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Bebop or
bop is a form of
jazz characterized by fast
tempos and improvisation based on harmonic structure rather than
melody. It was developed in the early and mid-
1940s. It first surfaced in musicians' argot some time during the first two years of the
Second World War.
Hard bop later developed from bebop combined with
blues and gospel music.
History
The
1939 recording of "Body and Soul (Coleman Hawkins album)" by Coleman Hawkins is an important antecedant of bebop. Hawkins' willingness to stray - even briefly - from the ordinary resolution of musical themes and his playful jumps to double-time signaled a departure from existing jazz. The recording was popular, but more important from an historical perspective, Hawkins became an inspiration to a younger generation of jazz musicians, most notably Charlie Parker, who was already experimenting with chromatic scales and rapid blasts of notes in
Kansas City, Missouri, a stopover for traveling jazz bands during the
Great Depression era.
In the 1940s, this emergent generation forged their own style out of the swing music of the 1930s. Mavericks like
Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker,
Bud Powell, and
Thelonious Monk, were influenced by the preceding generation's adventurous soloists, such as pianists
Art Tatum and Earl Hines, tenor saxophonists Hawkins and
Lester Young, and trumpeter
Roy Eldridge. Gillespie and Parker had traveled with some of the pre-bop masters, including Jack Teagarden, Hines, and Jay McShann. These forerunners of bebop began exploring advanced harmonies, complex syncopation, altered chords, and chord substitutions, and the bop generation advanced these techniques with a more freewheeling and often arcane approach.
Minton's Playhouse in
New York served as a workout room and experimental theater of sorts for early bebop players, including the Benny Goodman Orchestra's guitarist,
Charlie Christian, who'd already hinted at the bop style in innovative solos with Goodman's band, as well as bassists
Jimmy Blanton and Oscar Pettiford, and the pianist Monk. Monk's personality epitomized the "hip" counter-cultural element of bop style. His
comping (accompaniment) and solos seemed almost intentionally awkward, beautifully discordant meanderings, and his original compositions comprise one of the first bodies of work written for bebop, making him one of the form's most highly regarded contributors.
Freed from the demands of the big band arrangement, bebop quartets, quintets and sextets allowed close communication which facilitated free flowing improvisation by all the musicians, a new direction for jazz. It was not essentially for dancing, but for listening. The steady swing held tight by a bassist, drummers began to improvise more with their left hands on snare and right foot on bass. Max Roach, Philly Joe Jones,
Roy Haynes and
Kenny Clarke began to support and respond to soloists, almost like a shifting call and response, using rhythmic accent ("dropping bombs") to create another layer of music. This style of drumming has its roots in the second-line drumming of early 20th and late 19th century marching bands. Bebop lost listeners with tempos too hot for dancers and melodies that sounded incoherent to the untrained ear.
Musical style
Bebop differed drastically from the straightforward compositions of the swing era, and was instead characterized by fast tempos, complex
harmonies, intricate melodies, and rhythm sections that expanded on their role as tempo-keepers. The music itself seemed jarringly different to the ears of the public, who were used to the bouncy, organized, danceable tunes of Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller during the swing era. Instead, bebop appeared to sound racing, nervous, and often fragmented. But to jazz musicians and lovers in the public, bebop was an exciting and beautiful revolution in the art of jazz. From an historical standpoint bebop is a kind of synthesis of flux and permanence. As a permanent legacy, it stresses certain elements that have made jazz perhaps the most stable tradition in the history of modern western music. Yet in contrast to this permanence, it is primarily bebop that makes possible a lot of the inner diversity and freedom of jazz.
While swing music tended to feature orchestrated big band arrangements, bebop music was much more free in its structure. Typically, a theme (a "head", often the main melody of a pop or jazz standard of the swing era) would be presented in unison at the beginning and the end of each piece, with improvisational solos based on the major chords making up the body of the work. Thus, the majority of a song in bebop style would be free improvisation, the only threads holding the work together being the underlying harmonies played by the rhythm section. Sometimes improvisation included references to the original melody or to other well-known melodic lines ("allusions", or "riffs"). Sometimes they were entirely original, spontaneous melodies from start to finish.
