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Blues
and ragtime, along with a rich local brass band tradition and many other
influences, came together in the late teens to early 1920s in New Orleans,
Louisiana to create a new type of music called Dixieland jazz. Dixieland
is also known as traditional jazz or New Orleans jazz. As jazz gained
in popularity, it spread north from New Orleans to Chicago, New York,
Kansas City, and across the Midwest to California.
The name "Dixieland" was most likely derived from the Original Dixieland
Jazz Band, a New Orleans group who made the first publicly available recording
of this style of music in 1917. The recording was very popular and the
band gained international prominence as a result.
Common instruments in a Dixieland jazz-style group included trumpet-cornet,
clarinet, trombone, and occasionally the saxophone. The rhythm section
could include the banjo, piano, drums, string bass, or tuba. Dixieland
was usually performed without a vocalist. The music was characterized
by a steady, often upbeat, tempo, 4/4 meter, and rhythms performed in
an exaggerated triplet swing style. Frequently the tuba or string bass
plays on the first and third beats of each measure, with the banjo or
piano playing chords on beats two and four. This is known as "two-beat"
style, and gives the music a sound similar to ragtime. The other instruments
of the ensemble play melodies and countermelodies simultaneously and take
turns playing solos. Musicians often play familiar melodies from memory
adding their own bluesy inflections throughout the song.
Dixieland jazz
greats included trumpeter Louis
Armstrong, pianist Jelly
Roll Morton, trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke, trombonist Edward "Kid" Ory,
clarinetist Sidney Bechet, and bandleader and trumpeter King Oliver.
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