Academic literature on the topic 'Keith Jarret'

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Journal articles on the topic "Keith Jarret"

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Monteil, Pierre-Olivier. "À l'écoute de Keith Jarrett." Autres Temps. Les cahiers du christianisme social 65, no. 1 (2000): 99–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/chris.2000.2189.

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Dobbins, Bill, and Ian Carr. "Keith Jarrett: The Man and His Music." Notes 49, no. 1 (1992): 141. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/897230.

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Early, Gerald. "Keith Jarrett, Miscegenation & the Rise of the European Sensibility in Jazz in the 1970s." Daedalus 148, no. 2 (2019): 67–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/daed_a_01743.

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In the 1970s, pianist Keith Jarrett emerged as a major albeit controversial innovator in jazz. He succeeded in making completely improvised solo piano music not only critically acclaimed as afresh way of blending classical and jazz styles but also popular, particularly with young audiences. This essay examines the moment when Jarrett became an international star, the musical and social circumstances of jazz music immediately before his arrival and how he largely unconsciously exploited those circumstances to make his success possible, and what his accomplishments meant during the 1970s for jazz audiences and for American society at large.
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Blume, Gernot. "Blurred affinities: tracing the influence of North Indian classical music in Keith Jarrett's solo piano improvisations." Popular Music 22, no. 2 (2003): 117–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143003003088.

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In the first forty years of his career, American pianist Keith Jarrett has established a reputation in multiple stylistic directions. Jarrett has typically incorporated influences as varied as bebop, country, rock, gospel, minimalism, baroque and classical styles into his often lengthy improvisations. Vital to his musical persona, but less obvious, is the influence North Indian classical music has had in shaping Jarrett's improvisatory strategies. Although he never formally studied Indian music, and although his instrument – the piano – is far removed from the conceptual backdrop of North Indian raga performance, Indian music was a central component in the artistic climate out of which his improvised solo recitals grew.A cultural climate of global influences was the backdrop to the development of Jarrett's solo concerts. Therein, perhaps, lies one key to understanding the spell that this music has cast on large and international audiences. With this format, Jarrett tapped into the ambiance of a particular historic moment, which combined a desire for change with the discovery of spiritual and musical traditions outside the Western world.In this paper I will demonstrate how explicit and implicit references to classical Indian principles of music making helped shape Jarrett's unique free solo concerts.
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Gagatsis, Alexander. "Keith Jarrett: A Biography. By Wolfgang Sandner. Translated by Chris Jarrett. Sheffield: Equinox, 2020. 215 pp. ISBN 9781800500112." Popular Music 40, no. 1 (2021): 178–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143021000222.

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Inck, Thomas. "A Beginner’s Mind: On Beginning Psychoanalytic Schooling … Bion, Keith Jarrett, and the Primal Scene." Studies in Gender and Sexuality 17, no. 3 (2016): 216–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15240657.2016.1200901.

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Ake, David. "The Emergence of the Rural American Ideal in Jazz: Keith Jarrett and Pat Metheny on ECM Records." Jazz Perspectives 1, no. 1 (2007): 29–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17494060601061014.

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Sarnowski, Michael. "Enemy Encounters in the War Poetry of Wilfred Owen, Keith Douglas, and Randall Jarrell." Humanities 7, no. 3 (2018): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h7030089.