Bebop music extended the jazz vocabulary by exploring new harmonic territory through the use of altered chords and chord substitutions (using a different chord than originally composed, such as a diminished or flattened fifth, the "blue note"). While this produced a more colorful and rich harmonic sound than past jazz styles, it also required a highly trained musician to execute well. Melodies grew in complexity from those of
swing jazz, and began to twist, turn, and jump rapidly to follow quickly-changing
chord progressions.
As bebop grew from its swing-era roots, these progressions often were taken directly from popular swing-era songs and reused with a new and more complex bebop melody, forming new compositions known as a
contrafacts. While contrafaction was already a well-established practice in earlier jazz, it came to be central to the bebop style. Musicians and audiences alike were able to find something familiar in this new exotic sound, but perhaps more importantly, small record labels such as Savoy Records, often avoided paying copyright fees for pop tunes.
Specific harmonic vocabulary
Melodically the predominating contour of improvised bebop is that it tends to ascend in arpeggios and descend in scale steps. While a stereotype, an examination of Charlie Parker solos will show that this in fact is a key quality of the music.
Ascending arpeggios are frequently of diminished seventh chords, which function as 7b9 chords of various types. Typical scales used in bebop include the bebop major, minor and dominant (see below), the harmonic minor and the chromatic.
The half-whole diminished scale is also occasionally used, and in the music of Thelonious Monk especially, the whole tone scale.
Of the
modes of the ascending
melodic minor, such as the altered scale and lydian dominant beloved of many modern jazz educators, there is little or no sign - it is widely thought that
John Coltrane was among the first to use them, but as with many things in Jazz history, it's hard to be certain.
Bebop frequently elaborates arpeggios with extra chromatic and scalar passing notes, some of which seem perverse. The flattened seventh is frequently added to major seventh arpeggios, the major to dominant chords and minor chords. Phrases frequently terminate on the 9th of the chord - traditionally dissonant tone.
Bebop was also heavily characterized by melodic use of the
flatted fifth. This is related to the harmonic technique of tritone substitution, popularised during the pre-war era by the pianist
Art Tatum. Here, the familiar series of perfect cadences is replaced by chromatic motion of the root. Thus, the standard "IIm7 - V7 - I" sequence, a building block of the 20th century popular song, is reconstructed as "IIm7 - bII7 - I". A bebop pianist, confronted with a chord marked as G7 (G dominant seventh) resolving to C, would often replace it with Db7 (Db dominant seventh). The tritone substitution could also be used within a standard dominant (V7) chord: for example, the G7 chord above could be a Db7 chord with G as the bass (another example of a flatted fifth). The original chord and the substituted chord share two important tones, the third and the seventh (in this case B and F).
Later codifications of bebop harmony emerged, notably in the teachings of pianist/educator
Barry Harris, who encouraged players to learn "bebop scales" for improvising such as the Bebop Dominant 7th Scale (1 2 3 4 5 6 b7 7) and the Bebop Major Scale (1 2 3 4 5 #5 6 7) (although Barry himself refers to them by a different name.) A feature of these scales is that when they are played in 8th notes, up or down, players automatically play a tone featured in the corresponding chord on every 4/4 beat. These scales are often disguised by playing them through segments of an octave, changing direction on chord tones, or enclosing chord tones with a chromatic tone above and below the chord tone. Both of these techniques allow the improviser to embellish the bebop scale without sacrificing the effect of chord tones on every 4/4 beat.
Another important technique is anticipation - where a chord is expressed before it appears, and expansion, where the improviser holds on to it into the next chord. Again Parker's recorded solos have many examples of this technique, which creates dissonance.
Many bebop progressions and solos make heavy use of
tonicization, but this is typical of harmonic jazz in general.
Overall, bebop seems to have taken many of the raw materials of swing and freed them up or liberated them - harmony and rhythm became more freely treated, and improvisers embraced this new freedom with relish.
