How Did Duke Ellington Became Popular In The 1920s

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In the Early 1920s African Americans began to feel the need to express themselves and thus new art, poetry and music was created. During this, one new music type exploded in popularity throughout the 1920s and began its evolution into the music now known as Jazz. Jazz became extremely popular in the 1920s do to the mixing of cultures in the instruments and the African American stories told through the lyrics that defined it.
The music type known as jazz can be said to have first popped up in New Orleans but that is not necessarily true as the musical sounds actuated with jazz have been said to have came up at other places at different times but New Orleans is where jazz first got really popular. African american music first popped up in New …show more content…

Ellington was different from his predecessors as he thought more about musical form. He also was different as he chose to rarely solo on the piano and would compose music that was made solely for his bandmates separate talents as soloist. He would also put instrument in roles that were not normal to give his bands a different sound that made them even more popular. He and his band in the 1920s also introduced “jungle music” which had more african influences. Ellington was also able to keep most of his original bandmates throughout his career where he died and his son took over. Ellington left a lasting legacy in jazz as many people today are still influenced by the music he wrote and how he wrote and music is still in his family to the this …show more content…

The sound of the music played in these rituals was then mixed with the music African Americans herd in other places such as churches. This was the original sound of jazz music which became popular enough to get other African American and even white people to play it in bands at different clubs and establishments. This music type would for the most part stay distinctive to Louisiana until later in the 1920s jazz would became so popular that racial tensions would began to rise in the state to the point of being dangerous, because of this a movement began where hundreds of jazz players moved north up river in an attempt to introduce the music type to other states and become popular which worked amazingly well. As a result by the late 1920s jazz was popular all around the United States and would not be going anywhere (BirthPlace,

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