Neo-Jazz is...
a historically-informed contemporary jazz technique.
Arising from conversations with fellow jazz artists in 2016, Neo-Jazz is a term meant to distinguish historically-informed jazz from other contemporary jazz dance styles. Neo-jazz embodies its lineage, yet is created and performed within a 21st century context. Centering the West African roots of jazz dance, the style is defined by eight key elements, leaving room individual for signatures in performance.
Elements
Groundedness and weight sensing
Rhythm and syncopation
Isolations
Weight shift from the pelvis to facilitate complex footwork
Musicality and a deep relationship to jazz music, and its related forms – blues and funk
Improvisation
A Black American vernacular base for movement vocabulary and composition
Acknowledgement of community, while honoring the individual.
Philosophy
Excerpts from the paper Pas de BourSLAY: Making the Case for Neo-Jazz as a Contemporary Jazz Technique, by Melanie George. Presented at the 2017 National Dance Education Organization’s Annual Conference.
“The aforementioned elements outline a framework for neo-jazz technique, absent of prescribed movement or exercises. Neo-jazz is a broad term meant to encompass differing methods of execution. As in post-modern dance, where we easily differentiate the aesthetic signatures of Trisha Brown and David Gordon yet still recognize a shared perspective on dance, the working definition of neo-jazz recognizes that historically-informed jazz dance may have stylistic differences, yet can still be recognizable by the transparency of lineage.”
“Within that definition is the influence of vernacular jazz dance, and its implied Africanist lineage. Vernacular is purposefully listed first, as it forms the foundation of this work. In composing the definition in this manner, I seek to unseat the privilege of Eurocentric dominance in contemporary jazz dance. The Africanist and Eurocentric influences are in dialogue, but the Eurocentric content, however pervasive it may be in our conventional understanding of contemporary jazz, is not privileged in the neo-jazz aesthetic. As acknowledged by multiple authors in the text Jazz Dance: A History of the Roots and Branches, “the roots of jazz dance are African.” Neo-jazz centers that narrative within the work. Furthermore, in the proposition of neo-jazz as fruit from the branches of the jazz dance tree, I seek to tip the heavily weighted scales away from that which is deemed new, hot, or trending within jazz training and visibility towards a more centered continuum. Derivative and innovative are not at odds in neo-jazz.”
Wearing a floral jumpsuit, Melanie is smiling, facing the camera, tossing her hair to the side.
Photo by JD Urban