Miles Davis is known as one of the biggest influences of the music industry in the 20th century. From a young age, he took interest in jazz. Not only did this man bring a higher popularity to the genre and inspire several trumpeteers from his diverse style with the instrument, but also created many other subgenres. His multiple collaborations and involvement in music groups had brought him many successes on top of his own as a solo artist. Also, he has had multiple awards in his career. Miles Davis was truly one of the more impactful artists toward music and jazz in the Harlem Renaissance. Before this prestigious status, Miles Dewey Davis III was born on May 26th, 1926 in Alton, Illinois, and grew up in St. Louis, Missouri. At the age of thirteen, he received a trumpet as a birthday present, and from there, his interest in music began. By the age of fifteen, he began performing at live venues, and at the age of only seventeen, the young man began working with Eddie Randall, who would help him to book his first major gig. He got the opportunity to play with the Billy Eckstine Big band in St. Louis; this gave him the opportunity to also meet and perform with two artists that inspired him , Charlie Parker and fellow trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Miles was later accepted into New York’s Juilliard School of Music, …show more content…
His first major performance with other artists was with the Billy Eckstine band in St. Louis, Missouri. With the help of Gil Evans, they created a nonet with artists such as Gerry Mulligan and John Lewis; this group released “The Birth of the Cool” in 1949. This group would eventually break up, but it left behind a subgenre that would become a staple in Miles’ career, cool jazz. Later in his career, he formed the Miles Davis quintet. Miles would form the Miles Davis sextet in 1958, and created the album “Milestones” and “Kind of Blue” with the
The Miles Davis Quintet was so influential to jazz history because they were able to spontaneously explore changes in temp, mood, and form walked a fine line between hard bop and free jazz that is still used today. The younger member in the quintet also energized Davis so he was playing with such
Although, Eddie 'Son' House, grew up in a musically inclined house, he had a deep hatred for blues and didn't turn to music until he was 25 years old when he had heard a new type of music style. For Charley Patton, the love for music started at the early age of 6 when he moved to a cotton and sawmill farm. It was at this farm he developed his music style and began playing for nearby plantation workers. He was one of few blues artists to play annual shows and put his unique skills on display. Booker T. Washington 'Bukka' White, was first cousins with B.B.King (another prominent blues artist) and was skillful with many instruments.
“A major figure in the history of jazz music, his career spanned more than half a century, during which time he composed thousands of songs for the stage, screen and contemporary songbook. He created one of the most distinctive ensemble sounds in Western music and continued to play what he called "American Music" until shortly before his death in 1974.”(Biography.com). Duke ellington was born in , Washington, D.C on April 29, 1899 to his two talented, musical parents where they lived in a middle-class neighborhood of Washington D.C. Being raised in a musical family Duke ellington began playing piano and composing music.
On May 26,1926, Miles Davis the son of Dr. Miles Dewey Davis, Jr. and Cleota Mae Davis, was brought into this world. Shortly after Miles was born his family moved to St. Louis. He was then raised in the eastern portion in a black middle class family. Miles had an older sister named Dorothy and a younger brother Vernon. The Davis family enjoyed everything little thing about music and what it was worth.
Introduction: John Birks Gillespie, better known by his stage name Dizzy Gillespie, was an American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader. Gillespie is regarded as one of the most important jazz performers of the 20th century and was crucial to the growth of the bebop jazz movement, which began in the middle of the 1940s. Gillespie recorded and wrote hundreds of songs over his career, many of them are now regarded as jazz standards. Early Life and Musical Beginnings Dizzy Gillespie was born and raised in Cheraw, South Carolina on October 21, 1917. He was the youngest of nine children and at the age of 12, Gillespie started playing the trumpet and soon displayed musical potential.
Just like any amazing artist, Miles’ Davis fame and skill did not come overnight. Back in high was when his first job experiences began. He worked at local bars and played at gigs, whenever he had the chance. These were only the beginning, one year later Davis joined the Blue Devils—his first band. He soon to attend Julliard, which led to the launch of his successful career.
In 1915, a woman who would shape the meaning of jazz was born. Her name was Billie Holiday. Her life was marked by tumult and poverty; however, through the many hardships she faced, she remained strong and determined. Today, she is regarded as one of the best jazz vocalists of all time. Her renowned voice was distinct due to her abundant use different tones and with her ever changing range.
The first bar he started playing at was The Eagle Saloon around 1908. When he first started playing here it was said his playing was loud and horrible, therefore the customers sent him home. This horrible reaction from his audience forced Oliver to return home and practice more in hopes of becoming much better. Between 1910 and 1917 he played in numerous clubs and built his reputation and image. During this time period he also brought together some of the most well-known players of the new jazz music.
Miles Davis, one of jazz’s most influential musicians with career that expanded six decades. Davis was known for his always changing style, from bebop to rock. He had been part of the bebop, cool jazz, hardbop, modal, rock-fusion movements, and shortly before his death working with hip-hop fusion. Throughout his entire career, Miles Davis preferred the audience recognize him for what he was doing then, not what he had done in the past. Over his sixty-year career he had earned several nicknames: The Sorcerer, the Prince of Darkness, and the man who walked on eggshells.
John Birks or Dizzy Gillespie helped usher in an era of bebop in Jazz. He was born in south carolina in 1917 and was youngest of nine children. He began playing piano when he was four years old and received a music scholarship to laurinburg Institute in North carolina. He is most known for his big puffy “swollen Cheeks” . Dizzy replaced eldridge in a band called Teddy Hill.
Armstrong was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1901, even though he sometimes said later in his life that he was born on July 4, 1900. He was raised by his mother and grandmother after his father, who was a factory worker, left the family while Armstrong was still a child. His family was very poor, and as a child Armstrong worked many odd jobs to help support the family. Armstrong was surrounded by music while working and playing in the streets of New Orleans. Since he could not afford an instrument, he learned to sing and joined a vocal quartet that sang on street corners for a little extra money.
"Satchmo," "Pops," and "Ambassador Satch" were names for an outstanding jazz artist that inspired many. He was one of the most important musicians in jazz. He helped to transform the traditional New Orleans style into a completely different form of jazz. Louis Daniel Armstrong was born on August 4, 1901, in New Orleans, Louisiana in a very poor neighborhood. His father, a laborer, abandoned the family when he was young, and his mother was an irresponsible single parent.
Petersons performing career started in his teen years when he won the “CBC’s National Music Competition” at the age of 14 in 1940. With the help of his self-formed trio, he began to grow throughout Canada performing on radio stations; from this he became Canada’s first jazz star, earning the nickname “the brown
Armstrong performed an astonishing 300 concerts per year on average (Harris). Through his expertise in jazz music Armstrong set the bar for all aspiring musicians, something great to learn from but hard to live up
If you listen to jazz today, you will hear expanded musical harmonies, musicians playing more complex chords, and musical harmonies borrowed from many different genres of music, including pop. Many new, mainstream jazz as artists use the same techniques that artists from the early 1900’s used. Joseph “King” Oliver was the father to many of these techniques, which changed jazz and the way we hear it today. During the 1920’s, Joe “King” Oliver was the most progressive and influential artist in jazz because of his musical innovations that influenced other jazz artists to incorporate his methods,which sparked a new type of jazz. Jazz was first born in New Orleans and eventually moved to Chicago.