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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Soul_jazzSoul jazz - Wikipedia

    Soul jazz began to mold into jazz fusion by the late 1960s, with musicians such as Turrentine moving to the CTI fusion label in the early 1970s and free jazz saxophonist Albert Ayler moving into jazz-rock during the late 1960s before his untimely death in 1970.

  2. Der Soul-Jazz erlangte in den 1960er Jahren große Popularität. Herausragende Beispiele hierfür sind die Stücke „Mercy, Mercy, Mercy“, komponiert von Joe Zawinul, gespielt vom Cannonball Adderley Quintet und produziert von David Axelrod, sowie Lee Morgans The Sidewinder, die beide auch Chart-Hits wurden.

  3. The Black Power movement in the 1960s, in concert with the Civil Rights Movement, galvanized African American communities to social and political action. Jazz musicians contributed to this process, developing soul jazz out of hard bop.

  4. 8. Juni 2020 · And from Davis’s early experiments with the instrument, the genre moved into a period in the early ‘60s that saw it reaching pop success. A 1962 Billboard article explored the popularity of the organ in pop music, highlighting its mainstream success—“new artists plying the organ trade seem to increase with every passing week.”

  5. Soul Jazz. Soul-Jazz, which was the most popular jazz style of the 1960s, differs from bebop and hard bop (from which it originally developed) in that the emphasis is on the rhythmic groove. Although soloists follow the chords as in bop, the basslines (often played by an organist if not a string bassist) dance rather than stick strictly to a ...

  6. 12. März 2024 · Soul Jazz in the 1960s. In the 1960s, soul jazz continued to evolve and thrive as a popular subgenre of jazz, characterized by its infectious grooves, bluesy melodies, and gospel-inspired harmonies. Building on the foundation laid in the late 1950s, soul jazz artists explored new musical territories and helped shape the sound of the ...

  7. Soul music was partially the result of the urbanization and commercialization of rhythm and blues in the 1960s. Young black musicians, often nurtured in black churches, enjoyed and listened to these R & B sounds and began the mix of gospel, R & B, and blues that would later be called “soul music.”