Instrumentation
The classic bebop combo consisted of saxophone, trumpet, bass, drums, and piano. This was a format used (and popularized) by both
Charlie Parker (saxophone) and Dizzy Gillespie (
trumpet) in their 1940s groups and recordings, sometimes augmented by an extra saxophonist or guitar, occasionally adding other horns (often a trombone), or other strings (usually fiddle or violin) or dropping an instrument and leaving only a quartet.
Although only one part of a rich jazz tradition, bebop music continues to be played regularly throughout the world. Trends in improvisation since its era have changed from its harmonically-tethered style, but the capacity to improvise over a complex sequence of altered chords is a fundamental part of any jazz education. Bebop requires a mathematical and problem-solving mental agility, leading mastery of this language to be something of a requisite
rite of passage for serious musicians.
Etymology of word
The word "bebop" is usually stated to be nonsense syllables which were generated in scat singing, and is supposed to have been first attested in 1928http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=bebop. One speculation is that it was a term used by Charlie Christian, because it sounded like something he hummed along with his playingJim Dawson and Steve Propes,
What Was The First Rock'n'Roll Record?, 1992, ISBN 0-571-12939-0. However, possibly the most plausible theory is that it derives from the cry of "Arriba ! Arriba !" used by Latin American bandleaders of the period to encourage their bandsPeter Gammond,
The Oxford Companion to Popular Music, 1991, ISBN 0-19-311323-6
. This squares with the fact that, originally, the terms "bebop" and "rebop" were used interchangeably. By 1945, the use of "bebop"/"rebop" as nonsense syllables was widespread in R&B music, for instance Lionel Hampton's "Hey Ba-Ba-Re-Bop", and a few years later in rock and roll, for instance Gene Vincent's "Be-Bop-A-Lula" (1956).
Bebop's influence
By the mid-1950s musicians (
Miles Davis and
John Coltrane among others) began to explore directions beyond the standard bebop vocabulary. Simultaneously, other players expanded on the bold steps of bebop: "cool jazz" or "west coast jazz", modal jazz, as well as
free jazz and avant-garde forms of development from the likes of
George Russell.
Bebop style also influenced the
beatniks whose spoken-word style drew on jazz rhythms, and who often employed jazz musicians to accompany them, as well as
rock and roll, which contains solos employing a similar form as bop solos, and hippies, who, like the boppers had a unique, non-conformist style of dress, a vocabulary incoherent to outsiders, a communion through music, and an idea of being "hip" or "cool". Fans of bebop were not restricted to the USA; the music gained cult status in France and Japan.
More recently,
Hip-hop artists (A Tribe Called Quest,
Guru) have cited bebop as an influence on their rapping and rhythmic style. Bassist Ron Carter even collaborated with A Tribe Called Quest on 1991's
The Low End Theory, and vibraphonist Roy Ayers and trumpeter Donald Byrd were featured on Jazzmattazz, by Guru, in the same year. Bebop samples, especially bass lines, ride cymbal swing clips, and horn and piano riffs are found throughout the hip-hop compendium.
References
- Berendt, Joachim E. The Jazz Book: From Ragtime to Fusion and Beyond. Trans. Bredigkeit, H. and B. with Dan Morgenstern. Westport, CT: Lawrence Hill & Co., 1975.
- Deveaux, Scott.. The Birth of Bebop: A Social and Musical History. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.
- Gidden, Gary. Celebrating Bird: The Triumph of Charlie Parker. New York City: Morrow, 1987.
- Gioia, Ted. The History of Jazz. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
- Baillie, Harold B. Swing to Bop: An Oral History of the Transition of Jazz in the 1940s. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987.
- Rosenthal, David. Hard bop: Jazz and Black Music, 1955-1965. New York : Oxford University Press, 1992.
