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German jazz
German jazz
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An overview of the evolution of Jazz music in Germany reveals that the development of jazz in Germany and its public notice differ from the "motherland" of jazz, the US, in several respects.

The 1920s

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One of the first books with the word "jazz" in the title originates from Germany. In his book Jazz – Eine Musikalische Zeitfrage (Jazz – A Musical Issue) of 1927, Paul Bernhard relates the term Jazz to a specific dance. When dancer Josephine Baker visited Berlin in 1925, she found it dazzling. "The city had a jewel-like sparkle," she said, "the vast cafés reminded me of ocean liners powered by the rhythms of their orchestras. There was music everywhere." Eager to look ahead after the crushing defeat of World War I, Weimar Germany embraced the modernism that swept through Europe and was crazy about jazz. In the dancing mania of the post-war period, there were not only modern dances such as the tango and foxtrot, but in 1920 also the Shimmy and in 1922 the Two-step. In 1925 the Charleston dominated the dance halls. Even when under great criticism Bernhard Sekles initiated the first academic jazz studies anywhere at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt in 1928 - the first courses in the United States were started in the mid-1940s.[1] The director of the jazz department was Mátyás Seiber. The jazz studies were closed by The Nazis in 1933.[2][3][4]

The first mass-produced jazz records came out in the United States in 1917. By January 1920, "Tiger Rag" had already been marketed by a German record company. In the early 1920s, the clarinetist and saxophonist Eric Borchard was making recordings in Germany. Borchard's first recordings show a heavy influence of Alcide Nunez; he soon developed his own style. By 1924 his band was comparable to good American bands such as the Original Memphis Five. Borchard's band included New Orleans trombonist Emile Christian. From 1920 to 1923, due to both economic turmoil and inflation, larger German jazz orchestras that played the new jazz dances were a rarity. Initially, a trio with a pianist, a drummer and a "Stehgeiger" (standing violinist), who also played the saxophone, was most common. Only after 1924 an economic stability was achieved, and an economic basis for larger dance orchestras was possible, like those founded by Bernard Etté, Dajos Béla, Marek Weber, Efim Schachmeister, and Stefan Weintraub.[5] It was the predominant element of improvisation that was met with a lack of understanding in Germany, where people had always played concrete written notes; Marek Weber, for example, demonstratively left the podium if its nightly band played jazz interludes.

In 1920–23, there was a period of economic turbulence and inflation in Germany, until 1924 when the market stabilized and money was invested in entertainment. Consequently, the mid-1920s brought forth a growth of larger bands who agreed to play jazz music. The two most popular German bands that showed the influence of American jazz were Eric Borchard's small combo, and Stefan Weintraub's Syncopators.[6]

Radio also had a role in jazz. In 1926, the radio began to regularly play jazz music, and as time progressed, by 1930, artists such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Paul Godwin's band, Red Nichols, and Peter Kreuder became popular with German audiences. The listeners were particularly partial to American black musicians such as Armstrong and Ellington, instead of their own German jazz musicians.[6] In the 1920s, jazz in Germany was primarily a fad. The "Salonorchester" turned to the new style, because dancers wanted it so. By 1924, the first jazz could be heard on the radio; after 1926, when Paul Whiteman enjoyed sensational success in Berlin, regular radio programmes were broadcast with jazz played live. His music was also available on record and in sheet music. The Weintraub Syncopators were the first hot jazz band in Germany at their summit beginning around 1928. Musicians from many musical backgrounds, composers of classical music concerts such as Paul Hindemith, Ernst Krenek and Kurt Weill, turned to the new music genre that came from America and incorporated it into their musical language. For the classical composers, the orchestral casts, the timbre, syncope, and blues harmonies of jazz were a synonym for the modern era. This new music genre was recognised not only as a fashion and entertainment music, but as real art. However, as early as in 1927, the composer Karol Rathaus called it somewhat prematurely a Jazzdämmerung (jazz twilight). Theodor W. Adorno criticized the popular jazz of this period as predominantly functional music (Gebrauchsmusik) for the upper classes, having little if any connection to the African-American tradition.[7]

Jazz was found as an uncommon link between the blacks and Jews. Jews at that time were recognized in jazz, not just as musicians and composers, but also as commercial managers, serving as the middlemen of the music. After the Great War in Germany, Negrophobia coalesced with the preexisting anti-Semitism and flourished, especially since Jews were often depicted as having a racial affinity with blacks, possessing similar objectionable qualities. Jews were prevalent figures in new art forms such as jazz, cabaret, and film. Often, a great number of jazz band leaders were Jews, many from Eastern Europe, including Bela, Weber, Efim Schachmeister, Paul Godwin, and Ben Berlin.[6]

Years of National Socialism, the 1930s and the missing 1940s

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Jazz was much more than just a creative pastime; in fact, people saw jazz as the "essence of the era's modernism", a strong surge toward greater equality and emancipation, posing as a perfect advocate for a democracy in Germany. With its debonair, carefree interdependence on chorus-line culture of the cabarets of Berlin, some dubbed jazz as the "incarnation of American vitalism". Yet, despite the liberal attitudes of the Weimar democracy, the public and private sentiment toward blacks, including African Americans, was ambivalent; there was a lack of black jazz musicians in Germany. Regardless of their social situation, the deeply engrained and institutionalized racism of German society was not tolerant of black people. For instance, many nationalistic student fraternities rejected student members who were of color or married to women of color. Furthermore, in 1932, all the conservative musicians and critics were denigrating jazz as a product of "Negro" culture, which provided the government the fodder to forbid the hiring of black musicians. Thus, for many African-American artists, popularity was a mere facade of a grim reality of being seen as a "racial alien". One critic even went as far as to call jazz a mere "negro noise", having only one purpose: "to introduce obscenities into society."[6]

Paul Schewers, a music critic, brought forth crude images of lewdly dancing black boys and girls in the service of procreation, implying that the lower forces were always surging through blacks, overtaking the rational light of morality and reason the way the white man grasped it. Undoubtedly, sensuality has an affinity with dance, and it was pervasive in jazz and in the lyrics, but this became a means of judging it as void of morality, and even aesthetics, reduced to being inferior to "high German culture".[6]

In neighbouring European countries the trend continued in the 1930s. Fan magazines were created for jazz and so-called "hot clubs". The Nazi regime pursued and banned the broadcasting of jazz on German radio, partly because of its African roots and because many of the active jazz musicians were of Jewish origin; and partly due to the music's certain themes of individuality and freedom. For the Nazis, jazz was an especially threatening form of expression. An anti-jazz radio broadcast From the Cake Walk to Hot sought a deterrent effect with "particularly insisting musical examples".[citation needed]

Perhaps the source of the critique against jazz was the modernity it implied; in fact, many of the jazz critics were those who were against any form of modernity. Those World War I veterans with Fascist pretensions and of the anti-Semitic Freikorps banded with other members in the National Socialist movement in denouncing Jews and blacks. This burgeoning hatred of jazz and its subculture infected the entire Nazi party structure that Adolf Hitler and his followers were trying so desperately to erect.[6]

Hitler was not fond of modernism in the arts, which included music; in the Nazi party's program of February 1920, he threatened to enforce future governmental laws against such inclinations in art and literature. Even though he never publicly spoke out against jazz specifically in the Weimar Republic, one can infer that Hitler's sentiments toward jazz must have had strong ties to his perception of racial hierarchy, with jazz, not surprisingly, being at the very bottom.[6]

In the 1930s, jazz began to see its downturn and started to suffer. Jazz's potential for being linked with the down-trodden minorities and pariahs of German society - the blacks and Jews - rendered it suspect. The future policies emerging against jazz were encouraged by German musicologists and radio spokesmen. In 1935, attempting to widen the perceived gap between "Nigger-Jew Jazz" and "German Jazz", Hans Otto Fricke used his prominent status as the director of "Radio Frankfurt", giving a two-part lecture series on the subject.[8] To a great extent, Jazz shared a similar fate with other postwar modernist art such as atonal music. It wasn't until 1931 that many crucial British and American jazz players began to leave the country as they faced increasing xenophobic harassment from colleagues and authorities. Many thought that the death of jazz was upon them, but little did they anticipate that it would be reborn into vitality and health under a dictatorship.[6]

Up until 1935, Joseph Goebbels, the Reich Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, had hoped to convince and persuade the public via anti-jazz propaganda, rather than prohibit jazz. However, jazz was banned in 1935 (WFMU Staff). In 1935, the Nazi government did not allow German musicians of Jewish origin to perform any longer. The Weintraub Syncopators – most of whom were Jewish – were forced into exile. They worked abroad during much of the 1930s, touring throughout Europe, Asia, and the Middle East before settling in Australia in 1937. Even people with a single Jewish grandparent like swing trumpeter Hans Berry were forced to play undercover or to work abroad (in Belgium, the Netherlands or in Switzerland).

