(Redirected from Big Band)

This USPS stamp recognizes big band's popularity in the 1940s
A 'big band' is a type of
musical ensemble associated with playing
jazz music and which became popular during the
Swing Era from the early 1930s until the late 1940s, although there are many big-bands around nowadays. A big band typically consists of approximately 12 to 19 musicians and contains
saxophones,
trumpets,
trombones, and a rhythm section. The terms 'jazz band', 'jazz ensemble', 'stage band', 'jazz orchestra', and 'dance band' are also used to refer to this type of ensemble.
In contrast to smaller jazz combos, in which most of the music is
improvised, or created spontaneously, music played by big bands is highly "
arranged", or prepared in advance and notated on
sheet music. Improvised solos may be played only when called for by the arranger.
History and style
There are two distinct periods in the history of popular bands. Beginning in the mid-1920s, big bands, then typically consisting of 10–13 pieces, came to dominate popular music. At that time they usually played a sweet form of jazz that involved very little improvisation, including one or more violins, which were mostly dropped after the mid-1930s. Typical of the genre were such popular artists as
Paul Whiteman and
Ted Lewis. Many of these artists changed styles or retired after the introduction of swing music. Although unashamedly commercial, these bands often featured front-rank jazz musicians - for example Paul Whiteman employed
Bix Beiderbecke and
Frankie Trumbauer.
Towards the end of the twenties, a new form of Big Band emerged which was more authentically "jazz," in that more space was given to improvised soloing. The three major centres in this development were
New York City,
Chicago and
Kansas City. In the former, a sophisticated approach to arranging predominated, first in the work of
Don Redman for the
Fletcher Henderson band, later in the work of
Duke Ellington for his
Cotton Club orchestra, and
Walter 'Foots' Thomas for
Cab Calloway's.
Earl Hines became the 'star' of Chicago with his Grand Terrace Cafe band and began to broadcast live from The Grand Terrace nightly coast-to-coast across America. Meanwhile in Kansas City and across the Southwest, an earthier, bluesier style was developed by such bandleaders as
Benny Moten and, later, by
Jay McShann and
Jesse Stone.
Swing music began appearing in the early 1930s, distinguished by a more supple feel than the more literal
4/4 of earlier jazz and a
walking bass -
Walter Page is often credited with developing this, though isolated earlier examples exist (eg by
Wellman Braud on Ellington's ''Washington Wabble'' from
1927).
This type of music flourished through the early 1930s, although there was little mass audience for it until around 1936. After that time, big bands rose to prominence playing
swing music and held a major role in defining swing as a distinctive style.
Western Swing musicians also formed very popular big bands during the same period.
[1][2][3].
By this time the Big Band was such a dominant force in jazz that the older generation found they either had to adapt to it or simply retire - with no market for small-group recordings (made worse by a depression-era industry reluctant to take risks), some musicians such as
Louis Armstrong and
Earl Hines fronted their own bands, whilst others, like
Jelly Roll Morton and
King Oliver, lapsed into obscurity.
The major "black" bands of the 1930s included, apart from Ellington's, Hines' and Calloway's, those of
Jimmie Lunceford,
Chick Webb, and
Count Basie. Ironically, the "white" bands of
Benny Goodman,
Artie Shaw,
Tommy Dorsey and, later,
Glenn Miller far eclipsed their "black" inspirations in terms of popularity from the middle of the decade.
Later bandleaders pioneered the performance of various
Brazilian and
Afro-Cuban styles with the traditional big band instrumentation, and big bands led by arranger
Gil Evans, saxophonist
John Coltrane (on the album ''
Ascension'' from 1965) and electric bassist
Jaco Pastorius introduced
cool jazz,
free jazz and
jazz fusion, respectively, to the big band domain. Modern big bands can be found playing all styles of jazz music.
Some large contemporary European jazz ensembles play mostly
avant-garde jazz using the instrumentation of the big bands. Examples include the
Vienna Art Orchestra, founded in 1977, and the
Italian Instabile Orchestra, active in the 1990s.
Instrumentation
While composers and arrangers have written for many combinations of instruments, conventional big bands since the 1930s have had a
rhythm section (composed of
drums,
bass,
piano, and possibly
guitar), a trumpet section, a trombone section, and a saxophone section, the latter three collectively referred to as "horns." In the second half of the twentieth century, a standard 17-piece instrumentation evolved, for which many commercial arrangements are available. This instrumentation consists of five saxophones, four trumpets, four trombones and a four-piece rhythm section.
Saxophone section
The
saxophone section (known as ''the reeds'', ''the sax section'', or just ''the saxes'' in jazz parlance) usually comprises five instrumentalists: two
altos, two
tenors and one
baritone. There can be more than five players in this section though; often comprising of two first altos, one second alto, two first tenors, one second tenor and one baritone - making a seven-piece sax section. The 'leader' of the section, who sets overall style, volume, tuning and phrasing, is always the first alto player.
