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
Scan each choice for information explicitly stated in the passage; choose the option that can be answered directly by quoted lines rather than by inference.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.The passage provides information sufficient to answer which one of the following questions?
Correct Answer
E
Correct. The passage explicitly gives factors that led record companies to shift toward reissuing vintage jazz recordings. Support: "if the artists of the past are so great and enduring, why continue investing so much in young talent? So they shifted their attention to repackaging their catalogs of vintage recordings." It also gives an economic motive: "For long-established record companies with vast archives of historic recordings, the economics were irresistible: 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." Thus the passage directly answers E (profitability/marketing advantage and the perception that past artists reduced the need to invest in new talent).
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