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While some war poets amplify the concept of anonymity for enemy soldiers, projecting an “us vs. them” mentality, other defining voices of war counter this militaristic impulse to dehumanize the enemy. This pivot toward describing the World Wars more like humanitarian crises than an epic of good and evil is most notable in poems that chronicle both real and imagined close-range encounters between combatants. The poem “Strange Meeting” by British First World War soldier Wilfred Owen uses the vision of two enemy soldiers meeting in hell to reinforce his famous notion that war is something to be pitied. As a result of technological advancements in the Second World War and the increasing distance of combat, the poems “Vergissmeinnicht” and “How to Kill” by British Second World War soldier Keith Douglas wrestle with dehumanizing the enemy and acknowledging their humanity. “Protocols” by American Second World War soldier Randall Jarrell is an imagined view of civilian victims, and is a reckoning with the horrors human beings are capable of committing.
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Adler, Jeffrey S. "Review: A People’s Archive of Police Violence in Cleveland, Bishop Chui, Jarrett Drake, Melissa Hubbard, Jasmine Jones, Carol Steiner, Stacie Williams, Keith Wilson, Volunteer Activists and Archivists." Public Historian 40, no. 4 (2018): 190–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2018.40.4.190.

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Stetsiuk, Bohdan. "The origins and major trends in development of jazz piano stylistics." Aspects of Historical Musicology 19, no. 19 (2020): 411–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum2-19.24.

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This article characterizes development trends in jazz piano from its origins in the “third-layer” (Konen, V., 1984) of music (ragtime and other “pre-jazz” forms) to the present time (avant-garde and retro styles of the late 20th – early 21st centuries). Main attention was devoted to the stylistic sphere, which represents an entirety of techniques and methods of jazz piano improvisation and combines genre and style parameters. In this context, the currently available information about jazz pianism and its sources (Kinus,Y., 2008; Stoliar, R., 2017) was reviewed, and sociocultural determinants, which contributed to the advent and changes of jazz piano styles were highlighted. Standing out among them at the first (traditional) stage are the schools and individual creative techniques known under generic name “stride piano” and based on the ragtime technique. At the second (contemporary) stage beginning from bebop, jazz piano stylistics gradually diverge from standardized textural formulas of homophonicharmonic type and attain fundamental diversity depending on creative attitudes of leading jazz pianists. The question of jazz piano stylistics is one of the least studied in jazz theory. The existing works devoted to this subject address mostly the sequence of the advent and changes of jazz piano styles along with the general characteristics of their representatives. Beginning from approximately the 1920s, jazz piano styles appeared and changed so fast that they left no time for their comprehension and perception (Kinus, Y., 2008). Only in the newest stylistics of the period after bebop, which divided the art of jazz into traditional and contemporary stages, did these styles attain a certain shape in new modifications and become the components of a phenomenon defined by the generic notion “jazz pianism”. It was stated that the genesis of this phenomenon is usually seen in the art of ragtime, carried in the United States of the late 19th – early 20th centuries by itinerant pianists. This variety of “third-layer” piano music playing produced a significant impact on the art of jazz in general, which is proved by its reproduction in the Dixieland and New Orleans styles as some of the first examples of jazz improvisation. The stylistics of ragtime influenced the entire first stage of jazz piano, which traces its origins back to approximately the 1910s. It combined mental features and esthetics of two traditions: European and Afro-American, which in the entirety