Other dance bands and musicians were not even that fortunate. For example, Mitja Nikisch, son of the celebrated classical conductor Arthur Nikisch and himself a respected classical pianist, had created a fine popular dance ensemble in the 1920s, the Mitja Nikisch Tanz Orchester, which played in prominent venues. The Nazi regime brought about its demise, leading Nikisch to commit suicide in 1936.[citation needed]

From 1937 onward, American musicians in Europe couldn't cross German borders. Admittedly, in spite of such persecution it was still possible, at least in major cities, to buy jazz records until the beginning of the war; however, the further development of, and the contact with, the American Jazz World were largely interrupted. The "Reichsmusikkammer" (Reichs Music Chamber) supported dance music that bore some traits of Swing, but listening to foreign stations, which regularly played jazz, was penalised from 1939 on. Even after certain songs and performers were banned in Germany, several radio stations played jazz music by printing a new, German-centric label. For example, the song "Tiger Rag" became "Schwarzer Panther", or the "black panther". "Joseph! Joseph!" became "Sie will nicht Blumen und nicht Schokolade", which translates as "She wants neither flowers nor chocolate" (WFMU Staff).

Some musicians did not want to follow this command. Thus, for example, when jazz was finally prohibited by the Nazis at the beginning of the war, the clarinettist Ernst Höllerhagen left Germany for exile in Switzerland.

At that time, only a relatively small number of people in Germany knew how jazz music sounded in America – at that time, swing – and that it was jazz. With the pressing wartime effort from 1941 to 1943, the Nazis accidentally fostered the jazz craze by forcing bands from Nazi-occupied nations in Western Europe to perform, bringing hot swing. Eventually, the Nazi party realized that jazz could not be removed entirely from Germany (WFMU Staff). The Nazis even re-developed and newly produced some pieces, giving them new lyrics, in special studios. One example is the song "Black Bottom", which was presented as "Schwarzer Boden". For some Germans, the banned foreign stations with jazz programs were very popular.[citation needed]

The Nazis on the one hand would jam transmissions from the Allies' stations, but on the other hand would also copy them. The band Charlie and His Orchestra is considered as a negative example, also called Mr. Goebbels Jazz Band. Several of Germany's most talented swing musicians, such as saxophonist Lutz Templin and vocalist Karl "Charlie" Schwedler, were active in a jazz band. Here the Nazis replaced the original texts with their own provocative propaganda texts that were pro-Nazi and anti-American/British. For example, the lyrics for "Little Sir Echo" has anti-American/British appeal with lyrics such as "German U-boats are making you sore, You're always licked, not a victory came through ... You're nice, little fellow, but by now you should know that you can never win this war!"[citation needed] Goebbels' propaganda was broadcast over pirated short-wave frequencies into America, Britain, and Canada in order to spread fear and weaken the morale of Germany's enemies (WFMU Staff).

Negermusik ("Negro Music") was a pejorative term used by the Nazis during the Third Reich to signify musical styles and performances by African Americans that were of the jazz and swing music genres.

The situation intensified in 1942 with the entry of the United States in the war. For diplomats of foreign embassies and Wehrmacht members, a couple of jazz clubs continued to remain open in Berlin. In addition, individual, illegitimate venues and private parties still played jazz. In 1943 jazz record production was stopped.[citation needed]

The Swingjugend, or Swing Youth, was a movement among mainly youth from 14 to 20 years old who dressed, danced, and listened to jazz in defiance of the Nazi regime. The Nazi Party acted against this movement by detaining several of the young leaders of the Swing Youth and sending them to concentration camps. However, the Swing Youth continued to resist the Nazi party by participating in prohibited swing and jazz activities (Neuhaus). Charlie and His Orchestra was moved in the still bombproof province.[9] Jazz was also incorporated into musical works such as operas and chamber music through "art-jazz", which utilized jazz-inspired and ragtime-inspired syncopated rhythms and modes. Famous operas such as Krenek's Jonny spielt auf! and Boris Blacher's Concertante Music for Orchestra are examples of art-jazz (Dexter).

The Nazi regime passed notorious edicts banning jazz records and muted trumpets calling them degenerate art or entartete Kunst. "Degenerate Music" was an exhibit sponsored by the Nazi regime that singled out "degeneracy" or the use of atonal music, jazz, discordant-sounding organization of tones and the individual composers and conductors, both of Aryan and non-Aryan descent. The "Degenerative Music" exhibit actually had the opposite effect of what the Nazis had hoped because soldiers became interested in genuine jazz (Potter). The documentary film Swing Under the Swastika looks at jazz music under the Nazi regime in Germany, and at the cases of the Madlung sisters who were sent to Ravensbruck concentration camp merely for owning jazz records. There are also interviews with jazz drummer and guitarist Coco Schumann and pianist Martin Roman, who were saved in the camps so they could and had to play for SS officers and during executions in Auschwitz as part of the "Ghetto Swingers".[citation needed]

Postwar period and the 1950s

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In 1950 Helmut Zacharias won the jazz-poll of American Forces Network Frankfurt as the best jazz violinist.

In the postwar period, and after nearly 20 years of isolation, many music fans as well as musicians themselves were very interested in the movements of jazz they had missed. In fact, jazz gave young people the enthusiastic hope for rebuilding the country. In the jazz clubs, jazz lovers played important records even before they could organize concerts. As World War II ended, jazz was imported to Germany via its strong footholds in England and France, and home-grown post-war jazz was able to develop, particularly in the American-occupied zone. Ironically, many German prisoners first heard jazz in French camps, and then the occupying Allied forces introduced those records and sheet music into the country.[6] Berlin, Bremen and Frankfurt became centers of jazz. Young German musicians could perform before a larger audience in American GI venues.

In the 1950s, following the model established in Paris, "Existential" jazz cellars (referring to the French philosophy) emerged in numerous West German cities.

On April 2, 1951, Erwin Lehn founded the dance orchestra of the South German Radio (SDR) in Stuttgart, which he led until 1992. In a short time it developed from a radio-band to a modern swing big band: Erwin Lehn and his Südfunk Tanzorchester (southern radio dance orchestra). In 1955 Lehn, with Dieter Zimmerle and Wolfram Röhrig, initiated the SDR broadcast Treffpunkt Jazz. There Lehn played with international jazz greats such as Miles Davis and Chet Baker. In addition to Kurt Edelhagen's band at the Southwestern Radio (SWF), the Südfunk dance orchestra became one of the leading swing big bands in the Federal Republic of Germany in the following years. In 1953, Edelhagen discovered Caterina Valente in Baden-Baden as a singer for his big band.

Albert Mangelsdorff, here much older than in 1960

American jazz musicians were heard at the Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts, and at events in the major concert halls in western Germany. Primarily, local musicians played in the clubs. In order to raise the level of cultural recognition, concert tours by the German Jazz Federation (a merger of the clubs) were increasingly organised. Until the end of the 1950s, the German jazz scene was strongly fixated on imitating American jazz, and on regaining the period of development it had previously missed. However, from 1954 on, West German jazz slowly departed from the pattern established by this musical role model. The quintet of pianist and composer Jutta Hipp played a central role in doing so; this group included the saxophonist Emil Mangelsdorff and Joki Freund, who also wrote instrumental compositions. Although Hipp's music was heavily influenced by American role models, she impressed the American jazz critics with her distinctive and independent performances. The peculiarity of her music was an asymmetrical melody in the improvisations, the beginning and end located in unusual places. English New Orleans and traditional jazzbands were fervently welcomed, particularly Ken Colyer, Sonny Morris and Chris Barber. Bands of this type have continued to play in Germany.

Whereas in America, the rhythmically accented and innovative Bebop enjoyed a heyday until the mid-1950s, this music---unlike the Cool Jazz that had also boomed in the 1950s---was a genre German musicians were unaccustomed to. They preferred Cool Jazz, because with its emphasis on brass melodies, and its interaction, as well as the tone, it was softer and slower---less explosive.

Authorities in German Democratic Republic (GDR) were highly skeptical of jazz due to its American roots. Karl Heinz Drechsel was dismissed from his job at the GDR broadcasting organization in 1952 because of his fondness for jazz and was prohibited from organizing jazz broadcasts again until 1958. The founder of the jazz group Leipzig, Reginald Rudorf, held well-attended lectures on jazz, which also explained the culture of the United States. But they were stopped with disruptive actions by the state security organization ("Staatssicherheit"). In 1957, the Dresdner Interessengemeinschaft Jazz (community of jazz interests) was prohibited in connection with the trial of the regime against Rudorf, as a suspected spy.[10]

While the GDR dance orchestras still played a few Swing numbers, it was Modern Jazz, which could not be integrated into the dance combos, that was officially criticized. It was later denounced as "snotnosed Jazz" by Andre Asriel.[11]

In 1956 the clarinettist Rolf Kühn moved to America, gave a guest performance with Caterina Valente in New York and performed with his quartet at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1957. From 1958 to 1962 Kühn played (as the first German musician) with the orchestras of Benny Goodman and as a solo clarinettist with Tommy Dorsey - as replacement for Buddy DeFranco - one and a half years later. In 1962 Rolf Kühn returned to West Germany.

