Playing the Changes on the Jazz MetaphorNow Publishers Inc, 2008 - 257 páginas Playing the Changes on the Jazz Metaphor proposes an expanded view of the jazz metaphor in a broadened perspective that embraces a wide range of possibilities in organizational, management, and marketing-related themes. This monograph presents a new Typology of Jazz Musicians based on different kinds of artistic offerings. This typology will combine three key distinctions or dimensions to construct a twelve-fold classification that - when extended to the sphere of organizational behavior and business strategy as a Typology of Management and Marketing Styles - will shed light on different ways in which the jazz metaphor relates to organizational design, business practice, management skills, and marketing opportunities. In order to describe these typologies, the author examines important aspects of a first-level jazz metaphor as it relates to organizational issues involved in shaping the jazz improvisation into a form of collective collaboration. This is followed by attention to a second-level linguistic metaphor based on viewing jazz as a kind of language at the foundation for a collaborative conversation. |
Términos y frases comunes
achieve Amadie analogy artist aspects audience bass bebop Berliner big band Bill Evans blues Brubeck C-Bb Charlie Parker chord changes chord progressions chord voicings chromatic circle of fifths Coker collaboration composition context create creative Crossan Cunha DeGreg Dennis and Macaulay described Dizzy Gillespie Dizzy’s drums Duke Ellington example flatted fifth follows Gifted Composers Gillespie with Fraser Gillespie's harmonic structure Hodeir Holbrook ideas impro innovation iTunes J. J. Johnson jazz improvisation jazz metaphor jazz musicians jazz performance Kamoche keyboard language Larson Lees Levine licks listening Longo Maggin marketing strategy Mehegan melodic Miles Davis Milt Jackson musi notes organization organizational patterns Paul Desmond phrases pianist player playing Post-It Piano present author quoted relevant Revised edn rhythm rhythmic role rules scale sequence seventh solo soloist sound Steedman style Thelonious Monk theme theory tion Tirro tones tritone trumpet tune vocabulary Weick York