An Introduction to America’s Music

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slow in tempo, rich in harmony, delicately blended in timbre, and meditative in
atmosphere, of which “Mood Indigo” (1930) is the most famous.
These are only a few of the more than 1,100 pieces that Ellington composed
and copyrighted in the course of his long career. In about 20 percent of those
work s, he sha red aut horsh ip w it h mu sicia n s who played w it h h i m, a nd he col lab-
orated with others on the rest. Even when Ellington received the sole composer
credit, collaboration lay at the heart of his music making. For as well as imag-
ining fresh combinations of timbre and pitch, Ellington composed by working
with his musicians so that their tonal personalities—their particular sound, way
of playing, and inventiveness—actually helped to create the music. W hen trum-
peter Fred Stone spent a few months with Ellington in 1970, he refl ected that
the band was the only outfi t he knew “where you are not required to match the
sound of the previous member. You must function as an individual.”

The 1920s were a time of relative prosperity. One aspect of the decade’s optimis-
tic outlook was a thirst for novelty that encouraged musicians to experiment and
innovate. That encouragement bore fruit in spheres of musical activity as differ-
ent as ultramodernism and jazz. With the stock market crash of October 1929,
however, musicians of all stripes faced new challenges: how to remain creative
and productive while making a living under the straitened circumstances of the
Great Depression.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION AND REVIEW



  1. What are the characteristics of modernist music? Who were the leading
    ultramodernists, and what distinguishes their music from more traditional
    compositions?

  2. Listen again to Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever (LG 7.1). How does the final
    strain of that march resemble the collective improvisation heard in Dipper-
    mouth Blues (LG 12.2) and Black Bottom Stomp (LG 12.3)?

  3. Compare Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, and Duke Ellington in terms
    of two musical polarities: improvisation versus composition, and solo play-
    ing versus ensemble playing.

  4. Several pieces discussed in this chapter rely on blues music, but the result is
    somewhat different in each case. How would you characterize these various
    treatments of the blues?

  5. A musician active in a genre that many people associated with disreputable
    lifestyles and illegal activities, Bix Beiderbecke led a short life marked by sub-
    stance abuse and early death. What later figures in popular culture does this
    profile bring to mind? W hat are some similarities and differences?


FURTHER READING
Broyles, Michael, and Denise Von Glahn. Leo Ornstein: Modernist Dilemmas, Personal Choices.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007.
Crawford, Richard. The American Musical Landscape. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University
of California Press, 1993. Chapter 6.

CHAPTER 12 | FURTHER READING

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