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Avant-Garde Jazz
Avant-garde jazz is a boundary-pushing current of jazz that privileges experimentation, collective improvisation, and timbral exploration over conventional song forms and chord progressions. It often uses atonality or loose tonality, extended instrumental techniques, shifting or absent meters, and open forms. Ensembles may emphasize texture and density as much as melody and harmony, drawing as readily from modern classical music and non-Western traditions as from blues and bebop. While sometimes intense or noisy, avant-garde jazz also embraces spaciousness and silence, allowing players to interact in real time without predetermined roles. The result is music that questions the limits of jazz itself, foregrounding sound, spontaneity, and social expression.
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Experimental
Experimental music is an umbrella term for practices that prioritize exploration, process, and discovery over adherence to established genre norms. It embraces new sound sources, nonstandard tuning systems, indeterminacy and chance operations, graphic and open-form scores, extended techniques, and technology-led sound design (tape, electronics, computers, and live processing). Rather than a single style, it is a methodology and ethos: testing hypotheses about sound, structure, and performance, often blurring boundaries between composition, improvisation, sound art, and performance art. Listeners can expect unfamiliar timbres, unusual forms, and an emphasis on how music is made as much as the resulting sound.
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Free Improvisation
Free improvisation is a practice of spontaneous music-making that avoids fixed idioms, stylistic templates, and pre-agreed structures. Musicians prioritize listening, interaction, and the exploration of sound itself—timbre, texture, dynamics, and silence—over conventional melody, harmony, or pulse. Guitarist Derek Bailey popularized the notion of "non-idiomatic improvisation," describing a music that deliberately resists falling into recognizable genre habits. While often overlapping with free jazz and contemporary classical experimentalism, free improvisation is not confined to either. It welcomes any instrument or sound source—acoustic, electronic, or everyday objects—and frequently uses extended techniques, feedback, and unconventional performance gestures. Performances can range from whisper-quiet, pointillistic interplay to ferocious, high-energy noise, with the ensemble shaping form in real time through attention and constraint.
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Free Jazz
Free jazz is a radical branch of jazz that rejects fixed chord progressions, strict meter, and conventional song forms in favor of collective improvisation, textural exploration, and spontaneous interaction. Musicians prioritize timbre, dynamics, and gesture as much as pitch and harmony, often using extended techniques (multiphonics, overblowing, prepared piano) and unconventional sounds. While rooted in the blues and earlier jazz vocabularies, free jazz frees improvisers from pre-set harmonic cycles, allowing lines to unfold over tonal centers, shifting modes, drones, or complete atonality. Rhythm sections may float without a steady pulse, or drive with layered polyrhythms and “energy playing.” The result ranges from contemplative soundscapes to cathartic, high-intensity eruptions. Culturally, the genre intersected with the civil rights era and broader avant-garde movements, emphasizing autonomy, community, and new possibilities for musical expression.
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Jazz
Jazz is an improvisation-centered music tradition that emerged from African American communities in the early 20th century. It blends blues feeling, ragtime syncopation, European harmonic practice, and brass band instrumentation into a flexible, conversational art. Defining features include swing rhythm (a triplet-based pulse), call-and-response phrasing, blue notes, and extended harmonies built on 7ths, 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths. Jazz is as much a way of making music—spontaneous interaction, variation, and personal sound—as it is a set of forms and tunes. Across its history, jazz has continually hybridized, from New Orleans ensembles and big-band swing to bebop, cool and hard bop, modal and free jazz, fusion, and contemporary cross-genre experiments. Its influence permeates global popular and art music.
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Spiritual Jazz
Spiritual jazz is a strand of modern jazz that seeks transcendence through sound, blending free improvisation, modal frameworks, and non‑Western musical concepts to evoke the sacred, the cosmic, and the ecstatic. It often features long, open forms; drones and pedal points; polyrhythmic percussion; and timbres associated with ritual or meditation (harp, flutes, bells, tanpura). Melodic language leans toward modes and scales from African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian traditions alongside blues inflection. The mood can shift from contemplative prayer to cathartic release, and vocal elements may include chants, mantras, spoken word, or invocations aligned with spiritual or philosophical themes.
