fundação getúlio vargas escola de administração de empresas de
Transcription
fundação getúlio vargas escola de administração de empresas de
FUNDAÇÃO GETÚLIO VARGAS ESCOLA DE ADMINISTRAÇÃO DE EMPRESAS DE SÃO PAULO CHARLES KIRSCHBAUM CAMPOS ORGANIZACIONAIS EM TRANSFORMAÇÃO o caso do Jazz americano e da Música Popular Brasileira SÃO PAULO 2006 CHARLES KIRSCHBAUM CAMPOS ORGANIZACIONAIS EM TRANSFORMAÇÃO o caso do Jazz americano e da Música Popular Brasileira Tese apresentada à Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo da Fundação Getúlio Vargas, como requisito para a obtenção do título de Doutor em Administração de Empresas Campo de Conhecimento: Estratégia Empresarial Orientador: Prof. Dr. Flávio Carvalho Vasconcelos SÃO PAULO 2006 ii Kirschbaum, Charles Campos Organizacionais em Transformação: o caso do Jazz americano e da Música Popular Brasileira / Charles Kirschbaum. – 2006. 213 f. Orientador: Flávio Carvalho de Vasconcelos Tese (doutorado) – Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo. 1. Estrutura social. 2. Jazz. 3. Música popular - Brasil. 4. Música e sociedade. 5. Artes e sociedade. 6. Música – Indústria. Vasconcelos, Flávio Carvalho de. II. Tese (doutorado) - Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo. III. Título. CDU 316.3 iii CHARLES KIRSCHBAUM CAMPOS ORGANIZACIONAIS EM TRANSFORMAÇÃO o caso do Jazz americano e da Música Popular Brasileira Tese apresentada à Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo da Fundação Getúlio Vargas, como requisito para a obtenção do título de Doutor em Administração de Empresas Campo de Conhecimento: Estratégia Empresarial Data de Aprovação: __/__/__ Banca Examinadora: _______________________________________ Prof. Dr. Flávio Carvalho Vasconcelos (Orientador) FGV-EAESP _______________________________________ Prof. Dr. Ana Cristina Braga Martes FGV-EAESP _______________________________________ Prof. Dr. Clóvis Machado-da-Silva FGV-EAESP Prof. Dr. João Marcelo Crubellate UEM – Ciências Sociais Aplicadas Prof. Dr. Sérgio Giovanetti Lazzarini Faculdade Ibmec - São Paulo SÃO PAULO 2006 iv Para o meu zeide Natálio z”l, o maior contador e criador de histórias que eu conheci v Agradecimentos In Brazil, where basic education is still restricted, I must thank those who supported me with material means: CAPES (both the graduate and the “sandwich” support), Princeton University, for the fellowship, CNPq, for the PIBIC sponsorship to Cristina, my assistant, EAESP-FGV, for sponsoring several trips to national and international conferences. I thank my parents for the “free” B&B. I would like to thank all friends, colleagues, teachers and relatives who helped me with this thesis. I thank Profs. Carlos Osmar Bertero and Francisco Aranha for their patience in reading this thesis’ project, and for their invaluable feedback. Prof. Maria Ester de Freitas was the first teacher I had in my undergrad classes who gave the due attention to conflict in organizations. I thank her for this insight and her support for my return to the Academy. Together with Ester, Prof. Fernando Motta has been always a role-model of scholar, and the first who suggested me to read Bourdieu. Profs. Mario Aquino Alves and Servio Tulio Prado Junior gave me the opportunity to help them in the disciples Organizational Theory and Strategy. The discussions that took place at the “Clube Bohemia” have certainly impacted the following pages. Prof. Patricia da Cunha Tavares and Prof. Eduardo Loebel were the first to show me the Social Network Analysis technique. They were already using UCINET (a software for SNA) and they made it less threatening. Patricia has been, since then, a great friend and someone I could discuss extensively about music. It was at Prof. Eduardo Marques’s classes, at the Political Science department at Universidade de São Paulo, where I had the opportunity to understand the potentiality of SNA. Prof. Marques was also one of the first supporters of the idea of studying social networks among artists. I thank Prof. Ana Cristina Braga Martes for calling my attention to the Economic Sociology’s potential contributions. I would like to thank as well the “invisible college” that diligently read previous versions and very tentative pieces. Their feedback hasn’t been completely absorbed yet. These were reviewers at the Academy of Management (2005 and 2006), Enanpad (2005), Eneo (2004), and Revista de Admininstração de Empresas. At conferences I had the opportunity to discuss my work with several scholars. I owe to Stewart Clegg, Wouter de Nooy, Sérgio Lazzarini, Tracy Thompson, and Nachoem Wijnberg very extensive feedback to my work. The experience at Princeton was a watershed in this trajectory. At CACPS (Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies) I found the space and support to exchange ideas. Paul DiMaggio, Stanley Katz , Larry McGill, Sandy Paroly helped me to make it possible. Prof. vi DiMaggio has informally played a role of co-supervisor, providing timely feedback for several papers, opening perspectives at the Sociology world, and helping me to survive at Princeton. Both Prof. Katz and McGill spent valuable time in reading my texts and providing feedback. It was through McGill that I met Mark Schulman, from the New School Jazz program. Mr. Schulman gave me important tips on the Jazz Academy world at New York. Simin Gul helped me with all sorts of problems with computer bugs. Of course, I can not forget the afternoon spent at the Rutgers University, where I could discuss with Ann Mische my work. At Princeton, I established a great dialogue with several colleagues and professors: among them, Mafalda Cardim, Martin Ruef, Joeri Mol, Kelly Lee Patterson, Charles-Henri Reuter, Gabriel Rossman, and Hana Shepherd were great interlocutors. Mafalda, thank you for those coffee breaks and the discussions around Bourdieu. Jan Marontate, Felipe Schwartzman, and David Stevens gave me important feedback to my presentation at the CACPS luncheon. During my stay at Princeton, I had the opportunity to provide a “bridge” between Prof. DiMaggio and Prof. Clóvis Machado-da-Silva. As in any other social network situation, the tertius eventually benefits from the content that is transmitted. In my case, I had the opportunity to be acquainted with an ongoing debate between neo-institutionalism and the contemporary sociological theory. Since then, Prof. Machado-da-Silva has been a resourceful interlocutor. I would like to thank those people who helped me to do the “hard stuff”. First of all, my brother Roberto, whose programming skills made it possible to build the social network used in this research. Roberto’s true calling is the psychoanalyst therapy, and I am sure that without this talent the work would never reach its end. Cristina Sakamoto, undergraduate student at EAESP-FGV was invaluable in collecting the social network data. She was also a great advisee and instant chatter during her PIBIC research. Bruno Lessa helped me to collect data on Jazz criticism. Data on Jazz came from several sources. At the Jazz Institute at the Rutgers University I received invaluable help from Dan Morgenstern. Tom Lord provided exhausting explanations on his discography. Several musicians (and their assistants) sent their info by email: I would like to thank Jessica Jary (for Michael Jary info), Ditmer Weertman from the Nederlands Jazz Archief (for Willy Langestraat, Jan Burgers, Ted Easton info), Trond Valberg from the The National Library of Norway (for Staffan Kjellmor info), Akira Hori (for Tsunetami Fukuda info), Wolfram Knauer from the Jazzinstitut Darmstadt (for Jost Münster vii info), Don Brow from the Australian Jazz Institute (for the Les Welch info), Rhoda Scott, André J. Racine, Duane Stufin (for Bill Clarke info), and Jeter Thompson. Jason Koransky from the Down Beat magazine gave me important tips on how to recover old Jazz criticism. I thank Scott Yanow for his kind appreciation of my work and explanation on how he developed his electronic database. I also would like to thank all staff at both Firestone Library and Mendel Music Library at the Princeton University for their patience and support. I owe to Daniel Boomhower the access to Down Beat’s microfilms. At EAESP-FGV several colleagues became both friends and interlocutors. Among them, my special thanks to Ricardo Gomes do Amaral, Marcelo Binder, Luiz Brito, Natércia Carona, Luiz Felipe Carvalho, Rebeca Chu, Fernando Ferreira, Augusto Galery, Rodrigo Gouvêa, Tatiana Iwai (Tets), Andre Mascarenhas, Eros Nogueira, Elvio Porto, Maurício Reinert, Andrea Leite Rodrigues, André Samartini, and Pedro Zanni. Over a “guiness” at Finnegan’s, Ricardo has pointed several biases in my writing. A new crop of friends have helped me in the last months: Renata Oliveira, Caetano Andrade, Alaíde Sipahi Dantas and Igor Tasic. At FFLCH-USP, across the river, several friends and colleagues have helped me. Among them, my special thanks to Thais Pavez. I risk now to commit a great injustice for not citing all friends involved in this trajectory. But among my friends, Maria Abreu, Andrea Valenzuela, Luiz Ojima Sakuda, Vinicius Mianna, Ulisses Sakurai and Luciana Itikawa, and Daniel and Denilde Holzhacker provided a timely support when my hands trembled. Andrea, I miss a lot our discussions on Jazz and Adorno. I would like to thank my parents for all support received, and Karin Slemenson for her help. Flavio Vasconcelos has been a supervisor, friend, co-author and confident. He supported my wildest dreams (like writing a thesis about the Jazz field in a management school) and helped me to anchor them accordingly. Finally, I thank all musicians for producing great music. This thesis would be impossible without you. Thank you all! viii I'm very glad to have met you. I like your playing very much. ~ Charlie Parker to Jean-Paul Sartre ix Resumo A teoria Neo-Institucional define Campos Organizacionais como espaços onde atores compartilham regras, esquemas interpretativos e consentem com as instituições estabelecidas. A partir dessa perspectiva, espera-se que as formas sociais sejam adotadas e difundidas pelos membros do campo. Essa visão de campo tem sido expandida para dar conta dos conflitos e inovação. A partir da investigação do campo de Jazz e da MPB, aborda-se a tranformação em campos de produção musical. Em primeiro lugar, investiga-se as relações teóricas entre o conceito de campo e redes sociais, através da aproximação das teorias desenvolvidas principalmente por Bourdieu e White. Evitando-se a síntese desses dois corpos teóricos, sugere-se o potencial de complementaridade entre as duas abordagens. Assim, sugere-se que mudanças sociais podem ser acompanhadas pelo descasamento entre a estrutura de redes sociais e a concentração de oportunidades. A partir do mapeamento das redes sociais do campo de Jazz, de 1930 a 1969, obtem-se uma topografia dos líderes de banda e seus respectivos estilos. Verifica-se que o lugar de emersão de novos