Just after World War II, American composers and jazz performers
were interested in indeterminacy and improvisation. Yet the composers tended to
deny the influence or importance of jazz in a tacit move to keep their music
"pure" of associations with racial protest then emanating from the jazz sphere.
Lewis identifies John Cage and Charlie Parker as representatives of "Eurological"
and "Afrological" approaches, respectively, whose differences turn on their
attitude toward the expression of race, ethnicity, class, and political
ideology in music.
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© 2002 George Lewis. Used with permission of BMRJ. All rights reserved.