produced the following picture: 1) popular and concert area of music playing; 2) gravitation toward demonstration of virtuosic play; 3) domination of comic esthetics; 4) objectivity of expression; 5) tendency toward the completeness of form; 6) inclination toward stage representation. In technological (texturalpianistic) aspect, ragtime, reproduced in the jazz stylistics of stride piano, demonstrated the tendency toward universalization of piano, which combined in the person of one performer the functions of solo and accompaniment, derived from the practice of minstrel banjoists related to the percussion-accented rhythmics of dance accompaniment (Konen, V., 1984). It was stated that ragtime as the transitional bridge to jazz piano existed simultaneously with other forms of “third-layer” music playing found in the Afro-American environment (unlike ragtime itself, which was an art of white musicians). These were semi-folklore styles known as “barrel house” and “honky-tonk(y) piano” cultivated in Wild West saloons. The subsequent development of jazz piano stylistic went along the lines of more vocal and specific directions related mostly to peculiarities of playing technique. Among the more global origins equal in significance to ragtime and stride pianists derivative, blues piano stylistics is worth noting. It represents an instrumental adaptation of vocal blues, which had the decisive influence over the melodics and rhythmics of the right hand party of jazz pianists (ragtime and stride piano highlighted and consolidated the typical texture of accompaniment, i.e., the left hand party). Blues piano style is a multicomponent phenomenon that shaped up as a result of efforts taken by a whole number of jazz pianists. It was developed, and continues to exist until presently, in two variants: a) as a solo piano variant, b) as a duet variant (piano and vocal). Along with blues piano, a style known as “boogie-woogie” was cultivated in jazz piano stylistics of the period before bebop as the new reminiscence of the pre-jazz era (with rock-n-roll becoming a consequence of its actualization in the 1950–1960s). A stylistic genre known as “Harlem piano style” (its prominent representatives include Luckey Roberts, James P. Johnson, Willie “the Lion” Smith, and Thomas “Fats” Waller) became a sort of compendium that combined genetic components of traditional jazz piano. This school has finally defined jazz piano as a form of solo concert music playing, which also determined the subsequent stylistic varieties of this art, the most noteworthy of which are “trumpet piano style”, “swing piano style” and “locked hands style”. Their general feature was interpretation of the instrument as a “small orchestra”, which meant rebirth at the new volute of a historical-stylistic spiral of the “image” of universal piano capable of reproducing the “sounds” of other instruments, voices and their ensembles. Outstanding pianists of various generations have been, and are, the carriers (and often “inventors”) of jazz piano styles. It should suffice to mention the names of such “legends” of jazz as Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Bill Evans, and also Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett (older generation), Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Brad Mehldau, Vadim Neselovskyi, Robert Glasper (middle generation), Eldar Djangirov, Tigran Hamasyan, Cory Henry (younger generation). Conclusions. The description of the stages of development of jazz piano pianism made in this article proves that its polystylistic nature is preserved, and the main representative of certain stylistic inclinations were and remain the texture. Textured formulas serve as the main objects of stylistic interpretations for jazz pianists of different generations. These readings are represented by two vectors – retrospective (revival of jazz traditions) and exploratory, experimental (rapprochement with the academic avant-garde). Of great importance are the styles of personalities, in which polystylistic tendencies are combined with the individual playing manners and improvisation, which, in general, is the most characteristic feature of the current stage of development of jazz piano art.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Keith Jarret"

