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From: Chris/Power Salad on 4 Oct 2005 15:04 On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 14:17:35 GMT, "Jona Vark" <noemail(a)all.com> wrote: >But I did see a 3 stooges eopsiode where they rapped all the way through.. >circa.. 1950 something.. or earlier.. Lots earlier. Their first Columbia short, "Woman Haters", 1934. Even then, the Stooges were street.
From: james on 4 Oct 2005 16:29 A musical genre's death begins when it is given a name. Until then, it's just some original music that someone decided to make.
From: hank alrich on 4 Oct 2005 17:07 Jay Kadis wrote: > "Iain Fraser" wrote: > > which brings the classic jazz joke > > How do you get a million dollars playing jazz? > > Start with 2 million > Funny, I hear that applied to recording studios all the time. They stole the joke from farmers. -- ha
From: Jona Vark on 4 Oct 2005 20:03 "Chris/Power Salad" <chaff(a)powersalad.com> wrote in message news:2gk5k19kjgsg8m27iad5bh158lroius2b9(a)4ax.com... > On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 14:17:35 GMT, "Jona Vark" <noemail(a)all.com> wrote: > > >But I did see a 3 stooges eopsiode where they rapped all the way through.. > >circa.. 1950 something.. or earlier.. > > Lots earlier. Their first Columbia short, "Woman Haters", 1934. Even > then, the Stooges were street. YES!!! THAT WAS it! I Wish more people could see that.. it was definately the earlist rap I have ever seen.. Very cool! Def Stooges! Yo!
From: Julian on 5 Oct 2005 02:36
On 3 Oct 2005 18:52:08 -0700, genericaudioperson(a)hotmail.com wrote: >it depends on what you call jazz, and what you define as dead. Jazz sure ain't dead. Mostly what I listen to these days. Lot's of good people making jazz records. >the big shift happened when Elvis-style rockabilly/Buddy Holly became >the rage. before that, the sound of big band horn arrangements was the >popular sound whether it was a pure jazz thing or a pop thing. Yes that's when it stopped being the pop music of the day. If you call when it stopped being on top it's death, that is when it happened. >then the small three piece band with an electric guitar and a young >vocalist took over. then everything else happened. > >so 1954 would be a good death year if you wanted to try to be specific. |