Jazz (TV Mini Series 2001) Poster

(2001)

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10/10
A flawed program, but a great event
RobT-226 February 2001
As a jazz fan for over 20 years now, ever since I first encountered the 6-LP "Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz" in the library of the college where my father taught, I could go on and on about all the stuff Ken Burns and company left out. However, part of me keeps imagining some kid latching onto this program the way I did with the Smithsonian LP's, then searching out jazz recordings, books on the subject, and recent copies of "Down Beat" magazine. Multiply this scenario by an unknown number (hundreds? thousands, perhaps?), not just with literal kids but all kinds of people open to discovery in the same way, and you get some idea of how I feel about the program.

Speaking again as a longtime jazz fan, even though I was a bit disappointed that more "modern" and avant-garde jazz wasn't included, the portions of "Jazz" covering swing were a revelation--I've never had such a direct visceral connection to that music before, though I've enjoyed it from time to time. This illustrates the major merit of "Jazz", the way it puts the viewer inside the world in which the music happened. One reason the swing segments are the best in that regard is that not only do we get to see what else was going on in the world at that time, we get to see the audience's interaction with the music--specifically, the dancing. This may be why "modern" jazz isn't emphasized as much; the audience's reaction couldn't be captured on camera in the same way.

The one theme I would have liked "Jazz" to cover in greater depth was its decline in popularity after swing had run its course and most young musicians were either getting into bebop or dixieland (the postwar revival of the latter being one of the program's more mysterious omissions). I think part of the problem lies in the definitional boundaries some of jazz's defenders have drawn around it. It seems to me that jazz was at its healthiest when its practitioners drew upon other musical traditions for ideas; this could mean classical music, showbiz pop, or most often other traditions of black music, notably the blues.

Once jazz had been firmly defined as an improvised music emphasizing certain kinds of instruments and instrumental combinations, there developed a tendency among jazz musicians to draw almost exclusively from earlier jazz styles, often the "purer" styles of recent vintage. After a certain point, any attempts at a new style were open to criticism over whether they were "really" jazz. (It's interesting, in this regard, that most of jazz's innovators have resisted purists' expectations of "jazz" musicians; just try to think of any musicians who added to the jazz vocabulary without doing something along the way that upset some group of purists or another.) Some new styles were accepted as the real stuff, others were not, which is a pity since some of them, especially rhythm & blues, might have lead to the reinvigoration of jazz as a popular art.

Louis Jordan is singled out in "Jazz" as someone who led black audiences awa y from jazz, yet his music developed directly from the swing music of the 30's and early 40's. How differently would jazz history be written if Jordan's kinds of innovations, which kept the music true to the experience of urban blacks without alienating potentially curious whites, were accepted as "real" jazz? After all, it's only a short step from Jordan to early rock &' roll.

It strikes me that, if jazz is really central to American music, an honest portrayal of jazz would include a full accounting of its influence on other American musical styles. Louis Jordan is one such example; the hard bop influence on the great 60's soul bands (notably Booker T. & the MG's, James Brown's bands, and the guys at Motown) is another; the use of jazz-schooled musicians by such disparate yet seminal bandleaders as Bob Wills and Spike Jones is yet another. Finally, jazz purism has robbed the music of some potentially valuable innovators, the best example being Jimi Hendrix, exactly the kind of instrumental prodigy who would have been a natural for jazz in an earlier time, but who went from r&b bands to rock & roll instead (contrast Ornette Coleman, who went from r&b bands to the jazz avant-garde).