estilos pode ser explicado pela evolução da estrutura do campo. As tranformações internas a um campo impactam as carreiras dos músicos. Constroise uma carreira “típica” de um músico de jazz, que sugere uma trilha a ser percorrida para que se alcance o sucesso. Em contrapartida, a mudança na estrutura e lógica do campo de Jazz levou ao favorecimento de alguns músicos que não seguiram a carreira típica. Essa contraposição é importante para aproximar a análise à ação dos individuos co-responsáveis pela mudança na lógica do campo. A institucionalização de um campo possibilita a definição daqueles estilos que são legítimos, em contraposição com aqueles que são segregados. Dessa forma, a permeabilidade de um campo conjuga a a geração autônoma de normas com elementos externos. Novamente, essa permeabilidade é reflexo da transformação da estrutura e lógica do campo. A partir da penetração da Bossa Nova no campo de Jazz americano, analisou-se a participação dos críticos na avaliação, legitimação e tradução da Bossa Nova. Essa influência cruzada foi acompanhada pela redifinição das fronteiras entre os campos. A comunicação entre campos distintos surge como um fator crucial na explicação da emersão de novos campos. A comunicação entre os grupos de Música Popular Brasileira e Música Pop (principalmente Jovem Guarda) foi realizada pelos músicos do movimento Tropicalista. A criação de uma nova posição possibilitou a articulação entre dois espaços sociais que encontravam-se polarizados. x Percebe-se o papel do conflito nessas dinâmicas: o conflito dentro do campo do jazz permitiu a sua abertura e emersão de uma pluralidade de estilos que articulavam de formas distintas a tradição do jazz e as influências externas. A polarização dentro do campo da MPB criou a possibilidade de criação de novas posições internas e articulações externas. As mudanças nessas lógicas foram concomitantes com o desenho de novos contornos do campo e novas trajetórias das carreiras. Em contrapartida, esses conflitos revelaram elementos compartilhados que se tornaram institucionalizados e aceitos por grupos opostos. Palavras-chave Campo Organizacional, Redes Sociais, Indústria Fonográfica, Bourdieu, Sociologia da Arte xi Abstract The Neo-Institutional theory defines Organizational Fields as social spaces where actors share rules, interpretative schemata and consent with established institutions. From this perspective, one expects that field’s actors adopt and diffuse social forms. This conception of field has been expanded in order to include the phenomena of conflict and innovation. By exploring the Jazz and the MPB fields, this thesis approaches the transformations in fields of music production. First, it investigates the theoretical relationships between the concept of field and social networks, by exploring the convergence of Bourdieu’s and Harrison White’s theories. Although I don’t propose a synthesis between these two approaches, I advocate that they are complementary. Hence, I suggest that social changes might occur in tandem with the uncoupling between the social network structure and the concentration of opportunities. By reconstructing the social networks among Jazz musicians, from 1930 to 1969, I obtain a topography of band leaders and their respective styles. The findings suggest one might explain the locus of new style emergence by the field’s structure evolution. The internal changes in a field impacted several musicians’ careers. I built a “typical” career-path, which suggests a track to be covered in order to attain success. In contrast, the change in the field’s structure and meta-logics favored several musicians who didn’t follow the typical path. This contrast attempts to shed light on the individual action, which helped in turn to change the field’s logic. A field’s institutionalization allows the identification of those legitimate styles, in contrast with those that are segregated. Thus, a field’s permeability articulates its autonomous generation of norms with external elements. Again, this permeability reflects a field’s structure and logics change. By exploring the penetration of Bossa Nova in the Jazz field, I analyzed how Jazz critics participated in the legitimating and in the translating processes of Bossa Nova. This cross-influence occurred in tandem with a redefinition of both fields’ boundaries. The communication between two different fields turns to be a crucial explanative factor in the emergence of new fields. The communication between the MPB and the pop music groups (mostly Jovem Guarda) was accomplished by Tropicalists. The creation of a new position made possible the articulation of two social spaces that were polarized. It seems evident the role of conflict underlying these dynamics: the conflict within the jazz field allowed the opening and emergence of a plurality of styles that articulated in several ways the Jazz tradition with external influences. The polarization within the MPB field xii created the possibility of emergence of new positions and external articulation. The change within these logics took place in tandem with the drawing of new boundaries and new career trajectories around and within these fields. In contrast, these conflicts revealed shared elements that became eventually institutionalized and shared by opposing groups. Key-words Organizational Field, Social Networks, Recording Industry, Bourdieu, Sociology of Art xiii SUMÁRIO 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................4 1.1 Theoretical Issues .............................................................................................................4 1.2 Chapters in this Thesis....................................................................................................11 2. Fields and Networks: Theoretical Distinctions, Convergence and Perspectives..................14 2.1 Introduction: beyond Functionalism...............................................................................14 2.2 The concept of Field - origins and traditions..................................................................16 2.3 Bourdieu’s concept of Field ...........................................................................................16 2.3.1 Structure and Types of Capital ................................................................................16 2.3.2 Positions and Dispositions.......................................................................................17 2.3.3 Habitus and Practices ..............................................................................................18 2.3.4 Power, Struggle and Domination.............................................................................19 2.3.5 Stability and Change................................................................................................20 2.3.6. A fractal model of fields .........................................................................................21 2.3.7. Interaction and Social Networks in Bourdieu’s theory ..........................................22 2.4 Interactionist Approach to Fields ...................................................................................23 2.4.1 The Harrison White School of Social Network Analysis........................................25 2.4.2. Neo-Institutionalism and Social Networks.............................................................25 2.4.3. Contemporary Social Network Analysis ................................................................26 2.3. The “linguistic turn” in the Social Network Analysis ...................................................27 2.4. Fields and Networks – is a convergence possible?........................................................30 2.4.1 The Rise of the Medici in Florence .........................................................................33 2.5. Conclusion and Perspectives for Future Research ........................................................35 3. Jazz Field Evolution, 1930-1969: from Centralized to Decentralized Field ........................36 3.1. Introduction ...................................................................................................................36 3.2. An Institutional Account of Jazz Evolution ..................................................................38 3.2.1. Emergence of a Professional Body of Musicians...................................................39 3.2.2. Formalization and Rationalization of Jazz .................................................................41 3.2.3. Emergence of a professional body of critics ..........................................................43 3.2.4. Consolidation of academic institutions in Jazz.......................................................45 3.3. A History of Jazz ...........................................................................................................46 3.3.1. The Styles of Jazz ...................................................................................................51 3.4. Theoretical Development: Field, Institutional Change, and Circulation of Elites ........60 3.4.1. Centralized Fields ...................................................................................................61 3.4.2. Decentralized Fields ...............................................................................................62 3.4.3. Control Variables....................................................................................................64 3.5. Data Sources ..................................................................................................................66 3.5.1. Jazz Recording Sessions Data ................................................................................66 3.5.2. Style Assignment Methodology .............................................................................67 3.5.3. Musicians’ Demographic Data ...............................................................................69 3.6. Methodology..................................................................................................................69 3.6.1. MRQAP...................................................................................................................69 3.6.2. Blockmodeling........................................................................................................71 3.7. Results ...........................................................................................................................72 3.7.1. MRQAP Analyses ..................................................................................................72 1 3.7.2. Analyses of Blocks .................................................................................................78 3.8. Discussion....................................................................................................................107 3.9. Conclusions .................................................................................................................114 