Ebook: Jazz as Visual Language: Film, Television and the Dissonant Image
Author: Nicolas Pillai
- Tags: Jazz, Musical Genres, Music, Arts & Photography, Recording & Sound, Music, Arts & Photography, Communication & Media Studies, Social Sciences, Politics & Social Sciences, Popular Culture, Social Sciences, Politics & Social Sciences
- Series: International Library of the Moving Image
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: I.B.Tauris
- Language: English
- pdf
The new phenomenon of jazz music took the world by storm in the 1920s and 1930s. This book provides a timely analysis of the relationship between jazz and recording and broadcast technologies in the early twentieth century. Jazz histories have traditionally privileged qualities such as authenticity, naturalness and spontaneity, but to do so overlooks jazz's status as a modernist, mechanised art form that evolved alongside the moving image and visual cultures. Jazz as Visual Language shows that the moving image is crucial to our understanding of what the materiality of jazz really is. Focusing on Len Lye's direct animation, Gjon Mili's experimental footage of musicians performing and the BBC's Jazz 625 series, this book places emphasis on film and television that conveys the 'sound of surprise' through formal innovation, rather than narrative structure. Nicolas Pillai seeks to refine a critical vocabulary of jazz and visual culture whilst arguing that jazz was never just a new sound; it was also a new way of seeing the world.
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