Thesis on "Technological History of Jazz in Film"

Home  >  Topics  >  Music My Account

Thesis 5 pages (1575 words) Sources: 5 Style: MLA

[EXCERPT] . . . .

Technological History Of Jazz in Film

Jazz has a long and colorful history within American popular culture. It is truly an original American tradition, and has mesmerized music lovers for generations now. Part of its rise in popularity was its use in early film history as the medium began adopting elements that allowed for the recording of sound to go along with motion pictures. The first successful talkie film, The Jazz Singer, was about a want to be Jazz musician. From these early starts came popular short films featuring popular artists as well as spots in major Hollywood films thanks to technological developments that allowed for an entire orchestra to be recorded and incorporated onto the silver screen.

There is a long history of the musical tradition before film even burst onto the scene. As a true American original, "Jazz originated from pop music styles of the 1800s that were blended to satisfy social dancers," (Gridley 28). It included a unique blend of African and European musical influences. Elements such as improvisation and call and response, crucial elements which help to define the nature of Jazz itself, came from African musical traditions. These elements were then blended with classical European instrumentation. These traditions came from the heavy European influence in areas like New Orleans which then became the birthplace of Jazz itself. This new and vibrant musical trend then was mixed with sorrowful melodies of the blues (Gridley 30). Before the era of film, there was a need for live music. Jazz fit that need nicely and bands played on stages to accompany films live in person. Ragtime became a popular accompaniment of early silent films. This tradition i
Continue scrolling to

download full paper
s an early form of jazz, and "some scholars consider ragtime to have been the first jazz style," (Gridley 31). However, it lacks the traditional swing feel and beat to what we know of Jazz today. Thus, jazz even played a crucial role in film before the incorporation of recorded sound.

The first Jazz record was recorded early at the beginning of the Twentieth Century and sparked a massive chain of developments based on new, emerging technologies. The first recording was in 1917, when the all white band the Original Dixie Land Jazz Band set their classic "Livery Stable Blues" on wax recording (Schoenherr 1). From that time on, Jazz records became incredibly popular all across the country. Then, commercial radio was established in the early 1920s (Schoenherr 1). This helped further the spread of Jazz's popularity, making it a perfect choice for budding film makers of the time when the technology to record sound with film became available. With the rise of the radio, Jazz began to gain a large following.

In the mid 1920s, technology began revolutionizing the film industry. In 1925, the "first electrically-recorded discs and Orthopedic phonographs go on sale, using Western Electric system developed at AT&T's Bell Labs over the previous ten years, making it now possible to record whole orchestras and symphonies and even sound in motion pictures," (Schoenherr 1). Thus, the conversion to sound began, and had a huge impact on the musical tradition and popularity of Jazz. The first talkie was Don Juan in 1926. According to research, "Ultimately Don Juan failed to recoup its production costs, a disappointed Warner Brothers shifted focus to promoting The Jazz Singer," (History Link 1). Thus, it was clear that Jazz music was to be deeply embedded into movie history.

The very first successful talkie film was in fact about a Jazz singer. In December 30, 1927, The Jazz Singer is the second movie with sound produced. It debuted in Seattle and was met with great popularity and fan fervor (History Link 1). This was a film utilizing revolutionary technology to bring Jazz into the dream world of Hollywood films. According to research, "The movie uses Warner Brother's Vitaphone sound-on disc technology to reproduce the musical score and sporadic episodes of synchronized speech," (History Link 1). Thus, although it is primarily a silent film, it uses a musical score and sparse implementations of speech to present the first step towards the incredibly clear audio clarity we know in the modern movies today. It is an interesting glimpse into the transition between archaic silent films and the new modern films of the present; "Although the song and dialogue portions of The Jazz Singer were limited to a handful of scenes, they meshed nicely with the rest of the film, shot in silent film format," (History Link 1). The movie itself was primarily based on Samson Ralpaelson's play of the same name. It highlights "a Cantor's son who pursues a career as a vaudeville song and dance man, spurning the wishes of his Jewish parents, who would rather he sung traditional music," (History Link 1). It features an all white cast, with what is close to Jazz in musical tradition. However, it is not a concrete representation of the rich developing Jazz of the day, but a variation that was easily mass produced to the American public. After its massive success, producers and studio executives saw great potential in the use of both sound and Jazz within the context of popular American film. Silent films became a thing of the past and "Sound-on-sound film would eventually become the industry standard," (History Link 1). The Jazz Singer became a pioneer that spurred many other talkie Jazz films or stories with Jazz performances to emerge and dominate early American cinema. Following films included movies like Our Dancing Daughters in 1928. This film portrayed no talking scenes but and incorporation of jazz music in the story of a flapper in Charleston. Thus it was representing not only the musical traditions of Jazz, but the cultural movement which was popularized right along side it. Other early films included Paradise in Harlem in 1931. This featured an all black cast, about a young Jazz musician whose life is cut short by mob killings. It was another development that made the Jazz influenced plot lines a more realistic portrayal within the context of fictional film.