4. Careers in the Right Beat: U.S. Jazz Musicians’ typical and non-typical trajectories ......116 4.1. Introduction .................................................................................................................116 4.2. Artists’ Careers and art Fields .....................................................................................117 4.3. Typical Career Stages and Turning Points ..................................................................119 4.3.1. Introduction to the Field .......................................................................................119 4.3.2. Introduction to a National band ............................................................................120 4.3.3. Climbing the Sidemen Hierarchy .........................................................................121 4.3.4. The Launching of a new bandleader.....................................................................124 4.3.5. Institutionalization of Innovation and Innovator ..................................................129 4.3.6. Style Deinstitutionalization and Leader Decline ..................................................130 4.3.7. Recurrent Innovator..............................................................................................131 4.4. Non-typical Career Paths.............................................................................................134 4.4.1. Coleman Hawkins.................................................................................................135 4.4.2. Ornette Coleman...................................................................................................136 4.5. Discussion: Resources and Fields................................................................................137 4.6. Conclusion and Future Research Opportunities ..........................................................139 5. How do Outsider Styles Become Legitimated? A dialogue between Bossa Nova musicians and Jazz critics........................................................................................................................140 5.1. Introduction .................................................................................................................140 5.2. Theory on new Styles ..................................................................................................142 5.2.1. Outsider as a source of innovation .......................................................................142 5.2.2. Boundary work and sources of conflict................................................................143 5.2.3. Making sense of change .......................................................................................144 5.2.4. Conflict and Changes in Power ............................................................................146 5.2.5. From Periphery to Core: latency and visibility ....................................................147 5.3. Jazz and Bossa Nova ...................................................................................................148 5.3.1. Enacting the Jazz Tradition ..................................................................................148 5.3.2. Bossa Nova in the Jazz Field................................................................................149 5.4. Methodology................................................................................................................149 5.4.1. A theory of Jazz and Bossa Nova.........................................................................149 5.4.2. Classification of Records......................................................................................150 5.4.3. Ratings ..................................................................................................................151 5.4.4. Social Networks....................................................................................................152 5.4.5. Preparation of the Network...................................................................................153 5.4.6. Preliminary Analysis ............................................................................................153 5.4.7. History and Narratives..........................................................................................154 5.5. Results .........................................................................................................................155 5.5.1. Bossa Nova Narratives .........................................................................................155 5.5.2. The Evolution of the BN Theory..........................................................................157 5.5.3. Evolution of Record Classification.......................................................................158 5.5.4. Evolution of Ratings by Record Category............................................................158 5.5.5. Penetration of BN in the Jazz community ............................................................159 5.6. Discussion: a tentative model for a process of institutionalization .............................159 5.7. Implications for the study of institutionalization.........................................................161 5.8. From the System towards the Field thinking...............................................................161 6. Tropicália: Strategic Maneuvers in Networks of Musicians ..............................................163 6.1. Introduction .................................................................................................................163 2 6.2. Strategic behavior in social spaces: rational choice and economic sociology approaches ............................................................................................................................................164 6.2.1. A Rational-Choice Preliminary Model: The Hotelling Game..............................165 6.2.2 Strategic Action in Social Networks: from Closure to Structural Holes...............166 Source: Author’s adaptation of Granovetter (1977) and Burt (1992) ................................168 6.3. - Social Networks and Social Identities.......................................................................168 6.4. - Musicians in Social Networks: Emergence of Tropicália.........................................170 6.4.1 Bossa Nova (BN): the paradigm of the ascending middle-class ...........................171 6.4.2 The pop Jovem Guarda (JG) and its counterpoint to BN ......................................171 6.4.3 Emergence of MPB, and its clash with JG ............................................................172 6.4.4. “Baianos” penetrate the BN/MPB community .....................................................172 6.4.5 Tropicália is established and becomes influential .................................................173 6.5. Understanding Styles and Identities from a Network/Embedded Perspective ............174 6.5.1 Identities among Musicians ...................................................................................174 6.5.2. Repertoire creates Networks.................................................................................175 6.6. Methodology................................................................................................................175 6.6.1. Database................................................................................................................176 6.6.2. Sociograms ...........................................................................................................177 6.6.3. Network Analysis .................................................................................................178 6.7. Results .........................................................................................................................179 6.7.1. Emergence of BN and JG: 1958 to 1961..............................................................180 6.7.2. Consolidation of BN and JG: 1962 to 1965 .........................................................182 6.7.3. Emergence of MPB: 1966 to 1967 .......................................................................183 6.7.4. Emergence of Tropicália: 1968 to 1969 ...............................................................184 6.8. Discussion and Conclusion..........................................................................................186 6.8.1. Future Research Opportunities .............................................................................187 7. Concluding Remarks ..........................................................................................................188 Refêrencias: ............................................................................................................................191 Glossário.................................................................................................................................210 3 1. Introduction 1.1 Theoretical Issues All chapters are directly or indirectly affected by my research in the sociological version of Neo-Institutionalism. As I learned its different theoretical orientations and empirical findings, I chose a theme that I believed had strong institutional effects: the emergence of new artistic styles and the evolution of art fields. Soon enough in my research, I learned that the sociology of art has its specificities. These specificities do not exclude the possibility of an institutional analysis of art fields. On the contrary: as I show throughout the coming chapters, much of the institutional research cited had art fields as their empirical objects. The risk, then, is to reduce a phenomenon observed in an art field to such a degree of generality that we will not be able to distinguish the creation of an art style from a scientific theory, a managerial practice or a technology. As a result, in several cases I was led to leave aside the neo-institutional approaches in favor of other approaches, mostly from the contemporary economic sociology. If I was not able in many cases to reach an appropriate theoretical synthesis (such endeavor would be too ambitious for this scope), I tried at least to preserve the original neo-institutional intuition. Having said that, let us delve in the neoinstitutional family of theories and my research question. The emergence of the neo-institutional theories in late seventies and early eighties marked a reaction against a perspective where organizations were regarded as autonomous decision-makers. For instance, DiMaggio and Powell’s classic (1983) made an effort to explain why organizations were so similar. If they were not as diverse as managers claimed, there should be an explanation. Their methodological strategy was to shift the attention from individual organizations to organizational fields, as major sources of explanation. They define an organizational field as: [T]hose organizations that, in aggregate, constitute a recognized area of institutional life: key suppliers, resource and product consumers, regulatory agencies, and other organizations that produce similar services or products. The virtue of this unit of analysis is that it directs our attentions to (…) the totality of relevant actors. (…) [T]he field idea comprehends the importance of both connectedness and structural equivalence. (DIMAGGIO;POWELL, 1983, p. 65; citations omitted, italics in the original). 