And yet the faults of "Jazz" don't cancel out its many fine points, though they do throw them into sharper relief. I can't imagine any jazz fan failing to enjoy the music, and only a few who fail to learn something new about it. The fallout from "Jazz" as an event--the numerous arguments over the program's merits as history (many of these arguments concerning, at bottom, the definition of jazz) and the recent spur of jazz record (CD, tape, whatever) sales--is icing on the cake. On my own personal rating system, "Jazz" ranks just shy of an A+ (a "perfect" film) because I can imagine it being done better. Nevertheless, I'm giving it an IMDB rating of "10" for its entertainment value, its educational value, its status as a ublic event, and on general principles.
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8/10
Much beauty, some frustration too
bob9987 January 2014
This is a compilation that is pretty much essential for those coming to the music for the first time, and will afford a lot of pleasure to those who have been listening for some time too. Some of the film clips are breathtaking: you ask yourself 'where did he find that?' The focus is on the great figures of Armstrong, Ellington, Parker and Billie Holiday, which is appropriate since these people did more than others to shape the course of the music over the last century, but many viewers will be frustrated by the glancing attention and even omission given to some musicians. Why was it not thought necessary to show 'Lockjaw' Davis, Johnny Griffin, Tadd Dameron, Red Garland, Art Pepper, Lee Konitz, Jo Stafford and many more? Chick Corea and Keith Jarrett, where are they? It seems as though Winton Marsalis decided who the great ones were, and the worthy ones could be ignored.

I will praise the editors who took this huge mass of material and made something coherent and entertaining out of it. We must forever be in their debt. The way is now clear for some documentarist to make a series on jazz from 1960 to today.
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9/10
Once you learn more about Jazz on your own, the more "Jazz" feels incomplete
Quinoa198423 July 2005
Ken Burns' Jazz documentary, which is a twenty-hour documentary (too long or not long enough would be the argument, I'd go with not long enough), details the history of Jazz from its origins in Ragtime, up until the 1960's. It is indeed insightful for those who do not know the histories of these people, pretty much all of them terrific or outstanding, and it does try to take you inside their world. As one who has only really gotten into Jazz within the past few years, as just a history lesson it keeps attention most of the way through.

The problems one can find in the documentary could be really squared down to two. The first is that Burns, while talented and obviously with a good research team and plethora of pictorial aids, forgets something about Jazz- it's supposed to be fun! There's something about the sense of humor and vitality of jazz that gets lost among the heavy-handed narrations, that make jazz out to be as mighty and colossal as the Greeks or the Romans. Jazz is important to the world of music, but much of what is spoken trumps most of the experiences in the stories (not that a few of them aren't entertaining- most of the stuff involving Armstrong, Bix, Blaisie, and Art Tatum keeps interest that way). The second problem, which is a given considering the length of the documentary, is that there isn't enough room for everyone, and after Miles and Coltrane, it just halts. It would be intriguing if Burns went back and did a 'special edition' treatment, and cover more ground on what he had, and expand into the great jazz that did come out since the 60's (and there has been a few, believe you/me).

If you're wanting to get into the atmosphere, the moods and histories (and of course the music, some of it rare here) on Jazz, basically this is the best place to start. But if you're already an aficionado, or if you don't have the utmost attention span to watch all of the footage, it may comes to let-down.
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10/10
take a bow, Mr.Burns
PCARONA20 October 2005
I've never been one to send in any type of critique or review to any type of website, but after viewing the Ken Burns "jazz" documentary, I knew this was a call to arms. I've never been so moved before by any film/doc etc.. through the brilliant use of historical footage and expert insight that dances along with the music of the day it's a perfect marriage of sound and vision. I was actually brought to tears of joy several times throughout the series. if anyone is even remotely interested in any type of American history/music of any kind or just a lover of great programming ,this is a must for all. A true American classic! not only did this series reconnect me with such intricate American heritage, but introduced me to a whole new world of exquisite, fascinating music that I immediately fell in love with. For this I am forever grateful to Mr. Burns. the only thing I'm not happy about is the fact that now I've been on a constant quest and spending spree of most of my weekly paycheck on a jazz cd purchasing frenzy!!! Ohh well , it's worth every penny ,keep up the superb work and now its time to venture into the civil war series.
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Interesting Overview; but biased and somewhat uninformed.
The Continental Op1 February 2001
I am neither a musician nor a serious scholar of jazz, just a fan,but even I could see the flaws in Ken Burns' sometimes fascinating, other times infuriating documentary on the history of "America's music".

