cinsi münas

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التركية - الإنجليزية
jazz
To destroy

You’ve gone and jazzed it now! = It is ruined.

A musical art form rooted in West African cultural and musical expression and in the African American blues tradition, with diverse influences over time, commonly characterized by blue notes, syncopation, swing, call and response, polyrhythms and improvisation
To distract/pester

Stop jazzing me! = Leave me alone.

To complicate

Don’t jazz it too much! = Be careful, it was good to start with!.

Of excellent quality, the genuine article

This risotto is simply the jazz. = This risotto was cooked in the classic manner.

To enliven, brighten up, make more colourful or exciting; excite
Unspecified thing(s)

I'm just going down to the shops and jazz = I am off to purchase items and etcetera.

A term in use from around 1900 to describe a type of music that originated in New Orleans It is characterized by syncopations and reiterated rhythms
A genre of music that is the subject of this program While no simple definition exists for jazz, the most important elements of jazz are often said to be swing and improvisation
play something in the style of jazz
Musical style based on improvisation within a band format, combining African traditions of repe­tition, call and response, and strong beat with Eu­ropean structure
Jazz is a style of music that was invented by African American musicians in the early part of the twentieth century. Jazz music has very strong rhythms and often involves improvisation. The pub has live jazz on Sundays. jazz up to make something more attractive or exciting. Musical form, often improvisational, developed by African Americans and influenced by both European harmonic structure and African rhythms. Though its specific origins are not known, the music developed principally as an amalgam in the late-19th-and early 20th-century musical culture of New Orleans. Elements of the blues and ragtime in particular combined to form harmonic and rhythmic structures upon which to improvise. Social functions of music played a role in this convergence: whether for dancing or marching, celebration or ceremony, music was tailored to suit the occasion. Instrumental technique combined Western tonal values with emulation of the human voice. Emerging from the collective routines of New Orleans jazz (see Dixieland), trumpeter Louis Armstrong became the first great soloist in jazz; the music thereafter became primarily a vehicle for profoundly personal expression through improvisation and composition. Elaboration of the role of the soloist in both small and large ensembles occurred during the swing era ( 1930-45), the music of pianist and bandleader Duke Ellington in particular demonstrating the combination of composed and improvised elements. In the mid-1940s saxophonist Charlie Parker pioneered the technical complexities of bebop as an outgrowth of the refinement of swing: his extremes of tempo and harmonic sophistication challenged both performer and listener. The trumpeter Miles Davis led groups that established the relaxed aesthetic and lyrical phrasing that came to be known as cool jazz in the 1950s, later incorporating modal and electronic elements. Saxophonist John Coltrane's music explored many of the directions jazz would take in the 1960s, including the extension of bebop's chord progressions and experimental free improvisation
"Afro-American group instrumental part-improvised music" (Peter Riley), which quickly became a world music in the true sense of that term The most innovative, original, creative and exciting music of the first two-thirds of this century A handful of practitioners are still managing to find something distinctive to create in the idiom, in contrast to most contemporary Modern Jazz revivalists who give the impression that they are miming to records of the old masters (Someone like Wynton Marsalis is living proof that jazz is virtually dead ) The name Jazz is often used to describe many other areas of music that have little, if anything, to do with it - from Joni Mitchell to Erik Satie to Frank Sinatra to Philipp Wachsmann
a style of dance music popular in the 1920s; similar to New Orleans jazz but played by large bands a genre of popular music that originated in New Orleans around 1900 and developed through increasingly complex styles play something in the style of jazz
A style of music originating in the 20th century in New Orleans which combined elements of European-American and African music This style of music was developed largely in urban areas, starting in New Orleans, then moving to Chicago, then to New York It is an improvisational, expressive style of music, characterized by syncopated rhythms, 'blue notes' and the use of seventh and ninth chords Search Google com for Jazz
A style of music of Afro-American roots chracterized by a strong rythmic understructure, blue notes, and improvisation on melody and chord structure
To play jazz music
An American musical style of the 20th century characterized by syncopated rhythms and improvisation
To dance to the tunes of jazz music
cinsi münas
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