School of Music
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A 1920s version of "dancing with the stars" may have influenced jazz music
by Todd Hollingshead The hit television show 'Dancing with the Stars' has been around only a few years, but a new study by a Brigham Young University researcher shows that a different type of dancing with the stars happening in the late 1920s may have shaped jazz music as we know it. In an article appearing in the current issue of the Journal of the American Musicological Society, music professor Brian Harker shows that a partnership with a jittering, jiving, dancing duo may have heavily influenced the rhythms of Louis Armstrong, widely recognized as one of the most influential jazz musicians of all time. Harker's article provides evidence that Armstrong's jazz trumpeting actually took on a more free flowing, innovative and flexible style due to his performing duets with the dancers. 'The dancing seems to have pushed jazz in a new direction,' said Harker, who notes that dance's role in the development of early jazz music has not been well understood. Between the summer of 1926 and the summer of 1927, Armstrong entered into a partnership at Chicago's Sunset Café with a husband-and-wife dance team called Brown and McGraw. Armstrong played his trumpet onstage with the dancers, playing rehearsed--though not written--solos that closely matched their steps, movements or facial expressions. 'This couple introduced rhythmic dance movements to Armstrong, which opened up the way to more complicated dance steps,' Harker said. 'And the rhythm of those steps may have changed the way Armstrong performed himself.' During the time of their musical collaboration, Armstrong retuned his approach to rhythm. Whereas previously he tended to rely on more or less fixed rhythms, his recordings in late 1926 and 1927 reveal a style that is free and flexible. This rhythm became the foundation for the new jazz language that emerged in the Swing Era. 'For Harker to be able to piece together what the eccentric dance of the time was like and how it influenced a major player at a turning point in jazz history is truly remarkable,' said Kate van Orden, editor for theJournal of the American Musicological Society and professor of music at the University of California-Berkeley. 'It's masterful work in every respect - its methodological conception, archival research, music analysis and presentation.' Harker uncovered this little known partnership between Armstrong and Brown and McGraw during a research sabbatical in New York City in 2005 and 2006. While digging through an interview with a trumpet player named Doc Cheatham, Harker found references to this partnership. From there, Harker went on a treasure hunt and found additional sources from newspapers, clippings in Armstrong's scrapbooks, census records and a 1926 court case between Brown and McGraw and a club in which they performed. Harker also tracked down a living nephew of the dancing couple who provided additional personal information. Harker learned that Armstrong not only accompanied the duo, but he also worked out solos based on their dancing. 'Big Butter and Egg Man' is one such solo that may have been influenced in this way. A quote from Armstrong on the collaboration is cited in the paper: 'There was the team of Brown and McGraw -- they did a jazz dance that just wouldn't quit. I'd blow for their act, and every step they made, I put the notes to it.' Harker said this finding led to the discovery of other examples of jazz trumpet soloists not only working with dancers, but also getting on stages and performing along with them. It took the BYU researcher two years to harmonize the research and write the paper. It includes the first scholarly writings about Brown and McGraw, a duo that faded out when they couldn't translate their act to movies and radio. This is not the first time Harker has researched Armstrong. The music history and theory professor, who also plays the jazz trumpet, first started studying Armstrong while working on his Ph.D. dissertation. He won the 1999 Irving Lowens Award for his article, ''Telling a Story': Louis Armstrong and Coherence in Early Jazz,' published by Current Musicology. Source: BYU News
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BYU Fine Arts and Entertainment Calendar for May 2008
by Marissa Ballantyne Friday, May 2 The fifth annual Deseret Chamber Music Series will open with a performance by the Deseret Piano Trio at 7:30 p.m. in the Madsen Recital Hall, Harris Fine Arts Center. Faculty artists Monte Belknap, violin; Julie Bevan, cello; and Jeffrey Shumway, piano, will perform the Trio in D Minor, op. 120 by Gabriel Fauré and the Trio in B-flat Major, op. 97, “Archduke” by Ludwig van Beethoven. Admission is free. Friday, May 9 BYU School of Music faculty artist Marilyn Smith will perform a vocal recital at 7:30 p.m. in the Madsen Recital Hall, Harris Fine Arts Center. Admission is free. Friday, May 16 The Deseret Chamber Music Series will continue with a concert of Spanish Vihuela music at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center. Faculty performing group Orpheus Winds will perform “Siete Canciones Populares Espanolas” by Manuel de Falla and “Aires Tropicales” by Paquito D’Rivera as well as the Violin Sonata No. 7 in C minor, op. 30, no. 2 by Ludwig van Beethoven. Admission is free. Friday, May 23 The Deseret Chamber Music Series will conclude with a night of the music of Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center. LeeAnn Morgan, violin; Scott Holden, piano; April Clayton, flute; Geralyn Giovannetti, oboe; Jaren Hinckley, clarinet; Monte Belknap, violin; Claudine Bigelow, viola; and Eric Hansen, double bass, will perform. Admission is free. Wednesday, May 28, through Saturday, June 14 The Department of Theatre and Media Arts will present “Esperanza Rising,” a play adapted from the book by Pam Munoz Ryan about a young Mexican immigrant’s struggle to adjust to life in the United States during the Depression. Directed by Eric Samuelsen, it will be seen in the Pardoe Theatre, Harris Fine Arts Center. Dress rehearsals will be May 28-29 at 7:30 p.m. and matinee performances will be June 5, 13 and 14 at 2 p.m. Regular evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. starting Friday, May 30, and running through Friday, June 13. There will be no performances Sundays or Mondays. Tickets are $15, or $9 on weeknights and $10 on weekends with a BYU or student ID and for children two years of age and older. Tickets are $6 for all seats at dress rehearsals and matinee performances. Tickets can be purchased at the Fine Arts Ticket Office, by calling (801) 422-4322 or by visiting performances.byu.edu.
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School of Music hosts final free concerts of winter semester April 15
by Marissa Ballantyne
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New directors for BYU Wind Symphony, Cougar Marching Band
The Brigham Young School of Music has announced two new appointments in its bands division.
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Chamber, Philharmonic Orchestra concert April 3 to preview Carnegie Hall repertoire
by Marissa Ballantyne Includes premiere of K. Newell Dayley's 'A Perfect Brightness of Hope'
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BYU Men's, Women's Choruses plan joint concerts March 25-26
The Brigham Young University Women’s Chorus and Men’s Chorus will perform two spring concerts Tuesday and Wednesday, March 25-26, at 7:30 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall.
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BYU jazz groups to perform March 21 at Covey Center
by Marissa BallantyneThe Brigham Young University Jazz Ensemble and Vocal Jazz will perform together in a showcase on Friday, March 21, at the Covey Center for the Arts.
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