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
Contrast the author's portrayal of Marsalis (criticized as enforcing orthodoxy but described as someone who "never advocated mere revivalism" and who "has demonstrated ... how traditional elements can be ... reinvented") with the record companies' actions (they "shifted their emphasis to reissues of old recordings" and found that "it is far more profitable to wrap new covers around albums paid for generations ago than it is to find, record, and promote new artists"). Choose the answer that says record companies embraced a more rigid classicism than critics attributed to Marsalis.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following?
Correct Answer
A
A is correct. The author presents the critics' charge that Marsalis and his adherents "codified the music into a stifling orthodoxy" but immediately qualifies Marsalis's role, noting that "he never advocated mere revivalism" and that he "has demonstrated ... how traditional elements can be ... recombined, and reinvented". By contrast, the author describes record companies cutting back on new artists—"Columbia has drastically reduced its roster of active jazz musicians, shifting its emphasis to reissues of old recordings" and that "it is far more profitable to wrap new covers around albums paid for generations ago than it is to find, record, and promote new artists." The passage therefore supports the ironic point that record companies have adopted a more rigid, market-driven classicism than the critics attribute to Marsalis.
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