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单词 jazz
释义

jazz

noun
 
/dʒæz/
/dʒæz/
[uncountable]Idioms
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  1. a type of music with strong rhythms, in which the players often improvise (= make up the music as they are playing), originally created by African American musicians at the beginning of the 20th century
    • traditional/modern jazz
    • a jazz band/club
    • jazz musicians
    • the rising stars of the New York jazz scene
    Collocations MusicMusicListening
    • listen to/​enjoy/​love/​be into music/​classical music/​jazz/​pop/​hip-hop, etc.
    • listen to the radio/​an MP3 player/​a CD
    • put on/​play a CD/​a song/​some music
    • turn down/​up the music/​radio/​volume/​bass
    • go to a concert/​festival/​gig/​performance/​recital
    • copy/​burn/​rip music/​a CD/​a DVD
    • download/​stream music/​an album/​a song/​a video/​a playlist
    Playing
    • play a musical instrument/​the piano/​percussion/​a note/​a riff/​the melody/​a concerto/​a duet/​by ear
    • sing an anthem/​a ballad/​a solo/​an aria/​the blues/​in a choir/​soprano/​alto/​tenor/​bass/​out of tune
    • hum a tune/​a theme tune/​a lullaby
    • accompany a singer/​choir
    • strum a chord/​guitar
    Performing
    • form/​start/​get together/​join/​quit/​leave a band
    • give a performance/​concert/​recital
    • do a concert/​recital/​gig
    • play a concert/​gig/​festival/​venue
    • perform (British English) at/​in a concert/(especially North American English) a concert
    • appear at a festival/​live
    • go on/​embark on a (world) tour
    Recording
    • write/​compose music/​a ballad/​a melody/​a tune/​a song/​a theme song/​an opera/​a symphony
    • land/​get/​sign a record deal
    • be signed to/​be dropped by a record company
    • record/​release/​put out an album/​a single/​a CD
    • be top of/​top the charts
    • get to/​go straight to/​go straight in at/​enter the charts at number one
    see also acid jazz
    Culture jazzjazzJazz is one of the most popular and important forms of music which started in the US. The names of its stars are known around the world. Most people have heard of stars like Ella Fitzgerald, 'Count' Basie, 'Duke' Ellington and Louis Armstrong. Wynton Marsalis, who plays in the traditional style, is one of the best-known jazz musicians today.Jazz was begun in the South by African Americans. Many of its rhythms came from the work songs and spirituals (= religious songs) of black slaves. New Orleans street bands first made jazz popular. Early forms of jazz created at the beginning of the 20th century were ragtime and the blues. Ragtime musicians included the singer 'Jelly Roll' Morton and the composer and piano player Scott Joplin. Famous blues singers included Bessie Smith and later Billie Holiday. Dixieland developed from ragtime and the blues and made a feature of improvisation (= making up the music as it is being played), especially on the trumpet and saxophone. Dixieland stars included Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet.In the 1920s many African Americans moved north, taking jazz with them, and Chicago and New York became centres for the music. This was the beginning of the big band era. In the 1930s swing music came into fashion and people danced to jazz. Radio and the new recording industry helped to make it even more popular. The big bands were led by Basie, Ellington, Woody Herman, Glenn Miller, and 'The King of Swing‘, Benny Goodman. In the 1940s there were new styles such as bebop, developed by 'Dizzy' Gillespie, Charlie 'Bird' Parker and Thelonious Monk. Freer forms like progressive jazz and free jazz developed in the 1950s with stars including Stan Getz, John Coltrane and Dave Brubeck. Cool jazz followed in the 1960s, led by Getz and Miles Davis. More recent styles have included funky jazz, jazz-rock, hip-hop jazz and jazz rap, all of which have used video-sharing sites such as YouTube and streaming services to reach a wider audience.In Britain jazz attracts a small but enthusiastic audience. The height of its popularity was in the 1940s and 1950s, when large crowds gathered to hear big bands. British jazz has always been heavily influenced by US jazz. In the 1960s pop and rock music replaced jazz as the music of the young generation. There are now few jazz bands, although smaller combos (= groups) continue to play a wide range of trad (= traditional), bebop, cool and avant-garde jazz. The most famous British jazz musicians have included Johnny Dankworth and Cleo Laine, George Melly, Humphrey Lyttleton and Courtney Pine. The home of jazz in Britain is Ronnie Scott's club in London.
    Topics Musica2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • live
    • cool
    • free
    verb + jazz
    • play
    • listen to
    jazz + noun
    • music
    • clarinettist
    • guitarist
    preposition
    • in jazz
    See full entry
    Word Originearly 20th cent.: of unknown origin.
Idioms
and all that jazz
  1. (informal) and things like that
    • How's it going? You know—love, life and all that jazz.

jazz

verb
/dʒæz/
/dʒæz/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they jazz
/dʒæz/
/dʒæz/
he / she / it jazzes
/ˈdʒæzɪz/
/ˈdʒæzɪz/
past simple jazzed
/dʒæzd/
/dʒæzd/
past participle jazzed
/dʒæzd/
/dʒæzd/
-ing form jazzing
/ˈdʒæzɪŋ/
/ˈdʒæzɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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更新时间:2025/3/10 13:31:43