Louis Armstrong: Jazz Music And Music In Jazz Culture

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Louis Armstrong
Louis Armstrong, born August 4, 1901 in New Orleans, was a jazz musician with gifted performing skills ranging from playing the trumpet and composing music to singing and occasional acting. His career was most prominent from the 1920s through the 1960s playing songs such as “What a wonderful world” and “Hello, Dolly”. Armstrong had multiple nicknames such as Pops, Big Papa Dip, and Satchmo his extraordinary jazz performances not only influenced jazz but American culture and the world as a whole. His perfect pitch and rhythm spread throughout America like a freight train. His music supplied such revolutionary vocabulary it soon became commonplace, like forks and knives. Armstrong once said “If you have to ask what jazz is, you'll never know”.
Louis Armstrong’s was the most influential musician in jazz culture. Armstrong was one of the first soloist in jazz history leading the vast changing culture of jazz from ensemble-oriented folk music into an artform focusing on inventive solo improvisation. His relaxed phasing helped set the stage for the Swing era. Armstrong’s popular scat singing and phrasing affected almost every singer to emerge after 1930s including influential singers such as …show more content…

Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, cofounders of Apple, are widely recognized as the pioneers for the microcomputer revolution. While other companies like IBM we're working on creating large scale computers, Jobs, with the help of his business partner Steve Wozniak, created the first personal computer the Apple two. After that, realizing the future of computers by seeing Xerox’s work with graphic designer interfaces, Jobs pushed Apple into creating an enormous stride in technology, the Macintosh computer. After catching the world by storm in 1984, Jobs, at age 25, had a net worth of 100 million

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