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Jazz patterns drums
Jazz patterns drums




jazz patterns drums jazz patterns drums

  • Music and compendium for Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology (SFW40820).
  • Music and liner notes from Classic Sounds of New Orleans from Smithsonian Folkways (SFW40183).
  • Music and liner notes from Jazz/Some Beginnings - 1913-1926 (FWORF31).
  • Smithsonian Interactive Jazz Education Website.
  • The article entitled “Jazz” by John Edward Hasse and Bob Blumenthal in Smithsonian Folkways Magazine.
  • Other suggested Smithsonian resources for information on early jazz and the drum set:
  • Wire brushes or fly swatters (optional).
  • If a drum set is not available, photos/videos of a drum set containing the above components.
  • Drum set (bass drum and bass drum pedal, snare drum, tom toms, cymbals, hi-hats, mounted woodblocks (if available)).
  • A world map and a map of the United States of America.
  • Liner notes from Music of New Orleans, Vol.
  • 5: New Orleans Jazz: The Flowering (FW02465)
  • “Shake It and Break It” and liner notes from Music of New Orleans, Vol.
  • “I’m Satisfied You Love Me” and liner notes from New Orleans Jazz: The Twenties (FWRBF 203).
  • 2: Music of the Eureka Brass Band (FW02462)

    jazz patterns drums

  • “Lord, Lord, Lord” and liner notes from Music of New Orleans, Vol.
  • 1: Baby Dodds Talking and Drum Solos(FW02290)
  • “Spooky Drums No.1,” “Careless Love Blues,” and liner notes from Foot Notes to Jazz, Vol.
  • Learn to play an early drum set rhythm called the “shimmy beat” as performed by Baby Dodds.
  • Learn to perform and improvise a New Orleans brass band rhythm.
  • Learn about the early history of the drum set and its development.
  • Learn the names and origins of the individual pieces of the drum set.
  • Instruments: Drum Set, Drum Sticks, Body Percussion, Hands, Voice Genre: Early Jazz/Dixieland, New Orleans Brass Band This lesson provides an introduction to drum set history and teaches students to perform preliminary New Orleans brass band and early jazz drumming rhythms. Most people (including many drum set players!) are surprised to learn that the drum set, as we know it today, owes much of its popularity to the development of jazz in New Orleans.

    jazz patterns drums

    Likely first used in the United States in the late 19th century and developed extensively throughout the first half of the 20th century, the drum set is now an international cultural icon. Few American innovations have had as far-reaching and profound an impact on the world’s music as the drum set.






    Jazz patterns drums