The 1960s

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After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, West and East German jazz musicians were separated.

On West German television, the great American musicians were introduced to audiences during prime time. Around 1960, Western music producers' interest in recording musicians such as Wolfgang Lauth waned, as jazz music no longer seemed to be a good sale. In 1964, Horst Lippmann had noted:[12] "The German record industry neglected all modern German jazz musicians and only occasionally presented records with amateur Dixieland bands in the area. No German record company seems to be prepared for the artistic obligation to publish modern German jazz appropriate as it is the case in the field of symphonic and chamber music." Shortly thereafter, as if this appeal had been heard and had caused a new generation of jazz producers (such as Siegfried Loch, and Hans-Georg Brunner Schwer) to emerge, records by Klaus Doldinger, Albert Mangelsdorff, but also by Attila Zoller or Wolfgang Dauner came onto the market.

Eberhard Weber

The music critic and producer Joachim-Ernst Berendt took an eminent position at this time, influencing German jazz mainly in the 1960s and 1970s. Without him, neither the European Free Jazz, even as individual musicians like Mangelsdorff, Doldinger and others, would have gained the importance that they have for the German jazz today. Berendt was the first and only global player of the jazz critics and producers of the German jazz scene, who introduced jazz from Germany abroad.

The best-known jazz groups in West Germany were the quintets of Albert Mangelsdorff (with Heinz Sauer and Günter Kronberg [de]), Michael Naura (with Wolfgang Schlüter), and the quartet of Klaus Doldinger (with Ingfried Hoffmann.) Innovators were also the Lauth Wolfgang quartet (with Fritz Hartschuh) and the trio of Wolfgang Dauner (with Eberhard Weber and Fred Braceful). Musically there was a deliberate but careful delineation of the American model. With their growing popularity, Doldinger and Mangelsdorff could also perform abroad and publish records. Naura had to retire from active life as a musician because of illness, and later became an editor of the Jazz part of the NDR (Northern German Broadcast). For the GDR, the Manfred Ludwig sextet has to be mentioned, originally for a long time the only band, which turned to the style of modern jazz.

In 1965, the quintet of Gunter Hampel, a moderate Free Jazz maintainer, with musicians such as Manfred Schoof, Alexander von Schlippenbach, Buschi Niebergall and Pierre Courbois, arrived on the German jazz scene and performed many concerts in the "province". Free jazz, without compromises, could be heard from the Manfred Schoof quintet (Voices) and an octet by Peter Brötzmann (Machine Gun). Especially in the smaller towns of western Germany, jazz music clubs disappeared with the advent of the Beat. From the mid-1960s on, in the GDR, the trio of Joachim Kühn (who migrated to the West in 1966), Friedhelm Schönfeld, and Manfred Schulze found their own ways into free jazz.

The 1970s

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The 1970s were marked by the globalization and commercialization of the German jazz world. Jazz was combined with various other music genres. Successful jazz musicians such as Klaus Doldinger, Volker Kriegel and the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble followed this trend in the direction of rock music in West Germany. At the same time, younger musicians like Herbert Joos, Alfred Harth and Theo Jörgensmann garnered public acknowledgment and aroused the attention of the jazz scene with their music. It is noteworthy that the German musicians achieved an acceptance with the local audience on par with American jazz musicians. For example, the Theo Jörgensmann quartet, an avant-garde jazz group, was even in the Best-of Lists of Popular Music in the Music-Yearbook Rock Session.[13] At the same time the German record labels FMP, ECM and ENJA established in the market. Also acoustic-romantic performances by Joachim Kühn and other pianists like Rainer Brüninghaus came into fashion. In Moers and other West German towns, festivals were held that focused on these new developments in jazz.

Theo Jörgensmann, 2009

In the 1970s, academic studies of jazz started in West Germany. The annual summer course at the Akademie Remscheid (Remscheid Academy) was very popular among young jazz musicians. There is hardly a professional jazz musician, born between 1940 and 1960, who did not attend this course as a student or teacher.

After 1970, the government ministries of East Germany gave up their antagonism towards jazz music, giving the explanation that jazz had become an integral part of East German culture and politics. Klaus Lenz [de] and the Modern Soul band found its own way to the Fusion of rock and jazz music. In East Germany in particular, free jazz musicians developed their own gestures and improvised first on apparently East German-specific material in such a way that the idea of an "Eisler-Weill Folk-Free jazz"[14] could take hold abroad. The self-assertion was more strongly pronounced in East than in West Germany. Among the better-known artists of this era were Conny Bauer and Ulrich Gumpert [de] (Zentralquartett), as well as Manfred Hering [de] and Günter "Baby" Sommer. This music resonated with a broad young audience, and was very successful. The jazz journalist Bert Noglik noted in retrospect: "In the course of the seventies in the GDR in the evolution of jazz the Free Jazz (in a broader sense) has crystallized to be the form of the major direction of practice and its majority passes, and exists both in quantitative and qualitative respects. This statement refers to the musicians, the audience and also the organizational structure of the concert and tour management. All of this is even more astonishing when one considers that in the eastern and western neighboring regions, there always flowed a relatively strong mainstream music."[15]

Barbara Dennerlein began her career in the 1980s

The 1980s

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In the 1980s, the jazz audience, as well as the jazz scene, split in many different directions in West Germany. There were forms which included traditional repertory, the various currents of free jazz and fusion music, a turning to Neobop, but also style elements that hinted at more modern styles, and neo-classical jazz. In Cologne, there was a strong initiative for Jazz, founding the initiative "Kölner Jazz Haus" (Cologne Jazz House), from which projects such as the Kölner Saxophon Mafia (Cologne Saxophone Mafia) emerged. In Frankfurt, a whole series of guitarists of international significance emerged, among them Torsten de Winkel, who should later appear on the world's stages with the likes of Pat Metheny and Joe Zawinul. And a new interest awakened for the work of Big Bands. Jazz arrangers such as Peter Herbolzheimer raised this genre in Germany to an international level. New venues were opened in mid-sized cities. Due to the large number of different jazz styles, such concerts were poorly attended, especially in the larger cities.

In East Germany, the development was more clearly arranged. In the 1980s, there was a greater exchange between jazz musicians from West and East Germany. If the cooperation took place within the borders of the GDR, normally a non-German musician was also invited to give this event an international complexion. Economically jazz musicians in the GDR lived in comparatively secure or prosperous circumstances, because they worked in an environment of subsidized culture, and unlike their western colleagues did not need to follow the directives of the free market economy. In addition to a comparatively wide Dixieland scene in the area and mainstream American-style jazz, free improvisational music developed in a way that Fred Van Hove (later relativated[check spelling]) spoke misguidedly of the, "Promised Land of Improvised Music".[16]

A shot from a 2006 performance by Peter Brötzmann, a key figure and doyen in European free jazz

The 1990s to the present

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In 1992, the jazz researcher Ekkehard Jost discerned two basic trends of the jazz scene: one, jazz as a repertoire music and two, jazz in stable and dynamic development. The latter survives through musical practice and is based on the origins of jazz. In the 1990s, even more than in the 1980s, the marketing of music styles dominated the music business, and jazz in particular. Helge Schneider, a well-known entertainer, knew how to integrate jazz into his own comedic art. Another well-known German jazz musician and entertainer is Götz Alsmann, as well as the successful trumpeter Till Brönner. A number of other jazz musicians became established through entertainment-jazz in the scene as well. However, these are not the only musicians who work as jazz musicians sometimes under difficult conditions in Germany, and who are responsible for creating such diverse styles of jazz.

In addition, between East and West Germany, an alignment of styles occurred, much to the detriment of East German jazz culture. Over time, elements of jazz were increasingly integrated with other styles such as hip-hop, later drum 'n' bass and others, most prominently by the internationally successful duo Tab Two. These new styles of fusion were assessed as Acid Jazz or as Nu jazz. Today jazz elements can be found in a great variety of musical styles, such as German Hip-Hop, House, Drum 'n' Bass, dance music, and many others.

Jazz is in low demand on German television. Jazz clubs and other venues still must face the fact that the number of visitors is often difficult to predict and highly variable. Often, younger audiences stay away. Even for tax reasons (so-called "Ausländersteuer" i.e., foreigner tax), the major international musicians, in particular the modern creative musicians, who play in Switzerland, Austria, the Netherlands, Italy and France, increasingly skip Germany on their routes and tours.

