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The names of Jazz QuartetMuch inventiveness and history has gone into the naming of bands. Here are some band names:- " Tony Parenti's New Orleanians; Parenti's Liberty Syncopators; Philippe Pares et son Orchestre-Jazz; Tiny Parham and his Musicians; Earl Hines and his Orchestra; Hitch's Happy Harmonists; Hollywood Shufflers; Saxi Holtsworth's Harmony Hounds; Sol Hoopii's Novelty Trio; Hot Boys Band; Hotsy Totsy Boys; Tiny Parham and his "Forty" Five; Parham's Black Patti Band; Parham - Pickett Apollo Syncopators; Peck's Bad Boys; Jack Pettis and his Band; Hot Jazz Ernest Holzer; Hottentots; Paul Howard's Quality Serenaders; Jack Humphrey's London Band; Prince Albert Hunt's Texas Ramblers; Hunter's Serenaders; Alex Hyde and his New York Orchestra; Jack Pettis and his Pets; Phillips Louisville Jug Band; Picaninny Jug Band; Piccadilly Players; Piccadilly Revels Band; Alex Hyde's Original New Yorker Jazz Band; Jack Hylton's Kit-Cat Band; John Hyman's Bayou Stompers; Indiana Sycopators; Cliff Jackson and his Crazy Cats; Preston Jackson and his Uptown Band; Alex Jackson's Plantation Orchestra; Charles Pierce and his Orchestra; Murray Pilcer and his Jazz Band; Pinkie's Birmingham Five; Piron's New Orleans Orchestra; The Plantation Jazz Orchestra; Dewy Jackson's Peacock Orchestra; Jamaica Jazzers; Jeanette James and her Synco Jazzers; Jelly James and his Fewsicians; Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon and his Hot Shots; Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon accompanied by the Harlem Hamfats; Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon accompanied by Punches Delegates " Jazz StylesJazz is a reflection of the history of this music from the 1890s to modern day. Many of the great classical composers have drawn on jazz for inspiration. Jazz can be divided into many periods and styles, e.g. :- The two mainstreams combined to form a third stream. Earlier in the century, composers had pursued similar directions - George Gershwin with "Rhapsody in Blue," and Darius Milhaud with "The Creation of the World." Bandleader Paul Whiteman, whose motto was to "make a lady out of jazz," popularized what was to be labeled "symphonic jazz" during the 1920s and '30s. Duke Ellington began creating his extended works including "Reminiscing in Tempo," in 1935, and "Diminuendo in Blue and Crescendo in Blue," in 1937. Click to Enter database [About Jazz Quartets] [Ensembles in London wedding music repertoire] [About London] [About music in London] [About Wedding Venues] [About Wedding Ceremonies registrars, ministers and music] [About kinds of music such as classical, jazz or folk] [Frequently Asked Questions FAQs] [Ensembles1] [Ensembles2] [Ensembles3] [Ensembles4] [Home Page] |