4 Against a methodological individualism, researchers looked at “institutions” as “beliefs and modes of behavior instituted by the collectivity” (DURKHEIM, 2003). The organizations who presented conformity to these institutions were able to gain a certain degree of legitimacy superior in comparison to those organizations who didn’t conform. This intuition may be traced back to Durkheim: [In lower societies] the slighter development of individuality, the small extension of the group, the homogeneity of external circumstances, all contribute to reducing the differences to a minimum. The group has an intellectual and moral conformity of which we find but rare examples in the more advanced societies. Everything is common to all. Movements are stereotyped; everybody performs the same ones in the same circumstances, and this conformity of conduct only translates the conformity of thought. (DURKHEIM, 1915, pg. 18). The similarity to DiMaggio and Powell’s proposition is remarkable (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1991, p.1). However, the authors don’t loose sight of the legitimacy requirement under the diffusion of forms. They propose that organizations will undertake common forms (isomorphism) depending on the kind of legitimacy source supporting this form. They identify three types of isomorphism: coercive, normative and mimetic. The coercive isomorphism is linked to the capacity of a formal institution to impose or require a practice. The normative isomorphism is generally based on the strength of a professional group to establish common practices, crystallized in certification. Finally, the mimetic isomorphism occurs as organizations copy each other in order to be perceived as a legitimate player. This effect was believed to be stronger when the degree of uncertainty increased, and instrumental calculation was hindered (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1983, proposition B-4). The important aspect at this point is to note that these scholars engaged in the study of institutions as epistemologically independent from individual action (DIMAGGIO, 1998). This contrasts sharply with a Weberian conception of institutions as the outcome of individual action (COLLINS, 1980). I understand this preference much closer to a methodological shortcut rather than a normative or ontological positioning. The side-effect of such methodological approach was the widespread criticism to neo-institutionalism and its limits. Because little emphasis was given to individual action (especially by the more positivistic side of this school), there was a perception that this school of thought was conservative and defended social conformity. Nonetheless, this strategy has allowed innumerous scholars to investigate the diffusion and transformation of social practices and forms in tandem with the measurement of 5 legitimacy sources (see for instance STRANG; MEYER, 1993; STRANG; TUMA, 1993; CZARNIAWSKA;JOERGES, 1996; STRANG;SOULE, 1998). Conversely, the mechanisms of desintitutionalization were investigated (OLIVER, 1992). They also delved into the investigation of degrees of conformity and possible responses to institutional environments (MEYER;ROWAN, 1991; OLIVER, 1991) and the correspondent strategic outcomes (BAUM;OLIVER, 1992, 1996). Although this body of research provided a wealth of insights on institutional mechanisms, scholars ended up with difficult obstacles: if actors do conform to institutions, how is change possible? Conversely, if actors are able to think and strategize as if they were outside the institutional web as Oliver (1991) seemed to propose, what would lead us to believe that actors conform to institutions at all? For if all actors are able to manipulate their institutional environments, there is no causal mechanism that explains when, how and why they eventually conform to institutions. This paradox was well noticed by Granovetter in his “over and under-socialized” paradox (GRANOVETTER, 1985). Nonetheless, organizational students kept insisting on the dichotomy between conformity and strategic action. Pouder and John (1996), for instance, proposed a sophisticated model where collectivities faced decline when institutionalized and obdurate schemata were unable to cope with external shocks. Although I could relate this mechanism with the rise and decline of several industrial clusters, I was not able to relate this model with the evolution of several artistic fields. Rather than perceiving a collectivity as a monolithic block of firms, I was looking for heterogeneity of schemata and conformity to rules, practices and forms. The challenge was to avoid investigating fields as monolithically sources of rules, but to depict them as variable in relation to their internal structure1. As Scott warns us: The notion of field reminds us that environments of organizations are not random collection of resources and schemas, nor are they constructs defined by disembodied dimensions, such as complexity and munificence; rather, they are themselves organized. (SCOTT, 2001, p. 136). How organizational fields are internally organized and structured? Is it possible to explain heterogeneity of practices from insights on a field’s structure? The work of Leblibic, Salancik et al (1991) portrayed an example of field where peripheral companies had enough freedom to introduce innovations. This intuition was still covered under the durkheimian 1 See “Glossário” for a discussion on the word “Structure” 6 theoretical umbrella: as we move outwards in a community, moral density decreases. As a result, we should observe more hybrid forms (DURKHEIM, 1915; DOUGLAS, 1984). The core-periphery paradigm was dominant in the beginning of my research. From this perspective, I attempted to show how new styles in Jazz were born in the periphery and eventually migrated to the core. However, some empirical findings led me to review my theoretical framework. First, in several moments, I observed that new styles were created at the core of the jazz community. This suggested that the mechanisms at work varied with different field structures. Second, qualitative research showed that musicians who played different styles frequently engaged in open conflicts. Third, the plurality of styles suggested that the deinstitutionalization and substitution of a style for another didn’t follow necessarily the same mechanisms observed in technological substitution. Hence, in order to understand the phenomena at hand, I had to include in my theoretical framework elements that could account for (1) assessment of the meaning of “structure”, (2) change in the field structure, and (3) conflict. The assessment of what “structure” means for different scholars leads us to understand the theoretical basis under the field construct. For neo-institutionalists, high structuration was described as frequent flows of information, which led to a construct closer to social networks (DIMAGGIO;POWELL, 1983; DIMAGGIO, 1986; BURT, 1987; GALASKIEWICZ;WASSERMAN, 1989; POWELL, WHITE et al, 2005). DiMaggio (1986) suggests the application of blockmodeling analysis in order to extract positions from a social network. Such approach gave an alternative to the core-periphery paradigm, for it allowed me to explore with higher granularity a social network structure and apply the concept of structural equivalence, which is preferable to the density construct. In contrast, Bourdieu takes as the basis of a field’s structure the distribution of kinds of capital. As a consequence, I faced the following methodological issue: Issue 1: choose an appropriate field construct Most of the studies cited above and probably most research in institutional analysis take a field’s meta-logics and structure as ceteris paribus. Again, this is not in my opinion a sanguine ontological position, but just a methodological short-cut which allows a better description and explanation on how certain dependent variables (let say, performance, survival or diffusion) are affected by independent variables (legitimacy indexes, density, etc.). When we let the field meta-logics vary we must be ready to cope with higher degrees of complexity, which might be overwhelming for a standard article. Nonetheless, this is exactly what recent commentators on institutional studies claim future research should do (SCOTT, 7 2001; MACHADO-DA-SILVA; FONSECA; CRUBELLATE, 2005). Longitudinal research designs should be able to account for variation in the field’s structure. To be sure, several articles have extended our knowledge on field dynamics. For instance, Thorton and Ocasio (1999) explore how a change in a field’s logics2 impacts the succession of key executives. Scott, Ruef et al (2000) investigate the diffusion of health-care organizational forms in tandem with the emergence of legitimating discourses among the medical and health care professional communities. These articles stress a “top-down” effect, by exploring how overall logics impact behavior. These led me to explore what was the available longitudinal analysis I could perform: Issue 2: choose an appropriate longitudinal methodology Conversely, several scholars attempted to understand how individual action affects the field structure (DIMAGGIO, 1988; POWELL, 1991). Fligstein (2001) offered a framework relating kinds of coalitions with different types of field logics. Powell, White et al (2005) attempt to combine the top-down and bottom-up effects through the longitudinal analysis of social networks. In addition, we observe a range of articles exploring individual interpretative schemata change and action throughout longitudinal analysis, either borrowing concepts from Giddens (Tolbert & Barley; MACHADO-DA-SILVA, FONSECA, CRUBELLATE, 2005) or Bourdieu (LOUNSBURY, 1997). Vandenberghe (1999) places Bourdieu’s theory of habitus quite close to Giddens’s structuration concept. However, Bourdieu links the formation of habitus to an actor’s trajectory in a field. In this thesis I haven’t explored directly the interpretative schemata as an operational construct. However, I attempted to recover qualitatively the reasons and beliefs that led musicians and other actors act as they did: Issue 3: recover the individual reasons and beliefs that impacted action throughout one’s trajectory As suggested above, most neo-institutional concerns are focused on the vertical relationships between institutions and actors. In its top-down approach, institutions (and change) impact individual behavior. In its bottom-up approach, individual action impacts institution. Scott (2001, p. 195) offers and integrative framework that depicts both top-down and bottom-up effects, but less attention is given to competing rationalities and interpretative schemata. As DiMaggio and Powell (1991, p. 23) stress: “Giddens’s account, however, does little to explain why some interactions go better that others or why routines create particular stable patterns”. Later, they affirm: 2 Scott defines institutional logics as “the belief systems and related practices that predominate in an organizational field” (SCOTT, 2001, p. 139). 