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Positive reviews. Negative reviews. Compilation albums. References. External links. Jazz (miniseries) Jazz is a 2001 television documentary miniseries directed by Ken Burns. It was broadcast on PBS in 2001 [2] and was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series. [3] .
Ken Burns's 10-part, 19-hour documentary ''Jazz'' -- which begins tomorrow night at 9 on PBS, striking with a heavier thump than any previous document about the music -- may once again...
Film Review: Ken Burns's Jazz. Tue 21 2011. This is the second in a series of film reviews reprinted from the Journal of American History. These reviews model ways of looking critically at popular films, documentaries, miniseries, and other history-based features. Look for one each month!
Filmmaker Ken Burns tells the story of jazz — the quintessential American art form. The 10-part series follows the growth and development of jazz music from the gritty streets of New...
Jazz, a new documentary by Ken Burns, is a celebration of a unique American art form and of the people that made it. Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane, Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, and Dizzy Gillespie—these are the illustrious names that fill the history of jazz.
During the Sixties, jazz is in trouble. Critics divide the music into "schools" - Dixieland, swing, bebop, hard bop, modal, free, avant-garde. But most young people are listening to rock 'n'...
Dec 30, 2015 · Ken Burns Jazz - A Retrospective Review - Part 1A. © - Steven A. Cerra - copyright protected; all rights reserved. "Ken Burns's Jazz isn't jazz; it's politics and ideology — at times one is tempted to say racism — masquerading as history and sociology." - Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post.