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Alves, Alisson de Albuquerque. "Homoerotismo em questão na literatura brasileira A condição homoafetiva nas obras Stella Manhattan e Keith Jarret no Blue Note: Improvisos de Jazz de Silviano Santiago." Universidade Estadual da Paraíba, 2010. http://tede.bc.uepb.edu.br/tede/jspui/handle/tede/2174.

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Made available in DSpace on 2015-09-25T12:23:43Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Alisson_Albuquerque_MLI.pdf: 758891 bytes, checksum: 1629753424d51f48bde9712e04df3834 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010-05-12<br>The literature is a propitiate way so that several speeches, beyond what is said about the own literary phenomenon, be presented/recreated in the sense of envision possibilities of reconstruction/reframing of the subjects in the cultural space, once these ones can, on one side, make part and/or to understand the status quo hegemonic, as well as they can, on the other hand, accomplish, with effect, the (re)appearance of new "individual" subjects - ethnic minorities and class, nationals and gender -, which insist in a fight -demarcate territories and to look for the recognition of cultural values that should be given. For this optics, we left from the literary production of representation homoerotic that, as the feminine representation, it works a speech appraiser of the condition of the gay subjects in the sociocultural context, mainly when it is taken into consideration that these suffer, as it discusses Silva (2007), the prejudice, the homophobia or intolerance. Then, with base in what seems be the most important criterion to consider the existence of a literature of gay expression - the homoerotic thematic, we had the objective, in that master's degree dissertation, to observe and to discuss the representations homoerotic, analyzing the condition homoaffective in the novel "Stella Manhattan" (1991) and the book of short stories "Keith Jarret no blue note" (1996), both by Silvano Santiago, with the intention of verifying the representations of the homoerotic desire, as well the aspects that, hypothetically, could make possible the constitution of a "gay aesthetics", according to the thought of some theoretical as Wilton Garcia (2000, 2004), for example, have been enough to deconstruct the duality homoaffective that ranging from the practice of homosexual and heterosexual and homophobic and makes the expression of gay desire a possibility of institutionalization of the gay in the context sociocultural and construction of "identity". So, I intend this work to establish a link between what is conventionally known as gay literature, considering its existence, and how the homoerotic themes and recurring elements of this literature are approached in works that we proposed to examine. For this, we will take as reference some texts that talk about the aspects of the conceptual issues and historical notions of gender, sexuality and homoeroticism, the questions surrounding the relationship between literature and homoeroticism, considering the erotic aspect of the term. Finally, the identity / sexual homoerotic through a wide study on the expression of gay literature, and later through the works that are part of our corpus analysis Stella Manhattan (1991) and book of short stories "Keith Jarrett on Blue Note" (1993), both of Silvano Santiago.<br>A literatura é um meio propício para que diversos discursos, além dos que já dizem respeito ao próprio fenômeno literário, sejam representados/recriados no sentido de vislumbrar possibilidades de reconstrução/ressignificação dos sujeitos no espaço cultural, uma vez que estes tanto podem, por um lado, fazer parte de um status quo hegemônico, como também podem, por outro lado, cumprir, com efeito, o (re)surgimento de novos sujeitos individuais minorias étnicas e de classe, nacionais e de gênero , os quais se empenham numa luta demarcar territórios e buscar o reconhecimento de valores culturais que lhes deveriam ser conferidos. Por essa ótica, partimos da produção literária de representação homoerótica que, como a de representação feminina, aciona um discurso avaliador da condição dos sujeitos (nesse caso, os gays) no contexto sociocultural, principalmente quando se leva em consideração que estes sofrem, como discute Silva (2007), o preconceito, a homofobia ou a intolerância. Então, com base no que parece ser o critério mais importante para considerar a existência de uma literatura de expressão gay a temática homoerótica, tivemos o objetivo, nessa dissertação, de observar e questionar as representações homoeróticas, analisando a condição homoafetiva no romance Stella Manhattan (1991) e no livro de contos Keith Jarret no blue note (1996), ambos de Silviano Santiago, com o intuito de verificar se as representações do desejo homoerótico, bem como os aspectos que, hipoteticamente, poderiam possibilitar a constituição de uma estética gay ou da literatura gay como um gênero, segundo o pensamento de alguns teóricos como Wilton Garcia (2000, 2004), por exemplo, têm desconstruído a dualidade homoafetiva entre a prática homo e heterossexual homofóbica e denotam o desejo como uma possibilidade de institucionalização do gay no contexto sociocultural e de construção de identidade sexual e/ou de gênero. Assim, busca-se, com este trabalho, estabelecer uma relação entre o que se convencionou chamar de literatura gay, considerando a sua existência, e a temática homoerótica somada aos recursos imagéticos nas obras que propusemos analisar. Para tanto, tomamos como referência alguns textos em torno dos aspectos relacionados às questões conceituais e históricas das noções de gênero, sexualidade e homoerotismo; às questões que envolvem as relações entre literatura e homoerotismo, considerando o aspecto erótico do termo; por último, às identidades sexuais homoeróticas através de um estudo panorâmico acerca da literatura de expressão gay, e, posteriormente, através das representações do desejo gay nas obras que fazem parte do nosso corpus de análise.
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Douglas, Charles William. "An Overview and Performance Guide to Johannes Möller's "Shenandoah Fantasy for Two Guitars"." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2019. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1505150/.