Although there are many more jazz musicians in Germany now than in the 1960s and 1970s, it is much easier for the public to form their own individual opinion of the jazz musicians and their music because of electronic media. Traditional opinion makers like public broadcasters' jazz editors are losing influence.

Since the 1990s, Germany's most renowned jazz festival (JazzFest Berlin) has been regularly criticised, and its artistic directors have fallen back on highly elaborate concepts without a clear artistic line being visible.[17]

Notable jazz events (selection)

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Literature

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  • Michael H. Kater (1995): Different Drummers: Jazz in the Culture of Nazi Germany. Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-516553-1 (cited after German translation: Gewagtes Spiel. Jazz im Nationalsozialismus. Köln: Kiepenheuer & Witsch)
  • Mike Zwerin (1988): Swing Under the Nazis: Jazz as a Metaphor for Freedom. ISBN 978-0-8154-1075-1
  • Dexter, Dave. Jazz Cavalcade: The Inside Story of Jazz. New York: Da Capo Press, 1977.
  • Neuhaus, Tom. “No Nazi Party.” History Today 55.11 (2005): 52–57. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. Web. 24 October 2009.
  • Potter, Pamela. “Music in the Third Reich: The Complex Task of ‘Germanization.’” In Jonathan Huener and Francis R. Nicosia (eds), The Arts in Nazi Germany: Continuity, Conformity, Change, Chapter 4. New York: Berghahn Books, 2006.
  • WFMU Staff. “Charlie and His Orchestra.” WFMU's Beware of the Blog (accessed October 11, 2009).

German books

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  • Wolfram Knauer (1986, Pb.): Jazz in Deutschland. Darmstädter Beiträge zur Jazzforschung 5. Hofheim: Wolke Verlag
  • Martin Kunzler (2002): Jazzlexikon: Reinbek
  • Rainer Bratfisch (Pb., 2005): Freie Töne: Die Jazzszene der DDR. Berlin: Ch. Links
  • Mathias Brüll (2003): Jazz auf AMIGA - Die Jazz-Schallplatten des AMIGA-Labels von 1947 bis 1990. Zusammenstellung von Mathias Brüll. (RMudHwiW / Pro Business Berlin - ISBN 3-937343-27-X)
  • Rainer Dollase, Michael Rüsenberg, Hans J. Stollenwerk (1978): Das Jazzpublikum: zur Sozialpsychologie einer kulturellen Minderheit. Mainz, London, New York, Tokyo: Schott
  • E. Dieter Fränzel/Jazz AGe Wuppertal (Pb.) (2006): Sounds like Whoopataal. Wuppertal in der Welt des Jazz. Essen: Klartext
  • Frank Getzuhn (2006): Wandeljahre öffentlicher Lerngeschichte zum Jazz in Deutschland von 1950 - 1960: Lernangebote und Lernen in Zeitschriften und Sachbüchern zum Jazz. Berlin: wvb Wiss. Verl.
  • Bernfried Höhne (1991): Jazz in der DDR: Eine Retrospektive. Frankfurt am Main: Eisenbletter und Naumann
  • Ekkehard Jost (1987): Europas Jazz: 1960–1980. Frankfurt a.M.: Fischer paperback
  • Horst H. Lange (1996): Jazz in Deutschland: Die deutsche Jazz-Chronik bis 1960. Hildesheim; Zürich; New York: Olms-Presse (2. run)
  • Martin Lücke (2004): Jazz im Totalitarismus: Eine komparative Analyse des politisch motivierten Umgangs mit dem Jazz während der Zeit des Nationalsozialismus und des Stalinismus. Münster: Lit
  • Rainer Michalke (Hg., 2004): Musik life – Die Spielstätten für Jazz und Aktuelle Musik in Nordrhein-Westfalen. Essen: Klartext Verlag
  • Bert Noglik (1978): Jazz im Gespräch. Berlin (DDR): Verlag Neue Musik, ders. (1992): Swinging DäDäRä. Die Zeit, 8. Mai 1992, S. 60
  • Bruno Paulot (1993): Albert Mangelsdorff: Gespräche. Waakirchen: Oreos
  • Fritz Rau (2005): 50 Jahre Backstage: Erinnerungen eines Konzertveranstalters. Heidelberg: Palmyra
  • Werner Josh Sellhorn (2005): Jazz - DDR - Fakten: Interpreten, Diskographien, Fotos, CD. Berlin Neunplus 1
  • Fritz Schmücker (1993): Das Jazzkonzertpublikum: das Profil einer kulturellen Minderheit im Zeitvergleich. Münster; Hamburg: Lit
  • Werner Schwörer (1990): Jazzszene Frankfurt: eine musiksoziologische Untersuchung zur Situation anfangs der achtziger Jahre. Mainz; London; New York; Tokyo: Schott
  • Dita von Szadkowski Auf schwarz-weißen Flügeln Focus Verlag 1983 ISBN 3-88349-307-4
  • Robert von Zahn (1999): Jazz in Nordrhein-Westfalen seit 1946. Köln: Emons; ders. (1998): Jazz in Köln seit 1945 : Konzertkultur und Kellerkunst. Köln: Emons-Verlag

German jazz magazines

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  • Jazz Echo
  • Jazzpodium
  • Jazzthetik
  • Jazz thing
  • Jazz Zeit
  • Jazz Zeitung

See also

[edit]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
German jazz refers to the styles, performances, and innovations in music originating from or prominently developed in , initially introduced in the late 1910s through dances and American influences during the , where it rapidly gained popularity as a symbol of cosmopolitan energy amid economic and cultural upheaval. From 1933 onward, the Nazi regime systematically suppressed , labeling it as culturally alien and racially degenerate due to its African American roots and associations with Jewish musicians, resulting in official bans, censorship of broadcasts, and persecution of performers, though clandestine listening and playing continued among resistors. After , revived vigorously in via Allied occupation forces' broadcasts and live performances, evolving into a distinct European variant emphasizing improvisation and abstraction, with the 1960s movement led by figures like saxophonist challenging conventional structures and gaining international acclaim. In contrast, East Germany's scene operated under communist oversight, where it was tolerated as entertainment but often subordinated to ideological conformity, limiting avant-garde experimentation compared to the West. Key achievements include technical innovations, such as Albert Mangelsdorff's techniques, Eberhard Weber's fusion bass work bridging and classical, and a robust infrastructure of conservatories, festivals like the Berlin Jazz Festival, and labels that have sustained 's position as a European hub into the 21st century.

Early History

Origins in the Weimar Republic (1918-1933)

Jazz arrived in Germany shortly after the end of , primarily through the introduction of American dances such as the and , which were adapted to syncopated rhythms associated with early . In April 1919, Berliners encountered these dances for the first time, fueling a post-war craze as public dancing, prohibited during the conflict, resumed amid the cultural liberalization of the . Initial exposure came via , phonograph records imported from the , and accounts from soldiers who had encountered the music during occupation duties in the , where African American troops performed and early jazz. The first live jazz performances in Germany occurred in the mid-1920s, marking the shift from imported influences to domestic adaptation. In September 1924, Eric Borchard's American Jazz Orchestra debuted at the Barberina Tanzpalast in , presenting an ensemble that mimicked U.S. styles with banjos, saxophones, and rhythmic emphasis on percussion. This was followed by the formation of German-led bands like the Stefan Weintraub Syncopators, established around 1925, which became one of the earliest groups to perform "hot" —characterized by and swing—blending American techniques with European traditions. Visiting American ensembles, including Sam Wooding's band in 1925 and Josephine Baker's appearances in 1926–1928, further popularized the genre in 's nightlife venues, where jazz accompanied revue shows and dancing. By the late 1920s, had integrated into Germany's urban cultural scene, particularly in , with radio broadcasts beginning in 1924 and expanding after Paul Whiteman's 1926 tour, which drew large audiences and influenced local musicians to incorporate symphonic elements. Domestic bands proliferated in cabarets and dance halls, employing German, Jewish, and Eastern European players who adapted the music without direct access to original American performers, often relying on transcribed arrangements. This period saw symbolize modernity and emancipation, though it faced early conservative critiques for its rhythmic intensity and associations with American racial origins, setting the stage for later ideological conflicts.

