Midterm Review

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Across
  1. 3. The first and most important note of a scale, often indicated by the Roman numeral I
  2. 5. A style of jazz piano featuring a quick tempo and improvised melodies over a rhythmic left-hand ostinato; it influenced swing and rock & roll
  3. 7. A highly influential blues singer who came to prominence partly as a result of recordings made by ethnographers John and Alan Lomax
  4. 9. Regarded as the quintessential female jazz singer, she began her career with Chick Webb's Orchestra and was famous for her improvised scat solos
  5. 11. A style of jazz that developed in Chicago in the 1920s, primarily by white musicians, featuring a greater emphasis on solo improvisations
  6. 12. A solo, virtuoso style of jazz piano also known as the "Harlem School", featuring a ragtime left-hand pattern
  7. 13. Female blues and jazz singer who was the most successful black performing artist of her time but alcoholism and the depression damaged her career; her duet with Louis Armstrong in "St. Louis Blues" is one of her most famous performances
  8. 15. Pianist and composer who perfect stride and composed, among other pieces, "The Charleston"
  9. 17. The simultaneous sounding of two or more pitches
  10. 20. Pianist, composer and band leader, known as the first modern jazz pianist
  11. 23. Pianist, arranger, composer, and bandleader, who was long regarded as the only significant female jazz musician
  12. 24. Clarinetist and bandleader who brought swing to national attention and was the first jazz musician to succeed with the classical repertory
  13. 27. A highly influential blues singer, known as the link between the early Mississippi blues and the modern Chicago blues; legend has it he sold his soul to the devil in exchange for guitar skills
  14. 29. First integrated and most prominent all-female band
  15. 32. New Orleans composer and pianist, most famous for providing an oral history of jazz that was archived at the Library of Congress
  16. 34. Pianist and composer whose works, such as "Maple Leaf Rag," defined ragtime
  17. 36. New Orleans cornetist and bandleader, famous for mentoring several prominent jazz musicians, most notably Louis Armstrong
  18. 39. New Orleans clarinetist, who was the first virtuoso of the soprano sax
  19. 40. Pianist, bandleader and arranger, who developed the ideal jazz accompaniment centered around the rhythm section
  20. 43. Best known American bandleader, most famous for commissioning and performing symphonic jazz standards like Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue
  21. 44. The arrangement of time durations in music
  22. 45. Trumpet player and singer who was a star soloist with the International Sweethearts of Rhythm
  23. 47. Virtuoso jazz pianist who revolutionized jazz piano in spite of having severely impaired vision
Down
  1. 1. Drummer and bandleader who led the house band at the Savoy Ballroom in New York
  2. 2. Pianist, bandleader and composer, who is known as the most significant composer of big-band music
  3. 4. Harlem pianist, composer, and band leader, author of such jazz standards as "Ain't Misbehaving"
  4. 6. A three note chord built of two thirds, one on top of the other
  5. 8. Female blues and jazz singer who emulated jazz instrumental soloists and performed with the greatest jazz musicians of the day; one of her most famous songs is the controversial "Strange Fruit"
  6. 10. New Orleans cornetist, singer, and bandleader who revolutionized jazz improvisation and who was equally influential as an instrumentalist and as a singer
  7. 14. The way in which music is passed down from person to person
  8. 16. Also known as "sweet jazz," a style of jazz combining the rhythmic elements of jazz with the instrumentation and forms of classical music; it reached a wide audience and was a precursor of Third Stream
  9. 18. A large jazz ensemble, typically consisting of 12-18 members who perform from written arrangements but may also be given the opportunity to do short improvised solos
  10. 19. Arranger and bandleader, whose band at the Roseland Ballroom was the most important of the early big bands; his arrangements were made famous by Whiteman and Goodman's bands, among others
  11. 21. An early 20th-century, composed piano music featuring consistent syncopation of the melody against a steady duple meter
  12. 22. Pianist, arranger, composer, and bandleader who was the most prominent woman in early jazz
  13. 25. The system of harmony based on the major and minor scales, in which harmonies move away from and then return to the tonic
  14. 26. Singer and bandleader who was known as one of the most popular and colorful bandleaders of the swing era; "Minnie the Moocher" was his signature song
  15. 28. A widely used harmonic pattern consisting of 4 measures on the tonic, 2 measures on the subdominant, 2 measures on the tonic, 2 measures on the dominant and 2 measures on the tonic, used as a basis for improvisation
  16. 30. A type of performance in which the music is created as it is being performed
  17. 31. Pianist, songwriter and composer who successfully combined jazz into his popular and classical works, such as Rhapsody in Blue
  18. 33. A 19th-century African-American folk song with Biblical references, expressing sorrow and hope and combining African and European musical elements
  19. 35. Composer and arranger who set the standard for jazz, dance band and radio orchestra arranging, most famous for orchestrating Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue
  20. 37. A meaningful or memorable succession of pitches
  21. 38. The way in which the melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic elements of music are woven together
  22. 41. Female singer, successful with both popular and jazz repertoire; she treated her voice as a jazz instrument
  23. 42. Highly influential alto saxophonist, known for his light and airy sound, most famous for his work in Count Basie's band and his recordings with Billie Holiday
  24. 46. The flexible approach to rhythm that is one of the main features of jazz; also a 1930s style of jazz performed by big bands