Jazz).
- Straight, No Chaser: The Bebop Era, Bird
and Dizzy-the great years.
- Put A Little Hot Dog In My Roll: Women in Jazz.
Classic Blues Singers. The Black Pearls-Ma, Bessie, Ella, etc., plus the
new women of Jazz.
- Black Giants: Some great
instrumentalists who helped forge the direction of Jazz. Some young giants
on the scene.
- The Influence of Jazz Music on other
genres: (i.e., Rap, Hip-hop, etc.)
Course
Outline
January 28,
2008 (Readings: Gary Giddins, Chapter 1. "Precuros"), Multi Purpose
Room
- Introduction and Course Overview
- What is Jazz?
- Where did the word Jazz come from?
- Exploring the origins and history of
Jazz
- Early Jazz History
February 4 (Readings: Gary Giddins, Chapter 1
& 2, "Precuros", "A New Music" ), Multi Purpose Room
- Definitions of Jazz, Ken Burns-Jazz
Gumbo (Episode 1)
- Analyzing the Jazz Idiom -History of
African-American Music
- What is Jazz? (continued) ---Class
Reactions
- Where did the word Jazz Come From?
(continued)
- Exploring the origins and History of
Jazz (continued)
- What is “Swing”?
February 11
(Readings: Gary Giddins Part One & Two, “Precurors”, “A New Music” ),
Multi Purpose Room
- Analyzing Jazz (continued), Rhythm &
Blues
- New Orleans and Beyond
- Guest Artist and
Lecturer: Dr. E Ron Horton and UM Jazz Ensemble
February 18 (
Readings: Gary Giddins, Part 2, “A New Music”), Multi Purpose Room
- Lewis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton,
Chick Webb, Fats Waller
- Class Exercises & Performance,
Students Invited to bring your “ax” (instrument)
- Demonstration of “Jazz rhythms, chords”,
“Walking Bass Lines”, “Call and Response”, etc.
- Guest Artist: Dr. Sais Kamalidiin & Howard University Music
Department Students
February 25
(Readings: Gary Giddins, Part 3: “A Popular Music”; Gene Santoro, Chapter 3,
Chapter 5)
- Where did the Music Come From?
- Responses to Early Jazz, 1919 – 1934
- Swing Era, Benny Goodman, Ella
Fitzgerald, Chick Webb
- Guest
Artist: Dr. Bill Clark Jazz
Ensemble
March 3,
(Readings: Gary Giddins, Part 4; W. Royal Stokes, Chapters 1 - 2 )
- Responses to Early Jazz, 1919 – 1934 (continued)
- Historical and Musical Figures in the
Swing Era
- African Americans and the Swing Era
- Duke Ellington, Sarah Vaughan, Charlie
Parker, Dizzy Gillespie
- Mid-Term Review
March 10
Mid-Term Examination—In Class (Multi Purpose Room)
March 17 Spring
Recess (NO CLASS)
March 24
(Readings, Gary Giddins Part 5, W. Royal Stokes, Chapter 3)
- Guest Artist(s): To Be Announced
- Jazz around the World
- Jazz and its cultural
influences on other musical genres
- Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Mingus,
Thelonious Monk,
Fats Navarro, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell, Max Roach, Sonny Rollins
- Reactions to Bebop & Post Bop
March 31 (Gary Giddins, Part 5; Gene Santoro 42 – 46, pp.211 – 228)
- Guest Performance: Dr. Bill Clark Jazz Ensemble
- Social
conditions of bands and the societal environment
- Race
Politics and Jazz in the 1950s and 1960s
- Social
conditions of bands and the societal environment (Drugs, Housing, etc.)
- Vibes and Venues:
Interacting with audiences in different settings
April 7
(Readings: Gary Giddins, Part Six & Seven, “An Alternative Music and A
Struggling Music” )
In
Class: Quiz # 1
- Approaching the ‘Jazz Standards’ in
Music
- Avant-garde and Fusion: Two Opposites?
