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Chapter 14 Section 3. A Creative Era. The Emergence of Jazz. The 1920’s is often called the Jazz Age because jazz music gained wide popularity during this time { Jazz originated among African Americans in the South}
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Chapter 14Section 3 A Creative Era
The Emergence of Jazz • The 1920’s is often called the Jazz Age because jazz music gained wide popularity during this time • {Jazz originated among African Americans in the South} • Early jazz musicians also experimented with another form of African American music called the blues • The blues grew out of a long history of slave music and religious spirituals with heartfelt lyrics and altered or slurred notes that echoed the mood of the lyrics • Jazz musicians such as Louis Armstrong began to incorporate blues styles into their music
The popularization of Jazz • During the Great Migration when African American’s moved northward, they brought jazz with them • Musicians of different backgrounds began to use jazz elements in their music • Concert pianist {George Gershwin combined classical music with American jazz in the composition “Rhapsody in Blue”} • The development of big-band music brought jazz to a whole new audience • Jazz clubs emerged, featuring famous musicians such as Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters and Cab Calloway • Also many African Americans went to France after WWI, due to their racial tolerance and Jazz singer such as Josephine Baker gave France their own Jazz Age
The Harlem Renaissance • So many creative black writers, musicians and artists lived in Harlem (a New York City neighborhood) that the flourishing of artistic development in the 1920’s is known as the Harlem Renaissance • Theatrical roles available to African Americans were restricted by prejudice. Nevertheless they staged and produced many successful Broadway plays and musicals • {African American graduate of Columbia University Law School, Paul Robeson, went on to become one of the most highly acclaimed actors of the 1920’s.} • Rose McClendon was a leading African American actress
Continued…. • African American literature was paramount to the Harlem Renaissance • Novelists produced work marked by bitterness and defiance but also by joy and hope • Harlem poets, such as Langston Hughes, celebrated their ethnic identity and acknowledged the struggles they faced • One of the most active Harlem Renaissance supporters was James Weldon Johnson. • As executive secretary of the NAACP, Johnson raised money to support African American artists and art programs in Harlem • {He also published The Book of American Negro Poetry}
Langston Hughes • The Negro Speaks of Rivers- Langston Hughes • I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins. My soul has grown deep like the rivers. I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young. I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it. I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans, and I've seen its muddy bosom turn all golden in the sunset. I've known rivers: Ancient, dusky rivers. My soul has grown deep like the rivers.
The Lost Generation • At the same time of the Harlem Renaissance a new generation of writers rose • {Ernest Hemmingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Sinclair Lewis were all members of the Lost Generation} • Their work reflected their horror of the death and destruction of WWI. They scorned middle-class consumerism and the superficiality of the postwar years
The Visual Arts • Most artists of the 1920’s depicted the impact of growing cities and the increasing use of machinery on American life • Photography came to be a widely appreciated as an art form. Photographer Alfred Stieglitz helped to popularize photography • Mexican muralists such as Diego Rivera became popular during this time as well. He was commissioned to paint a mural in Rockefeller Center, which was destroyed because it contained an image of Lenin. • Creativity also emerged in the United States in architecture. A new style with rectangular shapes and clean lines came to be. • Sky scrapers, such as the Chrysler Building and the Empire State Building, also came about at this time
Review Questions • Where did Jazz originate? • This man combined classical music with American jazz in the composition “Rhapsody in Blue” • This man went on to become one of the most highly acclaimed actors of the 1920’s • He published The Book of American Negro Poetry • Ernest Hemmingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Sinclair Lewis were all members of this group
Diego Rivera’s mural in Rockefeller Center. Can you find Lenin??