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
Focus on what proponents of the "typical accounts" claim about swing and bebop—find lines that link musical stagnation in swing to unrealized innovations and to commercial forces that propped up the old idiom.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.It can be inferred from the passage that the proponents of the typical accounts of the origins of bebop would be most likely to believe which one of the following?
Correct Answer
D
Choice D. The passage attributes to typical accounts the view that musicians "failed to extend jazz's rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic language in directions plainly indicated by the music itself," which "built up pressure resulting in the eruption of a new musical modernism." It also says that "the machinery of the popular music industry continued to prop up the 'threadbare' idiom, seducing musicians into going through the motions long after they had any legitimate artistic reason to do so." Together these statements support D: that swing contained seeds of innovation that were left undeveloped because of commercial pressures.
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