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West End Blues was a 12-bar blues composition by Joe ‘King’ Oliver with words subsequently added by Clarence Williams. It was played by Oliver’s Dixie Syncopators and recorded by them on 11 June 1928.
This powerpoint will analyse West End Blues by Louis Armstrong under the catagories; Form, harmony, instrumentation and timbre, melody, rhythm and metre, texture, tonality, performer/composer audience and occasion
28 Ιουν 2024 · What was so special about “West End Blues”? How did it change jazz/music? How is it more important than “Gut Bucket Blues” or “Potatohead Blues”?
6 Φεβ 2016 · Learn how Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five performed a twelve bar blues with jazz elements and scat singing in 1928. See the structure, instruments, chords and phrases of this classic jazz track.
One jazz composition of the 1920s was Louis Armstrong’s performance of West End Blues. This piece begins with an introduction by the trumpet lasting 10 bars, showing the incompleteness which creates the antecedent that will lead on to the consequent of the rest of the song.
West End Blues is one of the most famous recordings in the history of jazz for the following reasons: 1) Armstrong's introduction showed how dazzling his skills as a trumpeter were; 2) he laid the groundwork for jazz soloists to be considered true artists, the same as musicians in other styles of music and; 3) the recording introduced Earl ...
6 Αυγ 2000 · "West End Blues" was a sleepy Southern blues tune written by Joe "King" Oliver until it landed in the hands of trumpeter Louis Armstrong in the late 1920s, at a recording studio in...