Acid jazz  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Redirected from Acid-jazz)
Jump to: navigation, search

"In 1987 Gilles Peterson, having done his apprenticeship at the Electric Ballroom and developed his own thing as part of Nicky Holloway's Special Branch, set up a new club at Dingwalls on a Sunday afternoon. He invited Patrick Forge to join in and for the next four and a half years the club ran and pioneered that acid jazz thing."--Sholem Stein


"However, for a group like the Poets, acid jazz became an aesthetic foil. Ian Weissenfeldt described the genre as “emotionless crap” and argued, “that polished, pseudo sophisticated attitude that acid jazzers thought of themselves [just] because they wore suits and took inspiration from 70's funky fusion but the sonic result was mostly not much different than Kenny G.. It was the opposite of what I wanted to hear in music, which was warm, analog and raw."--Pop When the World Falls Apart: Music in the Shadow of Doubt (2012) by Eric Weisbard

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Acid jazz is a music genre that combines elements of funk, soul, and hip hop, as well as jazz and disco.

The genre has its origins in 1980s England where DJs such as Gilles Peterson and Patrick Forge started spinning jazz fusion, jazz-funk, Brazilian jazz and soul jazz of the 1950s and 1960s. Particularly significant were records from the Blue Note catalogue and artists such as Roy Ayers and Donald Byrd. Examples of these records can be found on the London Jazz Classics (1993-1995) series, the Jazz Juice series (1985-88), and on Sunday Afternoon At Dingwalls (2006).

In a second phase of the genre, 1980s acts began such as The Brand New Heavies, Incognito, Us3, and Jamiroquai made new records that build upon the old records.

Sometimes jazz-funk classics were covered, as was the case with "Always There" (1976, 1991).

Contents

Characteristics

The genre's name was coined by Gilles Peterson, and the label was started by Bangs, Eddie Piller, and Gilles. The name refers to the acid house genre, which was popular in UK clubs in the 1980s.

Acid jazz consisted of two related movements. The first was based on records by disc jockeys and music producers who added percussion and electronic dance beats to jazz tracks from the 1960s and 1970s. The second movement included groups who were influenced by these recordings and who emphasized a groove. Acid jazz borrowed from jazz, funk, and hip-hop. Because it relies heavily on percussion and live performance, it is sometimes associated with jazz, but its emphasis on groove aligns it more with funk, hip hop, and dance music. The style is characterized by danceable grooves and long, repetitive compositions. Acid jazz bands usually include horns, a rhythm section (drum set and additional percussion), a vocalist who may sing or rap, and a DJ.

History

Acid jazz has its origins in the 1960s, when psychedelic styles were being incorporated into other musical genres, jazz being one of these. Some cite "Six Pack" and "Soul Fiesta" by The Apostles (1969) as acid jazz records during the 1960s. Acid jazz became popular in London clubs during the 1980s when disc jockeys associated with the rare groove movement played obscure jazz records. Their interests were in the fringe of jazz fusion, jazz funk, and the soul jazz of the 1950s and 1960s. Particularly significant were records from the Blue Note catalogue. These DJs included Gilles Peterson, who had residencies at several London clubs in the 1980s. Peterson began in a small pirate radio station and then moved to the larger Kiss-FM. In 1988 with producer Eddie Piller he formed the label Acid Jazz Records. The first release from the company was the compilation Totally Wired, which contained obscure jazz funk tracks from the 1970s with updated new tracks.

In 1990 Peterson left to start the label Talkin' Loud at Phonogram. The company signed Galliano, Young Disciples ("Apparently Nothin"), and Urban Species. Another British record label, Fourth and Broadway Records, was formed in 1990 and began a compilation series with the title The Rebirth of Cool. The label's roster included Pharoah Sanders, Stereo MCs, MC Solaar, and Courtney Pine.

In 1991 acid jazz broke into the mainstream with the success of Brand New Heavies. After one self-titled album (1990) with Acid Jazz Records, the group signed with FFRR Records and had the hit singles "Never Stop" and "Dream Come True". Other bands included Incognito and Us3, whose "Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia)" (1993) was the biggest hit in the genre. Also successful was Jamiroquai, an early act for Acid Jazz Records that signed with Sony, which released Travelling Without Moving (1996) and the hit single "Virtual Insanity". Other live acts included Stereo MCs and the James Taylor Quartet. The mainstream success of acid jazz was followed by many compilations which left the public confused about the genre.

Acid jazz in USA

Acid jazz spread to the United States in the early 1990s. It reached New York City in 1990 when British promoter Maurice Bernstein and his South African partner Jonathan Rudnick opened Groove Academy as a party at the Giant Step club in the basement of the Metropolis Café in Union Square. Groove Academy turned into a record label and media company. Acid jazz musicians in New York City included Brooklyn Funk Essentials, DJ Smash, and Jerome Van Rossum. In San Francisco acid jazz was released by Ubiquity Records, by Solsonics in Los Angeles, and The Greyboy Allstars in San Diego.

A Tribe Called Quest borrowed from jazz for their album The Low End Theory (1991). Under the name Buckshot LeFonque, Branford Marsalis and Digable Planets won a Grammy Award for the 1993 single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)".

Formed in New York in 1990, Groove Collective produced their self-titled debut in 1993. The rapper Guru released a series of albums recorded with jazz musicians as the Jazzmatazz series.

Stemming from Chicago in 1993, Liquid Soul achieved a national profile in 1996 when their self-titled debut LP was re-released by Ark21. In 2000 their album Here's the Deal was nominated in the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album category.

Around the world

Acid jazz soon gained an international following, including in Japan, Germany, Brazil and Eastern Europe. From Japan, United Future Organization gained an international reputation, signing an American record deal in 1994. Other acts from Japan included Mondo Grosso, Skalpel came from Poland.

Decline

The rise of electronic club music in the mid- to late-1990s led to a decline in interest in acid jazz among the record buying public, although the genre continued to have a reduced worldwide following. In the twenty-first century the movement became so intertwined with other forms that it became indistinct as a genre and many acts that might have been defined as acid jazz are now seen as jazz funk, neo soul or jazz rap.

Q magazine stated "Acid jazz was the most significant jazz form to emerge out of the British music scene". One major legacy of the genre is its influence on the jam band movement, with acid jazz proving a suitable medium for extended improvisation for acts such as Medeski, Martin and Wood

Key artists

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Acid jazz" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools