jazz 的 5 个定义
- music originating in New Orleans around the beginning of the 20th century and subsequently developing through various increasingly complex styles, generally marked by intricate, propulsive rhythms, polyphonic ensemble playing, improvisatory, virtuosic solos, melodic freedom, and a harmonic idiom ranging from simple diatonicism through chromaticism to atonality.
- a style of dance music, popular especially in the 1920s, arranged for a large band and marked by some of the features of jazz.
- dancing or a dance performed to such music, as with violent bodily motions and gestures.
- (6)
- of, relating to, or characteristic of jazz.
- to play in the manner of jazz.
- Informal. to excite or enliven.to accelerate.
- Slang: Vulgar. to copulate with.
- to dance to jazz music.
- to play or perform jazz music.
- Informal. to act or proceed with great energy or liveliness.
- Slang: Vulgar. to copulate.
- jazz up, Informal. to add liveliness, vigor, or excitement to.to add ornamentation, color, or extra features to, in order to increase appeal or interest; embellish.to accelerate.
jazz 近义词
style of music
更多jazz例句
- He doesn’t tell — but presumably Willie Weeks is among the good guys, as is Hendrix, and Wooten’s real-life cohort, and the visiting faculty at his music camps, who tend, like Wooten, to fall along the jazz-country-virtuoso spectrum.
- During a six-decade career, he won 23 Grammy Awards, more than any other jazz performer.
- That live performance, a tribute to health-care workers on the front lines of the coronavirus crisis, will feature band leader Jon Batiste, countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo, jazz vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant and dancer Ayodele Casel.
- Anderson biked until he was in his mid-80s and enjoyed listening to opera, jazz and symphony music.
- Yet it—like the blues, like jazz, like rock ’n’ roll—is part of who we are and where we’ve been.
- Ragtime, blues, country, jazz, soul, and rock and roll were all pioneered or inspired by black artists.
- For the last three decades, he has garnered justifiable praise as one of best pianists in jazz.
- I think posterity will enshrine this body of work among the classics of 21st century jazz.
- “Sue (Or In a Season of Crime)” brings the rock chameleon into jazz territory, backed up by a horn-heavy jazz big band.
- Do you see yourself setting a standard for classical chops in jazz?
- The American influence has been felt to such an extent that King Jazz is a universal potentate.
- I heard one stalwart old fellow declare he was going to vote for Jazz.
- He performed the ceremony carelessly enough, and then lounged away whistling the latest jazz melody.
- And almost before you know it, you are playing your favorite pieces—jazz, ballads, classics.
- Besides, she had not forgotten what Danby Force had said: “Things often happen in the mill after a jazz night.”