- Verve History of Jazz page on Bebop
Samples
Videos
- Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie
- A comprehensive explanation of Bebop
Bebop musicians
Main article: List of Bebop musiciansNotable musicians identified with bebop:
- Julian Cannonball Adderley, alto sax
- Clifford Brown, trumpet
- Ray Brown (musician), bass
- Don Byas, tenor sax
- Charlie Christian, guitar
- Kenny Clarke, drums
- John Coltrane, tenor sax
- Tadd Dameron, piano
- Miles Davis, trumpet
- Kenny Dorham, trumpet
- Carl Fontana, trombone
- Curtis Fuller, trombone
- Dizzy Gillespie, trumpet
- Dexter Gordon, tenor sax
- Wardell Gray, saxophone
- Al Haig, piano
- Sadik Hakim, piano
- Barry Harris, piano
- Percy Heath, bass
- Milt Jackson, vibes
- J. J. Johnson, trombone
- Duke Jordan, piano
- Stan Levey, drums
- Lou Levy (pianist), piano
- John Lewis (pianist), piano
- Dodo Marmarosa, piano
- Charles Mingus, bass
- Thelonious Monk, piano
- Wes Montgomery, guitar
- Fats Navarro, trumpet
- Charlie Parker, alto sax
- Chet Baker, trumpet
- Oscar Pettiford, bass
- Tommy Potter, bass
- Bud Powell, piano
- Max Roach, drums
- Red Rodney, trumpet
- Sonny Rollins, tenor sax
- Frank Rosolino, trombone
- Sonny Stitt, tenor and alto sax
- Lucky Thompson, tenor sax
- George Wallington, piano
Bebop or
bop is a form of
jazz characterized by fast tempos and improvisation based on harmonic structure rather than melody. It was developed in the early and mid-1940s. It first surfaced in musicians' argot some time during the first two years of the Second World War. Hard bop later developed from bebop combined with
blues and
gospel music.
History
The 1939 recording of "Body and Soul (Coleman Hawkins album)" by Coleman Hawkins is an important antecedant of bebop. Hawkins' willingness to stray - even briefly - from the ordinary resolution of musical themes and his playful jumps to double-time signaled a departure from existing jazz. The recording was popular, but more important from an historical perspective, Hawkins became an inspiration to a younger generation of jazz musicians, most notably Charlie Parker, who was already experimenting with chromatic scales and rapid blasts of notes in
Kansas City, Missouri, a stopover for traveling jazz bands during the Great Depression era.
In the 1940s, this emergent generation forged their own style out of the swing music of the 1930s. Mavericks like
Dizzy Gillespie,
Charlie Parker,
Bud Powell, and
Thelonious Monk, were influenced by the preceding generation's adventurous soloists, such as pianists
Art Tatum and
Earl Hines, tenor saxophonists Hawkins and
Lester Young, and trumpeter
Roy Eldridge. Gillespie and Parker had traveled with some of the pre-bop masters, including
Jack Teagarden, Hines, and Jay McShann. These forerunners of bebop began exploring advanced harmonies, complex syncopation, altered chords, and chord substitutions, and the bop generation advanced these techniques with a more freewheeling and often arcane approach.
Minton's Playhouse in New York served as a workout room and experimental theater of sorts for early bebop players, including the Benny Goodman Orchestra's guitarist,
Charlie Christian, who'd already hinted at the bop style in innovative solos with Goodman's band, as well as bassists
Jimmy Blanton and Oscar Pettiford, and the pianist Monk. Monk's personality epitomized the "hip" counter-cultural element of bop style. His
comping (accompaniment) and solos seemed almost intentionally awkward, beautifully discordant meanderings, and his original compositions comprise one of the first bodies of work written for bebop, making him one of the form's most highly regarded contributors.
Freed from the demands of the big band arrangement, bebop quartets, quintets and sextets allowed close communication which facilitated free flowing improvisation by all the musicians, a new direction for jazz. It was not essentially for dancing, but for listening. The steady swing held tight by a bassist, drummers began to improvise more with their left hands on snare and right foot on bass. Max Roach, Philly Joe Jones, Roy Haynes and Kenny Clarke began to support and respond to soloists, almost like a shifting call and response, using rhythmic accent ("dropping bombs") to create another layer of music. This style of drumming has its roots in the second-line drumming of early 20th and late 19th century marching bands. Bebop lost listeners with tempos too hot for dancers and melodies that sounded incoherent to the untrained ear.
