1.
He doesn’t have a comeback, though, because “Dizzie” is Dizzie’s real name—her dad was a jazz fan
2.
Up to then, I suppose it had been nothing more than banter but I sensed it was beginning to border on something a little more diabolical and that was when the mood changed with some Athens jazz
3.
In 1954, his Birth of Cool album gave its name to the “cool jazz” movement
4.
Toby Walkins was in front of his computer, searching out a favorite jazz musician
5.
The neophyte web-cruiser hit the reverse arrow and went back to searching out more jazz tunes
6.
boards riffed over a jazz station
7.
A packed house with a jazz band, and a platoon of
8.
blazed in that jazz lounge
9.
She let her voice trail off while the jazz filled the next few silent moments
10.
Love Stalin, all that jazz
11.
He even made sure to hold it high in the air and all of that jazz, just so everyone could see that his family had money
12.
Nor will the vibrant Dixieland jazz that originated in the funeral processions of New Orleans fill the void
13.
"I would have to agree with you, Monica, some of that jazz is real trash, but as they say, beauty is in the eyes of the buyer
14.
I started playing my jazz tapes—this old car did not come with a cd player
15.
Two hours later I was in the ballroom, where the other hundred guests where drinking and dancing to the jazz music
16.
“ - and Jazz
17.
look at the door to the room that Jazz had ran in before
18.
Jazz was perched on a stool, glaring
19.
He then turned to Jazz “You can't pretend
20.
kil me,” Jazz said, her voice starting to shake with fear
21.
Jazz remained isolated in a
22.
“What of the Ultra?” Jazz asked
23.
“How far is the station?” Jazz asked
24.
Pierre, Cel, Dol and Jazz had al disappeared
25.
boomerangs at the Ultra, whilst Jazz Dol and St
26.
There, among the professional Ladies of the Night and the amorous dilettantes, right in front of the sixteen-member jazz band, behind the overpriced drinks, pumped up with the wonderful, strange noises of what later turned out to have been Glen Miller tunes, rub shoulders with the soldiers and sailors, the flyboys and submariners among the assorted flotsam and jetsam of the war machinery we celebrated our survival - as, I believe, did everybody else
27.
They featured either the very competent house band or some itinerant black American jazz musicians playing for close dancing
28.
Of course they would not mention the price of beer that went with this banquet, but I had heard that the best jazz pianists played there
29.
ASEAN Jazz Festival is held in different cities in the country
30.
Jazz On The Beach
31.
Smooth jazz music played
32.
Country & Western, Rock ‘n Roll, Jazz & Blues, etc
33.
In this pass through the material, you get to jazz it up, if you wish
34.
“I used to sing before all of this, a cappella, jazz, I did the nightclub thing for a year
35.
He saw his role, not as the conductor, but as one of the players in a jazz quintet
36.
To jazz up the work,
37.
It was familiar, some sort of Earth jazz he had
38.
each other, with deceit, deception, lies and all that jazz
39.
Whether it was in a small jazz club in Toronto, the chanting of monks in Tibet, or rocks on a dead world on the other side of the Galaxy, Dave understood what he was hearing
40.
eyes are so sad, sad as jazz
41.
Whenever I think of crab cakes and jazz
42.
But whenever I think of crab cakes and jazz
43.
It was playing some vintage Coltrane and I figured I would only hear this jazz for another half hour before it was out of range
44.
By that time I could probably pick up WJZR, a Rochester jazz station
45.
Outstanding programs like Ken Burns’ Baseball or Jazz can be so enlightening that they lead viewers to read more about the subjects
46.
Uncle Arthur led a jazz band in New York
47.
Clifford was a student of jazz, bebop and hard bop
48.
In 1954 he was New Star of the Year in the Down Beat poll and was inducted into their Jazz Hall of Fame in 1972
49.
There’s more on his life in the 2000 book, Clifford Brown: The Life And Art Of The Legendary Jazz Trumpeter by Nick Catalano
50.
Some referred to actress, jazz and blues singer Bessie Smith as the Empress of the Blues, probably because her first record sold three quarter of a million copies
51.
She was inducted into four Halls of Fame: the Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz in 2008; Rock and Roll in 1989; Big Band and Jazz in 1981; Blues in 1980
52.
I close the chapter with a passage from the book, John Coltrane: Jazz Revolutionary by Rachel Stiffler Barron
53.
His music encompassed jazz, fusion, jazz rap, bebop, hard bop, third stream, jazz-funk, cool jazz and rock
54.
He covered hard rock, blues-rock, jazz, psychedelic rock and patriotic music
55.
Janis managed blues-rock, folk, jazz blues, acid rock, country, soul, psychedelic rock and hard rock – I think that covers it all
56.
Bess and Philip Cohen were caring and generous parents who loved swing jazz and opera respectively
57.
She went on to singing blues and jazz in the late twenties in private and gospel in public
58.
