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Jazz Dance/Harlem Renaissance 1302 Views
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Description:
Jazz, dance, and the Harlem Renaissance—three things Shmoop can really get behind.
Transcript
- 00:08
Jazz, Dance and the Harlem Renaissance.
- 00:11
Blacks in this country haven't always had the easiest time.
- 00:15
In fact... we're going to go with... they've never had the easiest time.
- 00:22
However, things are a lot better than they used to be...
- 00:24
... and one of the things that has really helped to define the community culturally... is music.
Full Transcript
- 00:30
In the 1920's and 30's, they broke through with a new musical style that doesn't have
- 00:35
quite so many negative connotations.
- 00:38
We're talking about jazz.
- 00:41
In fact, we're talking very excitedly about it.
- 00:48
Guess you could say we're jazzed about jazz.
- 00:53
The songs themselves, as well as the dances that arose from them...
- 00:55
...have always been closely associated with black culture.
- 00:59
Not all jazz musicians were black, but all of the early ones were.
- 01:04
The genre was kick-started in New Orleans...
- 01:06
...with all black musicians and audiences...
- 01:08
...and the music was mostly improvisational.
- 01:17
What set jazz apart from other musical styles of the period was its syncopated rhythm...
- 01:27
...the blend of big brass instruments with traditional African music...
- 01:32
...and the "scatting."
- 01:34
Scatting is improvisational singing, where you're not necessarily singing real words.
- 01:39
Something like this: <<DS scats poorly.>> Okay, this is why we leave scatting to the professionals.
- 01:52
Of course, like just about everything in black history, jazz music was not without controversy.
- 02:00
Various groups boycotted the music, and some created movements against it...
- 02:04
...calling it "the devil's music."
- 02:06
Obviously not true, although it can get hotter than H-E-double hockey sticks in New Orleans.
- 02:12
When Prohibition started, speakeasies allowed for jazz to be played in places where it was
- 02:17
otherwise banned.
- 02:18
These speakeasies were basically bars where blacks and whites were allowed to mix and mingle.
- 02:23
Pretty enlightened for establishments that were generally quite... poorly lit.
- 02:30
While blacks were making headway in the South...
- 02:32
...there was another cultural movement taking place up north in New York...
- 02:35
the Harlem Renaissance.
- 02:38
So... just imagine if Michelangelo and Da Vinci worked out of a studio on 126th Street.
- 02:49
The Harlem Renaissance featured a major emphasis on both art and music.
- 02:54
The Black Rights advocates of the time went to great lengths to circulate positive ideals
- 02:59
and views of black Americans.
- 03:01
They tried to show any doubters that African Americans
- 03:05
could be just as creative as anyone else.
- 03:09
This went a long way to accomplishing their goal.
- 03:12
People like Bing Crosby... white... and Lena Horne... black...
- 03:16
became famous during the Harlem Renaissance.
- 03:19
Black literature and poetry from artists such as Langston Hughes were published in black
- 03:23
journals and magazines...
- 03:25
...and worked wonders at giving black culture its day in the sun.
- 03:30
Of course, it wasn't all rainbows and ponies.
- 03:32
All this new exposure and success for the black community
- 03:35
angered and outraged some whites...
- 03:38
...and people rioted and formed lynch mobs.
- 03:42
A lynching, if you didn't know, is where they hang you from a tree.
- 03:47
It wasn't an easy road to travel, but it was an important one.
- 03:50
While the fight is a long way from over...
- 03:52
... blacks have certainly opened the eyes... and ears...
- 03:54
of many people who didn't always view them as equals.
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