Spanning the century, this nineteen hour documentary is most effective at the beginning, when Burns' gift for research is most apparent. You can see the pains he took searching documentation and rare photographs to paint a picture of the roots of the music. However, as the narrative moves on, his over-reliance for third and fourth hand accounts and his own ignorance of the genre becomes apparent.

I am not going to go into the laundry list of "should have" musicians (Lionel Hampton, Stan Getz, JJ Johnson, Charles Mingus gets only ten minutes!) and others that got short shrift or weren't even mentioned. I'd be here all day.

However, I will say that Burns obviously relied too much on critics and writers in putting together his material. Towards the end, especially when they begin to talk of the 50's and 60's, the whole program begins to have the taint of academia all over it.

For example, the 50s phenomenon of the wildly popular California-based "cool jazz" is dismissed by critic Nat Hentoff as "bland" and then never mentioned again.

I am sorry to disagree with the distinguished Mr. Hentoff, but as anyone who has heard the recordings of such greats as Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker can atest, the music they were producing was just as creative and exciting as their East Coast, black contemporaries.

To people like Mr. Hentoff, the west coast musicians committed the ultimate sin of being white and somewhat popular. Much of the documentary continues along the same "us vs. them" vein.

It seems the people who assisted Mr. Burns took advantage of his ignorance and stamped their orthodox biases on what could have been a great work. Whole genres and types (fusion, Cubano, Brazillian) are either dismissed outright or ignored. It reinforces my view that critics are the most useless species on the face of the planet.

However, I do have to admit that many parts were fascinating. When Burns does interview eyewitnesses to certain events, it shows the flashes of "what might have been". I just wish that he wouldn't have blindly followed the opinions of the the critics and academics and let the audience discover for themselves what to think.
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8/10
Awesome in scope but incomplete
ebiros220 October 2005
It takes guts and talent to put together an idea like this and execute on it. Producer and director Ken Burns pulled off something we all wanted see in a documentary film. If it weren't for him, we may not have seen the likes of it in our life time. This near 20 hour epic takes Jazz from its roots to its modern day incarnations. I've learned quite a bit about history of jazz by watching this mini series, but I think the story told is little bit lop-sided. What Ken Burns failed (or purposely omitted) was the entire history of jazz guitarists. There's absolutely none represented in this series - zilch (!), and don't tell me that guitar wasn't an important part of jazz history. What Ken told was the story of jazz keyboard, and horn virtuosos. Not bad, but I still wanted to see some guitar in this series.

Martin Scorsese filled some gap with his "Blues" mini-series about blues guitarists, but a comprehensive history of jazz guitar history is still missing. Would some talented and daring director please take on the challenge ?
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10/10
A great intro in Jazz and its history
ahothabeth19 November 2002
Don't bother with the U.K. version (12 hours) buy the USA version (19.5 hours) it contains more and can usually be found at lower cost.

Covers the birth of jazz, swing era, move to bebop, free modal very well, but there is only scant coverage of more modern moves in the field of jazz.

Mr Burns has argued that he is more of an historian than a critic and as such he can only really deal with the phases of jazz that are from the past. This line of reasoning is, I think, not un-reasonable.

A nice touch on the DVDs is that when a piece of music is playing then pressing the "info" button on the DVD or its handset, brings up a screen about the music being played, e.g. title of music, who wrote it, who is playing, when was it recorded, etc.
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10/10
Simply the Best!
brickwall14 January 2001
Ken Burns has done it again. "Jazz" is a wonderful overview of the history of Jazz music, America's classical music. Burns not only illustrates the music of Jazz, but also the African American experience. Which is "our" American experience.

Some noted Jazz critics have complained that Ken Burns over "simplified" Jazz as an art form. Or omitted various artists. However, "Jazz" is intended to be an overview or introduction, and not a doctorial thesis. So enjoy it.

I highly recommend "Jazz" and can't wait to get the DVD with its extras.
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10/10
The Best Jazz 101 since Professors' Roach & Marsalis
trinity_310 February 2001
I'm not a member of the "Let's Hate Ken Burns" club. I'm a fan. As a fan, I've seen nearly everything that Burns & Buddy Squires have done together since co-founding Florentine Films, along with Roger Sherman & Lawrence Hott, in the late 70's. And I am *especially a fan* since I am offspring of a bonefide jazz musician who made his living in America & Europe in the 40's, 50's, & 60's, until his untimely death in the 70's.

This is Burns & Squires masterpiece in the American Trilogy. They got it right. Burns & Squires, moved through the significant contributors & innovators in Jazz from it's New Orleans Dixie Land inception through the major periods including: Swing, Bop, Hard Bop, Cool, Avant Guard, Free, & Post Modernism.

There are a lot of folks out there quick to ridicule Burns & Squires' brilliant effort. I am not one of them. And I would venture to guess, that not many of them "lived the life".
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10/10
the history of modern American music
slappysquirrel_20005 February 2021
I took the history of jazz as a college course several years before this series first aired. The songs used as examples were the same as what as used in this series. During that class my father was terminally ill. He was such an audiophile. He loved jazz. What I would bring home from class we would discuss. He told me a few stories not taught in books. So it was bittersweet to watch this series. I could feel my father was there with me watching.
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8/10
Not perfect, but a very good overview of American jazz history
j_steans12 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Although this documentary doesn't cover every artist who's ever contributed to the cannon of jazz music as a whole, it's a great overview and does an excellent job of following the early history and development of jazz as an American art form. I've read complaints in these reviews that the documentary focuses too much on black musicians and doesn't allow enough time for discussing the contributions of white musicians. Given the fact that the documentary's purpose is to trace the origins and early history of jazz, I think the documentary struck a fair balance. Jazz is an art form which was primarily created by and developed by black musicians, with white musicians largely following their lead and standing on their shoulders as they continued to develop their art. I'm not saying that white musicians don't have a place in jazz history, but the true jazz giants- the true innovators and the developers of jazz- have been African American for the most part, with white musicians learning from them and expounding upon their knowledge. Without Louie Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Sidney Bechet, Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and the like, jazz as we know it simply wouldn't exist. This isn't to say that white musicians didn't make contributions to jazz as an art form, but the documentary pays homage to a fair number of white musicians as well (Artie Shaw, Bennie Goodman, Dave Brubeck, and others are all discussed at some length). And a number of the white musicians who are discussed actually acknowledged how much they had learned from their black counterparts and expressed embarrassment that they received much more press coverage for their work than did the black musicians whom they studied while developing their skills (Bennie Goodman and Dave Brubeck both fell into this category).

It just seems like there are people on here who are upset that their particular favorites didn't get the attention that they wanted them to, so they're attacking the documentary as a whole because of it. The documentary does a good job at examining the history of jazz as a whole, but in doing so, it has to limit its subject matter to some of the most central innovators of the art form. Some artists who were more important to side movements within the overall jazz community may not have been discussed at length (i.e., the "cool jazz" movement or what have you), but the figures who laid down the foundations of the art form are all there.

