Acid Jazz

Acid jazz (sometimes groove jazz) is a musical genre that combines jazz influences with elements of soul music, funk, disco and hip hop. It developed over the 1980s and 1990s and could be seen as taking the boundary crossing of jazz fusion onto new ground. Largely initiated in London and gaining the name from the Acid Jazz record label, pioneering groups were Jamiroquai, Incognito, Galliano, Brand New Heavies, James Taylor Quartet, Young Disciples and Corduroy. In the United States notable acid-jazz groups are: Groove Collective and Solsonics. Other more recent artists and groups who have produced music in this genre include Mother Earth, Mr. Scruff, Visit Venus and Praful. A typical acid jazz group would consist of a rhythm section built round bass guitar, electric guitar and drums, a horn section (trumpets, saxophones, trombones, etc) tied together by some kind of keyboard instrument (providing either rhythmic support or ambient sound effects) and vocals. See also: nu-jazz

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
edward tufte
mooneye
sebastian ziani
caesar of heisterbach
tony macalpine
ghettotech
leona gom
hazel scott
verona
njera
lena horne
axeman of new orleans
have one's cake and eat it too
hiromi goto
duchy of saxony
jack the stripper
columbia union college
electro (comics)
marechal foch
cracidae
dimitrie sturdza
guan
ion bratianu
neile graham
peter krten
pitta (bird)
genni gunn
mcjob
anna elizabeth dickenson
john stapp
history of computing hardware (1960s present)
ray kroc
bill maher
kombucha
het parool
william norton
restorationism
joan haggerty
st mungo's hospital for magical maladies and injuries
great disappointment
2045
john davies of hereford
reading rainbow
london international airport