Compare And Contrast Jazz And Hip Hop

Words: 1721
Pages: 7

Jazz and Hip-Hop
Jazz and hip-hop, two forms of music born out of the historical and social struggles of the African-American culture. Jazz finds its origins in New Orleans, Louisiana, uniting military music with ragtime, Creole and European traditions, and finally the blues, with its painful history of slavery and racial abuse. Hip Hop however born out of the streets of New York City, reflecting on the treacherous gang violence and social inequalities for inner black kids. Most would say that hip-hip is somewhat of a grandchild to jazz. Whether it is or not, both constantly deal with racial issues, finding their roots and icons in the African-American culture.
For well over a century now, jazz has been the father of American music. It has incorporated elements from R&B, classical, Latin, etc. Jazz has a very strong connection with hip-hop. Socially, musically, and culturally the two have more in common than some would acknowledge. From the 1960s up to today, jazz and hip-hop continue to borrow and experiment with each other. They both contain elements of improvisation; in hip-hop, free styling and DJing represent this, while in jazz much of the exchange between musicians is improvised.
Jazz started as a new form of entertainment. The Original Dixieland Jazz Band was a unique band. They introduced
…show more content…
Even though jazz is much older than hip hop, there is quite a bit of jazz tracks that have a hip-hop influence. Miles Davis’ last record, Doo-Bop, recorded shortly before his death, is highly oriented towards the hip hop world. Davis’ displayed a tendency to identify new musical trends and bring them to life by adapting his music to them and it showed greatly one last time. In part inviting jazz musicians to approach the hip hop world. Still today, jazz artists try and blend hip hop into their music, showing the two genres can work together and not just hip-hop artists using old samples from great jazz musicians in their