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  2. Apr 6, 2024 · The 1930s marked a period of significant evolution in jazz, fundamentally shaping it into a cornerstone of American music. During this decade, swing emerged, intertwining African American musical innovation with broader cultural influences.

  3. Kansas City Jazz in the 1930s as exemplified by tenor saxophonist Lester Young marked the transition from big bands to the bebop influence of the 1940s. Outside of the United States the beginnings of a distinct European style of jazz emerged in France with the Quintette du Hot Club de France which began in 1934.

  4. Mar 3, 2019 · As the 1930s drew to a close, swing was pumping through jukeboxes and radios around the country. However, after Hitler’s Germany brutally invaded Poland in 1939, the United States was soon drawn into war, with effects extending into the evolution of jazz.

  5. The Jazz Age, known as the Roaring Twenties, was an era of American history that began after World War I and ended with the start of the Great Depression in 1929. The popularity of the new jazz culture resulted in both positive and negative consequences within American society in the 1920s.

  6. A generation later, the African American music that came to be called “jazz” emerged from New Orleans and was proliferated primarily in the commercial music centers of Chicago and New York. The Great Depression that began in 1929 threatened to bring an end to jazz, but it reemerged in the 1930s more popular than ever and sporting a new name ...

    • David Joyner
    • 1998
  7. By the 1930s, much of the controversy that had shadowed jazz for years began to dissipate as a large number of Americans avidly listened to the many permutations of jazz music. Jazz, especially in its arranged big band form, defined modern America and, by World War II, was the popular music of the nation.

  8. Apr 2, 2024 · But it was the all-white big bands that were taking jazz music to the masses in America in the 30s and helping to make music of African-American origin ubiquitous.

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