Music Genres
Jazz Music
All Music Guide
Jazz has been called America's classical music, and for good reason. Along with the blues, its forefather, it is one of the first truly indigenous musics to develop in America, yet its unpredictable, risky ventures into improvisation gave it critical cache with scholars that the blues lacked. At the outset, jazz was dance music, performed by swinging big bands. Soon, the dance elements faded into the background and improvisation became the key element of the music. As the genre evolved, the music split into a number of different styles, from the speedy, hard-hitting rhythms of be-bop and the laid-back, mellow harmonies of cool jazz to the jittery, atonal forays of free jazz and the earthy grooves of soul jazz. What tied it all together was a foundation in the blues, a reliance on group interplay and unpredictable improvisation. Throughout the years, and in all the different styles, those are the qualities that defined jazz.
Back to the topStyles of Jazz
Big Band/Swing
Big Band Progressive Big Band Dance Bands
Swing Ballroom Dance Modern Big Band
Progressive Jazz Jive Retro Swing
Orchestral Jazz Sweet Bands Experimental Big Band
Continental Jazz British Dance Bands Society Dance Band
Free Jazz
Modern Creative Modern Free Early Creative
M-Base Free Jazz Third Stream
Free Funk Avant-Garde Jazz
Fusion
Fusion Jazz-Pop Contemporary Jazz
Crossover Jazz Free Funk Jazz-Rock
Smooth Jazz
Latin Jazz/World Fusion
World Fusion Latin Jazz Afro-Cuban Jazz
Brazilian Jazz Latin Big Band Cuban Jazz
African Jazz
New Orleans/Classic Jazz
Boogie-Woogie Ragtime Dixieland
Stride Early Jazz New Orleans Jazz
Mainstream Jazz Trad Jazz New Orleans Brass Bands
Novelty Ragtime New Orleans Jazz Revival Hot Jazz
Bop
Bop Vocalese
Cool
Chamber Jazz Cool
West Coast Jazz
Hard Bop
Neo-Bop Post-Bop
Hard Bop Modal Music
Standards
Soul Jazz/Groove
Jazz-Funk Soul Jazz
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