It's a shame that people can't judge the documentary on its own merits rather than looking for the things in it that suits their own personal tastes.
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10/10
Truly a Masterpiece
tatekawa23 February 2009
Very comprehensive, well structured with amazing picture and sound quality. This documentary recollects the key events and key characters that created the development of the most important music genre of our times. Ken Burns has definitely left a legacy in the history of music and history itself, in the way he is able to explain the jazz evolution through a historical perspective. Well documented with great footage and very unique photography and historical records. This documentary is definitely a lesson in art and history. History of jazz, history of America, history of the industrial human being and a music genre that has transformed the appreciation of modern society and humanity itself.
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7/10
My own interest began to wane towards the end...
planktonrules8 March 2015
I enjoyed watching "Jazz" but as the show progressed I enjoyed it less and less. Much of it is because I simply like the older jazz and swing music and didn't enjoy the more modern free-form style of jazz. Much of it is also because the more I watched the show the more I noticed a few biases. EVERY EPISODE MENTIONED LOUIS ARMSTRONG. While he was a jazz great, it was obvious that Ken Burns REALLY adores Louis Armstrong and I wish he'd just made a show about him! He also strongly loves Duke Ellington. But he also inexplicably skips over some jazz or swing musicians who deserved mentioned--in particular Cab Calloway. He only mentions him BRIEFLY twice--and never positively or in any depth at all. The same could be said for Glenn Miller when the shows were about swing--it wasn't very complementary and was VERY brief (never even mentioning his premature death). This makes me wonder about what I watched--was it really the comprehensive history of jazz or just a particular and biased view? Still, despite this, the shows are well made, have some great music and did get me to appreciate and enjoy jazz and especially swing much more than I had. Worth seeing but I really would like to see some alternate view of the history of jazz, as it just felt like I was missing something.
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4/10
A flawed and incomplete overview of the greatest American music
jay_zhead19 April 2006
When I learned that Ken Burn's "Jazz" was going to be on TV I was very excited; and prepared a bunch of empty tapes to record it. The previews made it seem like the most perfect documentary that I, then a jazz musician in the making, could watch. However, as the series went on, I became supremely disappointed. This series, though most of it was very interesting to me and I learned a lot from it, is seriously flawed in presenting this most American of art forms and leaves me feeling hurt for the great people that the series failed to even mention, while others much less great were somehow squeezed in.

The first few episodes of the series are great, they are superbly done and I enjoyed them throughly. However, passed the bebop era, the series goes rapidly downhill. It skips everything that stems away from the most traditional of jazz, mocks fusion - which is really, like it or not, definitely a big part of jazz and is mostly responsible for it's continued survival, skips all important jazzmen of the 70's and 80's - how could they have done a series about jazz without even a single mention of a giant like Chick Corea is beyond me - and ends on a weird and unclear note, where they present a bunch of unknown young jazz musicians, that are (save for Joshua Redman and Christian McBride) should not have been in the documentary ahead of many giants that were not included. I still have no idea who half of those people are, even after searching for something of theirs. Very fishy.

Herbie Hancock, who is a pillar of Jazz and probably the most important Jazz-man of the last 30 years, was barely mentioned as a part of Miles Davis' group. Fellow pianist and jazz giant Chick Corea, who created an enormous body of work that influences young players all over the world (there is no pianist in jazz today who was not influenced by Corea, whether they know it or not) was not mentioned at all. Also there was no mention of such important players as Jaco Pastorius, who established the electric bass as a serious instrument and transformed modern jazz forever, Michael Brecker, the biggest influence on saxophonists since Wayne Shorter (me among them), Pat Metheny, the guitar giant who managed to turn creative Jazz into a accessible and popular music but without sacrificing it's intensity or complexity..

And here, in the section about "the revival" of Jazz, they show me a bunch of young faces I haven't even heard of, some of whom are frankly just "purists" who are trying to play like the old jazz giants without a hint of originality or message to their music. This is not the future of Jazz as far as I am concerned, and I was insulted for those greats that were not even mentioned when those unknown kids came on the screen.

Not that I'm in any way trying to belittle the colossal contribution of Louis Armstrong (who, by the way, is the reason I became interested in Jazz in the first place), but some of the screen time they gave him could have been used to at least mention many greats that were omitted. Also, I felt that Ken Burns tried very hard to turn the history of Jazz into a documentary about civil rights of blacks in America, and though it is, of course, very relevant to the issue at hand, it was still dealt way too much screen time until in becomes tiring and you find yourself fast-forwarding through those parts to see what actually happens to the musicians themselves.

