Rhythm Changes: Jazz, Culture, Discourse explores the history and development of jazz, addressing the music, its makers, and its social and cultural contexts, as well as the various discourses especially those of academic analysis and journalistic criticism that have influenced its creation, interpretation, and reception. Tackling diverse issues, such as race, class, nationalism, authenticity, irony, parody, gender, art, commercialism, technology, and sound recording, the books perspective on artistic and cultural practices suggests new ways of thinking about jazz history. It challenges many established scholarly approaches in jazz research, providing a much-needed intervention in the current academic orthodoxies of Jazz Studies.
Perhaps the most striking and distinctive aspect of the book is the extraordinary eclecticism of the wide-ranging but carefully chosen case studies and examples referenced throughout the text, from nineteenth century literature, through 1930s Broadway and film, to twentieth and twenty-first century jazz and popular music.
Rhythm Changes: Jazz, Culture, Discourse explores the history and development of jazz, addressing the music, its makers, and its social and cultural contexts, as well as the various discourses especially those of academic analysis and journalistic criticism that have influenced its creation, interpretation, and reception.
Introduction: The Persistence of Authenticity
1. The Challenge of the Past: Jazz, Parody, and Jazz Discourse
They Brainwash and Teach You Hate: From Parody to Protest
It Aint Necessarily So: From Caricature to Celebration
In a Sentimental Mood: From Ridicule to Romanticism
Notes
2. A Few of My Favorite Things: Analyzing Jazz, Interpreting Irony, Assessing
Value
"Saying Something": Coltrane, Irony, and My Favorite Things
"White Things," Black Things, and a Few Other Things
"Undeniable Qualities": Homage, Value-For, and Ideological Hegemony
"Myriad Subtleties," Bebop Parody, and the Question of Context
"Were in the Money": Irony, Complexity, and Social Normativity
Notes
3. My Only Sunshine: Jazz, Country Music, George Russell, and Musical
Meaning
Way Out West: From Cowhand Sonny to Dangerous Davey
Cowboy Favorites: Jazz Meets Country Music
You Are My Sunshine: From Singing Cowboys to Gassed Soulsters
Happy Endings: George Russell Meets You Are My Sunshine
Sunshine Redux: From Kiddies Songs to Kitchen Appliances
Notes
4. Divine Revelations: Keith Jarrett, Acoustic Authenticity, and Romantic
Genius
Fun With Toys: Miles, Electricity, and Acoustic Relief
A Blazing Forth of a Divine Will: Blank Slates, Claptrap, and Emphysemic
Goats
Body and Soul: Sacred Space, the State of Grace, and Everyday Ecstasy
Blessed With Genius: The Flame Itself, the Man from Porlock, and the Heavenly
Ostrich
Play On, Play On: Robert Bly, the Wild Man, and the Neglected Male Psyche
Touch the Soil: Elemental Instruments, Indian Country, and the Noble Savage
Notes
5. The Body Electric: Music, Machines, and Mechanical Reproduction
I Sing the Body Electric: Aesthetic Materialism, Technological Humanism, and
Electrical Grandmothers
Spark of Being: Frankenstein, Electricity, and the Merging of Text and Form
Undervaluing Overdubbing: Jazz, Spontaneity, and Recording Studio Trickery
Essential and Divine: Faithful Fidelity, Analogue Authenticity, and "exactly
what was played"
Preserving Spontaneity: Free Improvisation, Live Performance, and the Paradox
of Sound Recording
Notes
6. Can Blue Men Sing the Whites? African American Exceptionalism, European
Stereotypes, and the Jazz Studies Debate
Getting To Know You: The Afrological, the Eurological, and the Illogical
The Anxiety of Affluence: Race, Class, and European Privilege
A Pan-European Conspiracy? Cultural Nationalism, Nativist Politics, and
Foreign Competitors
The Emancipation Problem: African American Models and German Belligerents
A Delicate, Nuanced Approach? Humour, Improvisation, and Composer-Centred
Music
Networks of Power: Whiteness, Erasure, and World Harmony
Postscript: Say It Loud, Im British and Im Proud
Notes
References
Discography
Filmography
ALAN STANBRIDGE is an Associate Professor in Music and Culture at the University of Toronto, Canada