8 [R]ules are typically constructed by a process of conflict and contestation (…). Thus, although we stress that rules and routines bring order and minimize uncertainty, we must add that the creation and implementation of institutional arrangements are rife with conflict, contradiction, and ambiguity. (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1991, p. 28). To make justice to the previous research, the neo-institutional tradition has amassed several exemplars on conflict among groups. For instance, Holm (1995) showed how different technical approaches were supported by opposing rationalities. Greenwood and Hinings (1996) portrayed field dynamics as the outcome of the clash and contradiction between professional bodies. While this research did contribute for further understanding of the role of conflicts in field dynamics, they focus on competing rationalities and logics. These agonistic coexistence examples eventually led to the emergence of a dominant logic, which led in turn to the process of institutionalization and isomorphism of elected forms. The case of Jazz, however, showed an increasing coexistence of competing legitimacy sources and styles, which gave no signal to subdue to a homogeneous conformity3. The proposal of Bourdieu that fields are not only social spaces where actors share rules and norms, but also spaces where they struggle, gave me a possible avenue for understanding the dynamics in the jazz field. This alternative approach is also suggested by several institutionalist scholars (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1991, p. 25; SCOTT, 2001, p. 142). However, this choice was punctuated with challenges. I want to cite two problems in undertaking Bourdieu’s approach in tandem with my previous choices. First, Bourdieu didn’t include in his theory a full appraisal of social network analysis. Second, his construct of field is ultimately based on a conception of power. In spite of Powell’s (1991) attempt to bring in power and Bourdieusian intuitions into the neo-institutional tradition (see also Lounsbury, 1997, for a proposal to include the concept of habitus in the institutional analysis), scholars in this tradition have followed a different path: interactions matter, and power seems to be coupled to legitimacy4. The issue then was to meet a reasonable compromise while setting the boundaries between two approaches that are not easily reconcilable: 3 Scott (2001, p. 140, p. 161, p. 177, p. 189) presents several research examples of “pluralistic” and “contentious” fields, where institutional spheres clash against each other. As Scott focuses on the macro institutional spheres, as if disembodied of individuals, one cannot avoid linking his institutional analysis to his early structuralist phase. 4 This distinction might be observed between Giddens and Bourdieu accounts of power. Giddens follows closely the functional idea that power is linked to legitimacy. As a consequence, the access to resources is allowed only to legitimate agency. Bourdieu, in contrast, understands the institutions as homologous to power structures. He reverses Giddens’s formula, by stating that the legitimacy attached to resources was originally linked to power 9 Issue 4: reconcile and contrast the neo-institutional and Bourdieusian approaches I found a common thread between neo-institutionalists and Bourdieu in the writings of Harrison White. In contrast to neo-institutionalists, White has explored the horizontal relationships among actors. The way that actors generate discourses which include the position of other actors deeply affects the construction of one’s identity. From this perspective, White maintains both levels of analysis: the overall market gains a “market identity” (WHITE, 2002a), while actors enact each other (and oneself) identity as they seek for higher control in their social spaces (WHITE, 1992a). While Bourdieu stresses the coupling between position and social identity, White treats the formation of social identities as a continuous process, where social interaction is not always coupled to social identity. As a consequence, interaction and identity are seen as co-constitutive: Issue 5: explore the emergence of identities in tandem with changes in social network Although scholars within and among schools (neo-institutionalists, Bourdieusians, etc.) disagree on the epistemological status of social forms (i.e., categories, institutions), they all agree that institutions should not be granted an ontological status. Institutions are the outcome of individual enactment and collective intersubjective sharing of meanings. But if categories are socially constructed (BERGER; LUCKMANN, 1966), we should ask what makes an institution resilient. In other words, if social actors are conscious that social categories are not given, but constructed, why do they conform to these institutions? Again, there are at least two concurrent explanations. A Bourdieusian approach, for instance, insists that socially constructed categories gain an ontological status as its proponents are able to naturalize its existence. In other words, powerful actors are able to delete the social traces that generated the naturalized categories (BOURDIEU, 1993a). A phenomenological approach stresses that categories have the effect of economizing cognitive activity by reducing environmental complexity (WEICK; SUTCLIFFE; OBSTFELD, 2005). While I don’t believe it is possible to disentangle the power and cognitive effects, in this thesis I favor the cognitive aspect of the emergence of new categories: Issue 6: explore the emergence of new categories in tandem with cognitive operations Following, I explore how the chapters in this thesis are related with the issues depicted above. struggles. This discussion is not new in Organizational Studies. One may trace it back to Etzioni’s (1961) and Coser’s (1966) criticism to the Parsonian reading of legitimacy in Weber’s writings. 10 1.2 Chapters in this Thesis Issue 1 (choice of field structure) is betrayed by Issue 5. The choice of social network analysis is present in my research since the beginning, as the paradigms of “core-periphery” and “positions” supported much of my empirical analysis. Nonetheless, the concern with an inappropriate hodgepodge of theories led me to compare the epistemological and methodological basis of neo-institutional, Bourdieu’s and White’s approaches. “Fields and Networks” tries to achieve that. I begin by exploring the weberian roots in Bourdieu’s writings: the concepts of closure and domination. In contrast, I propose that social network analysts and neo-institutionalists have offered a picture of open system and conflicting sources of legitimacy. While for Bourdieu social networks are instrumental for accessing resources and reproducing identities, for social network scholars, interactions could lead to novel information and identities. Although the prospects of comparison seemed slim, I found the common reliance on the simmelian concept of triad (which eventually led to the development of structural equivalence construct). While Bourdieu regarded the social relations in an ordered pattern, coupled to power vectors, Harrison White proposed that social interactions could occur in spite of expected patterns. If social networks are not always coupled to a field’s logic, it is possible to grasp social network dynamics as not reducible to a field’s logics. Both may be analyzed as distinct dimensions. Once the social network analysis approach was granted methodological legitimacy (as the blockmodel approach relates to issue 1 – field construct), I was able to perform an analysis of social networks among Jazz musicians. In “Jazz Field Evolution”, I center my attention on Issue 5 – emergence of new styles in tandem with changes in the social network structure. For that purpose, I have also faced methodological issues while coping with issues 2 and 4. Because I have applied the blockmodel approach, I was led to “slice” my longitudinal data in periods, rather than analyzing it as temporally continuous. On one hand, I obtained “pictures” of these “slices” (periods), which gave me the opportunity to bridge them with interpretation, mostly backed by qualitative research. On the other hand, the “slicing” leads to a loss of information, for instead of analyzing actors throughout their trajectories, I reduced them to positions. The lack of information on individuals’ trajectories kept issue 3 almost untouched. I was not able to observe one’s trajectory, but I summarized demographic and other relevant information on all leaders in each position. As a result, I was able to include variables such “years in the field” and “number of sessions recorded” or “’race’”, which placed the analysis 11 at an intersection between social network analysis, and the Bourdieusian field concept (Issue 4). I grounded my explanation on ideal types of fields. These analytical tools provided me coherent theoretical bundles that could be compared with my empirical findings. As a consequence, much of my analysis attempted to understand how variables changed vis-à-vis each other under the light of the embraced ideal types. The chapter “Career in the Right Beat” attempts to cover some ground on issue 3. Ideally, the study of trajectories should illuminate obscure aspects in the field dynamics. For that purpose, I should be able to either interview my subjects or perform content analyses on their discourses. To be sure, biographies, autobiographies, interviews, articles are available for that purpose. However, such endeavor would be beyond the scope of this thesis. Hence, I took a less ambitious path and attempted to summarize several biographies in a typical career path. No doubt such reduction led me to discard individual information that could guide me to better understand the social network dynamics seen at “Jazz Evolution”. However, my concern here was not to explain the overall field change and its relational aspects (how musicians perceived each other vis-à-vis race, style affiliation, age, etc.), but just individual action. The kernel of the argument is the following: musicians who conform to typical career paths should also conform to established institutions. In other words, social attainment should be institutionally regulated; otherwise we wouldn’t observe the overall field effects. Now, if we accept that an institutionalized career path is regarded as rational (Weber’s rationalization) and has external coercion (Durkheim’s social fact), it would be expected that ceteris paribus actors in a field would reinforce and reproduce the field’s structure. But social change in this case is an empirical fact. When I explored some innovators’ bios, I have found disregard to institutionalized career paths as concomitant or preceding innovation. However, what I observe is not a total disregard to all institutions; innovators and mavericks do rely on legitimacy sources that might be latent, not completely absorbed, or somewhat excluded from the status order. Conversely, I tried to avoid explaining individual contempt to established career paths by building in my narrative capricious tastes or arbitrary personality traits5. Instead, I tried to show that musicians who bet in alternative paths faced periods of transition in their careers that coincided with moments when the field itself was changing. As a consequence, the legitimacy sources underlying action were also going through rearrangements. 