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Johannes Möller's 2014 composition Shenandoah Fantasy for Two Guitars, is a theme and variations on the American folksong Oh Shenandoah and is the composer's only work dedicated to American music. An informed performance of this work requires biographical information. Since no scholarly work on this composer is currently available, this paper includes Möller's biographical information, compositional background and performance suggestions. This information was acquired through a recorded video interview with the composer that covered his early education as a guitarist and composer, his formal conservatory training, career accomplishments, influences that informed the piece, and suggestions for performance practice. The insight gained through this interview reveals its main influences as the Romantic Fantasy, American Minimalism, Keith Jarret's harmonization of Oh Shenandoah, American country and bluegrass music, and the sounds of American folk instruments. These are the subjects of the body of this paper. In addition to an overview of some scholarly writing on the styles which influence the piece, some solutions are offered at the end of the paper to aid in the performance of difficult passages. The intent of these solutions is to make the piece easier for the left and right hand, without sacrificing those musical elements that represent its influences. This is currently the only scholarly work available for Shenandoah Fantasy for Two Guitars and its composer.
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Barakat, Alexandra. "Improvisation(s) solo au piano : Keith Jarrett (the Köln concert) : mouvement(s) et frontière(s)." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015AIXM3002.

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Nous avons appréhendé Köln Concert comme une sorte de symptôme. Il présente à l’analyse un ensemble de caractéristiques rarement coprésentes. C’est en ce sens une œuvre utile, prétexte à évaluer des phénomènes parfois contradictoires, du moins qu’on a l’habitude d’opposer (composé/improvisé, écrit/oral, savante/populaire). Enregistré à l’opéra de Cologne en 1975, par Keith Jarrett, il représente une vente record dans l’histoire du jazz, à cheval entre deux époques, comme le basculement dans l’ère post-moderne, qui traduit l’existence d’un flou esthétique, d’un état intermédiaire où la notion d’œuvre même paraît peu pertinente. Cette musique, improvisée du début à la fin, ne semble pourtant pas appartenir au « free jazz », ni même vraiment au jazz et évoque à l’écoute un récital « néo-romantique ». Nous nous sommes attachée à en suivre le cheminement, associant l’écoute et l’analyse critique de sa transcription (publiée en 1981). Elle ne relève pas d’une forme dominante : de formes nous ne trouvons qu’ébauches, segments; c’est une œuvre « ouverte », au sens d’une action en relation directe avec son public. Dans cette dramaturgie musicale, on reconnaît les effets d’une rhétorique – au sens de la Grèce antique – et un travail de la mémoire, évoquant l’ars memoria. Par sa grande culture musicale « classique », ses longues années d’étude précédant sa carrière de jazzman, Keith Jarrett occupe une position à part, marquée par la relation inédite entre une maison de disques européenne (ECM) et un musicien, achevant de brouiller les frontières entre les genres et les localisations esthétiques. Köln Concert acquiert ainsi une dimension anthropologique riche en enseignements<br>Köln Concert is a useful instrument to compare and articulate contradictory or opposite elements on conceptual sides (composed/improvised, written/oral, savant/popular). Recorded in 1975, this solo performance is the biggest record sale in jazz music. It was published at the very beginning of the post-modernism era in music and belongs to a new aesthetical field, not defined by such notions as « opus » or « work ». This music, totally improvised, can’t be defined as jazz or « free jazz » or « contemporay music », for example, nor « neo-classical music », even if it could sound like some neo-romantic recital. Through a critical analysis of the transcription (published in 1991), we tried to describe the music as an action. Köln Concert has no overall shape, no total structure, just fragmentary forms. It’s an opened work directly connected to an audience. His musical dramaturgy has a rhetorical dimension, as it can be perceived through ancient Greek culture and ars memoria in general. Thanks to his great musical culture, including jazz and classical music, Jarrett is out of categories. American artist. associated with an European record company (ECM) and to his new aesthetical conceptions of the sound, he belongs to a new world of aesthetics. We consider Köln Concert as a kind of musical symptom, not because of the quality of the music (which can always be discussed) but because this type of musical action can be analysed as a concrete utopia, made to explore cognitive processes and develop a new vision of anthropology
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Broström, Olle. "Effekter av plankning : Utvecklande av solospel på piano." Thesis, Kungl. Musikhögskolan, Institutionen för musik, pedagogik och samhälle, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kmh:diva-3900.