The 1930s saw a huge surge in popularity of experimental and short musical performances highlighting major Jazz musicians. The Jazz Singer "led to an end of the silent movie era and the proliferation of the talkies," (Yanow 1). After its success, a wave of new talkies featuring Jazz performances emerged. Many of the earliest talkie movies were experimental shorts; "Among the experimental shorts were a few brief performances by the team of Noble Sussle and Eubie Blake, at least one clip by the Van Eps Trio and, most successfully, the Ben Bernie Orchestra performing a swinging version of 'Sweet Georgia Brown' in1925," (Yanow 1). These short films became even more popular later as the years progressed and technology continued to improve sound quality within American cinema. Even famous musicians got into it, as in the case of Duke Ellington in his musical short film, Black and Tan (Yanow 2). Featuring smaller quartets and ensembles, these shorts eventually began to fall out of popularity. According to research, "There were many shorts subjects filmed in 1927-32 that feature legendary hot jazz bands and dance orchestras, but unfortunately a large percentage no longer exist," (Yanow 2). They normally featured three to four songs with two vocalists. One of the most popular of the more modern shorts was Jamming the Blues and became one of the most recognizable films from the swing era with Lester Young in 1944. The 1940s saw a ton of jazz shorts known as Soundies, produced by the Mills Novelty Company (Yanow 3). These were typically "Filmed in a day with the music being pre-recorded, the performances have the musicians and singers miming to the music (the same as in all early Hollywood films)," (Yanow 3). Such films continued to increase… READ MORE

Quoted Instructions for "Technological History of Jazz in Film" Assignment:

GUIDELINES FOR RESEARCH PAPER

The Research Paper provides a unique opportunity to pursue in greater depth a pertinent jazz film/media phenomenon that might stem from either your disciplinary or personal interests. For example, if you are a sociology or American Studies or African-African American Studies major, you might want to consider the phenomenon of American ex-patriot jazz musicians (black and white) living and working in postwar Europe as reflected in films such as Paris Blues (1961). If you are political science major, you might consider how *****free jazz***** became a trope of the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s. If you are a feminist looking at how women have been either (mis)represented or largely ignored in jazz films, you might want to write on a documentary such as Anita O*****Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer (2007). If you are a Midwest regionalist, you might want to consider how the rich Kansas City jazz scene of the 1930s was recalled and reconstructed by Robert Altman in his feature narrative film Kansas City (1996) or in his pseudo-documentary jam session, Robert Altman*****s Jazz *****34 (1997). If you are an art major, you might want to investigate the story of A Great Day in Harlem (1995), a fascinating documentary springing from an iconic photo of jazz musicians that appeared in Esquire magazine in 1958. If you are a cultural historian enmeshed with issues pertaining to the collapse of distinctions between *****high art***** and *****commercial/popular art,***** you might want to consider the development of funk and fusion as revealed in performance documentaries featuring Blood, Sweat and Tears, Chicago, or the Brecker Brothers Band.

Here, the intention is to provide as much latitude as possible in order for you to pursue your interests as long as they fall within the bounds of a specifically jazz film/media context. Other possible topics, again, given the requirement to focus them through the prism of jazz film/media include:

1. a study of the impact of an economic and/or technological phenomenon, e.g. the film industry*****s conversion to sound in the late-1920s/early-1930s, and the impact of that transition on the day*****s popular music (i.e., big band jazz) during the period as manifested in, for example, the emergence of jazz/big band/popular music shorts or the inclusion of big bands in Hollywood feature films including backstage musicals, etc.;

2. a critical study of a particular jazz film genre, e.g., the postwar rise of big band leader biopics in the wake of The Fabulous Dorseys (1947); here, you might want to consider more general issues pertaining to the biopic such as historical authenticity vs mythmaking (and, with it, Hollywood*****s tacit support or reinforcement of prevailing social-cultural-political values contemporary with the film*****s production and release); on the other hand, you might want to focus on a particular issue, e.g., the handling of race and/or gender and *****mine***** the films from either of those standpoints; from a musical standpoint, you might want to probe the genre*****s *****construction***** of jazz musicians as artists and therefore explore the problems/challenges faced by jazz musicians in arriving at a personal style, balancing the often seemingly contradictory pulls of artistic vs commercial success, and bringing some order to personal lives made abnormal by the rigors of touring, working at night, etc.;

3. a study of a jazz movement or innovation such as a film*****s rendering of the large ensemble needs of swing bands vs the individual virtuosic explorations of bebop as embedded in the narrative-dramatic fabrics of such Hollywood jazz films as Bird and New York, New York.

