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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Soul_jazzSoul jazz - Wikipedia

    Soul jazz or funky jazz is a subgenre of jazz that incorporates strong influences from hard bop, blues, soul, gospel and rhythm and blues. Soul jazz is often characterized by organ trios featuring the Hammond organ and small combos including saxophone, brass instruments, electric guitar, bass, drums, piano, vocals and electric organ.

  2. Soul Jazz. Soul-Jazz, which was the most popular jazz style of the 1960s, differs from bebop and hard bop (from which it originally developed) in that the emphasis is on the rhythmic groove. Although soloists follow the chords as in bop, the basslines (often played by an organist if not a string bassist) dance rather than stick strictly to a ...

  3. www.wikiwand.com › en › articlesSoul jazz - Wikiwand

    Soul jazz or funky jazz is a subgenre of jazz that incorporates strong influences from hard bop, blues, soul, gospel and rhythm and blues. Soul jazz is often characterized by organ trios featuring the Hammond organ and small combos including saxophone, brass instruments, electric guitar, bass, drums, piano, vocals and electric organ.

  4. Soul jazz, in contrast to hard bop, emphasizes melodic hooks and repetitive rhythmic grooves, including a bass line played in the syncopated tradition of rhythm and blues, as heard in “Cannonball” Adderley’s “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy” (1966). As in hard bop, soloists follow the chord progressions, and the bass line—often played by an organist/pianist—maintains a strict four-to-the-bar walking bass line pattern.

  5. Jazz (or Black American Music depending on who you ask) has a myriad of genre designations that can be quite confusing, or in the modern era, useless. Soul jazz is an odd designation that came in a relatively brief period of little over a decade plus that included a fusillade of innovation: bebop, cool jazz and hard bop.

  6. Soul jazz is a subgenre of jazz that emerged in the late 1950s, blending elements of jazz, blues, and gospel music. It is characterized by its strong backbeat, accessible melodies, and incorporation of soulful and spiritual themes, often featuring the Hammond organ as a central instrument. This style resonates with the cultural and social movements of its time, connecting deeply with African American experiences and traditions.

  7. Jan 4, 2010 · Soul-Jazz: Where Jazz, Blues And Gospel Meet Born in the '60s, soul-jazz is a groove-oriented style built from the bottom up. You take a strong bass line, establish a steady groove between the ...

  8. Soul Jazz. Soul jazz is a subset of the hard bop genre and carries the hard bop tendency towards RnB and blues just a bit further. It was the original intention of JMA to list the soul jazz artists in hard bop, but the line was drawn at the bluesy B3 organ players such as Groove Holmes and Jack McDuff. Put simply, soul jazz is instrumental RnB ...

  9. Jun 8, 2020 · Soul jazz lives on in all kinds of different ways, from its huge influence on hip-hop to the way that elements from it have branched outward into fusion, disco, smooth jazz, and quiet storm. But it also lives on through contemporary artists who honor its roots and bring them into the present. The Delvon Lamarr Trio, a Seattle-based band, keeps the elements of the subgenre’s origins intact, Hammond B3 and all. With Lamarr on the Hammond, Jimmy James on guitar, and drummer Michael Duffy, the ...

  10. Soul Jazz. Some people further divided Hard bop into a subgenre called Soul Jazz – which, as the name implied, was influenced by soul music. It is characterised by: Almost always using the Hammond Organ; Gospel/Soul inspired; Compared to Bebop, it was harmonically very simple – it generally only used 2 or 3 chords vamps for the entire song and often just used triads rather than extended or altered chords;