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The Big Speakeasy: Jazz And Prohibition

Series: Night Lights Classic Jazz
From: WFIU
Length: 00:59:01

An hour-long program of classic jazz, featuring jazz from the Prohibition era and an interview with historian Michael McGerr. Read the full description.

Prohibition-jazz_small On January 16, 1920, alcohol became illegal in the United States of America. The same year, Mamie Smith recorded "Crazy Blues," which would sell a million copies and help pave the way for the music-media explosion of the 1920s-a decade often called the Jazz Age, but one you could simply call the Age of Sound, because suddenly sound was everywhere, in the form of radio, phonographs, and by 1927, talking pictures.

Jazz was indeed a big part of that sound, and with the coming of Prohibition it flourished in the underground bars known as "speakeasies" around the country-a new music born in a time of complexity and change, and now aligned, for better or worse, with a culture of forbidden liquor that also gave rise to organized crime.

Historian Michael McGerr, author of A Fierce Discontent: The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Movement in America, 1870-1920, joins the program this week to discuss jazz and Prohibition, offering his view that the relationship was more complex and nuanced than we've been led to believe. We'll also hear Prohibition-era jazz from Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, Duke Ellington, Paul Whiteman, Bessie Smith, and more.

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Piece Description

On January 16, 1920, alcohol became illegal in the United States of America. The same year, Mamie Smith recorded "Crazy Blues," which would sell a million copies and help pave the way for the music-media explosion of the 1920s-a decade often called the Jazz Age, but one you could simply call the Age of Sound, because suddenly sound was everywhere, in the form of radio, phonographs, and by 1927, talking pictures.

Jazz was indeed a big part of that sound, and with the coming of Prohibition it flourished in the underground bars known as "speakeasies" around the country-a new music born in a time of complexity and change, and now aligned, for better or worse, with a culture of forbidden liquor that also gave rise to organized crime.

Historian Michael McGerr, author of A Fierce Discontent: The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Movement in America, 1870-1920, joins the program this week to discuss jazz and Prohibition, offering his view that the relationship was more complex and nuanced than we've been led to believe. We'll also hear Prohibition-era jazz from Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, Duke Ellington, Paul Whiteman, Bessie Smith, and more.

Timing and Cues

Total Program Length: 59:00
00:00 Segment 1: Program Intro
Incue: Theme Music

01:00 Segment 2: Optional Cutaway for News

06:00 Segment 3: Program Part 1
Outcue: “… on Night Lights.”

32:25 Segment 4: MIDPOINT BREAK (1:00 music bed)

33:25 Segment 5: Program Part 2

59:00 End Program

Related Website

http://indianapublicmedia.org/nightlights/big-speakeasy-jazz-prohibition/