4. a sociological study focused on relationships between jazz and film/media pertaining to such issues as the significance of jazz as a means of African-American artistic expression in a largely white-dominated society and entertainment-arts industry; the intellectualization and popularization of progressive jazz on campus during the 1950s in the work of *****modern***** groups such as The Dave Brubeck Quartet or The Miles Davis Sextet; the aesthetic, cultural and political implications of the increasing co-mingling of young blacks and whites through the popularization of jazz in the 1940s-1950s (here, one might want to examine the convergence of jazz and the Beats of the 1950s; or, the growing postwar recognition of jazz as one of America*****s unique gifts to world culture, including its use as an *****official***** U.S. cultural ambassador through the tours of jazz legends such as Louis Armstrong; or, the rise of the black avant-garde and its ideological ties to the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s);

5. an examination of the use of jazz in background scoring for films, television programs, and, most recently, as a signifier of sophistication in TV commercials plugging upscale products and services; alternatively, you might want to consider the connection of jazz with representations of urban night-life, with its dangerous-exciting after-hours milieus, and its gallery of exotic yet generally damaged *****night creatures***** whose often sordid lives involve crime, drugs, booze, pathologically violent behaviors, and jazzers (some straight, some hooked) often looking for their muses in all the wrong places (e.g., in the popular TV private-eye series, Peter Gunn, 1958-1961);

6. an examination of the jazz documentary, or the use of jazz in experimental and animation films, or the rise of jazz performance videos, or the emergence of jazz educational and instructional videos ranging from Leonard Bernstein*****s *****Concerts for Young People***** to *****how-to***** videos featuring jazz pros sharing technical inside information with aspiring players.

7. an examination of jazz as it connects to other art forms such as drama (e.g., Jack Gelber*****s play, The Connection), or with painting (e.g., Matisse*****s series of prints titled Jazz), or with dance.

GUIDELINES FOR THE RESEARCH PAPER

Topic and Method:

The Research Paper should be an intensive and formal 1,250 word examination (about 5 pages, exclusive of Notes and Bibliography) of a significant jazz film/media topic supported by evidence drawn from at least five (5) credible sources. Possible subjects appropriate for scholarly treatment are mentioned above (see *****Preamble*****).

In preparing the Research Paper, your principal research sources will be books, scholarly articles from academic journals, and periodical literature of the day such as magazine and newspaper articles and/or reviews, as well as primary sources including films, videos and recordings. Please keep in mind that you are assembling a carefully organized Research Paper rather than an impressionistic *****reaction***** to an individual film, TV show, or *****tell-all***** bio of a ***** Parker or Billie Holiday. Therefore, work ahead, hit the library with gusto, develop a do-able theme (and statement of purpose), outline your arguments, and deploy your supporting evidence with clarity and logic, and, indeed, imagination and stylistic elan.

The Research Paper should include the following: A. an Introduction in which you briefly but clearly set forth the research problem, i.e., the paper*****s basic theme, and the reasons or rationale for undertaking the investigation (what, in other words, is the significance of the topic?), and a brief indication as to the investigative approach (will your methodological framework be mainly historical, critical or theoretical?; will the paper be organized as a technological impact study, an economic study, a genre study, a sociological study, a study of an artistic innovation, or . . . ?); B. the Exposition or body of the paper in which you clearly develop and present your research findings (i.e., the heart of your presentation); and C. a Conclusion in which you summarize your major findings and discuss their implications.

The paper should include appropriate citations of sources used. For style issues pertaining to documenting your citations and sources, please use a recent edition of the MLA Handbook for *****s of Research Papers. Basic concepts should be presented with clarity and vigor through the use of lucid explanations and detailed examples.

The paper must be computer-generated, double-spaced (with 1-inch left and right margins for comments by the graders) and plainly legible (make sure your printer*****s ribbon or ink supply is fresh). The length of paper should be 1,250 words (about 5 pages of text, plus the Title Page, and a separate page for your list of Sources Cited or Bibliography). The Title Page should include your name, KUID#, the title of the course, the course number, the name of the instructor (i.e., Prof. Chuck Berg), the name of your contact-GTA, the date of submission, the designation of the assignment (i.e., RESEARCH PAPER), and the specific title of your paper (be sure to give your paper a title reflecting the nature of the topic covered).