The 1920s Boom and Cultural Integration

Jazz arrived in Germany shortly after , primarily through American occupation forces in the and returning soldiers who brought recordings and , with the first documented performances occurring in by April 1919. The genre initially spread as a novelty , influenced by Parisian trends and early recordings, but lacked live performances until the first in 1924. Economic stabilization following the introduction of the in November 1923 attracted foreign musicians to , transforming the city into Europe's jazz capital by the mid-1920s, where stable currency and vibrant nightlife created lucrative opportunities. The boom accelerated with international tours that popularized authentic jazz sounds. Sam Wooding's orchestra toured multiple German cities starting in spring 1925, featuring American musicians like and introducing syncopated rhythms to local audiences. Josephine Baker's headline appearance in La Revue Nègre on January 2, 1926, at Berlin's Theater am drew massive crowds, while Paul Whiteman's June 1926 visit further boosted popularity, leading to regular jazz broadcasts on German radio after 1926. German bandleaders quickly imitated these styles; Eric Borchard, who had worked in the United States, formed one of the earliest domestic jazz ensembles in the early and recorded pioneering tracks like "June Night" in 1924, establishing himself as a leading figure in the scene. Cultural integration occurred as jazz permeated entertainment venues, with salon orchestras adopting it to meet dancer demand and influencing classical composers. Ernst Krenek's jazz-infused opera Jonny spielt auf premiered in Leipzig on February 10, 1927, and ran for over 400 performances across Europe, blending syncopation with European traditions. Kurt Weill incorporated jazz elements into The Threepenny Opera in 1928, while groups like the Weintraub Syncopators scored films such as The Blue Angel (1930), embedding the genre in cabaret, theater, and cinema. Primarily appealing to middle- and upper-class urban youth, jazz symbolized American modernity and post-war liberation, though it faced conservative critiques for its perceived primitivism, yet German musicians' adaptations marked a pragmatic fusion rather than wholesale rejection.

Jazz During National Socialism (1933-1945)

Official Suppression and Ideological Attacks

Upon Adolf Hitler's ascension to power in 1933, the newly established (Reichsmusikkammer, RMK), under the Reich Culture Chamber, centralized control over musical life in , excluding Jewish professionals and targeting "degenerate" forms like as threats to cultural purity. The RMK's directives aimed to eradicate so-called fremdländisch (alien) music, with singled out for its associations with American commercialism and racial "impurity." Ideologically, Nazi propagandists, led by ' Ministry of Propaganda, denounced as Negermusik (Negro music), embodying , Jewish influence, and moral corruption unfit for Germanic sensibilities. Critics portrayed its syncopated rhythms and as symptoms of cultural and racial dishonor, linking it to a supposed Jewish-Black conspiracy to undermine European . Such framed not merely as entertainment but as an existential assault on national identity, with publications like those from the RMK decrying its "erotic" and "socialistic" elements. Suppression manifested through escalating restrictions rather than a single nationwide edict. In 1935, the Reich Broadcasting Corporation prohibited "black and Jewish " on German radio stations to curb foreign influences. From 1937 to 1938, district Nazi leaders, police, and local authorities issued decrees banning performances, , and related dancing in public venues. These measures intensified during wartime; on January 17, 1942, public and private dance events—often featuring —were outright prohibited nationwide. A pivotal ideological assault occurred at the 1938 Entartete Musik (Degenerate Music) exhibition in , organized during the Reich Music Days, where was vilified alongside modernist works. The exhibit's catalogue depicted a Black saxophonist adorned with a Jewish star, symbolizing 's alleged role in a plot to corrupt German youth and . Despite such campaigns, enforcement remained inconsistent, oscillating with propaganda needs and economic demands for , though the core policy privileged suppression to align music with Nazi racial realism.

Underground Resistance and Nazi Co-optations

Despite official prohibitions labeling jazz as Entartete Musik (degenerate music) associated with Jewish and African influences, clandestine jazz activities persisted in Nazi Germany, particularly among urban youth and professional musicians who organized secret performances and listening sessions. In cities like and , enthusiasts gathered in private apartments or hidden venues for improvised jam sessions and dances, often tuning into forbidden Allied radio broadcasts from the to access swing records smuggled or copied illicitly. These underground scenes faced severe risks, including Gestapo raids; for instance, in August 1941, authorities arrested over 800 members during a crackdown on "asocial" gatherings, resulting in forced labor, imprisonment, or transfer to concentration camps like Moringen. The , emerging around 1939 primarily in but spreading to and other cities, exemplified this resistance through their embrace of as a cultural defiance against Nazi regimentation and militarism. Composed mainly of teenagers aged 14 to 18 from middle-class backgrounds, they adopted British and American styles in , , and —replacing "Sieg Heil" with "Swing Heil" and prioritizing dance marathons featuring and hot over drills. While not overtly political, their rejection of ideological conformity led to estimates of up to 6,000 adherents by 1942, prompting Nazi countermeasures like mandatory attendance at "degenerate music" lectures and the promotion of sanitized alternatives. Jewish musicians, such as guitarist Coco Schumann, contributed to Berlin's pre-war underground circuit, performing in illicit clubs until forced evasion or ; Schumann survived Auschwitz and Theresienstadt by leading camp orchestras. Paradoxically, the regime attempted to co-opt jazz elements for propaganda and domestic control, fostering state-sanctioned ensembles that mimicked swing rhythms while purging improvisation, syncopation, and non-Aryan personnel. Under ' Reich Ministry of Propaganda, radio orchestras like those led by Lutz incorporated diluted jazz in broadcasts to counter Allied cultural influence, employing German musicians in rigidly orchestrated "substitute" styles devoid of "hot" elements deemed racially inferior. For foreign propaganda, the NSDAP-sponsored , active from 1939 to , produced swing-infused recordings with subversive lyrics aimed at demoralizing enemy troops, such as parodies of popular tunes broadcast via shortwave to Britain and the U.S. These efforts reflected tactical pragmatism amid wartime needs for morale-boosting entertainment, though purists within the Nazi cultural apparatus, including Alfred Rosenberg's office, continued ideological assaults, culminating in near-total bans by as resources dwindled.

Post-War Reconstruction and Division (1945-1960s)

Revival in Western Germany Amid Allied Influence

In the Western occupation zones established after 's surrender on May 8, 1945, Allied forces—particularly American troops—facilitated the immediate resurgence of as part of broader cultural reeducation initiatives aimed at countering Nazi . The U.S. Armed Forces Network (AFN) initiated broadcasts from on July 10, 1945, transmitting programs including swing and early to military personnel and receptive German audiences via shortwave and medium-wave frequencies. These efforts, alongside performances in G.I. clubs and military entertainment units, provided German musicians with essential employment opportunities, as thousands of Allied soldiers sought familiar music amid postwar reconstruction. German jazz practitioners, many of whom had operated underground or in exile during the Nazi era, quickly adapted to the new environment by performing for occupying forces. Trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff exemplifies this revival; he commenced his professional career in 1947 as a rhythm guitarist in the Otto Laufner Big Band, which supplied entertainment to U.S. Army clubs, before acquiring a in 1948 and focusing on jazz improvisation, often seeking engagements with African American units for stylistic inspiration. Radio outlets such as (NWDR) and (RIAS) amplified the revival by airing diverse genres like Dixieland, swing, and , bridging wartime suppressions with modern influences previously inaccessible due to import restrictions. By the early 1950s, jazz transitioned from military-centric venues to public platforms, coinciding with West Germany's economic stabilization. The publication of Joachim-Ernst Berendt's Das Jazzbuch in 1953 elevated jazz's status as serious art, while the debut of Jazz Podium magazine that year chronicled the scene's growth. The inaugural Deutsches Jazzfestival, held in in May 1953 and organized by promoter Horst Lippmann, featured predominantly German ensembles alongside American blues performer , establishing it as the world's oldest continuously running jazz festival and signaling institutionalized support amid the Wirtschaftswunder's consumer boom in records and radios. These developments underscored jazz's role in fostering individualistic expression and democratic values, distinct from Eastern restrictions.

Jazz in the Soviet Zone and Early GDR Restrictions

In the Soviet occupation zone of Germany following World War II, jazz experienced an initial revival facilitated by Soviet cultural policies. As early as May 8, 1945—mere days after the war's end in Europe—Soviet radio stations in the zone began broadcasting jazz to appeal to German audiences and counter Western influences, reflecting the USSR's own pragmatic adoption of the genre for propaganda since the 1920s. Dance halls and jazz ensembles, many reformed from pre-war underground networks, proliferated in cities like Berlin and Leipzig, with groups such as the Melodia Combo performing up-to-date swing and bebop by the late 1940s. This tolerance stemmed from Soviet military administration's emphasis on rebuilding cultural infrastructure to stabilize the zone, though German communists in the emerging Socialist Unity Party (SED), formed in April 1946, increasingly criticized jazz as a decadent import symbolizing American individualism and capitalism. The establishment of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) on October 7, 1949, marked a shift toward stricter ideological controls on , aligning with broader Stalinist cultural purges. Early GDR policy briefly accommodated "good and songs" as representative of in 1949 broadcasts, but by 1951, official directives explicitly excluded from , labeling it formalistic and antithetical to . The regime disbanded independent bands, prohibited performances in public venues, and barred the genre from radio and theaters, promoting instead "civilized" or adapted forms like schlager-infused ensembles under state oversight. These measures, enforced through cultural commissars and youth organizations, aimed to eradicate perceived Western imperialist influences, resulting in the closure of over 20 clubs in alone by 1952 and the blacklisting of musicians associated with "decadent" styles. Despite official suppression, jazz persisted underground via smuggled records, private jam sessions, and clandestine listening to Western broadcasts like RIAS from , fostering a resilient fan base among youth disillusioned with state-sanctioned music. Ideological campaigns in SED publications, such as , denounced as a tool of "American warmongers," echoing earlier Nazi rhetoric but framed through class struggle rather than racial purity. This repression peaked around 1953 amid broader cultural crackdowns, but in March 1953 and ensuing signals initiated a partial thaw; by , 1956, the first state-approved public jazz concert occurred in , distinguishing "authentic" progressive jazz from "commercial" variants to align it with socialist narratives.