Musical style
Bebop differed drastically from the straightforward compositions of the swing era, and was instead characterized by fast tempos, complex harmonies, intricate melodies, and rhythm sections that expanded on their role as tempo-keepers. The music itself seemed jarringly different to the ears of the public, who were used to the bouncy, organized, danceable tunes of
Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller during the swing era. Instead, bebop appeared to sound racing, nervous, and often fragmented. But to jazz musicians and lovers in the public, bebop was an exciting and beautiful revolution in the art of jazz. From an historical standpoint bebop is a kind of synthesis of flux and permanence. As a permanent legacy, it stresses certain elements that have made jazz perhaps the most stable tradition in the history of modern western music. Yet in contrast to this permanence, it is primarily bebop that makes possible a lot of the inner diversity and freedom of jazz.
While swing music tended to feature orchestrated big band arrangements, bebop music was much more free in its structure. Typically, a theme (a "head", often the main melody of a pop or jazz standard of the swing era) would be presented in unison at the beginning and the end of each piece, with improvisational solos based on the major chords making up the body of the work. Thus, the majority of a song in bebop style would be free improvisation, the only threads holding the work together being the underlying harmonies played by the rhythm section. Sometimes improvisation included references to the original melody or to other well-known melodic lines ("allusions", or "riffs"). Sometimes they were entirely original, spontaneous melodies from start to finish.
Bebop music extended the jazz vocabulary by exploring new harmonic territory through the use of altered chords and chord substitutions (using a different chord than originally composed, such as a diminished or flattened fifth, the "blue note"). While this produced a more colorful and rich harmonic sound than past jazz styles, it also required a highly trained musician to execute well. Melodies grew in complexity from those of swing jazz, and began to twist, turn, and jump rapidly to follow quickly-changing
chord progressions.
As bebop grew from its swing-era roots, these progressions often were taken directly from popular swing-era songs and reused with a new and more complex bebop melody, forming new compositions known as a
contrafacts. While contrafaction was already a well-established practice in earlier jazz, it came to be central to the bebop style. Musicians and audiences alike were able to find something familiar in this new exotic sound, but perhaps more importantly, small record labels such as Savoy Records, often avoided paying
copyright fees for pop tunes.
Specific harmonic vocabulary
Melodically the predominating contour of improvised bebop is that it tends to ascend in arpeggios and descend in scale steps. While a stereotype, an examination of Charlie Parker solos will show that this in fact is a key quality of the music.
Ascending arpeggios are frequently of diminished seventh chords, which function as 7b9 chords of various types. Typical scales used in bebop include the bebop major, minor and dominant (see below), the harmonic minor and the chromatic.
The half-whole diminished scale is also occasionally used, and in the music of Thelonious Monk especially, the whole tone scale.
Of the modes of the ascending
melodic minor, such as the altered scale and lydian dominant beloved of many modern jazz educators, there is little or no sign - it is widely thought that
John Coltrane was among the first to use them, but as with many things in Jazz history, it's hard to be certain.
Bebop frequently elaborates arpeggios with extra chromatic and scalar passing notes, some of which seem perverse. The flattened seventh is frequently added to major seventh arpeggios, the major to dominant chords and minor chords. Phrases frequently terminate on the 9th of the chord - traditionally dissonant tone.
Bebop was also heavily characterized by melodic use of the
flatted fifth. This is related to the harmonic technique of
tritone substitution, popularised during the pre-war era by the pianist Art Tatum. Here, the familiar series of perfect cadences is replaced by chromatic motion of the root. Thus, the standard "IIm7 - V7 - I" sequence, a building block of the 20th century popular song, is reconstructed as "IIm7 - bII7 - I". A bebop pianist, confronted with a chord marked as G7 (G dominant seventh) resolving to C, would often replace it with Db7 (Db dominant seventh). The tritone substitution could also be used within a standard dominant (V7) chord: for example, the G7 chord above could be a Db7 chord with G as the bass (another example of a flatted fifth). The original chord and the substituted chord share two important tones, the third and the seventh (in this case B and F).
