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THe Jazz age: music

THe Jazz age: music. PRESENTED BY RATSMEE VANG. JAZZ PERIOD . Started after WWI Between 1918-1929 up to the depression Happened along side the Harlem Renaissance Jazz was a result of the renaissance popular music included dance songs, novelty songs, and show tunes. jazz.

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THe Jazz age: music

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  1. THe Jazz age: music PRESENTED BY RATSMEE VANG

  2. JAZZ PERIOD • Started after WWI • Between 1918-1929 up to the depression • Happened along side the Harlem Renaissance • Jazz was a result of the renaissance • popular music included dance songs, novelty songs, and show tunes

  3. jazz • Traits from West African music black folk music • Considered immoral by older generation • 1919 - Kid Ory’s Original Creole Jazz Band • First jazz band

  4. Instruments used in Jazz • Piano – used to provide harmony, melody, and rhythm (Art Tatum – Tea for Two) • Varies the sound by amount of force used to press keys • Guitar – 6 stings plucked to strummed with fingers or a pick (Charlie Christian, I Found A New Baby) • Banjo – the five string in G or C, the four string tenor banjo and the six-string guitar banjo • These are common chords played in jazz

  5. Jazz instruments • Drums – including bass drum, snare drum, ton-tons, and cymbals (Art Barkey – Stop Time) • Congas – with the fingers and the hollow palm of the hand (played in one or pairs) • Vibraphone – percussion instrument (Milt Jackson) • Timbales – Latin American Drums

  6. Popular jazz artist • King Oliver and Bill Johnson • Bessie Smith • Bix Beiderbecke – The Wolverines • Louis Armstrong • Jelly Roll Morton • Jean Goldkette’s Orchestra • Paul Whiteman’s Orchestra • Fletcher Henderson’s Band • Duke Ellington’s Band • Earl Hine’s Band

  7. WORK CITED/ REFERENCES http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz_Age http://www.csupomona.edu/~dmgrasmick/j&b/Jazz%20Inst%20Tutorial/Piano.html http://www.csupomona.edu/~dmgrasmick/j&b/Jazz%20Inst%20Tutorial/Jazz%20Instruments.html http://asms.k12.ar.us/classes/humanities/amstud/97-98/jazz/YOURPAGE.HTM http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz

  8. F. Scott Fitzgerald -Born in 1896 in St. Paul Minnesota -Attended Princeton University -Coined term Jazz Age -Works on Jazz Age include The Great Gatsby, The Beautiful and Damned, This Side of Paradise, and Tales of the Jazz Age -Novels describe lives and morality of post WW1 youth -Died in 1940 from complications after a heart attack 1896-1940

  9. Anita Loos • Born in 1888 in California • Professions include: actress, novelist, screenwriter, and producer • Some works include Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes • Gentlemen Prefer Blondes stars a bold flapper who is more interested in gifts and money than marriage • Died in 1981 in New York 1888-1981

  10. Dorothy Parker • Born in 1893 in New Jersey • Worked as author, poet, critic, and screenwriter • In the 1920s alone she had over 300 poems published in magazines like Vanity Fair, Vogue, and Life • Published her first volume of poetry, Enough Rope, in 1927 • Plays include Business is Business (1924) and Close Harmony (1924) • Died in 1967 in New York 1893-1967

  11. Edith Wharton • Born in 1862 in New York as Edith Newbold Jones • Family connected to phrase “keeping up with the Joneses” • Used connection with upper class postwar New York in her literary work • Works include: TheAge of Innocence, Old New York, and Twilight Sleep • In 1921 she won a Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Age of Innocence. • Died in 1937 1862-1937

  12. T. S. Eliot • Born in 1888 in St. Louis, Missouri • Studied at Harvard from 1906 – 1909 • One of the 20th centuries most influential poets • Most famous poems include: The love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, The Waste Land, and Hollow Men. • Many poems dealt with the disillusionment of the post war generation and lost opportunities. • Often wrote using the stream of consciousness approach • Died in 1965 in London, England 1888-1965

  13. Jazz Age

  14. Prohibition • 1920- 1933 • 18th Amendment • Volstead Act • Speakeasies • Organized Crime • 21st Amendment

  15. Al Capone Also known as Scarface Head of the Chicago Outfit Outfit made 10 million dollars annually St. Valentines Day Massacre

  16. Charles Lucky Luciano Considered father of modern organized crime First boss of Genovese crime family

  17. Frank Costello “Prime Minister of the Underworld” Close friend to Lucky Luciano Later would take over the “Rolls-Royce” of organized crime

  18. Film Transition from silent films to talkies. Toll of the Sea The Jazz Singer Mickey Mouse Charlie Chaplin Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

  19. Mickey Mouse First appearance was in Plane Crazy Disney considers birthday to be November 18, 1928 Supposed to serve as a replacement character for Oswald the Lucky Rabbit

  20. The Jazz Singer • Starred Al Jolson • Aided in switch from silent films to talkies • The first feature length film to use synchronized dialogue • Originally was a short story that was turned into a successful play

  21. Sports • NFL • Negro National League • Red Grange • Jack Dempsey • Babe Ruth • Helen Wills • Bobby Jones

  22. Authors and Books • T.S. Elliot • F. Scot Fitzgerald • Edith Wharton • Anita Loos • The Great Gatsby • The Waste Land • The Age of Innocence • Gentleman Prefer Blondes

  23. Popular Language • Blind Date • Gold Digger • Crush • Flapper • Heebie Jeebies

  24. technology • The jazz Age was a very rich age for technology. • Radio were very common. • Even though the first combustion engine was built in 1896 by Henry Ford. • The automobile really took off in the 1920’s • Ford’s Model-Ts became such an overwhelming success that Henry sold over 15 million Model-Ts by 1927

  25. technology • Television was being experimented on. • Philo T. Farnsworth developed the dissector tube. • The first movie with sound is released. “The Jazz Singer”

  26. automobile • By the end of the decade there was almost one car per American family. • As a result people no longer needed the job to be close to their homes. • Family visited each other more frequently.

  27. radio The radio just like the car become very popular during the jazz age. The radio not only reported the events but shaped them.

  28. Radio • People spent half the night listening to the radio. • News, Sports, Concerts, and Sermons. • Those without radios in their home gathered in public places to watch crystal sets. • People were more in tuned with what was going on in the world to a sense.

  29. Radio • The radio became and instant success in the 1920’s • The Radio was partially in every Americans home in just a few shorts years. • KDKA was the first public radio broadcasting station located in Pittsburgh.Thousands more starting popping up in the next few years.

  30. Homosexual • The Jazz Age was groundbreaking to a sense • Homosexual were accepted to a certain degree • They got a certain level of freedom that they wouldn't see again until the 1960’s • Gay clubs other wise known as pansy clubs were openly operated

  31. Flapper • Flappers was a term used for young women during the 1920’s. • The Flappers had short sleek hair. Wore shorter then average shapeless shift dress. • wore make up and applied it in public. • smoked with a long cigarette holder.

  32. Flapper

  33. Women • A typical women in the 1920’s have a life expectancy of 55 years • She married at age 21 • She would be pregnant for 34% of the time during her fertile years.

  34. Women • Women were given the right to vote. •  Nellie Taylor Ross becomes the first woman elected as a governor in the United States.

  35. Medical Advancements • Antibiotics being one of the Medical advancement that caused less fetal death rate. • Formula’s invented. • Due to medical advancements the labor force grew threefold between the 1920-1950 • Discovery of vitamins C, E and insulin

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