The Jazz Roots of "Blast!"
The Jazz Roots of "Blast!"
Examines the influences of jazz and African-American music on the successful musical, "Blast!"
750 words (
approx. 3 pages) |
1 source |
MLA | 2005
Paper Summary:
"Blast!", the musical, grew from the award-winning drum-and-bugle corps Star of Indiana, founded in 1984 to benefit young people in music education. Star moved beyond its earlier triumphs to bring the power, passion and precision of outdoor pageantry to the stage in a musical performance that is now called "Blast!" This paper shows that by merging drum corps's pageantry, marching precision and instrumental virtuosity with the repertoire, props, costuming, staging, dance moves, and special effects of musical theater, "Blast!" made its world premiere in December of 1999 at the London Apollo Theatre. The paper explores the jazz and African-American roots of this musical.
From the Paper:
"Musically, jazz, African music, and Blast! share a number of similarities. All three depend heavily on brass and percussion and incorporate a multitude of instruments, both conventional and unconventional. In traditional African music, persistent and repetitive percussion is the general base for whatever other vocal or instrumental effects may be created against it. Drums, rattles, sticks, stones, iron gongs and bells may all be used separately or simultaneously to produce a series of intricate syncopated rhythms, often very complex in beat and off-beat, and possessing a dynamic drive impelling to body movement."
The Jazz Roots of "Blast!" (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 12, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-The-Jazz-Roots-of-Blast/67599
"The Jazz Roots of "Blast!" " 15 January 2012. Web. 12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Essay-The-Jazz-Roots-of-Blast/67599>