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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Post-bopPost-bop - Wikipedia

    One potential definition of post-bop is a musical period in which modern jazz was at its greatest mainstream popularity extending from the mid-1950s through to the mid-1960s.

  2. So Mainstream Jazz had to somehow find a way to respond to the avant-garde – and this response was a genre called Post-bop. This subgenre mixes elements of Bebop, Hard-bop, Modal and Free Jazz without necessarily being any one of these style.

  3. Jun 7, 2021 · The post-bop style of modern jazz was the mainstream jazz scene's response to the free jazz and avant-garde jazz movements.

  4. Post-Bop. 3,846 releases. Grew out of Hard Bop in the early to mid-1960s incorporating certain untraditional elements inspired largely in part from Avant-Garde Jazz, Modal Jazz and eventually, Free Jazz, such as non-diatonic chord progressions, irregular rhythms and amelodic forms. Read more.

  5. Post Bop grew out of the Hard Bop genre during the early to mid 60s as musicians such as Bill Evans, Wayne Shorter, and Herbie Hancock began to introduce more extended harmonies, abstract structures and looser rhythms in their playing and compositions.

  6. In the mid-1960s jazz began to move into more expansive Post-Bop territory as artists like Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, McCoy Tyner, Freddie Hubbard & Joe Henderson broadened their approach...

  7. The greatest Post-Bop albums of all time, as voted by RYM/Sonemic users.