Error creating thumbnail: File missing
⚠ SITE UNDERGOING SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE ⚠
We are currently in the process of updating to the latest version of MediaWiki, alongside numerous other improvements.
Editing will be disabled starting on April 19, 2024 at 12:00 ET.
Complete all edits and save all work before this time or progress may be lost.
Editing is scheduled to be re-enabled before the end of April.

Jazz

From Weezerpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
This is a joke page, but the content presented is no joking matter. List of joke pages.

Jazz is a musical genre and subculture that is an important part of the American Black musical tradition.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Bill Evans and Miles Davis at the piano during a Jazz session. Note Evans' "geeky glasses"; similar in style to those worn by Rivers.

Culture, music

The culture of Jazz, which rose to prominence in New Orleans during the early twentieth century, is based upon syncopation, swing, musical interplay, and improvisation, with roots in Blues and Ragtime music. The initial Jazz groups had many horn players who harmonized melodies together creating a characteristic "fat" sound. Songs from this era usually have intricate progressions which frequently use extended chords. These groups were called "big bands", and this early history of Jazz is often called the big band era. This Music became faster and more complex over time, and by the 1940s, artists like Charlie Parker had expanded beyond traditional big bands into a new BeBop style. This music had even more complex chord changes and modulations. It was during this era that the head-solos-head format, in which the band plays the main melody, then each member takes a solo over the same chords, and then the band plays the main melody or "head" again, became popular. The 1959 release of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue signaled a further advancement in jazz where the groups were smaller and the arrangements stayed on individual chords for longer, allowing improvisers to have more time to explore the nature of one particular chord. These smaller jazz groups were often called "combos", and with electric guitar, double bass, and drum set, the instrumentation roughly resembled modern rock bands such as Weezer.

Jazz and Weezer

Frank Cuomo played percussion on a Wayne Shorter album: Odyssey of Iska. Frank was also involved with Weather Report a notable Jazz Fusion band that is considered to have kickstarted the Jazz Fusion movement but did not necessarily publicly associate with it.[1]

During Several late 90's interviews, Weezer associates Karl Koch and Pat Wilson admitted openly that they were listening to Jazz, including recordings of legendary pianist Bill Evans.

The Haden Triplets, who have participated in Weezer recordings, are daughters of jazz musician Charlie Haden.

Weezer's response to Jazz

In "Heart Songs", Weezer bandleader Rivers Cuomo regrettably stated that he does not care to take too much time to appreciate one of America's finest genres of music: {{Rivers Cuomo quote|"I never listened to too much Jazz"|"Heart Songs"[2]

Weezer's SZNZ Summer EP features a song called "Blue Like Jazz".

See also