As far as I am concerned, this is a very lacking production, that starts off great and then completely misleads the viewers that are uneducated in jazz to believe that jazz between the death of John Coltrane and the emergence of Wynton Marsalis did not exist at all. Too bad. In my opinion, the series is - at best - incomplete. It leaves the impression of a documentary about Jazz made by purists for purists, completely disregarding a huge chunk of very important Jazz, and mockingly downplaying it to boot.

5 out of 10, only by virtue of how well it was technically done.
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Sickening.
trumpetboy14 January 2002
It's very sad to read how many people were bowled over by this so-called documentary. Sadder yet to see how many were coerced into thinking that this was a legitimate history of jazz. Let us look at some facts:

Before beginning this project, Ken Burns had in his own words, "maybe two" jazz cds. Because of this, he looked toward Wynton Marsalis for guidance. As a result, the entire documentary was slanted in accordance with Wynton's beliefs--the strongest belief being that white people have nothing to contribute to the genre.

This in mind, it is obvious that taking all of one's cues from him is a rather large mistake, as evidenced in Ken's show. For example, the entire West Coast movement was written off. There is no mention of Stan Kenton, Woody Herman, and many of the other great artists and innovators, simply because they were the wrong color...white. In addition, the trombone is not considered to be relevant past the big band era (Sorry J.J. Johnson!! Sorry Kai Winding!). Then of course, there is the statement made that no worthwhile jazz was composed after (approximately) 1965...well...until WYNTON MARSALIS came along!! What a slap in the face!! This is just the tip of the iceberg.

Yes, there were some good things in the show. The old footage of the great ones: Armstrong, Ellington, Basie, etc. It's too bad that Burns neglected to interview many of the musicians who are still alive that played in these organizations. Clark Terry, one of the finest trumpet players to ever walk the earth, and who played in BOTH Ellington and Basie's bands, ended up having less than 2 minutes, speaking about things that were relatively trite.

The main message that permeated this series was this: Black people created jazz, and whites made only minor contributions. Wynton has stated before that there is nothing that a white person could teach him about jazz. This means in Wytnon's mind that Django, Kenton, Bill Evans, Bix, Brubeck, Chet Baker, Gerry Mulligan, Jack Teagarden, Kai Winding, etc., etc., etc...have nothing to contribute, because they're white. Sad, isn't it?

Hopefully, someday Wynton and Burns will see that two wrongs don't make a right. Until then, if you want a true history of jazz, pick up a book called "Meet me at Jim and Andy's" by Gene Lees.
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9/10
Good, but no Vince Guaraldi?
dcornibe11 January 2022
Overall, as a noob to jazz and not really having a background in it or music training, I enjoyed this documentary and learned a lot about jazz. I was, however, a bit disappointed that there was absolutely no mention of Vince Guaraldi. Granted, in the overall scheme of things, he was never that big, except for the fact that he was only the guy who scored nearly all of the Peanuts specials, including A Charlie Brown Christmas - the 2nd best-selling jazz album of all time next to Miles Davis' Kind of Blue. "Linus and Lucy" has got to be one of THE most recognizable jazz tunes ever. It brought a lot of non-jazz enthusiasts to jazz, including me. And outside of Peanuts, he composed some really sweet-sounding tunes, like "Cast Your Fate to the Wind". Anyway, I know this doc was pretty long as it was, but they should have at least had a short blurb about him. Outside of Dave Brubeck, there was hardly anything mentioned about West Coast/Cool Jazz.

Also, towards the end I expected at least some mention of the formation of the annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival (Jazzfest). Nothing mentioned about that.
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10/10
Dive into the world of Jazz.
Bernie444414 December 2023
Filmmaker Ken Burns can do nothing wrong and does everything to its fullest. In this case, we dive into the world of jazz.

We learn everything from the concept to the execution. As much as you think you know going into the series Ken can find something you missed.

Separated into 10 disks it could easily have been 20 disks as they are each approximately two hours long. The information is so concentrated that you can be overloaded in an hour. Then you have to take a day to investigate the background of the artists and information given.

