jazz$41406$ - traduction vers Anglais
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jazz$41406$ - traduction vers Anglais

SINGING TECHNIQUE
Vocal Jazz; Jazz singing; Jazz vocalist; Jazz vocal; Jazz vocalists

jazz      
adj. jazz (stijl, ritme)
jazz band         
  • Stage Door Canteen]]'' (1943)
  • ''Jazz Band'', by Israeli artist [[David Gerstein]]
  • A rhythm section, with bass and drums
  • The West Point Band's Jazz Knights perform in West Point's Eisenhower Hall (2011)
MUSICAL ENSEMBLE THAT PLAYS JAZZ MUSIC
Jazz ensemble; Jazz Band; Skookum (jazz group); Jazz combo
jazzband
Utah Jazz         
  • 40px
  • The logo of the New Orleans Jazz from 1974 to 1979.
  • Longtime coach Jerry Sloan, who coached the Jazz over the two decades
  • [[Pete Maravich]] played for the Jazz from 1974 to 1980.
  • 2022]].
AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL TEAM
New Orleans Jazz (NBA team); New Orleans Jazz (NBA); Utah jazz; Mike Wells (basketball); Salt Lake City Jazz; Salt Lake City Basketball Team; Utah Jaz
Utah Jazz (basebal groep van de N.B.A)

Définition

acid jazz
¦ noun a kind of dance music incorporating elements of jazz, funk, soul, and hip hop.

Wikipédia

Vocal jazz

Vocal jazz or jazz singing is an approach to jazz using the voice.

Vocal jazz emerged in the early twentieth century, with its roots in Blues. Popular blues singers such as Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey had a great deal of influence of jazz vocalists such as Billie Holiday. Other characteristics of vocal jazz such as scat singing came out of the New Orleans jazz tradition. Louis Armstrong's 1926 recording of "Heebie Jeebies" is often cited as the first modern song to employ scatting. This later evolved into the complex vocal improvisation of the bop era that was adopted by Anita O'Day, Sarah Vaughan, Betty Carter, and Dizzy Gillespie. The Boswell Sisters were a vocal jazz trio originating from New Orleans that help popularize vocal jazz music among the general American public during the 1930s.

Repertoire of vocal jazz typically includes the music of the Great American Songbook, however contemporary popular music is now often arranged for vocal jazz ensembles in addition to original music. Such arrangements/original music typically employ the harmonic language of jazz, improvisation, and rhythms derived from the syncretized music of West Africa, African-Americans, and European Art Music traditions. This includes swing music, as well as Latin jazz, jazz fusion, and rhythm and blues.

Technical characteristics of vocal jazz include diction based on vernacular rather than formal speech patterns. Legato and vibrato are also not constants in the articulation of vocal jazz. Vocal jazz often uses microphone amplification and singers are accompanied by a rhythm section (piano, bass, drums, and guitar) and sometimes vocal percussion.