Emergence of Distinct German Styles in the 1950s and 1960s

In during the 1950s, jazz musicians shifted from post-war imitation of American and toward initial innovations, with trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff emerging as a key figure after forming his quintet in 1952, focusing on modern jazz harmonies and improvisational techniques influenced initially by and . Mangelsdorff's group gained prominence through recordings and performances that adapted bop structures with European precision, marking an early departure from pure replication as he began experimenting with multiphonics on by the late 1950s. This period saw increased exposure via broadcasts and visiting U.S. artists, fostering progressive jazz developments between 1959 and 1963, where German ensembles incorporated modal elements alongside influxes of expatriate musicians. By the early 1960s in , distinct stylistic traits solidified through Mangelsdorff's leadership in explorations and collaborations, such as with the New Jazz Group , emphasizing collective improvisation over American swing rhythms and introducing rigorous technical control in contexts. began contributing to this experimental vein around 1962, blending intense free-form expression with Germanic intensity, laying groundwork for the sustained movement that differentiated German output from U.S. dominance. These advancements were supported by nascent festivals and recording opportunities, enabling musicians to prioritize European acoustic timbres and extended forms over commercial dance-oriented jazz. In the German Democratic Republic (GDR), jazz faced ideological scrutiny but saw tentative stylistic evolution in the 1950s through state-sanctioned rehabilitation efforts, linking swing and boogie-woogie to 19th-century folk traditions to align with socialist realism, resulting in controlled ensembles emphasizing disciplined rhythms over Western individualism. By the 1960s, GDR jazz gained partial acceptance as a modern socialist art form, with groups like the Horst Krüger Septett incorporating soul-jazz and funk elements in underground and official settings, though innovations remained constrained by censorship, producing a more restrained, ensemble-focused style distinct from West German experimentation. This division highlighted causal divergences: Western access to Allied influences spurred technical and free-form distinctiveness, while Eastern restrictions fostered hybrid, ideologically tempered adaptations.

Expansion and Experimentation (1970s-1990s)

Free Jazz and Avant-Garde Developments


Free jazz arrived in Germany in the mid-1960s, influenced by American pioneers like Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler, but quickly evolved into a distinctly European form characterized by intense collective improvisation, extended techniques, and a rejection of conventional harmonic and rhythmic structures. German musicians, responding to the post-war cultural landscape and the 1968 student protests, infused the genre with political urgency and interdisciplinary elements drawn from contemporary art and aleatoric composition. Peter Brötzmann's 1968 album Machine Gun, recorded with an octet including drummers Han Bennink and Fred Van Hove, exemplifies this raw, confrontational energy, featuring prolonged, high-volume saxophone outbursts that symbolized rebellion against both musical norms and societal constraints.
The establishment of the Free Music Production (FMP) cooperative in in 1969 by producer Jost Gebers and musicians including Brötzmann marked a pivotal institutional development, providing a platform for documenting and disseminating through recordings, concerts, and the annual Total Music Meeting starting in 1968. FMP's catalog, exceeding hundreds of releases by the , captured collaborations such as the Unity Orchestra led by Alexander von Schlippenbach, which blended with orchestral scale and featured international artists like Evan Parker and . This infrastructure fostered a scene centered in , where the divided city's isolation encouraged experimentation amid tensions. In the 1970s and 1980s, German avant-garde jazz expanded through labels like FMP and festivals such as the New Jazz Meeting in , initiated in 1966 by critic Joachim-Ernst Berendt, which showcased emerging talents and hybrid forms integrating noise, electronics, and non-Western influences. Figures like Brötzmann continued innovating via projects such as the Die Like a Dog Quartet in the , pairing with tributes to , while maintaining a commitment to unscripted, high-stakes performance that prioritized sonic exploration over commercial viability. By the , the movement had influenced broader European improvisation networks, though it remained marginal compared to fusion trends, sustained by dedicated venues and state subsidies in reunified .

Fusion and Mainstream Commercialization

In the 1970s, German jazz fusion emerged as a prominent development, integrating rock, , and electric instrumentation to expand beyond traditional acoustic forms and attract wider audiences. Klaus Doldinger formed the ensemble in 1971, drawing parallels to American groups like through its emphasis on sax-led improvisation over rhythmic grooves, with early albums such as (1971) establishing a commercial foothold in via accessible jazz-rock hybrids. The band's longevity, spanning multiple lineup changes and over 20 albums by the 1990s, reflected fusion's market viability, bolstered by Doldinger's compositions that balanced technical virtuosity with pop-oriented structures. Volker Kriegel, a pioneering guitarist, advanced European fusion through his Mild Maniac Orchestra and solo efforts, releasing Lift! in 1973, which fused phrasing with rock energy and gained recognition for its textural innovation. Similarly, Eberhard Weber's bass-centric group Colours, under the ECM label founded in in 1969, produced The Colours of Chloë in 1974, employing and atmospheric synthesizers to create melancholic, post-fusion soundscapes that sold steadily in international markets. These recordings exemplified how German musicians leveraged studio technology and label support to commercialize , achieving crossover appeal without diluting improvisational core elements. The United Jazz + Rock Ensemble, convened in 1974 by figures including Kriegel and Albert Mangelsdorff, operated as a flexible supergroup blending arrangements with fusion's electric edge, touring extensively and releasing albums like Live in Schützenhaus (1975) that highlighted collaborative commercialization. By the , fusion's mainstream integration was evident in sustained festival appearances and radio exposure, though economic pressures and shifting tastes toward smoother jazz variants tempered pure fusion's dominance into the . Mangelsdorff's work in fusion contexts, such as Trilogue with in 1977, further bridged roots to broader accessibility. This era's output, supported by imprints like MPS and ECM, marked a causal shift from niche experimentation to viable industry presence, driven by empirical demand for genre-blended recordings.

Contemporary Scene (2000s-Present)

Diversity, Innovation, and Institutional Support


The contemporary German jazz scene, from the 2000s onward, demonstrates marked diversity in stylistic approaches, ranging from traditional swing to experimental fusions, bolstered by a younger generation and increased female participation. Promotion initiatives at local, regional, and national levels have contributed to a rise in women jazz musicians, addressing historical underrepresentation and enhancing the scene's demographic breadth. This diversity extends to multicultural influences, with Germany's active ecosystem incorporating global elements amid a highly decentralized network of clubs and festivals across the country.
Innovation in German jazz during this period is evident in the independent exploration of a wide stylistic spectrum, including and electronic integrations, often led by emerging artists. Saxophonist Jakob Manz exemplifies this through his fresh, boundary-pushing approach, blending technical prowess with contemporary improvisation. The scene's vitality persists post-COVID, with ongoing experimentation despite economic challenges, as highlighted by the annual German Jazz Prize, which since 2021 has recognized excellence across categories like rising stars and ensembles. Institutional support underpins these developments through federal and regional mechanisms. Initiative Musik, the German government's primary body for and , allocates resources for artistic development, touring, and festivals, with grants up to €30,000 available to musicians and projects. Specialized programs, such as Berlin's for established musicians and groups, provide targeted financial aid based on artistic merit. Educationally, hosts over 120 programs at conservatories and universities, fostering professional training in performance, theory, and history, with graduates entering a scene supported by organizations like the Deutscher Musikrat. These structures, including festival rounds, enable sustained innovation while mitigating precariousness through diversified income streams like teaching and grants.