Later codifications of bebop harmony emerged, notably in the teachings of pianist/educator Barry Harris, who encouraged players to learn "bebop scales" for improvising such as the Bebop Dominant 7th Scale (1 2 3 4 5 6 b7 7) and the Bebop Major Scale (1 2 3 4 5 #5 6 7) (although Barry himself refers to them by a different name.) A feature of these scales is that when they are played in 8th notes, up or down, players automatically play a tone featured in the corresponding chord on every 4/4 beat. These scales are often disguised by playing them through segments of an octave, changing direction on chord tones, or enclosing chord tones with a chromatic tone above and below the chord tone. Both of these techniques allow the improviser to embellish the bebop scale without sacrificing the effect of chord tones on every 4/4 beat.
Another important technique is anticipation - where a chord is expressed before it appears, and expansion, where the improviser holds on to it into the next chord. Again Parker's recorded solos have many examples of this technique, which creates dissonance.
Many bebop progressions and solos make heavy use of
tonicization, but this is typical of harmonic jazz in general.
Overall, bebop seems to have taken many of the raw materials of swing and freed them up or liberated them - harmony and rhythm became more freely treated, and improvisers embraced this new freedom with relish.
Instrumentation
The classic bebop combo consisted of saxophone, trumpet, bass, drums, and piano. This was a format used (and popularized) by both Charlie Parker (saxophone) and
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet) in their 1940s groups and recordings, sometimes augmented by an extra saxophonist or guitar, occasionally adding other horns (often a trombone), or other strings (usually fiddle or violin) or dropping an instrument and leaving only a quartet.
Although only one part of a rich jazz tradition, bebop music continues to be played regularly throughout the world. Trends in improvisation since its era have changed from its harmonically-tethered style, but the capacity to improvise over a complex sequence of altered chords is a fundamental part of any jazz education. Bebop requires a mathematical and problem-solving mental agility, leading mastery of this language to be something of a requisite rite of passage for serious musicians.
Etymology of word
The word "bebop" is usually stated to be nonsense syllables which were generated in scat singing, and is supposed to have been first attested in 1928http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=bebop. One speculation is that it was a term used by
Charlie Christian, because it sounded like something he hummed along with his playingJim Dawson and Steve Propes,
What Was The First Rock'n'Roll Record?, 1992, ISBN 0-571-12939-0. However, possibly the most plausible theory is that it derives from the cry of "Arriba ! Arriba !" used by Latin American bandleaders of the period to encourage their bandsPeter Gammond,
The Oxford Companion to Popular Music, 1991, ISBN 0-19-311323-6
. This squares with the fact that, originally, the terms "bebop" and "rebop" were used interchangeably. By 1945, the use of "bebop"/"rebop" as nonsense syllables was widespread in R&B music, for instance Lionel Hampton's "Hey Ba-Ba-Re-Bop", and a few years later in rock and roll, for instance Gene Vincent's "Be-Bop-A-Lula" (1956).
Bebop's influence
By the mid-1950s musicians (Miles Davis and
John Coltrane among others) began to explore directions beyond the standard bebop vocabulary. Simultaneously, other players expanded on the bold steps of bebop: "cool jazz" or "west coast jazz",
modal jazz, as well as free jazz and
avant-garde forms of development from the likes of
George Russell.
Bebop style also influenced the
beatniks whose spoken-word style drew on jazz rhythms, and who often employed jazz musicians to accompany them, as well as
rock and roll, which contains solos employing a similar form as bop solos, and hippies, who, like the boppers had a unique, non-conformist style of dress, a vocabulary incoherent to outsiders, a communion through music, and an idea of being "hip" or "cool". Fans of bebop were not restricted to the USA; the music gained cult status in France and Japan.
More recently, Hip-hop artists (A Tribe Called Quest, Guru) have cited bebop as an influence on their rapping and rhythmic style. Bassist Ron Carter even collaborated with A Tribe Called Quest on 1991's
The Low End Theory, and vibraphonist
Roy Ayers and trumpeter Donald Byrd were featured on Jazzmattazz, by Guru, in the same year. Bebop samples, especially bass lines, ride cymbal swing clips, and horn and piano riffs are found throughout the hip-hop compendium.
