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  1. The Cry of Jazz is a 1959 documentary film by Edward O. Bland that connects jazz to African American history. It uses footage of Chicago 's black neighborhoods, performances by Sun Ra , John Gilmore , and Julian Priester and the music of Sun Ra and Paul Severson interspersed with scenes of musicians and intellectuals, both black and ...

  2. 5. Juli 2020 · The Cry of Jazz is a 1959 documentary film by Edward O. Bland that connects jazz to African American history. It uses footage of Chicago's black neighborhoods and performances by Sun Ra,...

    • 34 Min.
    • 12,6K
    • Reelblack One
  3. 26. Aug. 2013 · It’s set at a party, in Chicago, at which white jazz enthusiasts ask Black friends about the music. The protagonist, Alex (George Waller), responds with an essayistic voice-over monologue of ...

    • Condé Nast
  4. 14. Feb. 2018 · The Cry of Jazz is a 1959 documentary film by Ed Bland that connects jazz to African American history. It uses footage of Chicago's black neighborhoods and performances by Sun Ra, John...

    • 34 Min.
    • 21,8K
    • Jazz Time with Jarvis X
  5. The Cry of Jazz is the only film composer and musician Ed Bland ever helmed. It fused street grit and ivory tower intellect into a thirty-four minute celluloid whirlwind unlike anything before or since, all the while scored by a then unknown Le Sun Ra & his Arkestra.

  6. The Cry of Jazz. The film is a poetic examination of the meaning of jazz, Black American music, and the function of Black people in America. "Negro life.,. as created through jazz, is a contradiction between worship of the present, freedom, and joy, and the realization of the futureless future, restraint, and suffering—which the American way ...

  7. The Cry of Jazz is the only film composer and musician Ed Bland ever helmed. Deemed radical, alarmist, and amateurish by many upon its release, it fused street grit and ivory tower intellect into a thirty-four minute celluloid whirlwind, all the while scored by a then unknown Le Sun Ra & his Arkestra.