Challenges and Precariousness in the 2020s

The severely disrupted the German jazz scene, leading to widespread cancellations of tours, festivals, and concerts from 2020 to 2021, which exacerbated long-standing economic vulnerabilities for musicians and organizers. Recovery efforts in 2022 included reopenings of clubs, but attendance remained subdued due to lingering fears of contagion and rising , which reduced cultural spending and strained venue operations. Many event staff, such as technicians and caterers, shifted to other sectors during lockdowns and did not return, further complicating live performance logistics. Economic precariousness persists as a core challenge, with jazz musicians' average taxable annual reported at €20,000 in 2021—down from €21,000 in 2019 and equivalent to less than 60% of the national average working population —despite packages that failed to substantially alleviate risks. Female jazz musicians face a of approximately 25%, heightening long-term financial insecurity, including elevated old-age rates. Federal initiatives like Neustart Kultur provided billions in since 2020 for infrastructure and productions, including a €17 million extension in 2022 for music , yet these measures have not resolved underlying instability or the sector's reliance on project-based . Recent budgetary pressures compound these issues, as exemplified by Berlin's 2024 decision to cut €130 million (12% of its culture budget), prompting protests from arts communities and threatening sustained support for jazz clubs and festivals amid broader fiscal tightening. While programs like the APPLAUS prize distributed €2.5 million to 101 jazz clubs across 16 states in November 2022 and the German Jazz Prize awarded €10,000 to 31 recipients in 2022, critics note uneven resource distribution and insufficient addressing of the scene's diversity, leaving many professionals in freelance roles without reliable social security. External factors, including the economic repercussions of the Ukraine war, have further pressured operations through supply chain disruptions and energy costs, underscoring the fragility of a scene dependent on public subsidies rather than robust market revenues.

Musical Characteristics and Influences

Technical and Stylistic Features

German jazz distinguishes itself through a pronounced emphasis on experimentalism and extended techniques, particularly in and variants, where musicians prioritize sonic exploration over conventional swing rhythms and tonal structures. This approach often incorporates multiphonics, collective improvisation, and unorthodox instrumentation, reflecting influences from and a rejection of American 's hotter, more pulse-driven idioms. A hallmark technical innovation is the multiphonic technique pioneered by trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff, who produced multiple simultaneous tones by singing into the instrument while playing, effectively transforming the solo trombone into a polyphonic entity capable of harmonic and contrapuntal textures. This method, demanding precise embouchure control and pitch matching, expanded the trombone's expressive range in jazz contexts, as demonstrated in Mangelsdorff's solo performances from the 1960s onward. Bassist Eberhard Weber further advanced instrumental techniques with his custom electric-acoustic bass featuring an extended low C-string, enabling chordal voicings and melodic lines typically reserved for higher-register instruments. Weber's style integrated minimalist patterns, ambient textures, and chamber-like precision, blending with classical phrasing to create a liquid, introspective sound prominent in ECM recordings. Stylistically, German jazz, especially via the ECM aesthetic associated with artists like Weber, emphasizes spaciousness, crystalline clarity, and reflective melancholy, with recordings capturing intimate acoustics that highlight and subtle dynamics over dense ensemble interplay. This "ECM sound"—ruminative and delicate—fosters a , more contemplative demeanor, often drawing on European folk and new music elements for harmonic complexity and timbral purity. In circles, extended techniques such as overblowing, s on winds, and prepared acoustics yield atonal textures and noise elements, prioritizing raw energy and textural density as in Peter Brötzmann's work, which eschews traditional scales for visceral, eruptions. These features underscore German jazz's commitment to innovation, yielding a diverse palette from Frankfurt's school to fusions incorporating and odd .

Blends with German Classical and Folk Traditions

German jazz musicians have periodically integrated elements from folk traditions to forge a distinct from American origins, often navigating historical sensitivities tied to Nazi-era appropriations of . Albert Mangelsdorff's 1964 album Now Jazz Ramwong exemplifies this through its adaptation of the medieval German folk song "Es sungen drei Engel," employing Phrygian modal structures and collective improvisation to merge ancient melody with phrasing. Similarly, brothers and Kühn reharmonized the 16th-century folk tune "Sie gleicht wohl einem Rosenstock" in arrangements that same year, highlighting early experiments in cultural synthesis. Ulrich Gumpert further advanced this approach in his 1972 LP Aus Teutschen Landen, incorporating early German folk songs such as "Es fiel ein Reif in der Frühlingsnacht" into frameworks, while blending folksongs, workers' songs, and Saxon elements to evoke regional heritage under GDR constraints. Later efforts, like Dieter Ilg's 1997 album Folk Songs featuring traditional Volkslieder, reflect sustained interest in these roots amid broader fusion trends. Blends with classical traditions stem from Germany's rigorous conservatory system, where jazz practitioners often receive formal training in composers like Bach and , fostering intricate harmonic and structural sophistication. Pianist Michael Wollny, a prominent contemporary figure, draws explicitly from classical sources, as seen in performances incorporating Hindemith and Debussy alongside , and in collaborative projects like the 2019 "Late Night" series bridging and orchestral worlds with conductor Christian Jost. Gumpert's integration of Saxon motifs into further illustrates this crossover, yielding a "national-style cocktail" that prioritizes European contrapuntal rigor over swing-based idioms. Such fusions underscore German jazz's tendency toward complex polyrhythms and thematic development, influenced by the nation's classical legacy, though they remain niche compared to purely idiomatic styles. These efforts, emerging prominently from the onward, represent deliberate assertions of cultural autonomy, tempered by debates over authenticity and historical baggage.

Key Figures and Ensembles

Pioneering Musicians

Following , German jazz emerged from underground scenes and Allied influences, with musicians forming small ensembles in clubs and for radio broadcasts despite material shortages and ideological scrutiny. Pioneers focused on adapting American swing and styles, often performing in American officers' clubs before establishing domestic viability. Max Greger (1926–2015), a saxophonist and , founded his first in 1948, blending with for Bavarian Radio and evening gigs. By 1959, his orchestra became a house band for television, recording over 150 albums and collaborating with figures like and . Greger's ensembles emphasized swing rhythms and arrangements, helping legitimize as entertainment in post-war reconstruction. Albert Mangelsdorff (1928–2005), a , advanced European jazz innovation through multiphonic techniques, allowing simultaneous note-playing on by 1958. Emerging in the 1950s with groups like the Frankfurt All Stars, he co-led experimental quintets from 1961, prioritizing original compositions over imitation. Mangelsdorff's work, including recordings with American expatriates, positioned him as a foundational voice in free and modern , influencing subsequent generations via ensembles like the United Jazz and Rock Ensemble. Rolf Kühn (1929–2022), clarinetist and saxophonist, began in late-1940s dance bands before joining radio orchestras in 1952. Fleeing in 1950, he contributed to early and scenes, recording albums like Solarius (1965) and later fusing with global elements. Kühn's versatility bridged traditional and styles, earning recognition as an elder statesman of German jazz.

Influential Bands and Collaborators

The Globe Unity Orchestra, founded in 1966 by pianist Alexander von Schlippenbach for the Berliner Jazztage festival, emerged as a cornerstone of European , uniting musicians from the Trio and Manfred Schoof Quintet in a large-ensemble format emphasizing collective improvisation. With a rotating roster of international players across generations, the orchestra performed regularly and marked its 50th anniversary in 2016 with recordings that reaffirmed its relevance in traditions. In the fusion realm, the United Jazz + Rock Ensemble, assembled in 1974 for a German television production, evolved into a prominent 12-piece group blending jazz improvisation with rock elements, releasing 14 albums over nearly three decades until disbanding around 2002. Featuring key German figures like guitarist Volker Kriegel, saxophonist (of Indian descent but based in ), and keyboardist Wolfgang Dauner, the ensemble toured extensively and incorporated ethnic influences, distinguishing it from American jazz-rock models. Eberhard Weber's Colours quartet, active from 1975 to 1981, represented a melodic, harmonically intricate strain of German jazz with classical undertones, producing albums such as Yellow Fields (1975), Silent Feet (1977), and Little Movements (1980) on . Weber collaborated with Norwegian drummer Jon Christensen and British drummer , bridging German compositional rigor with Scandinavian and British rhythmic sensibilities to create rhythmically flexible works. Trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff led influential small groups, including a 1961 quintet with saxophonists Heinz Sauer and Günter Lenz, which explored modal and free structures, while his broader collaborations extended to international projects like recordings with American pianist and the Zagreb Jazz Quartet in 1964. These ensembles and partnerships underscored German jazz's emphasis on innovation through cross-cultural and interdisciplinary exchanges, often prioritizing experimental forms over commercial swing derivatives post-World War II.

