Jazz Education: The Evolution of Jazz MentorshipMain MenuThe Evolution of Jazz MentorshipIntroductionAn examination of the shift from mentorship to institutionalized jazz educationHistory of Jazz Education and MentorshipBuster WilliamsJazz BassistGermaine BazzleJazz VocalistBob SchulzCornetistAllan VacheJazz ClarinetistClaude "Fiddler" WilliamsViolinistRace in Jazz Education and DHModern MentorshipOur Other DH MethodConclusionAdditional Works CitedAnnotated BibliographyProcessRubricCharles Feinberg a633ea3222992a27c847ec0ad06f6d16f2661c0aIan Nishc8e1b57977e1f4a2609b5fd3c5709368881a067dChenchen Zhao1ae1f5e092d2c0ee7ee3a905c32f28c80b2bcff2Lucy Marr980f44bafc1d959aa28bd1523452ecda562647e8Dylan Thies5f1b5f99d39dc97d140f6ac638f3793e0c81ceed
1media/4367175385_0b1a59806b_b.jpgmedia/terence_slide-59f4991771db5dc5241fd42497e10a7075970db6-s900-c85.jpg2017-04-25T10:48:25-07:00Introduction59An examination of the shift from mentorship to institutionalized jazz educationimage_header2017-05-11T14:53:18-07:00
What is digital humanities? Digital humanities (DH) is a field in which researchers and teachers utilize computerized/digitized resources to accumulate and analyze information pertaining to the human experience from antiquity to the modernity. It is a dynamic field; constantly adapting to meet the evolving needs of those who wish to utilize DH resources as a provocative academic resource. As the print medium is supplanted by digitalized media, humanity projects must adapt to the digital to maintain accessibility, engage desired populations and distribute important information in a modern, effective manner.
The Jazz Mentorship Project In this anecdotally-based Jazz DH project, you will explore how mentorship has influenced jazz education by instrumental type and temporally. You will be pushed to confront the following questions: How did mentorship influence the early jazz musicians in becoming the notable jazz icons of the 21st centuries? Are jazz mentorships losing influence as jazz education has integrated into the classroom over the last 50 years? Is the passage of jazz via mentorship completely lost in our modern education system (e.g. college courses focused on jazz theory and composition)? To address these questions, we examine five jazz musicians thoughts on mentorship (sometimes referred to as apprenticeship) through their interviews with Monk Rowe and Michael Woods, directors of the Hamilton College Jazz Archive. These jazz musicians include bassist Buster Williams, vocalist Germaine Bazzle, cornetist Bob Schulz, clarinetist Allan Vache, and violinist Claude "Fiddler" Williams. Through these interviews, you will investigate what has prompted the shift in jazz education from jazz's mentorship roots to a more institutionalized education. Additionally, you will be introduced to on-going efforts to return the mentorship-based jazz education within the confines of formal jazz education, such as the Jazz Education Network Program.
As you will soon read and hear, traditional jazz education in the form of mentorship was inherently personal. Thus, institutionalization of jazz education and thought coincides with the loss what jazz was meant to represent for early musicians. The loss of intimacy in jazz education may be one of the reasons jazz seems to be lost in popularity in modern American culture, as musicians maintain more superficial relationships with peers and tend to learn in a more impersonal manner as compared to previous generations.