Remember, the paper is your representative. Therefore, use several drafts to refine and tighten your presentation. Be sure to proofread carefully to check the logic and completeness of your explanations and illustrations. Employ a dictionary, a thesaurus, and an established style manual such as a recent edition of the MLA Handbook for *****s of Research Papers as your style arbiter.

Warnings: Avoid unsupported generalizations (concretize your general statements and assertions with appropriate supporting arguments and evidence) and rambling (outline your paper so that all parts fit together in a coherently interlocking and logical presentation). Superfluous repetition, along with other mechanical, logical and organizational shortcomings will detract from your goal of communicating precisely and forcefully; they will also detract from your grade. Again, please delimit your topic to a reasonable scope. Save that all-encompassing epic for Simon & Schuster.

--------------------------------Proprosal-------------------------------------

I have chosen to research the technical history of sound being integrated into film beginning in the late 1920s and how this occurring parallel to the rise in jazz music, helped the art form bloom into a thriving part of American popular culture. I will first look at the advancement in technology and investment by studios, such as Warner Bros. in sound recording with the Vitaphone and advances to *****sound on film*****. I will look at the first appearances of Jazz in film beginning with early films in the late 1920s such as The Jazz Singer and into the 30s with The King of Jazz. In bringing together and stressing the fact that both Jazz and the technological advancements of Sound on Film blooming synonymously allowed for Jazz and equally Jazz*****s part in motion pictures, to be such the phenomenon and movement it was in American history.

Current sources:

Eyman, Scott (1997). The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution, 1926-1930. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Gabbard, Krin (1996). Jammin' at the Margins: Jazz and the American Cinema. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Crafton, Donald (1999 [1997]). The Talkies: American Cinema's Transition to Sound, 1926-1931. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press.

How to Reference "Technological History of Jazz in Film" Thesis in a Bibliography

Technological History of Jazz in Film.” A1-TermPaper.com, 2009, https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030. Accessed 3 Jul 2024.

Technological History of Jazz in Film (2009). Retrieved from https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030
A1-TermPaper.com. (2009). Technological History of Jazz in Film. [online] Available at: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030 [Accessed 3 Jul, 2024].
”Technological History of Jazz in Film” 2009. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030.
”Technological History of Jazz in Film” A1-TermPaper.com, Last modified 2024. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030.
[1] ”Technological History of Jazz in Film”, A1-TermPaper.com, 2009. [Online]. Available: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030. [Accessed: 3-Jul-2024].
1. Technological History of Jazz in Film [Internet]. A1-TermPaper.com. 2009 [cited 3 July 2024]. Available from: https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030
1. Technological History of Jazz in Film. A1-TermPaper.com. https://www.a1-termpaper.com/topics/essay/technological-history-jazz/3030. Published 2009. Accessed July 3, 2024.

Related Thesis Papers:

Silent Film Era Research Paper

Paper Icon

Silent Film And Its Effect on the Imagination

As Richard Abel observes, "The materiality of silent cinema…has become so unfamiliar to us, so different from that of our own cinema… read more

Research Paper 8 pages (2636 words) Sources: 5 Topic: Film / Movies / Television


Movie Editing Term Paper

Paper Icon

Editing Analysis of Selected Movies

For modern motion picture audiences, the art of film editing has risen to the level of quality that it is unnoticed -- if it is… read more

Term Paper 8 pages (2625 words) Sources: 8 Topic: Film / Movies / Television


Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies Essay

Paper Icon

Scorsese's Journey Through Film

Scorsese's Personal Journey in Film

The documentary A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese through American Movies is an impressive exploration of American cinematic history. It encompasses… read more

Essay 3 pages (1314 words) Sources: 0 Topic: Film / Movies / Television


Transition to Sound From Silent Pictures Term Paper

Paper Icon

Silent Film

When "The Jazz Singer" opened in October of 1927 it unofficially sounded the end of silent films. This is not to say, however, that there was not resistance… read more

Term Paper 5 pages (1693 words) Sources: 1+ Topic: Film / Movies / Television


Viacom Term Paper

Paper Icon

Viacom is one of the world's most valuable media and entertainment company, with operations spanning 164 countries and territories worldwide. Viacom owns two broadcast networks, 79 cable networks, 40 owned-and-operated… read more

Term Paper 13 pages (3495 words) Sources: 1+ Topic: Film / Movies / Television


Wed, Jul 3, 2024

If you don't see the paper you need, we will write it for you!

Established in 1995
900,000 Orders Finished
100% Guaranteed Work
300 Words Per Page
Simple Ordering
100% Private & Secure

We can write a new, 100% unique paper!

Search Papers

Navigation

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!