Monday, February 18, 2013


From the Basement to the Penthouse
Jazz, as soon as it emerged as an art form was immediately associated with the dregs of society.  It was born in the Red Light District of Storyville in New Orleans, moved north to the dance halls and speakeasies controlled by the mob in the south side of Chicago, accompanied rent parties in the slums of Harlem, and kept the patrons spending money in the brothels and casinos of Kansas City.  Since the genre was considered simply the music of the criminal, the young, or the black, it was largely dismissed which left musicians to struggle for legitimacy, regardless of color.  The Charleston, the shimmy, the Black Bottom, and the jitterbug, inseparable from the music that accompanied these dances, brought jazz from the margins to the mainstream(Gioia).  This exposure to popular culture created financial opportunities that had not existed before.  With the potential for economic advancement, came fierce competition between bandleaders and musicians.  Agents, publicists, and record companies all sought to profit as jazz was nationalized in visual arts, theater, movies, and music.  With more at stake bandleaders attempted to keep others from profiting from their creativity, and the differences in reward structure between black musicians and white musicians created a discourse of racial tension.  This new hot version of jazz, swing, created an environment of social miscegenation which made many in the older white community incredibly uncomfortable(p53, Stowe).
While riding on a train in Scottsboro, Alabama a white woman, when faced with a potential prostitution charge, accused several black boys of rape.  The Communist Party of the United States came to their aid and eventually led to their conviction being overturned by the Supreme Court in 1931.  A transition toward political radicalism was ushered in as white organizations criticized black organizations for taking too many concessions from the whites that were in power.  The 1936 competition between Benny Goodman, a white bandleader, and Chick Webb, a black bandleader, at the Savoy further exemplified the racial tensions of the times.  The Savoy was a racially integrated theater in Harlem, where the audience expected a certain level of professionalism and creativity.  If this level was not met, the audience would speak their minds and the performer would pulled from the stage.  Goodman and his all white band were no match for Webb and his all black band.  The performers were in conversation with the audience, and the audience felt that Webb had emerged triumphant that evening(Lecture 2/24).  

Goodman would later become vital in making a jazz a legitimate voice with his performance at Carnegie Hall in 1938.  Carnegie Hall was a venue of high culture, where people would dress in their fanciest of attire, listen to European classical music, and get cultured.  While Goodman, being white, only further strengthened the racial tensions, he realized he was profiting from what was considered a black art form.  He created moments of inclusiveness during the performance when black pianist Teddy Wilson, and black vibraphonist Lionel Hampton performed.  Duke Ellington would take a very different approach from his peers at the time.  In order to further penetrate the mainstream and achieve commercial and economic success he conceded his beliefs on segregation and politics.  He took a job at the whites only Cotton Club and hired an agent(Gioia).  While he was much more successful with the access to a broader, higher paying audience, the experience was a racial sting to his pride.  This exposure also opened him and other black artists up to criticism from white music critics.  John Hammond a white, well to do socialite, felt compelled to critique Ellington after he covered the Scottsboro case for a newspaper.  He said Ellington was insensitive to the troubles of his people and shut his eyes to the abuse put on his race(Stowe).  Ellington tried to ignore the critique saying it was laughable, but it altered his willingness to discuss politics and his approach to music further along in his career. During the 1930s swing broke down segregation and led the overall trend towards more integration.  

1 comment:

  1. Your blog demonstrates a deep understanding of the topics we covered in lecture and answers the prompt thoroughly. However, some of your sentence structure could be simplified. For example, "A transition toward political radicalism [...] were in power." could have been reworded to be more clear on what you are trying to say. There is also a grammatical error, "would pulled from the stage." Other than that, it was an impressive blog!

    ReplyDelete