Speaking of information, the presentation is filled with still pictures, film clips, knowledgeable presenters (they explain things in their own way), and quotes from people of the time.

I am now having to go back and read Ralph Ellison; I thought the was the invisible man and did not know about his musical background.

You will have to go through the series at least once more.
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7/10
Useful but - sadly - just a tad limited. But still worthwhile
pfgpowell-124 February 2020
Very useful view of the history of jazz but oddly limited. Perhaps that was unavoidable given the essentially amorphous nature of the beast. But don't let me quibble: after watching Burns's 12-parter I now have a far better idea of how jazz evolved and thus a framework on which to build other knowledge.

There is a great emphasis, necessarily I suppose given the route jazz took in the beginning of the 2oth century, on horn players, and that emphasis continues, again necessarily when we get to the evolution of bebop (which is pretty much where jazz burst out and asserted itself). But the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s also saw other instruments make their mark, particularly the guitar and piano.

The piano gets half a look-in with segment a segment on Thelonius Monk, and other pianists get a mention, but the focus is pretty heavily on the sax and the horn. What about the very, very many jazz guitarists - guitar is my instrument? Why no mention not just of the playing but the contributions made by Wes Montgomery, Grant Green and others? Mingus also gets a look-in, but . . .

Burns might respond that he wanted primarily to outline the development of jazz over the last century, and he has a point. But the topic does cry out for a broader, a far broader attempt.

As I say, though, here is not the place to quibble. Burns's Jazz does (as we say in Britain) what is says on the tin and I for one have gained from it. Now I look forward to similar broader enterprises.
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2/10
A huge disappointment.
Austen10 March 2002
Until viewing this documentary I thought it utterly fantastic that jazz could be boring. That belief was shattered by Ken Burns' disappointing "Jazz". Though it certainly contains immensely valuable archival footage, the mini-series as a whole is no more than traditionalist propaganda.

By all means, go to a jazz concert! Read Amiri Baraka's [LeRoi Jones'] "Blues People" & "Black Music" and Angela Davis' "Blues Legacies and Black Feminism" or Miles Davis' or Duke Ellington's memoirs. There are many other, better ways to learn about this uniquely American art form that abstain from this labored attempt to impose a narrow view of the jazz ideal (I mean how many *hours* of screen time should Wynton Marsalis really have?).

Those with an appreciation for the music and footage used in "Jazz" will either enjoy the rarities or laugh at the pompous presentation (or both). Those unfamiliar with anything related to jazz should know that this series presents a very slanted view of history. The lack of any objectivity led to critics almost universally panning "Jazz" on its release.
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Starts With a Bang; Ends in a Whimper
BB-153 February 2001
The culture of the "People, all the People" has been Ken Burns' great theme. In the first two thirds of "Jazz" he eloquently presents these grand ideas. From Armstrong and Ellington to Billie Holiday and Benny Goodman we are swept along in a vibrant, multi-layered story of something special that would change the world.

But once the documentary reaches the 50's, the tale takes a radical turn. There is a lot of focus on drugs and broken lives. This may be important but these sad endings lead the film on a downward emotional spiral. (I understand why Spike Lee detests jazz musician's stories focusing on drugs.) But at least the music is good.

When the so called jazz music of the 60's and beyond is revealed, we see that the climax of this film is a betrayal of its beginning. The "People's music" has vanished. We see that "real" jazz is elitist and narrow and for the most part is a musical dead end.

We find that "real" jazz is played on acoustic instruments such as trumpets and saxophones. So, electric jazz guitarists are almost never mentioned as well as any electric keyboard players. And the only correct modern style comes straight from Be Bop. We hardly hear any Latin jazz or Fusion.

The great music promoter John Hammond once said that his most satisfying discovery was George Benson. Of course we never hear about Benson because he was popular and he plays electric guitar. No, instead the film's ending becomes an overblown promotion of Wynton Marsalis who since he acts as the film's "senior creative consultant" brings the great story down to an example of petty ego.

