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- Q181897 subject Q21819348.
- Q181897 subject Q7214381.
- Q181897 subject Q7330395.
- Q181897 subject Q8819487.
- Q181897 subject Q8916181.
- Q181897 abstract "Harlem Stride Piano, stride piano, commonly abbreviated to stride, is a jazz piano style that was developed in the large cities of the East Coast, mainly New York, during the 1920s and 1930s. The left hand characteristically plays a four-beat pulse with a single bass note, octave, seventh or tenth interval on the first and third beats, and a chord on the second and fourth beats. Occasionally this pattern is reversed by placing the chord on the downbeat and bass note(s) on the upbeat. Unlike performers of the ragtime popularized by Scott Joplin and unlike much early jazz, stride players' left hands often leapt greater distances on the keyboard, and they played in a wider range of tempos and with a greater emphasis on improvisation.".
- Q181897 thumbnail Fats_Waller_edit.jpg?width=300.
- Q181897 wikiPageExternalLink home.html.
- Q181897 wikiPageExternalLink stride_piano.html.
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- Q181897 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214381.
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- Q181897 wikiPageWikiLink Q7330395.
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- Q181897 wikiPageWikiLink Q837182.
- Q181897 wikiPageWikiLink Q8819487.
- Q181897 wikiPageWikiLink Q8916181.
- Q181897 comment "Harlem Stride Piano, stride piano, commonly abbreviated to stride, is a jazz piano style that was developed in the large cities of the East Coast, mainly New York, during the 1920s and 1930s. The left hand characteristically plays a four-beat pulse with a single bass note, octave, seventh or tenth interval on the first and third beats, and a chord on the second and fourth beats. Occasionally this pattern is reversed by placing the chord on the downbeat and bass note(s) on the upbeat.".
- Q181897 label "Stride (music)".
- Q181897 depiction Fats_Waller_edit.jpg.