Throughout her life, Sister Rosetta toured the country, performing at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1964, the Newport Folk Festival three years later and the American Folk Blues Festival in 1970
59.
Besides performing gospel and rock and roll, she managed popular ballads, country, blues, R&B, hillbilly, political activism, jazz and soul, playing the piano as well as the guitar
60.
What about classifying a CD according to the type of music? The CDs I made – either on my PC or the recorder in my stereo system – are mixes, but of one type of music, like jazz or oldies or party music
61.
The latter might include jazz, blues, rock and oldies and oldies could be any song that was a hit of fifteen years ago, going back another fifty
62.
Is a CD by Blood, Sweat and Tears jazz or rock? It’s actually both, but what about the song, I Dig Rock And Roll Music? I figured from the fusion discussion throughout this book, this classification of pop or folk or rock and roll just isn’t going to work
63.
Marketed to African-Americans during the 1920s and 1930s, race records were 78 rpm records which contained gospel, jazz, blues and comedy and eventually whites bought them as well
64.
Parker was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame and the Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame
65.
He was known for his promotion of bebop as well as his jazz playing
66.
To honor him and promote interest in his work, the twentieth anniversary of The Charlie Parker Jazz Festival was held in New York in 2012
67.
Hammond was impressed by her and compared her to Louis Armstrong, feeling that she was an improvising genius of jazz
68.
She performed jazz, torch songs, swing, pop and blues
69.
She received four Esquire Magazine Awards, and was inducted into the ASCAP Jazz Wall of Fame in 1997, the Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame in 2004 and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000
70.
It was a sampler of jazz, rock and roll and fusion
71.
Michael played clarinet, alto sax and tenor sax: jazz, funk, fusion, rock and post-bop
72.
He was a studio musician of the highest quality and was regarded as the most influential jazz musician since John Coltrane
73.
She played classical, Broadway, girl group, pop, rock and roll, R&B, jazz, doo-wop and soul
74.
He was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame, the National Broadcasters Hall of Fame, the New Jersey Hall of Fame, the Hit Parade Hall of fame and has three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one each for recording, television and movies
75.
A few years after his death, The Music of Jim Pepper was recorded with a jazz group and symphony orchestra under the direction of Gunther Schuller
76.
In 1943, his orchestra – the first African-American group to play at Carnegie Hall – performed Black, Brown and Beige, a merging of classical, jazz and spirituals
77.
To a New York Times reporter he stated that he wasn’t playing jazz, but instead the natural feelings of the people
78.
Old’s 1996 book, Duke Ellington: Giant of Jazz gives more details on his life
79.
It expressed the direction jazz was taking at the time, but it also said something about music in general
80.
A local radio station used the tune as a sign on to a weekly jazz program and I’m sure it wasn’t the only show that did
81.
Jazz greats of the past include Charlie Bird Parker, Duke Ellington, Stan Kenton, Count Basie and Miles Davis, but none compare to Coltrane and his contribution to music
82.
He was a jazz revolutionary because he listened to every type of music he could and incorporated much into his own recordings and performances, always experimenting
83.
His many albums of conventional jazz displayed the peace he was always seeking
84.
He influenced countless musicians, even those who didn’t go the way of avant garde jazz
85.
“Hi Jazz, what’s up?” he said, glancing back at Donna
86.
“You were about to tell me who Jazz was,” she teased
87.
This chapter was inspired by my friend, Mike McKay of WBFO-FM in Buffalo, an NPR news, jazz and blues station
88.
GFMK is a jazz station
89.
I love jazz!"
90.
As he was pulling back onto the road, Joe hit the switch on his steering wheel to activate the stereo and hit the tuning button until some cool jazz drifted out of his speakers
91.
Voices in the hallway heralded the return of Scully and the arrival of police crime personnel consisting of two uniformed constables and two detectives, one of whom was Jazz Bryant
92.
They shared the lift to their operations room where Peg Green and Jazz Bryant where fully occupied
93.
The inspector opened his meeting allowing Jazz Bryant to take centre stage
94.
Jazz was a lady who was extremely easy on the male eye, thirty eight years old, tall, blonde and beautiful, but as hard as nails; and this morning she was straining at the leash
95.
Scully’s business office in the stable complex became common ground and to the stud master’s disgust Jazz Bryant insisted upon conducting all interviews of staff there
96.
Jazz had not completed her interviews until a half hour before midnight and he’d awarded her silent brownie points for her professionalism as she played her ace early in her presentation
97.
A contemptible character breeding more contempt thought Jazz who wasn’t distracted, but certainly interested in the series of framed photographs and diplomas that graced the wall behind him
98.
At eleven pm Jazz had done her dash for the day
99.
He’d been objecting for most of the night, but when Jazz drove away the picture lay on the passenger seat beside her
100.
It was a small assembly of top detectives, five in total, who gathered around Rudolph’s desk and studied the picture Jazz lay before them