5 The habitus concept is so flexible that one could be easily tempted to use it as a “jack-of-all-traits” explanatory tool. 12 Categories were so far treated as reified entities. However, the enactment of a category, in our case a “style” is at the core of the cognitive dimension in the neo-institutional tradition (Issue 6). Bourdieu, in contrast, will regard the capacity of “naming” objects as originated in the power of well positioned actors. In this thesis I emphasized the cognitive dimension of the creation of new categories. In “How do Outsider Styles Become Legitimated”, I explore how a given category (Bossa Nova) is compared to another one (Jazz). Here the interpretative schemata under analysis are not that of musicians, but the critics’; and the crucial challenge is to identify the elements that provided the legitimacy of Bossa Nova in an institutionalized field like Jazz’s. Although the social network evolution is taken as an explanatory variable (Issue 1 and Issue 5), most attention is given to the cognitive operations (Issue 6). In “Tropicália”, I depict how Tropicalist musicians were able to legitimate a new category (Tropicalia), by first establishing bridges between opposing groups (Bossa Nova and Jovem Guarda). It is worth noting that this brokerage is mostly symbolic, as the Tropicalists’ albums reproduced the repertoire from both groups. To be sure, this movement could be easily described by Berger and Luckmann as the externalization and objectification effects. But what is pointed out here is that any new institution has to find its place among a web of existent institutions. Such task might be achieved through direct conflict, or backed by subtle action. The latter refers to the “Robust Action” concept proposed by Padgett and Ansell (1993). Again, I am not directly assessing one’s interpretative schemata, but looking at the physical artifacts left behind (recorded albums). From these albums, I am inferring how musicians perceived their social milieu. 13 2. Fields and Networks: Theoretical Distinctions, Convergence and Perspectives Abstract Bourdieu’s Field and the American Sociology’s Network concepts have been instrumental for social scientists to depict social spaces. Although several attempts of convergence were pursued, the amalgamation of both in a common approach seems unattainable. This article seeks to compare Bourdieu’s and Harrison White’s theories, showing the elements that are irreducible to each other, as well as some common intuitions (e.g. the Simmelian characterization of competition as indirect conflict). Rather than offering an articulation of these theories, I propose that they are complementary in understanding the dynamics of a social space. Bourdieu’s capital-based Field construct leads us closer to explain one’s interests in connection to her actions. White’s focus on ambiguous action within social networks is relevant to understand how actors uncouple recurrent patterns of social reproduction. As such, it helps us to locate unexpected action in a given field. Finally, I recover empirical examples where both approaches were applied. 2.1 Introduction: beyond Functionalism One of the most popular streams of research in the revival of Economic Sociology explores the social conditions where economic transactions take place (GUILLEN et al, 2002; SWEDBERG, 2004). In general, such approach has rejected the radical methodological individualism initially proposed by economics, and lately introduced in the sociology (see for instance, COLEMAN, 1990). Granovetter (1985), for instance, draws our attention to the embeddedness condition of the economic life. Granovetter, among other sociologists, claim that economic phenomena occur within social networks and take in account shared values, cognitive schemata and trust, beyond the instrumental rationality entailed in the traditional economic analyses. Although such approach is not new, contemporary economic sociologists have been able to study economic phenomena as occurring in social contexts, and thus, revitalizing older insights proposed by classical sociologists. A subset of contemporary economic sociologists has insisted that the study of economic phenomena should not only take the social context as a constraint or resource, but also understand how individual actions and social phenomena are webbed together (EMIRBAYER, 1997). Moreover, these scholars assert that the sheer formation of individual 14 interest takes in account at the same time the broader context and the action of other actors (DIMAGGIO, 1994; SWEDBERG, 2003). As a consequence, the understanding of social action becomes an effort to uncover how social space is explained by patterns of relations. Such patterns of relations are the product of individual action and at the same time the context where individuals act. Although this rejection to the methodological individualism might be found already in the classical sociology, we owe to Parsons one of the most vigorous criticism of methodological individualism. Parsons (1949) attacked what he called the “randomness of interests”, proposed by the Utilitarian tradition. In its place, Parsons suggested that individuals take up social roles in their process of socialization. As individuals are allocated to such roles, their action is prescribed by a given script. The connection of roles occurs at multiple levels, eventually reaching the societal level, where norms govern the sustainability of the whole system. Sustainability is a central concern for Parsons, as well as “the problem of order”. From that perspective, Parsons understands that in a well-regulated society conflicts are always short-termed, quickly resolved by upper spheres in the system. The Parsonian architecture received several attacks by the end of the seventies. Among these challenges, one attack came from the micro-sociology. Goffman (1967), for instance, challenged the Parsonian idea of allocation to a social role. For Goffman, individuals are not allocated but they conform to social roles, while partially retaining their freedom of choice. This division between outer conformity and inner subjectivity led Goffman to explore how social interactions could also encompass individual strategic action. Nadel (1957), on the other hand, showed that social relations do not follow the script predicted by social roles. Moreover, Nadel proposed that instead of studying how individuals are allocated to social roles, sociologists should investigate whether the actual networks followed the social roles’ prescription. Another attack came from the conflict sociologists (COLLINS, 1975, 1980; COSER, 1966). Collins, for instance, performed a re-interpretation of Weber, and showed that in the Weberian tradition institutions are the product of conflicts in society. Following this logic, Parsons’s underrating of the conflict as an explanatory factor was interpreted as misreading reading the Weberian ideas. The last challenge that I present came from the rational choice tradition. As Parsons insisted that economic action is subordinated to societal norms and values, rational choice scholars, refused such ideas as transforming individuals in puppets in a “methodological holism”. Coleman (1990), for instance, proposed that the institutional changes in society are actually effect of underlying individual actions. As a consequence, a 15 model for social change should always take in account individuals’ interests and strategic action. The concept of field tries to recover the sociological intuition that interests and social action are interconnected, while resisting the over determination of one’s action by the social system or societal norms. This article will explore the concept of field and mainly two theoretical traditions: Bourdieu’s field theory and Harrison White’s social network studies. I will deploy most of my efforts in comparing Bourdieu’s approach to the contemporary social network approach, although comparisons against the Parsonian functionalism will be unavoidable, since both Bourdieu’s and White’s theories proposals sharply contrast with the latter approach. Finally, I’ll explore the limitations in both theoretical and methodological methods and point possible directions for future research. 2.2 The concept of Field - origins and traditions Martin (2003) and Mohr (2000) show that the idea of field has its origins in Lewin’s studies of social psychology. For Lewin, the analytical device of field should encompass all relevant factors that influenced one’s action. As a consequence, Lewin’s diagrams included not only social relations, but also (inter alia) institutions and events. Following a Gestalt approach, Lewin attempted to understand how these factors affected social action. In spite of its originality, the complexity of Lewin’s approach precluded his tool to become popular among sociologists. The idea of field would be eventually recovered by Pierre Bourdieu, and later, by neoinstitutional scholars. Following, I will recover Bourdieu’s concepts related to his field theory. 2.3 Bourdieu’s concept of Field 2.3.1 Structure and Types of Capital Bourdieu’s theory of field is inspired by Lewin’s earlier propositions and Cassirer’s ideas of relational construction of reality. Nonetheless, he deemphasizes the role of social interaction, which places his concept of Field at odds with the contemporary social network analysis developments (BOURDIEU; WACQUANT, 1992, p.113). Instead, Bourdieu believed that the most important factor to explain the field structure is the volume and the kinds of capitals each individual bears, as well as her objective trajectory. As a consequence, for Bourdieu, direct interaction might be irrelevant to understand social action. 