1. Home
  2. »
  3. Genres
  4. »
  5. Jazz
  6. »
  7. Cool/West Coast Jazz
  8. »
  9. West Coast Jazz

West Coast Jazz

Share
  • Overview
  • Key Artists
  • Top Artists
  • Top Albums
  • Top Tracks
  • Radio
  • People
507268_356x237
507190_356x237
651391_356x237
995737_356x237

Top Tracks

More
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    5:24
    Take Five
    The Dave Brubeck Quartet
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    2:30
    There's No Time for Love, Charlie Brown
    Vince Guaraldi
  • Play
    Options
    Queue
    6:08
    Christmastime Is Here (Instrumental)
    Vince Guaraldi Trio

Top Listeners

More
Jeff Seaman
Terry Moore
Jeff Seaman and Terry Moore have been listening to West Coast Jazz lately

Description

West Coast Jazz ruled the 1950s. There is much crossover between West Coast jazz and its Eastern Cool and Bop cousins, but the West Coasters enjoyed knocking down the borders between newer jazz, Swing, and even classical music. During and after World War II, scores of jazz musicians joined such L.A. natives as Chet Baker, Dexter Gordon, and Art Pepper in California. The more relaxed West Coast attitude was reflected by Gerry Mulligan (one of the architects of Miles Davis' seminal Birth of the Cool album), who caused a sensation with his piano-less quartet -- Mulligan and trumpeter Chet Baker's trademark floating, intertwining countermelodies can be heard in their hit version of "My Funny Valentine." Meanwhile, up the coast in San Francisco, Dave Brubeck and Cal Tjader had put Fantasy Records on the map. Brubeck brought Avant-Garde classical theory and adventurous time signatures to jazz and had a huge hit with, "Take Five," while Tjader mixed Cool Jazz with Latin rhythms to score big with "Soul Sauce." The movement was over by the mid-'60s, with most artists forced to either move to New York or join recording studios full-time in order to maintain steady work.