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Cool Jazz Explained

Hot vs Cool

There are two ways to play Jazz – you could either play Hot or play Cool. These two approaches to playing Jazz have been around since the beginning of Jazz, but it was only in the 1950’s that playing ‘cool’ became its very own genre in itself.

If you ask any scientist they’ll tell you that hot things have a lot of energy, while cool things do not. And it’s the same with Jazz – Hot Jazz is high energy Jazz, while Cool Jazz is (relatively) low(er) energy Jazz.

The characteristics of each ‘approach’ are as follows

Hot Jazz (Expressionism)Cool Jazz (Rationalism)
High EnergyLow energy
Emotive, Extroverted, & RawRestrained, Relaxed, & Introverted
Fast TempoSlow to Medium tempo (Ballads)
Driving and Heavy RhythmLight rhythm & quiet rhythm section
Played on or ahead of the beatPlay behind the beat
Use of wide dynamicsLittle dynamics
Use extreme high registersUse low and middle register
Wide vibratoLimited or no vibrato
StaccatoLegato
Accenting of notesUnderstated, unaccented tone
Angular melodiesSmooth, melodic and lyrical melodies
Fill beat with notesWide use of silence
HomophonicPolyphonic (counterpoint)
Hard touchSoft touch
4/4 timeOdd time signatures
Blues influencedClassical influenced
Lots of improvisationMore composition

The best way to think about it is that:

Numerous bands that played Hot Jazz labelled themselves as such, for example:

There was also two ‘styles’ of Swing:

Bebop was also considered Hot.

Inspiration of the Cool

Cool Jazz arose in the 1950’s as a reaction to (Hot) Bebop. Bebop was fast, loud, heavy, angular, high pitched, high energy and dense. Cool Jazz tried to do the exact opposite – it was slow, soft, light, lyrical, low pitched, low energy and sparse.

There were a number of early Jazz musicians who inspired the ‘Cool’ way of playing, including:

Young played in Count Basie’s Big Band. And while a lot of soloists at the time played forcefully and emotively (like Coleman Hawkins, for example), Young’s playing was soft, vibrato-less, smooth, restrained, relaxed, breathy, and behind the beat.

And Young didn’t just play cool. He epitomised cool. Young was always smartly dressed, laid-back, played with his sax at a slight angle, and used a lot of slang – in fact, he’s said to have even coined the term ‘cool’ as a term of approval. So whenever you describe something as ‘cool’, you’re partially indebted to Lester Young.

Just Lester Young being cool. Whatevs.

Birth of the Cool

So Cool Jazz was inspired by Lester Young, but it was created  by Miles Davis. Davis, like all other Jazz musicians at the time, started playing Bebop but he was always less intense, less aggressive, less quick, less loud, less high up, and less busy than other Bebop players (like Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie). He always played a bit more relaxed, used the middle register of his trumpet, and was more inclined to silence. So he wasn’t really suited to playing Bebop. So in 1949 and 1950 he got a group of musicians together and created the Birth of the Cool recordings. These recording were innovative because:

Cool Jazz

Cool Jazz was criticised at the time as being a kind of ‘white man’s’ Jazz – because it was often played by white, university educated musicians; it was classical influenced rather than Blues and Swing influenced; and it was more popular with white audiences than Bebop (which was seen as African-American and radical). This criticism is probably less relevant these days, and besides the boundaries between musical genres are flexible and porous.

So ‘Cool’ is NOT WHAT you play, but HOW you play it.

You still play all the same Jazz Standards, just in a more relaxed and restrained way. This makes the Cool Jazz genre a little bit odd. Jazz musicians playing very different styles of Jazz were classified under the genre of ‘Cool Jazz’.

Musicians played ‘cool’ before Cool Jazz (see Lester Young above). Musicians continue to play ‘cool’ after Cool Jazz. But it’s only those musicians who played ‘cool’ in the 1950’s that are classified as ‘Cool Jazz’. I wouldn’t think too deeply about this…

Cool but not Cold

And remember that it is Cool Jazz NOT Cold Jazz. You don’t want to play like a robot or a piano roll. You still want to impart some feeling into your playing. Being ‘cool’ is like being introverted – you still have feelings, you just don’t tell everyone about it all the time to everyone and don’t wear your heart on your sleeve. Cool Jazz still has feeling, it’s just less explicit and less extroverted; more nuanced and more restrained.

Have a Listen to

For a good example of the difference between Hot and Cool Jazz, have a listen to:

And check out the following artists:

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