Posts tagged ‘Music History’

“…Handel, Mozart, Beethoven, and Liszt all excelled in improvisation, which was then referred to as extemporization…”

Classical music is a sophisticated art form where talking during performances (much less to the musicians) is frowned upon. Yet in jazz, it is very common for the audience to speak to musicians during performances as a way of complimenting their improvisational skills.

Elements of jazz can be found in gospel, country, pop, R&B, movie soundtracks, and other musical forms. However, when the average person uses the word “jazz,” they may not understand the culture or the language.

Many people associate improvisation with jazz and vice-versa. However, improvisation has been an integral part of classical music history, stemming back to the medieval period in Gregorian chants. These chants used additional melodies above the Cantus Firmus (fixed melody in Latin), which were improvised by Medieval musicians to glorify God. In the later periods, improvisation was used in performances outside of churches. J.S. Bach, Handel, Mozart, Beethoven, and Liszt all excelled in improvisation, which was then referred to as extemporization. Bartok’s “Mikrokosmos” were originally improvised as were Beethoven’s famous sketch books (which he later used in formal works).

Near the beginning of the 20th Century, improvisation disappeared in the Romantic Period as performers began mastering composers’ works note for note; the art of improvisation was eventually lost. Schubert’s impromptus, contrary to their title, were not improvised but written out methodically. Playing classical music well is a skill requiring great discipline and talent, but the same can be said for jazz. Both disciplines use the same musical alphabet, yet have somehow managed to create different nomenclatures for each respectively.

Historically, jazz music has not been associated with higher education. However, the great Scott Joplin, an African-American jazz composer of the late 19th to early 20th century, took formal lessons with a classical German-born piano teacher and the Creole performers of New Orleans were often Conservatory-trained in Paris.

Both classical and jazz music are disciplines requiring creativity. The classical musician, after mastering the techniques must interpret the score and bring the written notes to life in a performance. The challenge of a jazz musician is to use, simultaneously, both improvisational talent and the technique required to perform unplanned music for a live audience. To draw an analogy, a classical musician is like an actor with a full script – having to memorize and master it, then bringing the character to life. A jazz musician is like an actor with no script, only a few guidelines to follow, yet charged with creating dialogue and instantly performing in character. In its purest essence, technicality must be mastered. One would argue that the task of learning and memorizing a sonata (15-60 pages) or concerto (often exceeding 100 pages) is a phenomenal task! The best classical and jazz musicians must both be proficient in technique, but the more challenging task is for them to able to augment their technical skills in a performance to move their audience emotionally. All musicians need to play from their hearts to truly affect their audience in a meaningful way.

Jazz Studies at Juilliard, Yale, Stanford, Harvard

Recently, Conservatory Canada has implemented a new examination category implementing jazz idioms, nomenclature and styles. The Royal Conservatory has for several years used a popular syllabus for their studies selection. In addition to the previously mentioned Jazz Studies program offered at Juilliard, Ivy League schools have also shown their support; Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, and Berkley currently offer or are implementing jazz programs. These institutions have embraced an original approach in combining classical and jazz instruction.

We cannot claim that one art form is more or less sophisticated than another. Classical musicians may not fully comprehend jazz culture, just as jazz musicians may not fully interpret classical culture. However, because music is a universal language, the understanding of its different forms and dialects are beneficial. These new “bilingual” musicians are able to better communicate with their audience in various ways. Following the same “early education” concept used for spoken languages, we need to educate children in both classical and jazz music. Children who study classical and jazz at the same time will be able to understand both cultures and fully realize their musical potential.

Oakridge Music Studios is a music education centre based in Vancouver, BC. The following music lessons are taught: piano lessons, guitar lessons, violin, cello, voice, singing, saxophone, trumpet. Music disciplines taught are: jazz, classical and pop music. Young musicians are encouraged to learn both classical and jazz – simultaneously – to excel and advance their music education. This unique bilingual teaching methodology of learning classical and jazz music disciplines is offered in a creative and imaginative environment to actively engage and unleash the young musician’s hidden music ingenuity and skills.

