1937 Jitterbug: Benny Goodman & His Orch. - "Peckin' "
- Length: 3:29
- Rating: 4.56 (9 ratings)
- Views: 3561' favoriteCount='7
- Author: 240252
Tags: 1930s 1940s age American dance jazz jitterbug orchestra swing
Benny Goodman & His Orch. - Peckin' (H.James /B.Pollack), Victor 1937---------------------------------------The term "jitterbug" comes from an early 20th century slang used to describe alcoholics who suffered from the "jitters" (delirium tremens). During the early 1900s, the term became associated with dancers who danced without any control or knowledge of the dance. In the Swing era, the term was adopted by band leader Cab Calloway to describe the swing dancers who, as he put it „look like a bunch of jitterbugs out there on the floor", due to their fast often bouncy movements. Calloway's 1935 recording of "Call of the Jitter Bug" and the film "Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party" popularized use of the word "jitterbug". Lyrics to "Call of the Jitter Jug" clearly demonstrate the association between the word jitterbug, and the consumption of alcohol. "If you'd like to be a jitter bug, First thing you must do is get a jug, Put whiskey, wine and gin within, And shake it all up and then begin. Grab a cup and start to toss, You are drinking jitter sauce! Don't you worry, you just mug, And then you'll be a jitter bug!" World War II facilitated the spread of jitterbug to Europe. For instance, by May 1944 in preparation for D-Day, there were nearly 2 million American troops stationed throughout Britain. Time Magazine reported that American troops stationed in France in 1945 „jitterbugged", and by 1946 jitterbug had become a craze in England.
Growth Interactive Audio Visual Installation
- Length: 7:15
- Rating: 5.00 (3 ratings)
- Views: 1326' favoriteCount='8
- Author: 5imian
Tags: Algorithmic Animation Controller Flash Growth Harlin Installation Jesse Jitter Max/Msp Music Oklahoma USB
This is an interactive installation I first made in the spring of 07. It involves a hacked USB controller, Max/MSP/Jitter , a flash animation, and algorithmic music generation. This premired at the University of Oklahoma
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