Blues and Ragtime: Paving the Way for Jazz
Blues and ragtime helped to pave the way for jazz, one of America's truly unique music genres. Originating in the South, these genres were inspired by the African backgrounds of slaves coupled with the oppression that freed men and women faced after their emancipation. New Orleans became a musical hotbed during the jazz era. It was also during the development and popularization of the genre that jazz music found its way to Chicago and California, as well as New York. It was through the development of blues and ragtime that jazz emerged and was made accessible to the public.
Blues, from which rock and roll grew out of, was an "indigenous creation of black slaves who adapted their African musical heritage to the American environment" (Szatmary 2). Through music, these slaves were able to retain a piece of their past while at the same time creating a new form of music. The music created by these enslaved men and women involved calculated repetitions, primarily through the call-and-response songs that were sung while working in plantation fields (2). Slaves' African musical heritage also played a major role in the development of African-inspired church music, which would become the basis for gospel music and subsequently provided a foundation for blues. While jazz had a major impact in New Orleans, the blues migrated north to Chicago where they established a stronghold that continues to thrive to this day. The blues "became more entrenched" in Northern urban areas as thousands of Southerners traveled north in search of work during and after World War II (4). It is estimated that more than 50,000 African-Americans from Mississippi alone headed north to Chicago between 1940 and 1944; in total, approximately 214,000 African-Americans migrated to Chicago during this time (5). Piero Scaruffi argues that blues music was "first and foremost, a state of mind" in which the "unbridled materialism of the blues was not self glorification but self-pity" (Scaruffi). Musically, the blues are structured into twelve bars of 4/4 time whose melody is a convergence of the African five note scale and the western seven note scale; blues music also introduced two flattened notes that...
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