Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many histories say bebop began because swing had become stale and the music industry kept propping it up, so musicians had to break away and make jazz 'art.' The author argues this is too simple: commercial forces didn’t just trap musicians—selling music made jazz a profession and helped produce bebop. Parker, Gillespie, and Monk weren’t trying to escape commerce so much as find a new way to work with it to gain freedom and respect.
Logic Breakdown
Ask whether the classical-music reference is being used as a parallel/analogy to the jazz account or as evidence/causal explanation; look for words like "echo" and "impute" that signal a comparison.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage16.The primary purpose of the reference to eruptions of modernity in classical music in the early 1900s (second sentence of the second paragraph) is to
Correct Answer
B
The sentence introduces the classical-music "crisis theory" to show a parallel with accounts of bebop: "These metaphors...echo the 'crisis theory' of twentieth-century European classical music." It then explains that classical histories "commonly impute the eruptions of modernity in the early 1900s to classical music's stubborn failure to move beyond the language of tonality..." Together these statements indicate the author is outlining a classical-music theory that is analogous to the typical jazz accounts, which matches choice B.
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