16 Inspired by the Marx, Bourdieu proposes that differences of capital among individuals occur in tandem with social stratification. Nonetheless, following Weber’s footsteps, Bourdieu doesn’t believe that only economic capital is important to one’s action. Instead, Bourdieu incorporates the Weberian intuition that the social differentiation occurs in tandem with the emergence of autonomous spheres of value. As a consequence, individuals accumulate and mobilize different kinds of capital. The most prominent kinds of capital in Bourdieu’s writings are the economic capital, cultural capital, social capital and symbolic capital (BOURDIEU, 1998). Economic capital refers to the monetary wealth that one is able to mobilize and spend. For its very nature, it is the most fungible of all kinds of capital. The cultural capital refers to the titles and certifications one received from accredited institutions. Social capital refers to the stable social relations one holds and is able to mobilize in order to obtain other kinds of capital. Finally, symbolic capital refers to awards, recognition and status one receives throughout her trajectory in the field (BOURDIEU, 1986). 2.3.2 Positions and Dispositions A position in a field refers to a given structure of capitals. One empirical example is found in Bourdieu’s study of the late nineteenth century literary field in France. While massconsumption writers had high volume of capital, and mostly composed of economic capital, avant-garde writers controlled a smaller amount of capital, and most of it was composed by cultural and symbolic capital (BOURDIEU, 1993a). A position dictates for its occupants the structure of possible actions one may pursue. Individuals with little capital have fewer resources available in comparison to their capitalrich colleagues. Writers with strong connections with well-established publishing houses are able to tap larger marketing and distribution resources, thus delivering their books to a large audience. Not surprisingly, these writers follow “mass-consumption” styles. As a consequence, newcomers to the field, with little economic or symbolic capital, are compelled to acquire cultural capital and push the field’s boundaries towards “avant-garde”. Following this logic, Bourdieu would state, innovation is brought by field-young writers, with little access to established channels. Although individuals that occupy the same position might have the same structure of opportunities, this collocation is not enough to explain one’s action (BOURDIEU, 1998). An actor’s action is also explained by his disposition, which is constructed throughout his 17 experiences and trajectory in the field. Here, Bourdieu operated a major break with Parsons’s concept of role-taking. While Parsons described a tight coupling between one’s interest and the script entailed in that role, Bourdieu’s model lets the question whether position and disposition are coupled to the empirical verification. 2.3.3 Habitus and Practices An important link between Bourdieu’s Theory of Action and his propositions on the Field Theory is the concept of Habitus. While positions refer to certain volume and structure of capital, disposition refers to one’s history in the field. Bourdieu offered the concept of Habitus, as the individual’s schemata that is mobilized as she perceives the functioning of the field. It is: [S]ystems of durable, transposable dispositions, structured structures predisposed to function as structuring structures, that is, as principles which generate and organize practices and representations that can be objectively adapted to their outcomes without presupposing a conscious aiming at end or express mastery of the operations necessary in order to attain them. (BOURDIEU 1990a, p. 53) The habitus helps Bourdieu explain how agents perceive objective structures and take action. Hence, it works as mediator between these two observable stances. Being subjectively given, the habitus reveals itself only indirectly. Bourdieu explains how one’s habitus is responsible for the activity of categorization, the decision process of capital conversion in a field and finally, whether a course of action is good or bad. Ultimately, then, it is important to understand one’s habitus as an embodiment of the field. While an individual is only a point in a field, the whole field is comprehended in that point (VANDENBERGHE, 1999). Bourdieu (1998) admonishes his readers to resist the idea that the habitus is overdetermined by the field’s structure. As shown above, one’s habitus is a set of durable and stable dispositions. Hence, we could infer that Bourdieu’s agency is mostly geared towards habitual action (DALTON, 2004, follows this logic). In addition, one’s habitus would be challenged only by external crises (BOURDIEU, 1984b). Bourdieu himself suggests a conservative reading of the habitus: Through the systematic ‘choices’ it makes among the places, events and people that might be frequented, the habitus tends to protect itself from crises and critical challenges by providing itself with a milieu to which it is pre-adapted as possible, that is, a relatively constant universe of situations tending to reinforce its 18 dispositions by offering the market most favourable to its products (BOURDIEU, 1990a, p. 61, italics from the original). As he insists, there is no circular relationship between habitus and field. The habitus is still a “product of structures and producer of the practices and reproducer of the habitus” (BOURDIEU; PASSERON 1970, p. 244). From this perspective, VANDENBERGHE (1999) suggests an understanding of habitus closer to Giddens’s structuration (GIDDENS, 1986). The habitus is constructed throughout one’s trajectory and embodies one’s expectations on how her kinds of capitals are exchanged. As a consequence, depending on one’s position and habitus, he or she might engage in different practices that will eventually lead to different employment of capitals. The heterogeneity of individuals’ habitus explains why individuals at the same position might pursue completely different ways of action. Again, this perspective differs substantially from Parsons. For Parsons, as individuals’ allocation to roles occurs in tandem with their socialization, it is difficult to understand why individuals in the same role would pursue different ways of action. 2.3.4 Power, Struggle and Domination For Bourdieu, the field is a space where power is exercised as the collocated actors are able to mobilize different quantities and kinds of capital. Actors who control larger amounts of a given resource are able to impose their dominance over those actors with less capital. Following Weber’s closure phenomenon, Bourdieu envisions that the closed networks of powerful actors impose dominance over less powerful actors. Such dominance is translated in the rules of the field. These rules entail how a given capital circulates and is exchanged by other kinds of capitals. Because powerful actors control the exchange rates and the flows of capital in the field, they are also able to reproduce their dominance. Such dominance, nonetheless, should not be understood as a complete acceptance of the rules of the game by the dominated. Bourdieu proposes that a field also encompasses the struggles among the actors, not only for economic and symbolic resources, but also for the chance of establishing the rules of the game: [T]he degree of indeterminacy and fuzziness in the objects of the social world, together with the practical, pre-reflexive and implicit nature of the schemes of perception and appreciation that are applied to them, is the Archimedean leverage point that is 19 objectively offered for political action proper. (BOURDIEU, 1985, p.729) 2.3.5 Stability and Change Needless to say, some actors are more skillful than others in handling their resources and taking advantages of the rules of the field. When Bourdieu studied the field of cultural production, he described the trajectories of three types of actors. First, there are those actors who understand the rules of the game to an extent that they are able to manipulate them. Second, those who naively follow fads and fashions, and their trajectories are shaped by the field’s bandwagons. Finally, we observe those who just occupy a middle position between the most skillful and the naïve actors. Although the investigation of all the three types of trajectories is important for Bourdieu, it is the study of the above and below average actors that is most productive in revealing the dynamics of the field. Naïve actors tend to follow trends when these are almost exhausted, or conversely, they engage in innovations when the field is not yet ready for them. The lack of fit between capital investment (understood in a broad sense) and return, and the subsequent adaptation of positioning and the turn of trajectory reveals how capital allocation functions in the field. Naïve actors are manipulated by more powerful actors to engage in actions that are unlikely to yield the expected returns. On the other hand, above average actors are able to capture extraordinary profits from capital exchange. To be sure, there exist times when non-dominant players are able to manipulate or subvert the rules of the game. Although such events promise a great opportunity for change, Bourdieu reminds us that they are rare. In contrast, most of the time the field dynamics follow the logics of reproduction, which is to say that the struggle among actors will not necessarily yield a change in their relative positioning: Those who occupy the dominated positions within the social space are also located in dominated positions in the field of symbolic production, and it is not clear where they could obtain the instruments of symbolic production that are needed in order to express their specific viewpoint on the social space (…). (BOURDIEU, 1985, p. 736) Conversely, Bourdieu envisions exogenous changes in distribution of resources as a much more promising source of social change. As actors are able to tap larger pulls of resources due to societal or technological changes, the field’s internal dynamics might change in tandem with the emergence of the new power configuration. In addition, as suggested 20 above, internal crises might trigger the production and diffusion of new discourses (BOURDIEU, 1985, p. 734). In short, though, Bourdieu’s model tends to focus on the reproduction of modes of domination (BOURDIEU, 2005, p.80). Vandenberghe will complain that Bourdieu could “open up his system, avoid deterministic descriptions of stable reproduction, and give voluntarism its due” (1999, p. 62). I’ll return to Vandenberghe’s point when comparing Bourdieu’s approach to Harrison White’s. 2.3.6. A fractal model of fields We should resist the temptation of reification of the concept of the field. The concept of field is not itself a social fact that we may observe directly through empirical investigation. A field is an analytical device applied to understand how habitus, capital and practices are intertwined