ABSTRACT

Rhythm Changes: Jazz, Culture, Discourse explores the history and development of jazz, addressing the music, its makers, and its social and cultural contexts, as well as the various discourses – especially those of academic analysis and journalistic criticism – that have influenced its creation, interpretation, and reception. Tackling diverse issues, such as race, class, nationalism, authenticity, irony, parody, gender, art, commercialism, technology, and sound recording, the book’s perspective on artistic and cultural practices suggests new ways of thinking about jazz history. It challenges many established scholarly approaches in jazz research, providing a much-needed intervention in the current academic orthodoxies of Jazz Studies.

Perhaps the most striking and distinctive aspect of the book is the extraordinary eclecticism of the wide-ranging but carefully chosen case studies and examples referenced throughout the text, from nineteenth century literature, through 1930s Broadway and film, to twentieth and twenty-first century jazz and popular music.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The Persistence of Authenticity

chapter 1|40 pages

The Challenge of the Past

Jazz, Parody, and Jazz Discourse

chapter 2|40 pages

A Few of My Favorite Things

Analyzing Jazz, Interpreting Irony, Assessing Value

chapter 3|46 pages

My Only Sunshine

Jazz, Country Music, George Russell, and Musical Meaning

chapter 4|50 pages

Divine Revelations

Keith Jarrett, Acoustic Authenticity, and Romantic Genius

chapter 5|52 pages

The Body Electric

Music, Machines, and Mechanical Reproduction

chapter 6|52 pages

Can Blue Men Sing the Whites?

African American Exceptionalism, European Stereotypes, and the Jazz Studies Debate 1