1960 to the Present
- Guest Lecturer: Mr. Jon Ozment, Jazz Pianist & Performer
April
14 (Readings: Gary Giddins, Part Six & Seven,
“An Alternative Music and A
Struggling Music”, W. Royal Stokes, Chapter 6 & 7)
- Traditionalism, Revivalism and the
“Young Lions,” 1980 to the Present
- Approaching the Standards-- ‘Jazz Gems’
and ‘Jazz Favorites’
- Guest Lecturer: Mr. Leroy Barton
Jr., Associate Professor of Music
April 21 In Class, QUIZ #
2, (Readings: W. Royal Stokes, Chapter 9;
Gene Santoro, vignettes 57 - 62 , pp 273 - 286 )
- Crossing Boundaries, 1980 to the Present
- Approaching the Standards-- 'Jazz Gems'
and 'Jazz Favorites'
- Guest
Lecture: Mr. Byron Morris, Jazz
Musician, Archivist &
Lecturer
April 28
- Crossing Boundaries, 1980 to the Present
(Continued)
- Approaching the Standards-- 'Jazz Gems'
and 'Jazz Favorites'
May 5 (Readings: Gary Giddins, Part Eight, “A
Traditional Music”)
- The Future of Jazz and how it will
evolve in the 21st Century
- Selected Musical Recordings
- James Carter, Joe Lovano, Cassandra
Wilson, Randy Weston,
Randy Weston, Joshua Redman, Don Byron, & More
- FINAL EXAM REVIEW & Course
Evaluations
May 12 Final Exam- In-Class, Multi Purpose Room (Short answer &
Essay)
Research Paper
Due @2:00 p.m.
|
Grades will be computed as follows:
- Concert Attendance
Reaction
Papers - No Later Than May 12, 2008
|
15%
|
|
Concert
Guidelines Assignments: You are required to attend two concerts and also write a two-page response paper for each
concert. Response papers are due no later than May 12, 2008. Papers should be typed when submitted. In writing
the papers, include the following:
- Date and Time of
the Jazz Concert.
- Location and proof
of attendance, if possible
- Who were the
musicians.
- What musical
selections were played and any comments that you can obtain from the
musicians regarding their backgrounds (e.g., how long they have been
playing, musical training, career plans, CD Projects, etc.)
- Critique of the
music that was played at the Jazz Concert. Was the jazz music “good “ in
your opinion? What did you like most or least about the Jazz concert.
- Do you see the
future of Jazz changing in the 21st Century having seen a live concert.
- OTHER (These items
are only guidelines and are not exhaustive).
- Check Web Sites,
& local papers for information on FREE Concerts. Washington Post
(Fridays) weekend session has weekly performances. City Paper,
which is in the Stamp Student Union, also has listings of clubs,
concerts, and other venues.
|
- Research Paper
(5-10 pages)
(Due: May 12th) OR
Creative Projects/ Performance(s)
Class Musical Performance(s)-See instructor for Guidelines and approval
(INSTRUCTOR'S APPROVAL REQUIRED!)
|
25%
|
- Class attendance,
punctuality & participation
|
5%
|
- Mid-Term Exam (Mid-Term
- In-class)
Quiz #1
Quiz #2
|
15%
|
|
10%
|
|
- Final Exam,
In-class (May 12)
|
30%
|
Multi-Purpose
Room (0130) Dates: See Individual Monday Dates.
Conference
Room (0120) Dates: To be Announced (Schedule Room Changes As Necessary).
* If there are special educational
needs or testing requirements, please speak with
me individually to
make testing or other arrangements.
NOTE: INSTRUCTOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE ANY CHANGES IN THE TOPICS OR
SCHEDULING OF TOPICS AND PERFORMANCES AS CIRCUMSTANCES MAY DICTATE.
(First Edition: 1/28/08)