Overall "Jazz" has seven excellent episodes about a vital part of history and its effect on the world's music. Enjoy these and after that I would gently suggest to quit while you're ahead.
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6/10
Jazz club
Prismark1013 October 2018
Jazz began in the late 19th century in New Orleans by black musicians. Since the 1960s it has splintered in many directions even dividing jazz aficionados some who only believe in traditional jazz.

Ken Burns was helped here by Wynton Marsalis. Burns does a through detailed look in the story of Jazz with footage of the great and the good.

Even at 10 parts there are omissions and it feels like an overview. The last episode races through to the modern day (2001) from the 1960s upwards.

Your enjoyment of the series and appreciation of the music depends on how much of a fan of jazz you are. I only have a gentle interest who looked at the show to learn more things about jazz and some other greats apart from Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis.
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1/10
Good Documentary on "Jazz"
djgayassmutha2 March 2001
This was a good documentary if you consider jazz to be played only on acoustic instruments, fusion to be a terrible form of jazz, jazz to have died in the seventies, Wynton Marsalis to be the best contemporary jazz artist, and Louis Armstrong to be the greatest jazz musician everywhere. This film gives jazz fusion artists such a bad rap that I do not call myself that anymore. I am now a progressive rocker which at least has a good name. Oh yeah, and its not dead unlike jazz which passed away after Bitches Brew. I want one thing. I want Ken Burns to look into the face of Allan Holdsworth, Al DiMeola, Michael Brecker, Chick Corea, Jan Hammer, Wayne Shorter, Pat Metheny, Mike Stern, Keith Jarret, Randy Brecker, Tony Williams, Jaco Pastorious, and John Scofield, and then tell them that they are not part of the history of "Jazz." What a disgrace.
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4/10
Average at Best
WWJDWITHCA3 February 2011
This is really not a very good film, and wow is it terribly boring. I mean, really? What can I say but way too much Louis Armstrong and way too much Wynton Marsalis. Who died and made him Jazz King anyway? Why does anyone care what he says? He actually said that Armstrong was the greatest musical mind since Bach! Umm, does Marsalis know that after the baroque period of music came the classical period dominated by two small individuals named Beethoven and Mozart. So Armstrong is not only one of of the greatest musical minds in history, Bach was too!

10 episodes of Jazz, and the last segment starts in 1962. That fact right there tells you how much of a mess this series is about Jazz. They compared Cecil Taylor to Beethoven, then they go back to talking about Duke Ellington, and Louis Armstrong, AGAIN! Then you have to listen to Marsalis! Ughh! Why?? How could someone possibly screw this easy documentary up so bad? Jazz music is a wonderful, wonderful form of music, and sadly this film series is awful and largely thanks to Wynton Marsalis.
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A HISTORY OF LUIS ARMSTRONG
bazdol18 January 2001
In this limited and parochial view of jazz, Ken Burns spends about three hours obsessing over Luis Armstrong; although he is one of the great ones, do we have to fawn over him for that length of time? I agree with an amazon.com reviewer who wrote that for Burns, jazz=black. Even so, what attention is really given to Diz, Parker, and others of the bop era; to my mind, bop was a great revolution in jazz and deserves special treatment. Also, what about the Herman herds, Stan Kenton, and other great bands of the 40's and 50's? Where are the Jerry Mulligans, Stan Getz's, and Lee Konitz's? Also, Anita O'Day, June Christy, and Chris Conner

There was more to the white end of jazz than Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, and this really puzzles me: the Ted Heath orchestra.

To me, although Burns allegedly spent six years making this documentary series, he just shows how constrained is his vision.

Burns has shown this parochialism before though where in "Baseball" he concentrated on the NY Yankees and Boston Red Sox. Cities such as Chicago, for example, were barely mentioned by dredging up that old war horse the White Sox scandal. I don't think St. Louis was even considered

I give "Jazz' ** out of *****
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