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Loft Jazz
Loft jazz is a New York–centered jazz movement of the 1970s in which musicians reclaimed inexpensive industrial lofts in SoHo, Tribeca, and the Lower East Side as DIY performance and rehearsal spaces. More a scene and practice than a rigid style, loft jazz blends the freedom and energy of free jazz with post-bop craft, open forms, and an eclectic curiosity for world rhythms, funk vamps, and chamber-like textures. Musicians emphasized extended techniques, collective improvisation, and flexible ensembles—often without chordal instruments—while cultivating community-led venues, self-produced concerts, and independent recording. The sound ranges from meditative, spacious explorations to intense, high-energy “fire music,” unified by a spirit of autonomy, experimentation, and proximity between performers and audience.
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Saxophone Trio
Saxophone trio refers primarily to a chordless jazz ensemble built around saxophone, double bass, and drums. Without a chordal instrument, the texture is harmonically open and conversational, giving the saxophonist—and the rhythm section—greater freedom to imply or reshape harmony in real time. The format was popularized in the late 1950s by Sonny Rollins, whose 1957 recordings demonstrated how space, counterpoint, and motivic development could replace continuous chordal accompaniment. Since then, saxophone trios have become a proving ground for improvisers across post‑bop, free, and contemporary jazz. In classical and contemporary chamber music, “saxophone trio” can also denote ensembles of three saxophones (e.g., soprano–alto–tenor) performing composed repertoire; however, the term most commonly signals the jazz chordless trio described above.
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Artists
Gustafsson, Mats
Flaten, Ingebrigt Håker
Nilssen-Love, Paal
Modirzadeh, Hafez
Hart, Billy
Kondo, Toshinori
Mazurek, Rob
Rosaly, Frank
di Domenico, Giovanni
Wooley, Nate
Corsano
Hooker, William
Blaser, Samuel
Dean, Elton
Drake, Hamid
Kowald, Peter
Parker / Guy / Lytton
Parker, William
Butcher, John
Buck, Tony
Holland, Dave
Bailey, Derek
Brown, Marion
Altschul, Barry
Phillips, Barre
Berger, Karl
Abe, Kaoru
Yoshizawa, Motoharu
Takagi, Mototeru
Trzaska, Mikołaj
Guy, Barry
Tchicai, John
Küchen, Martin
Brötzmann, Peter
Thing, The
Murray, Sunny
Bang, Billy
Léandre, Joëlle
McPhee, Joe
Lovens, Paul
Dunmall, Paul
Sanders, Mark
Hemingway, Gerry
Brice, Olie
Gayle, Charles
Almeida, Gonçalo
Hemphill, Julius
Burrell, Dave
Hazan, Shay
Zerang, Michael
老丹
Deng, Boyu
Helias, Mark
Aleksa, Marijus
Filiano, Ken
Takada, Midori
Rogers, Paul
McBee, Cecil
Schlippenbach, von, Alexander
Van Hove, Fred
Amado, Rodrigo
Takase, Aki
Coleman, Anthony
Wollesen, Kenny
Ware, David S., Quartet
Arnal, Jeff
Malaby, Tony
RED Trio
Grassi, Lou
Regef, Dominique
Joode, Wilbert de
Knuffke, Kirk
Dickey, Whit
Johnston, Darren
Fielder, Alvin
Risser, Eve
Kaufmann
Mezzacappa
Bradford, Bobby
Hoff, Devin
Faustino, Hernâni
Kang, Tae Hwan
McIntyre, Kalaparusha Maurice
Thompson, Malachi
Campbell, Roy
Bisio, Michael
Roder, Jan
Joos, Herbert
Takayanagi, Masayuki
Jacquemyn, Peter
Bauer
Taylor, Chad
Lenoci, Gianni
Ellis, Lisle
Toyozumi, Yoshisaburō
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
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, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.