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The 1930s marked the worst financial crisis in United States history, the Great Depression. Men and women struggled to find jobs in order to feed their families. During these tough years, people did not have money to spend on record albums and dance clubs. Radio continued to be the center of entertainment in America. A new style of jazz, "big band swing," emerged. People loved to dance to swing and it became the most popular music of the 1930's and 1940's. Jazz was played on the airwaves night after night. For listeners, this exciting music made the Great Depression more bearable. It reminded them of what America could be. In the meantime, Kansas City seemed to escape the hardships of the Great Depression. As cash flew through the city's gambling hot spots, saloon owners profited from the sale of illegal drugs and alcohol. This wide-open nightlife may be the reason that jazz was able to thrive in the city. A looser, more spontaneous, infectious brand of swing was played in nightclubs across the city. Unemployed jazz artists fled there to find jobs. Soon Kansas City's jazz scene grew as exciting as New York's or Chicago's.

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15y ago
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12y ago

Jazz, and other types of music, was hit hard by the Depression. It quickly picked itself up and became a cheap form of entertainment, a way to forget about the economic conditions of the nation and your family if only for a short while. Radios were cheap, so most families could listen to Jazz. Jazz was also performed in clubs and patrons could sip cheap liquor and dance the night away. The jukebox and 78 rpm records also allowed most music to be heard by those who wanted to hear it, for a small cost.

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14y ago

Summertime, Night and Day, Over The Rainbow ... there are more jazz standards from the 1930s than any other decade.

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Q: How did jazz help the Great Depression?
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