Jazz rap (also jazz hop or jazz hip hop) is a fusion of jazz and hip hop music, as well as an alternative hip hop subgenre,[1] that developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s. AllMusic writes that the genre "was an attempt to fuse African-American music of the past with a newly dominant form of the present, paying tribute to and reinvigorating the former while expanding the horizons of the latter." The rhythm was rooted in hip hop[1] over which were placed repetitive phrases of jazz instrumentation: trumpet, double bass, etc. Groups involved in the formation of jazz rap included A Tribe Called Quest, Digable Planets, De La Soul, Gang Starr, and Jungle Brothers.[1]
Overview
During the 1970s, the Last Poets and Gil Scott-Heron placed spoken word and rhymed poetry over jazzy backing tracks.[2] There are also parallels between jazz and the improvised phrasings of freestyle rap. While it drew from these disparate threads, jazz rap did not coalesce as a genre until the late 1980s.
At this time, the jazz community was divided between those who appreciated traditional styles and others who embraced newer forms like smooth jazz. This period also marked a significant shift in jazz's cultural positioning, elevating it to the status of "serious art music." Influential figures like Wynton Marsalis played a pivotal role in this transformation, advocating for a return to traditional jazz values.[3]
Jazz rap's emergence can be seen as an attempt to elevate rap music's status by associating it with jazz's cultural capital and was seen as an alternative to dominant rap subgenres like gangsta and pop rap. This association not only enriched the musical texture of hip-hop but also provided a platform for social and political commentary, aligning with jazz's historical role as a voice for African American experiences and struggles.[4]
Post-WWIIswing and modern jazz had fused with the introduction of Black appeal radio, which attracted a younger audience through its reliance on jive idioms, rhyming, and cadence-laden rap verses. Dizzy Gillespie had pointed to The jives of Dr. Hepcat and rhyming D.J. Daddy-O Daylie as key to popularizing modern jazz.[8] The rise of Top-40 radio on the strength of the rapping DJs in this period of radio's rebirth among black youth led to the wider use of language and syntax popularizing rap. Muhammad Ali's phrasing to the press in the early part of his career was born of listening to black radio of the 1950s, which was often white radio announcers speaking slang "jive" and imitating black announcers while withholding the fact on air of their backgrounds.[9] Pioneering DJs Al Benson, Nat D., and Jack the Rapper all used rhyming,[10] the dozens and jive talk to pepper their broadcasts and were widely copied by white DJs like John Richbourg, Gene Nobles, and Bill Allen during the 1950s, and whose influence on James Brown and other godfathers of rap was formative. Bebop was the backing track that modern jazz credits with being the foundation black appeal radio is based on.[11]
Also of this period was Toronto-based Dream Warriors' 1991 release And Now the Legacy Begins (Island). It produced the hit singles "My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style" and "Wash Your Face in My Sink". The first of these was based on a loop taken from Quincy Jones' "Soul Bossa Nova", while the second sampled Count Basie's 1967 rendition of "Hang On Sloopy". Meanwhile, Los Angeles hip hop group Freestyle Fellowship pursued a different route of jazz influence in recordings with unusual time signatures and scat-influenced vocals.[13]
Jazz artists come to hip hop
Though jazz rap had achieved little mainstream success, jazz legend Miles Davis' final album (released posthumously in 1992), Doo-Bop, featured hip hop beats and collaborations with producer Easy Mo Bee.[14] Jazz musician Branford Marsalis collaborated with Gang Starr's DJ Premier on his Buckshot LeFonque project that same year. Between 1993 and 2000 fellow Gang Starr member Guru released Jazzmatazz, which featured guest appearances from jazz artists such as Lonnie Liston Smith, Freddie Hubbard and Donald Byrd, amongst others.
Since 1994
Musical jazz references became less obvious and less sustained, and lyrical references to jazz certainly more rare.[15] However, jazz had been added to the palette of hip hop producers, and its influence continued throughout the 1990s whether behind the gritty street-tales of Nas (Illmatic, Columbia, 1994), or backing the more bohemian sensibilities of acts such as the Roots, the Nonce, and Common. Since 2000 it can be detected in the work of producers such as J. Rawls, Fat Jon and Madlib. A project somewhat similar to Buckshot Le Fonque was Brooklyn Funk Essentials, a New York–based collective who also released their first LP in 1994. Prince himself contributed to the genre on some songs from 1991 to 1992, as well as with his New Power Generation album Gold Nigga, which mixed jazz, funk and hip-hop and was released very confidentially.
Madlib's 2003 release Shades of Blue paid homage to his Blue Note Records roots, where he samples from Blue Note's archives. The album also contains interpretations of Blue Note classics performed by Yesterdays New Quintet.[17]
^"Durst, Albert Lavada", Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
^Hilmes, M. (1997). Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, p. 272-3.
^Marsha Washington George (28 March 2002). Black Radio ... Winner Takes All: America's 1St Black Djs. Xlibris Corporation. pp. 90–. ISBN978-1-4628-1993-5
^Hunt, Dennis (June 29, 1993). "Liberating Rap With Jazz Sound : Freestyle Fellowship Adds Riffs to Rhymes". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 22, 2017.
^Aldrich, Steve. "Doo-Bop". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
^Cunningham, Phillip Lamarr (9 September 2010). ""There's Nothing Really New under the Sun": The Fallacy of the Neo-Soul Genre". Journal of Popular Music Studies. 22 (3): 240–258. doi:10.1111/j.1533-1598.2010.01240.x.
^"Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1 > Overview". allmusic.com. Retrieved April 24, 2010.