If the arrangement requires it, the players
double on other
wind instruments, such as
flute,
clarinet, and
soprano saxophone. This occurs more commonly in
Latin Music
The saxophone section represents the 'backbone' of the wind instruments in that it frequently carries the tune or provides backing harmonies underneath a soloist or section solos, and occasionally plays a
soli (usually a chorus of pre-arranged music where the saxphones are in close harmony, often in Drop 2 voicing). Saxes, when playing along with brass in an
ensemble are said to 'soften' the sound of the brass but give it support.
Because of the shape of a saxophone and the fact that the sound emanates from the open keys as well as the bell, it cannot be muted for effects or volume reduction. It can only be played louder or more softly. Effects in the sax section are provided by using the alternative instruments such as flutes, clarinets, sopranos etc.
Brass section
The
brass section is a collective term for the trombone and trumpet sections. Quite often these sections play the same phrases and rhythms, for a powerful, brassy sound. These instruments can also make use of sound-changing
mutes, which are widely used in jazz.
Trumpets
The
trumpet section usually comprises four (sometimes five) players, each playing a separate part. The section leader is usually the first (or ''lead'') trumpet, who plays the highest and most strenuous part. When the whole band is playing ''
tutti'' (in unison, or all the same), the lead trumpet player is still considered the lead player of the band and is followed in phrasing, articulation, etc., by the rest of the band. The second trumpet player is usually the
jazz soloist. The other players are generally assigned progressively lower pitch parts. The trumpets often play the highest parts of the music because of their higher
register and are often harmonied in the
So What voicing style.
Trombones
This is similar in formation to the trumpet section, except that there are three
tenor trombones and one
bass trombone. The trombone section provides a deeper sound than that of the trumpets. The Stan Kenton orchestra from the late 1950s on used two bass trombones, with one player doubling on tuba.
Unusually, a
French horn can be grouped into the trombone section in place of a tenor or bass trombone.
Rhythm section
The rhythm section is comprised of
drums,
double bass (or
bass guitar),
piano,
guitar and sometimes additional
percussion including
bongos,
congas, and in the case of a more
Latin based band:
Guiros and
Cowbells. It is sometimes described as "a band within a band", although this is not their main function within a big band.
Although not intended to be heard ''above'' the wind instruments, the rhythm section is essential both to the band and to the audience in providing the important pulse in the music that is so important for dancing and listening to. It can be described as the driving force of the band because its sole purpose is to move the band forward in order to finish its musical journey. It provides the style (eg. Swing or Latin),
Chord Sequence, and interaction that the "horn" players can use to influence their solos and parts in the music. The rhythm section is sometimes said to provide a large part of the 'swing' to a band because of the swing rhythm from the
drums contrasting with the
walking bass from the bass.
Swing is an esoteric phenomenon and cannot easily be described. When playing together properly, the rhythm section achieves what is known in
electronics terms as '
phase-lock' and are totally together in
tempo and with only a small (constant)
phase differences between the players.
Under these conditions, the rhythm section is said to be 'swinging'. However, a rhythm section playing in absolute lock-step, in terms of pulse, might not swing either. To many jazz musicians, 'swing' is actually created by differences in pulse - for instance, when the bass player's pulse and the drummer's pulse are occurring at the same
tempo but are not exactly in phase. The drummer might be a little earlier or later than the bassist, though neither of them is playing slower or faster than the other.
Piano/keyboards
The role of the
pianist in a big band depends on his/her style and the needs of the band. The pianist can punctuate various accents, provide responses in a call-and-response, play countermelodies, provide fills in the music, etc. - simply put:
Comping. Historically, each big band pianist/bandleader had a trademark style. In some groups, the part played by the piano was minimal, in that the comping only contributed a light specification of the voicings of the chords. In contrast, other bandleaders gave the piano a more prominent role. Modern groups generally play a wide variety of styles and arrangements, with varying usage of the piano.
It is the role of the
pianist to play
keyboards in some songs that need electronic sounds; an example is the
Frank Sinatra song
Summer Wind.
It is not uncommon for the Piano/Keyboard players to often be the leader of a big band. This spans from
Duke Ellington with his orchestra in the early 20th century right up to the present day with pianists such as
Dave Grusin with the GRP All-Star Big Band, and
Gordon Goodwin with
Goodon Goodwin's Big Phat Band. This is the case because in order to correctly use chords, rhythms, and
voicings in a big band correctly, knowledge of all these is needed. Since piano players possess this knowledge when
comping (ie. it is like having a 4-6 part horn section in their hand), they can use this in writing big band scores.
Guitar
The guitar in a big band is mostly used as a pure rhythm instrument, in that it plays straight 4/4 time. That is, in a swing tune, the guitarist will often play four beats in every bar.
[4] This particular style of playing is not as simple as it seems. The ideal instrument was an acoustic archtop F hole guitar which had a tone color that cut through the brass and saxes. Often the guitar blends with the drummer's hi-hat as the bass does with the bass drum, but other styles (ballad, Latin) might be handled differently.