References
- Berendt, Joachim E. The Jazz Book: From Ragtime to Fusion and Beyond. Trans. Bredigkeit, H. and B. with Dan Morgenstern. Westport, CT: Lawrence Hill & Co., 1975.
- Deveaux, Scott.. The Birth of Bebop: A Social and Musical History. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999.
- Gidden, Gary. Celebrating Bird: The Triumph of Charlie Parker. New York City: Morrow, 1987.
- Gioia, Ted. The History of Jazz. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
- Baillie, Harold B. Swing to Bop: An Oral History of the Transition of Jazz in the 1940s. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987.
- Rosenthal, David. Hard bop: Jazz and Black Music, 1955-1965. New York : Oxford University Press, 1992.
- Verve History of Jazz page on Bebop
Samples
- Media:Bird Of Paradise.ogg of "Bird of Paradise" by Charlie Parker from In a Soulful Mood
- Media:Cheryl - Parker and Davis.ogg of "Cheryl", featuring Charlie Parker and Miles Davis
- of "Ruby My Dear" by Thelonious Monk
- of "Indian Summer" by Stan Getz
- of "I Can't Get Started" by Eddie Lockjaw Davis
Videos
- Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie
- A comprehensive explanation of Bebop
Bebop musicians
Main article: List of Bebop musiciansNotable musicians identified with bebop:
- Julian Cannonball Adderley, alto sax
- Clifford Brown, trumpet
- Ray Brown (musician), bass
- Don Byas, tenor sax
- Charlie Christian, guitar
- Kenny Clarke, drums
- John Coltrane, tenor sax
- Tadd Dameron, piano
- Miles Davis, trumpet
- Kenny Dorham, trumpet
- Carl Fontana, trombone
- Curtis Fuller, trombone
- Dizzy Gillespie, trumpet
- Dexter Gordon, tenor sax
- Wardell Gray, saxophone
- Al Haig, piano
- Sadik Hakim, piano
- Barry Harris, piano
- Percy Heath, bass
- Milt Jackson, vibes
- J. J. Johnson, trombone
- Duke Jordan, piano
- Stan Levey, drums
- Lou Levy (pianist), piano
- John Lewis (pianist), piano
- Dodo Marmarosa, piano
- Charles Mingus, bass
- Thelonious Monk, piano
- Wes Montgomery, guitar
- Fats Navarro, trumpet
- Charlie Parker, alto sax
- Chet Baker, trumpet
- Oscar Pettiford, bass
- Tommy Potter, bass
- Bud Powell, piano
- Max Roach, drums
- Red Rodney, trumpet
- Sonny Rollins, tenor sax
- Frank Rosolino, trombone
- Sonny Stitt, tenor and alto sax
- Lucky Thompson, tenor sax
- George Wallington, piano
Bebop
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otto bebop
The History of Bebop: Part I (some of you may have recently seen the Ken Burns story on Jazz on Public Televison. With all due respect to Mr.
BeBOP from FOLDOC
BeBOP < language > A language combining sequential and parallel logic programming, object-oriented and meta-level programming. Both don't know nondeterminism and stream AND ...
Bebop - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bebop or bop is a form of jazz characterized by fast tempos and improvisation based on harmonic structure rather than melody. It was developed in the early and mid-1940s.
The Bebop Shop: The Record Shop For Bebop, Hardbop and Modern Jazz CDs ...
Specializes in bebop, hardbop and modern jazz recordings.
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AskOxford: bebop
bebop / bee bop/ • noun a type of jazz originating in the 1940s and characterized by complex harmony and rhythms. — ORIGIN imitative. Perform another search of the Compact ...
British bebop...
british modern jazz since bebop which started in 1948 at club eleven featuring the music of ronnie scott and johnny dankworth
Bebop Spoken Here
Bebop Spoken Here ... JAZZ: Various Bebop Spoken Here £ 10.99 : The language of Bebop is one of the most enduring and eloquent in the history of jazz music.
eBay UK Shop - BeBop Guitars And Drums: drums, guitars
Buy drums, guitars items from BeBop Guitars And Drums eBay Shop. We sell drums items on eBay.co.uk.