Overview
Objectives
- Recall the major developments of jazz after swing, including bebop, cool jazz, and fusion
- Recognize Miles Davis and his contribution to the major movements in jazz
- Examine the musical language and controversy of Bitches Brew
- Identify several musicians who formed successful fusion groups during the 1970s and the defining features of their musical styles
Introduction
Jazz as a genre underwent a number of stylistic changes between the 1940s and the 1970s. As we will see, swing quickly gave way to bebop, a more virtuosic, solo-oriented style. Other musicians retreated inward, playing a subdued style of cool jazz. The musician at the forefront of many important developments in jazz was the trumpeter Miles Davis. He drew the most attention and controversy in 1970 when he released Bitches Brew, an album that fused jazz with rock. Bitches Brew is still considered the seminal jazz fusion a style of jazz that drew upon rhythms and instruments from rock music album, and it inspired an entire movement of jazz fusion artists in the 1970s, including Return to Forever, Herbie Hancock, and Weather Report.