Please call us if you seeking music lessons in the Vancouver, BC area. —–
Oakridge Music Studios-a Vancouver music school
Original article posted at OMusicStudios.com – Jazz Improvisation Improves Classical Music Skills
497 West 40th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V5Y 2R5
tel: +1.604.321.1551 fax: +1.604.321.1555


Learn How to Play with step-by-step piano lessons

Supported by video and audio files. Rocket Piano is organized into 3 high quality books taking you on a journey from beginner to advanced in your gospel piano playing.

learn piano online free image

Click here to find out more

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

English literature of the Middle Ages is full of references to minstrels and minstrelsy, and abounds in quaint and curious details of their life and manners; and for the present-day reader, desirous of information concerning the early music of this country, no better authority exists than Chappell

Tags: , , , ,

Music in the United Kingdom prior to the seventeenth century, or at any rate the latter part of the sixteenth, presents itself under very much the same aspects as on the Continent. On the one hand Church music, on the other Minstrelsy and latterly, the rise of a secular art, secular in spirit but hampered with ecclesiastical traditions.

English Church music of the pre-Reformation period necessarily moved on the same lines as that of the Continent, although probably existing in a far less advanced stage of cultivation. Minstrelsy, however, was greatly esteemed among English. Scotch, Irish, and Welsh; and among the Irish and Welsh the bardic caste enjoyed a degree of power and influence probably unknown in any other country of the world. Thus in Ireland the three grades of minstrels or bards of the legendary period

Tags: , , , , ,

Woe betide the unlucky noble who was ridiculed or denounced by a Troubadour! In the first instance he might feel assured that before long every court and castle in Southern Europe would be laughing at him, and in the second, he might consider himself fortunate if he was not compelled to turn out and defend his life and property against the steel-clad paladins of a hostile neighbour, as had the Lord of Rossilho when Alfonso of Aragon laid waste his territories, as vengeance for the death of the Troubadour Guillem de Cabestanh.

To the Troubadours we owe the existence of various art-forms common to music and poetry, such as the ” Pastorela,” or ” Pastorela ” the shepherd’s song, whence the modern Pastoral or Pastorale; the “Alba”

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

The next step in advance was the addition of a second part to the Chant, moving on certain fixed intervals

Tags: , , , , , , ,

The first important event in the musical history of the Christian era was the institution, by St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, of a uniform version of Church music. Prior to his time, the melodies in use in the Church had been transmitted from generation to generation by mere oral tradition. Under even the most favourable circumstances, it would have been almost impossible to preserve the ancient melodies of the Church in their original purity with this hap-hazard method of perpetuation; and when it is remembered that the Church itself only passed from the direct dangers of the persecutions, to the almost as great, if less obvious, dangers of imperial favour, it will be readily understood that Church music, in its original form at any rate, ran a considerable risk of perishing altogether.

With a view to removing such corruptions as already existed, and preventing the possibility of others arising in the future, St. Ambrose, about the year 384, made a general collection of the tones or tunes to which the Psalms were then sung, and setting forth each in the purest form possible. This formed the orthodox music of the Church for more than two hundred years, and in St. Ambrose’s old diocese of Milan it continues in use to this day.

Two centuries later the uniformity introduced by Ambrose had become very much relaxed; the Ambrosian chant was still in use throughout the Church at large, but with two hundred years use had come many modifications, and the modifications of one country differed materially from those of another. The necessity for a remodelling of the music of the Church was consequently very apparent. To this task Gregory the Great, who became Pope in 590, gave his earnest attention: and the system of Plain Chant which he arranged, broader in conception than that of Ambrose, and designed to meet the liturgical requirements of the entire year, under the title Gregorian, remains in use to the present time. Gregory also revised the Office of the Mass and gave it that form which still remains unchanged, and upon which some of the grandest musical con

Tags: , , ,
© 2010 copyright www.mikesmusicroom.co.uk for piano, organ and keyboard lessons | Privacy Policy