Festivals, Events, and Institutions

Major Jazz Festivals

Germany features several prominent festivals that highlight the genre's diversity, from avant-garde experimentation to mainstream and fusion styles, often drawing international performers and audiences exceeding tens of thousands collectively each year. These events, supported by public and private funding, underscore institutional commitment to amid broader cultural programming, with attendance figures reflecting sustained interest despite economic pressures on live music post-2020. Key festivals include Jazzfest Berlin, Enjoy Jazz, Moers Festival, and ELBJAZZ, each with distinct historical roles in promoting and global innovation. Jazzfest Berlin, founded in 1964 by the Berliner Festspiele, stands as one of Europe's longest-running jazz events, initially emphasizing American influences before evolving to spotlight European and experimental acts. Held biennially in late or early , it curates around 20-30 concerts across venues like the Pierre Boulez Saal, focusing on thematic programs for emerging talent; the 2024 edition from October 31 to November 3 celebrated its 60th anniversary with over 20 performances. Enjoy Jazz, established in 1999 in the metropolitan area, operates as Germany's largest indoor jazz festival, spanning , , and from early October to mid-November with approximately 100 concerts across theaters, clubs, and halls. Attracting more than 20,000 visitors annually, it commissions new works and features global headliners like alongside regional ensembles, marking its 25th edition in 2023 with artist-curated "takeover" segments. Moers Festival, launched in 1972 as the International New Festival , pioneered and presentations in a tented format at Castle, drawing under 2,000 initially but growing to influence European experimental scenes through acts like the Globe Unity Orchestra. Now held annually over (late May or early June) with a broader scope including and electronics, its 2024 edition marked 53 years, maintaining ties to countercultural roots while adapting to contemporary abstraction. ELBJAZZ in , inaugurated in 2010, transforms the city's port district into a jazz hub over two days in early June, utilizing nine waterfront venues for about 50 acts blending traditional and modern styles amid maritime backdrops. It has consistently drawn around 15,000 attendees per edition, with the 2024 event on June 7-8 exemplifying its scale before a planned 2025 hiatus for restructuring. Additional events like Jazz Baltica in Timmendorfer Strand, a seaside festival since the , contribute with four-day programs in late featuring Nordic and Baltic influences, as seen in its 2024 dates from June 27-30. Meanwhile, jazzahead! in , an annual April showcase since 2006, functions as a trade fair with 200+ performances, facilitating artist networking and exports rather than public spectacle.

Education, Organizations, and Media

Jazz education in Germany is integrated into numerous public music conservatories and universities, with approximately 18 institutions offering dedicated jazz programs across the federal states as of recent assessments. These programs emphasize instrumental proficiency, improvisation, composition, and ensemble performance, often blending classical training with jazz-specific techniques. Notable examples include the , which provides a in Jazz and advanced Master's programs developed from merged jazz departments. The University of Music and Dance maintains a longstanding jazz department, renowned for its rigorous curriculum and alumni contributions to the European scene. Similarly, the Hamburg University of Music and Drama offers comprehensive jazz courses preparing students for professional careers through diverse stylistic explorations. Professional organizations play a central role in advocating for musicians' interests and fostering development. The Deutsche Jazzunion, established in 1973, serves as the primary national representative body for professional practitioners, addressing economic, educational, and promotional needs through and initiatives like the annual Jazz Now! report on the sector's status. Complementary entities include the German Jazz Federation (Deutsche Jazz Föderation e.V.), which coordinates regional efforts, and the Bundesjugend-Jazzorchester (BuJazzO), a national youth orchestra promoting emerging talent via workshops and performances. Regional associations, such as the Saxony Jazz Association, support local clubs and events, often affiliating with the national union to amplify grassroots activities. Media coverage of German jazz encompasses print, online, and broadcast formats, sustaining public engagement despite niche appeal. Jazz thing & Blue Rhythm, a leading bimonthly magazine since the 1980s, covers reviews, festivals, and artist profiles in German, with supplementary radio and TV listings. JAZZTHETIK, founded in 1987 by publisher Christine Stephan, focuses on in-depth interviews and contemporary releases, marking three decades of independent journalism by 2017. Online platforms like jazz-fun.de provide news, event calendars, and album critiques. Broadcasts feature dedicated programs on public radio networks; NDR Kultur airs Jazz auf NDR Kultur five times weekly, while stations like JazzRadio 106.8 in deliver 24/7 programming blending traditional and modern styles. Public broadcasters maintain four professional radio big bands, including those of WDR and SWR, which perform and record original works, bolstering institutional support for live jazz dissemination.

Political Contexts and Controversies

Ideological Battles and Resistance Narratives

In the Third Reich, jazz faced ideological condemnation as "," a term reflecting Nazi racial doctrines that associated the genre with Black and Jewish influences deemed incompatible with purity and . Following Hitler's ascent in 1933, the regime established the , which purged non-Aryan musicians and restricted jazz elements such as to no more than 10% of performances, while limiting its repertoire share to 20%. Local decrees intensified suppression from 1937 to 1938, culminating in a nationwide ban on public and private dance events on January 17, 1942, amid escalating wartime controls after the Stalingrad defeat in February 1943. Despite these measures, the regime paradoxically co-opted sanitized versions for propaganda, as seen in , a Goebbels-directed that broadcast altered jazz tunes mocking Allied leaders via enemy airwaves from the late 1930s onward. Resistance narratives emerged through youth subcultures that embraced jazz as a defiant emblem of individualism against Nazi regimentation. The Swingjugend, or Swing Youth, formed in cities like Hamburg and Frankfurt from the late 1930s, organizing clandestine dances with hundreds of participants who adopted Anglo-American fashions, long hair, and greetings like "Swing Heil" to mock the Hitler salute. These groups accessed banned recordings via illegal radios or cinema newsreels, fostering non-conformity by including Jewish peers and rejecting Hitler Youth conformity; raids led to over 400 identifications in Hamburg by March 1940 and 383 arrests nationwide between October 1940 and December 1942, with punishments ranging from forced labor to concentration camp internment under Heinrich Himmler's 1942 directives. Underground ensembles like the Frankfurt Hot Club, established in 1941, jammed in hidden venues with lookouts to evade Gestapo detection, recording jazz at personal risk of imprisonment or conscription, as experienced by members Horst Lippmann and Emil Zwerenz in 1943. Even in camps such as Buchenwald and Theresienstadt, inmates formed rhythm orchestras and groups like the Ghetto-Swingers, sustaining jazz as a subtle act of cultural defiance amid eradication efforts. In the German Democratic Republic (GDR), ideological tensions persisted as authorities grappled with jazz's perceived Western individualism under , which prioritized collective discipline over . The 1955 Berlin debate on April 7 highlighted divisions: proponents like Günter Rudorf argued for jazz's anti-fascist roots—citing hot clubs and camp victims—to justify integrating its elements into state-approved , while critics such as Professor Knepler dismissed it as commercial and foreign, favoring German folk traditions to curb American cultural infiltration. No consensus emerged, leading to expert commissions but ongoing restrictions, including venue closures during political crises like the 1953 uprising; jazz endured through state-tolerated ensembles, yet musicians navigated censorship, with narratives framing the genre as a subtle counter to bureaucratic control rather than overt rebellion. These episodes underscore jazz's role in broader resistance lore, not as organized insurgency but as a persistent cultural irritant to authoritarian uniformity, substantiated by its survival despite regime efforts to redefine or suppress it.

East-West Divides and Post-Unification Debates

In the German Democratic Republic (GDR), jazz encountered ideological resistance as a symbol of American individualism and capitalism, yet Soviet occupation forces promoted it immediately after 1945 through radio broadcasts in for cultural reeducation and anti-fascist alignment. By the early , the Socialist Unity Party () condemned it as "formalistic" and decadent, but destalinization after 1956 prompted official rehabilitation, framing jazz as compatible with and linked to 19th-century Germanic musical progressivism. State-controlled ensembles, such as radio big bands, emphasized structured arrangements over unfettered improvisation, with the monitoring scenes for subversive potential. Conversely, the Federal Republic of (FRG) fostered a dynamic jazz ecosystem unencumbered by centralized ideological oversight, bolstered by U.S. military presence and public institutions like (WDR), which hosted workshops and broadcasts from the 1950s onward. This environment nurtured experimental in and —exemplified by saxophonist Peter Brötzmann's raw, confrontational style—and fusions like trombonist Albert Mangelsdorff's multiphonics or Klaus Doldinger's jazz-rock with —reflecting broader stylistic pluralism. The 1961 construction severed personal and artistic exchanges, amplifying divergences: East German practitioners, such as saxophonist Ulrich Gumpert, integrated with folk songs, workers' anthems, and regional baroque elements to align with , while Western scenes prioritized abstraction and transatlantic collaborations. Following reunification on October 3, , the merger of scenes highlighted persistent disparities in , , and , with East German —once exported as a "" via tours to both blocs—confronting the abrupt end of state patronage. Pre-1989 intercultural festivals had laid groundwork for integration, enabling figures like East German trombonist Conrad Bauer to secure international acclaim amid Berlin's emerging status as a jazz nexus. Debates emerged over the GDR's legacy: while some Western observers emphasized suppression under SED controls, archival evidence reveals a polyphonic domestic discourse, with evolving from contested import to sanctioned expression, contrasting narratives of uniform resistance. East musicians adapted variably to capitalist imperatives, blending traditions without fully erasing regional idioms, as unified funding via academies and ARD networks supported renewed vitality.

References

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