The guitarist sometimes takes solos, but usually not as many as the piano, and neither takes as many as the horns. This began to change with the development of the electric guitar in the late 30's, as shown by the solo work of
Charlie Christian with
Benny Goodman's big band. After that, electric guitars were used as an additional solo voice and to enhance tone color, often adding a bit of clarity to a sax line.
Traditional big band guitarist
Freddie Green of the
Count Basie orchestra played an unamplified acoustic guitar. His style made use of chord voicing primarily on the 6th, 4th and 3rd strings. The guitar was often dropped from later big bands, but for the real swing bands of the 30's, the guitar was indispensable. After
Alan Reuss left Goodman's band, a jazz writer commented that he had not realized how important Reuss's guitar work was to the band's sound until after Reuss had departed. Goodman said, "Neither did we!"
Bass
The bass, provides both a rhythmic and a harmonic foundation. In swing and similar styles, its role is to play the 'low-end' of the music, be that a ''
walking bass line'', (smoothly connecting
chord roots with a note on each beat using notes from the chord sequence and
scale- and
arpeggio-based patterns and chromatic embellishments) or a ''Two Feel'' (a feel used in
Latin Music which feels more
syncopated and pushes the beat). The bassist in a big band traditionally plays
double bass (nearly always
pizzicato, though this is not 'pizzicato' in the classical term of plucking in a
staccato-like way). Electric bass guitars and electric
upright basses (an electric double bass) are now used more and more frequently, as they provide built in amplification, are less expensive, easier to transport, and are easier to learn to play.
Drums
The
drummer is also an important member of the rhythm section, who together with the bass, piano and optional guitar form the core of a solid timekeeping unit. The drummer plays fills that accent the horn figures, and provides the basis of the swing feel with a steady broken-triplet figure on the ride cymbal. The drum kit usually comprises bass drum, tom-tom(s), snare drum, a heavy ride cymbal, hi-hat or 'sock' cymbals, crash cymbal(s) and sometimes other specialty cymbals (splash, China boy, pang).
The drummer can also be the leader of the band because, as the traditional time-keeping unit, it influences the tempo, feel, and dynamics of the piece more than any other instrument because it can always be heard. Leaders of such bands include
Buddy Rich,
Gene Krupa, and guest drummers such as
Greg Bissonette to such bands as
The Buddy Rich Big Band.
Big band arrangements
Form
Typical big band
arrangements of the swing period are written in
strophic form with the same phrase and chord structure repeated several times. Each iteration, or ''chorus'', most commonly follows
Twelve bar blues form or
Thirty-two-bar (AABA) song form. The first chorus of an arrangement typically introduces the melody, and is followed by subsequent choruses of development. This development may take the form of improvised solos, written ''
soli'' sections, and ''
shout choruses''.
An arrangement's first chorus is sometimes preceded by an introduction, which may be as short as a few measures or may extend to chorus of its own. Many arrangements contain an interlude, often similar in content to the introduction, inserted between some or all choruses. Other methods of embellishing the form include modulations and cadential extensions.
In terms of "where Swing really came from", in the 1920s, most bands used "stock" arrangements provided by the song publishers. The earliest arrangers put reed sections and horn sections together to create the kind of "call-and-response" formatting that can be traced back to rural Black Church singing. (Another influence is the jam or "head" arrangement of the later 1920s, which was taking a basic stock arrangement and adding some on-the-spot improvising.)
Orchestration
Musical
arrangements for big bands often make use of several common compositional techniques.
Voicings
Section parts can be arranged in a form of close position voicing called a 'thickened line', to give a broader impression of the melody or in open position to form a sustained background and (more rarely) a method of harmonising a melody. Open position voicings tend to be use more on long sustained notes.
Groups of two or three instruments are sometimes used in simple harmony.
The 'widened line' is a version of the thickened line and consists of the melody and three harmony voices
On other occasions, sections can play in
unison, giving a powerful, penetrating sound that cannot be achieved by a single instrument.
Saxophones
The baritone saxophone may be written to play the lead alto part an octave lower to reinforce the melody and provide an effective '5 part' harmony in close harmony saxophone ''
soli''. This is called Drop 2 voicings and is commonly used for the saxophone because the second highest part is dropped from the second alto to the baritone - allowing a greater range to be played and the mid-range becoming less "muddy".
The baritone saxophone is sometimes written with the trombones, (especially in bands without a bass trombone) to give extra richness at the bottom of the trombone section. On occasions, the baritone sax can double with the bass player and bass trombone to create very heavy bass lines or
riffs.
See also
★
List of big bands
References
William Russo, ''Composing for the Jazz Orchestra''
University of Chicago Press, Library of Congress no. 61-8642
External links
★
Jazz Big Band Arrangements
★
An Italian Big Band
★
Big Band Library
★
The Red Hot Jazz Archive
★
Big Band Remote Radio Broadcasts stream
★
Eastbourne Bandstand
★
Tuxedo Junction
★
The Palomar
★
United States Air Force Band/Airmen of Note - Live Stream 24/7/365
★
Ockbrook Big Band - Ockbrook Big Band