Library/PT 150/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Wynton Marsalis, a hugely famous jazz trumpeter, spent years pushing people to value jazz history and its past masters. Critics say his focus on tradition made jazz more conservative and slowed new ideas, and record companies responded by dropping young jazz artists and selling old recordings instead. Marsalis says he wasn’t trying to freeze jazz—he uses old styles in new ways—but labels saw classic recordings as easy, profitable products and chose repackaging over investing in new talent.

Logic Breakdown

Read the sentence containing 'retro ideology' and its immediate context (the phrase 'it's more museumlike in nature, a look back') plus the surrounding criticism about 'unbending classicism' and 'stifling orthodoxy.' Choose the option that best paraphrases this museumlike, backward-looking criticism.

Passage Stimulus

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2.

By stating that many people consider Marsalis to embody a "retro ideology," the former executive quoted at the end of the third paragraph most likely means that they believe that Marsalis

Correct Answer
C
The executive immediately clarifies the meaning: "For many people, Marsalis has come to embody some \"retro ideology\" that is not really of the moment—it's more museumlike in nature, a look back." That wording, together with critics' claim that Marsalis led jazz "into the realm of unbending classicism" and "codified the music into a stifling orthodoxy," supports C: he is criticized for overemphasizing strict adherence to tradition.
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