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Improvisation är konsten att komponera, uttala, arrangera eller framställa någonting ej förberett. Hur gör man då för att lära sig musikalisk improvisation? Vanligen sker detta med hjälp av en musikteoretisk ingång. Detta arbete syftar därför till att ta reda på vad ett inlärningssätt på en gehörsbaserad grund kan ha för effekter. Metoden har varit att planka olika pianisters solon på samma låt och göra en egen inspelning, även den på samma låt både före och efter plankningen för att kunna jämföra dessa båda inspelningar och observera vilka resultat arbetet givit. Det har även gjorts en inspelning på en annan liknande låt både före och efter plankningen för att undersöka om utveckling som skett i den första låten även är överförbart till andra låtar. Resultatet tyder på att ett plankningsarbete leder till utveckling inom parametrarna timing och frasering, men att andra tillvägagångssätt är nödvändiga för att stärka sådant som rytm och tonmaterial.
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Books on the topic "Keith Jarret"

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Franchi, Ivo. Keith Jarrett. Editori riuniti, 2002.

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Carr, Ian. Keith Jarrett: The man and his music. Da Capo Press, 1992.

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Carr, Ian. Keith Jarrett: The man and his music. Grafton, 1991.

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Santiago, Silviano. Keith Jarrett no blue note: Improvisos de jazz. Rocco, 1996.

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Keith Jarrett: Sein Leben, seine Musik, seine Schallplatten. Oreos, 1985.

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Sandner, Wolfgang. Keith Jarrett: Eine Biographie. Rowohlt Berlin, 2015.

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Jarrett, Keith. Foundations: Keith Jarrett Anthology (2 CD's). Rhino Entertainment, 1994.

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Keith Jarrett: The Man and His Music. Da Capo, 1992.

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Keith Jarrett : The Man and His Music. Paladin, 1992.

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Blume, Gernot. Musical practices and identity construction in the works of Keith Jarrett. 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Keith Jarret"

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"JARRETT, KEITH." In Music in the 20th Century (3 Vol Set). Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315702254-235.

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Laborde, Denis. "Ce que fait la main gauche de Keith Jarrett." In Pratiques de l’improvisation. BSN Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/bsn.marg.2016.01.0115.

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Jarrett, Keith, and Pat Metheny. "Race, Place, and Nostalgia after the Counterculture: Keith Jarrett and Pat Metheny on ECM." In Jazz MattersSound, Place, and Time since Bebop. University of California Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520266889.003.0005.

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Gioia, Ted. "Freedom and Fusion." In The History of Jazz. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190087210.003.0008.

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The avant-garde (or “free jazz”) musicians who came to the forefront of jazz during the late 1950s and early 1960s mounted a revolutionary movement that challenged all the conventions of the idiom, aligning their innovations with the progressive social and political changes of the era. This chapter looks at the leading exponents of the music, including Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, and Albert Ayler. But just when jazz seemed ready to sever completely its relationship with a mainstream audience, a new movement known as fusion (or jazz-rock fusion) attempted to broaden the music’s appeal by drawing on the new sounds of electrified commercial styles. Miles Davis, previously seen as an advocate of bebop, cool jazz, and other jazz movements, emerged as the leader of this new approach, signaled by the release of his hit album Bitches Brew. In the 1970s, a different kind of fusion style emerged, associated with the ECM record label in Germany, which combined jazz with ingredients drawn from classical music, world music, and other sources. This chapter traces the history of these contrasting styles and their major exponents, including Keith Jarrett, Pat Metheny, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, and the band Weather Report
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