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Be-Bop Masters (2005)

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Be-Bop Masters (2005)

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1 	–Kenny Clarke -	52nd Street Theme 	
2 	–Dizzy Gillespie -	Bebop 	
3 	–Dizzy Gillespie  Charlie Parker - Hot House 	
4 	–Billy Eckstine -	Blowin' The Blues Away 	
5 	–Dexter Gordon  Wardell Gray - The Chase 	
6 	–Jay McShann -	Swingmatism 	
7 	–Thelonious Monk -	Round Midnight 	
8 	–Bud Powell -	Dance Of The Infidels 	
9 	–Lennie Tristano -	Interlude 	
10 	–Howard McGhee -	Down Home 	
11 	–Fats Navarro -	Nostalgia 	
12 	–Serge Chaloff - Blue Serge 	
13 	–Al Haig -	Pennies From Heaven 	
14 	–Woody Herman -	Apple Honey 	
15 	–Metronome All Stars -	Victory Ball 	
16 	–Charlie Parker  Dizzy Gillespie - A Night In Tunisia

 

World War II brought an end to the heyday of swing. Big bands began to shrivel, as musicians were sent overseas to fight. For this reason, the 1940s saw a surge in smaller ensembles, such as quartets and quintets. Groups often consisted of one or two horns, usually saxophone and/or trumpet, bass, drums, and piano. Smaller groups meant that the focus shifted from intricate arrangements to improvisation and group interaction.

Adventurous Improvisation

Swing arrangements mainly consisted of composed sections, but with certain sections designated for improvisation. A bebop tune, however,, would simply consist of a statement of the head, or main theme, extended solos over the head’s harmonic structure, and then one final statement of the head. It was common for bebop musicians to compose new, complex melodies over well-known chord progressions. One example of this is Charlie Parker’s “Ornithology,” which is based on the changes from “How High the Moon,” a popular show tune in the 1940s.

Beyond Swing

With the focus on improvisation, bebop allowed for an explosion of innovation. Inspired by the more harmonically and rhythmically experimental players in swing era, such as Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Art Tatum, and Roy Eldridge, bebop musicians expanded the palette of musical devices from which to choose while improvising. Many aspects of swing were imported, including the triplet-based swing feel and a proclivity for the blues.

Typically however, bebop musicians played tunes at much faster tempos. Soloists did not concern themselves as much with lyricism, but more with rhythmic unpredictability and harmonic complexity. It wasn’t just the soloists who were important, however. The advent of bebop marked an expansion of the roles of the rhythm section players, who were no longer simply time-keepers, but who interacted with the soloist with their own embellishments.

Nonsense Syllables

The term “bebop” is an onomatopoeic reference to the accented melodic lines of the music. Sometimes shortened to “bop,” the name was most likely given to the style music retroactively, as the musicians themselves often referred to their style simply as “modern jazz.” ---Michael Verity, jazz.about.com

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