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Topic ClosedWhat subgenre of Jazz do you prefer?

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Poll Question: What is your favourite style related to jazz?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
2 [2.53%]
2 [2.53%]
8 [10.13%]
1 [1.27%]
3 [3.80%]
31 [39.24%]
2 [2.53%]
2 [2.53%]
2 [2.53%]
2 [2.53%]
22 [27.85%]
0 [0.00%]
2 [2.53%]
This topic is closed, no new votes accepted

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Mascodagama View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: What subgenre of Jazz do you prefer?
    Posted: February 26 2007 at 16:17
I like at least some music from every one of those categories.  But free / avant garde is probably what I listen to most frequently these days, followed by cool, bebop-hard bop and jazz-rock fusion.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2007 at 16:15
Never seen this thread before so I'm clicking funk jazz under the understanding that it encompasses afrobeat. I spent a while looking for "canterbury" until I saw the last option :(
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 26 2007 at 16:12
I'll revive this thread with a vote for, um, I don't know. What option is closest to smooth jazz? Ah other I guess.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 28 2006 at 06:04
Said it before, jazz fusion covers just under 50% of the other sub-genres listed. You mean jazz rock fusion to avoid ambiguity. One of the first groups/albums with 'fusion' in it name was the Joe Harriott/John Mayer Indo-jazz Fusion group of 1965- 8, who fused jazz and raga.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2006 at 22:03

Bossa Nova

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2006 at 21:58
Fusion, followed by Coltrane. He's a genre himself, he's that awesome.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2006 at 21:57
So many people voted for jazz fusion, probably because it is the only jazz genre that they are familiar with.  A couple more things.  The original poster said that bebop and hard bop are 100 percent improvisation.  Actually, that's not true, since there is a main melody.  The musicians all play the "head," or melody, through a couple of times and then they go into their solos, where the first instrument improvises stuff based on the chord changes of the head for as long as he wants before stopping and letting the next instrument play, and so on, until everyone that is soloing in the tune is done, at which point they play the head again, and the song is over.  Also, despite its name, hard bop is very different from bebop.
 
Anyway, I vote for bebop/hard bop, since I love both.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 27 2006 at 20:46
brazilian jazz like ZIL ,egberto gismonti,nana vasconcelos,flora purim ,hermeto pascoal.,wagner tiso ,Cesar Camargo Mariano,Tania Maria,Eliane Elias 

Edited by markosherrera - October 29 2006 at 20:45
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2006 at 12:17
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2006 at 12:15
Pat Metheny:
 
jazz rock fusion:
American Garage
jazz post bop
Question and Answer
world jazz
First Circle
even pop (partly)
The Falcon And The Snowman: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
jazz serious music  fusion
Reich: Different Trains, Electric Counterpoint / Kronos Quartet, Pat Metheny
free jazz/avant:
The Sign of 4
Song X: 20th Anniversary Edition
Zero Tolerance for Silence
jazz fusion (less definable):
As Falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita Falls
 
Even had dance tableturners  enjoy Imaginary Day, for its  mixing possibilities
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 25 2006 at 02:02
In no order of preference:

BeBop/Hard Bop (McCoy Tyner's "Trident' album kicks serious ass!)

Fusion (Mahavishnu, Tony Williams, etc.)

Free Jazz.

Exactly which Sub-Genre Pat Metheny falls into seems to be in question, but I really dig him.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2006 at 10:58
Jazz Fusion followed by avant/free jazz
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2006 at 10:55

Have to remind that terminology used wrt jazz-relayted musics here is at best sloppy and inconsistent. Fusion covers allsorts of jazz fused with other musics. Remember one of the first albums with fusion in its title and an early source of the term was with Joe Harriott & John Mayers Indo Jazz Fusion albums in the mid 60's, a marriage of then English style modern jazz (and Joe Harriott was West Indian who had been on the London scene for 20 years) and Indian raga.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mention of Holdsworth and Dixie dregs  then strictly the majority of their albums are jazz rock fusion. The only reference book and history on the subject of mixing rock with jazz is Stuart Nicholson's Jazz Rock: A History
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 24 2006 at 07:48
The result of this poll was highly predictible (as was the result of the Dire Straits poll) : prog-related jazz !!!
 
I like many jazz subgenres :
 
world jazz (Pat Meth, Jan Garbarek, Zakir Hussain, didier malherbe (ex-Gong BTW))
 
be-bop/hard-bop (john coltrane, wayne shorter)
 
latin jazz (the crusaders' 'chili con soul' album)
 
vocal jazz (sarah vaughan, billie holiday)
 
big band (buddy rich big band, 'big swing face' is a phenomenal live CD, and check out the tribute to the music of BR featuring the buddy rich big band + drummers like Bruford, Neil Peart, Morgenstein, Manu Katché...)
 
fusion (loose change (w/ virgil donati), allan holdsworth, dixie dregs...)
 
ragtime (scott joplin)
 
cool jazz (miles davis)
 
plus artists like earl hines, duke ellington...
 
Recently I was on holidays in Poland, and bought some polish jazz that I can recommend to you :
 
Wlodzimierz Nahorny (free jazz), Jan 'ptaszyn' wroblewski, jarek smietana, krzysztof komeda, zbigniew namyslowski, leszek mozdzer sextet, michal urbaniak's album 'decadence' (it's not really jazz, more experience stuff with an orchestra).
 
 
"Magma was the very first gothic rock band" (Didier Lockwood)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 23 2006 at 05:34
Dig 'em all!
I like to feel the suspense when you're certain you know I am there.....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 20 2006 at 18:00

1. Avant Garde/Free Jazz.
2. Jazz Fusion
3. Latin Jazz
4. Bebop/Hard Bop

and some funky :)
It is to say that rap is in it's best on Acid Jazz/Rap Jazz/DJ Jazz, or should I say spoken word. (Although I like new "rhytmic" R&B with it's multilayerty (not specially progressive) - although it might be overproduced or,.. well, the layers make music more interesting. It's nice to see how pop getting progger, though just utilising it and everything. And still the music is easy-listening and not truly experimental)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2006 at 12:50
Absoloutly no contest! Fusion is my choice of course. Followed by cool and funk.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2006 at 02:48
Fusion but I do like to listen to masters play as well.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2006 at 02:41
Originally posted by Visitor13 Visitor13 wrote:

Originally posted by man@arms man@arms wrote:

I suppose the free jazz/avant garde period is my favorite if I had to pick.  With the likes of Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, Cecil Taylor, Coltrane, Archie Shepp & Eric Dolphy who can go wrong?

 

Marry me.

And me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2006 at 13:03
Those in the UK, look out in HMV's sale for a cheap copy of nu.fusionist's Nils Petter Molvaer's album Remakes - a remix album, which has contributions from modern jazz musicians Bill Laswell, Matthew Herbert, Bugge Wesseltoft, Martin Koller etc.   I reckon a few here will have a real shock to the directions in which new jazz are heading - at least based on the limited choices offered up here on this thread. (Indeed check out Nils Petter Molvaer's original albums, e.g. Khymer, Live, NP3, etc. to discover the degree to which nu-fusion can be deconstructed and constructed afresh).
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