Latin jazz
Latin jazz is the general term given to music that combines rhythms from African and Latin American countries with jazz harmonies from the United States.
The two main categories of Latin Jazz are Brazilian and Afro-Cuban.
To a jazz musician, a piece of music is often called "Latin" if it has straight 8th-notes instead of the swinging 8th notes common in most jazz music. A lot of jazz musicians who know a lot about the history of American jazz may be quite unfamiliar with the history or traditions of Latin Jazz, though they probably know a few dozen of the most famous pieces.
Latin jazz music, like most types of jazz music, can be played in small or large groups. Small groups, or combos, often use the Be-bop format made popular in the 1950's in America, where the musicians play a standard melody, many of the musicians play an improvised solo, and then everyone plays the melody again. In Latin jazz bands, percussion solos are much more common, and they are more structured than in swing bands, where drum solos are rare and often more freeform.
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Referenced By
1910s in music | 1920s in music | 1922 | 1930s in music | 1940s in music | 2003 in memoriam | 7 April | 7th April | Afro-Cuban music | April 7 | April 7th | Cal Tjader | Cuban music | Deaths in 2003 | Eddie (Lockjaw) Davis | Eddie Davis (saxophonist) | Eddie Lockjaw Davis | Jazz | Jazz Age | Jazz music | List of cultural and regional genres of music | List of genres of music (A-M) | List of regional and cultural genres of music | List of regional genres of music | Music in Puerto Rico | Music of Cuba | Music of Puerto Rico | Music of Venezuela | Nestor Torres | Puerto Rico/Music | Timeline of trends in music (1900-1949) | Timeline of trends in music (1900-1950) | Tito Puente | Venezuelan music
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