in social life (SUDDABY et al, forthcoming). For that reason, in order to understand the totality of one’s action in the society, the researcher should locate the individual in all fields where she invests her capital. Conversely, a social space is defined as the totality of fields present at the societal level (BOURDIEU, 1985, p. 724). In contrast with Parsons, who understands the coupling of different spheres in an overall social system, Bourdieu envisions the embeddedness of fields in the social milieu. As a consequence, for Bourdieu, the way that capital flows within and between fields denotes the degree that they are autonomous (or heteronomous) in relation to each other. The embeddedness of fields and the respective flows of capitals impose a homology across all fields in a given society. From that perspective, Bourdieu defends the idea that different fields’ inner power logics will be not only comparable, but also quite similar. This is the result of the existence of a “meta-field”, the field of power that regulates the relationship among the different kinds of capital. As a consequence, we should find, following Bourdieu, comparable, albeit not the same, power games, be it the whole society, a given field, or a sub-field. Such power games are imposed throughout society as a consequence of the flow of different capitals. This homology suggests a fractal power structure across the societal spaces. Typical examples of fields that Bourdieu analyzed comprise the field of cultural production, the field of scientific production, the field of State power and so on. The empirical objects chosen by Bourdieu were traditionally macro, comprising large sets of social actors (artists, scientists, universities, art galleries, publishing houses, etc.). This approach could suggest that he perceived organizations as monolithically actors, equating them to any other social actor. Nonetheless, in his late writings Bourdieu envisioned organizations not only as 21 embedded in fields, but as field themselves, as they are able to control and exchange different types of capitals within their boundaries (BOURDIEU, 2005, p. 81). As a matter of fact, Bourdieu spent most of his career in empirical investigations of fields, and whether such fields followed the same power logics. Nevertheless, as Bourdieu himself recognizes (BOURDIEU; WACQUANT, 1992) more effort should be devoted to understanding the relationship among fields: how capitals flow from one field to another and how the conversion effectively takes place. Bourdieu claims that such enterprise was underplayed during his career due to its complexity. 2.3.7. Interaction and Social Networks in Bourdieu’s theory Within Bourdieu’s theory, social networks play a very limited role. As I showed above, social capital constitutes one kind of capital, where stable social networks are mobilized in order to attain other kinds of capital. Following, I argue that social networks could complement Boudieu’s theory in two dimensions: a broader understanding of social space, and the complete incorporation of social networks as one explanatory factor for social change and inter-field interaction. As I pointed above, Bourdieu’s idea of social capital is inspired in the Weberian concept of closure. For Bourdieu, powerful actors are able to close a social space to outsiders by imposing high exchange rates to different types of capital. As a consequence, only the mobilization of strong and durable social ties yields access to resources. In contrast, Granovetter (1973, 1983) suggests that weak ties are much more effective when what is on stake is the possibility of receiving fresh information from outside the actor’s original social milieu. In spite of these contributions from the contemporary American Economic Sociology, Bourdieu (BOURDIEU; WACQUANT, 1992) confirms his interpretation that such efforts are related to a “radical Durkheimianism”. For Bourdieu, the study of social networks as an explanatory device has its tradition in the Durkheim’s teachings on community cohesion. As such, it doesn’t take in account, from Bourdieu’s perspective, that the most important relationships in a field are not those of direct interaction, but those governed by the power logics that govern the game between different strata. Nonetheless, Bourdieu (2005) borrows inspiration on Simmel as well, in order to clarify this point. It is worthwhile to recover the original Simmelian proposition, for its centrality in this discussion. For Simmel, it is not the direct contact between producers that 22 explains the market dynamics. In contrast, Simmel (1955) explains, it is the interaction of producers within a common consumer that constitutes competition: Innumerable times, [competition] achieves what usually only love can do: the divination of the innermost wishes of the other, even before he himself becomes aware of them. Antagonistic tension with tension with his competitor sharpens the businessman’s sensitivity to the tendencies of the public, even to the point of clairvoyance, in respect to future changes in the public’s tastes, fashions, interests. (SIMMEL, 1955, p. 62) Bourdieu follows the same simmelian intuition in a later writing on economic anthropology, and suggests a dialogue with Harrison White’s network theory: [The] sometimes lethal constraints the dominant producers impose on their current or potential competitors are invariably mediated by the field: consequently, competition is never other than ‘indirect conflict’ (in Simmel’s sense) and is not targeted directly against the competitor. In the economic field, as elsewhere, the struggle does not need to be inspired by any intention to destroy for it to produce destructive effects. (We may deduce an ‘ethical’ consequence from the vision of the worlds of production as fields: just as we can say with Harrison White that ‘each firm is distinctive,’ as a position in a field, a point in a space. (…). (BOURDIEU, 2005, p. 83). The relational aspect among actors in a field is explained by indirect interactions. As Mohr (2000) and De Nooy (2003) explain, this concept is covered by the contemporary social network analysis by the concept of structural equivalence, sharply different from social cohesion. This distinction will be recovered in the following section, where I develop the interactionist and social network approach to social spaces, in order to build a comparison with Bourdieu’s theoretical body. 2.4 Interactionist Approach to Fields The idea of mapping a social space through the reconstruction of its social networks may be found already in the works of Durkheim. Durkheim (1915) offers a picture of a community where it is in its core where its moral values are stronger, while going towards the periphery we find a lower density of social ties and lower presence of the community’s values. Heirs of the Durkheimian tradition, such as Mary Douglas and Randall Collins, advanced the core/periphery model to encompass dynamics inside the community. Douglas 23 (1986) shows how in many communities several rites of passage are possible only at the fringes of the community, where visibility is lower. Douglas compares the community to a human body. Following Durkheim’s lead, Douglas shows how the sacredness of the human body is projected to the community body. As a consequence, profane practices (as opposed to sacred practices) may occur only at the fringes of the community. For Collins, social life takes place through interactions and rituals (COLLINS, 2004). Out of these interactions and rituals, individuals generate emotional energy, and common symbols and shared meanings emerge, maintaining the “social glue”. So far, Collins follows closely Durkeim’s footsteps. In addition, following Mead and Goffman, Collins believes that the individuals’ identities are constructed at the interactions. Moreover, such interactions might be cooperative, hierarchical as well as competitive. If in a competitive situation an individual is unable to sustain the required emotional energy to keep the game going, he will be eventually excluded from that circle. Collins recovers, for that purpose, the history of the field of philosophy, from the Ancient China until our times, to illustrate how communities of philosophers evolved around circles of interactions and public discussions (COLLINS, 2000). Such circles included from three to seven competing philosophical schools. If the community at a given period generated more than seven schools, a skeptical movement would take place and subsequent consolidation would follow. Conversely, as the number of schools approached its minimum, a cognitive space would be open for new schools to emerge. Following these intuitions, Collins reconstructed the history of philosophy as cycles between fragmentation and consolidation of schools, which are documented by both the social networks of philosophers as well as the cognitive networks among the philosophy schools. The role of conflict is central in his narrative, as he adds to his theory a conflict dimension mainly borrowed from Weber (COLLINS, 1975). Collins shows that truly new ideas in the philosophical field didn’t emerge necessarily from new comers to the field, but several times from incumbents who reacted to challengers. In spite of the inclusion of the conflictive dimension by interactionist scholars, like Collins, most of the social network analysis tradition still follows closely core/periphery paradigm, where the density of ties is the major explanatory factor. In the following section, I will recover Harrison White’s approach on the analysis of social network, as an alternative to the cohesion approach. 24 2.4.1 The Harrison White School of Social Network Analysis White, Boorman and Breiger (1976), influenced by Simmel’s idea of indirect interaction among competitors, developed the concept of “structural equivalence”. Two actors are structurally equivalent if they are connected to the same actors in the network. Also, they do not need to be directly connected in order to be structurally equivalent. Needless to say, few actors will be perfectly structural equivalent. For that reason, the authors proposed an algorithm to build a proximity matrix among all actors in the network. In that matrix, the authors were able to group those actors who were closely structurally equivalent in common partitions. These partitions were labeled “positions”, for as in the Social Role Theory (MERTON, 1968; NADEL, 1957), individuals in the same role would be embedded in a similar pattern of relations. The authors applied this structural equivalent analysis approach to the data extracted from social networks in a monastery and built structural positions across time. In contrast to the standard cohesion analysis, these “positions” showed to the researchers which groups were engaged in the conflict that would eventually lead the monastery to its end. As a consequence, “structural position” was incorporated to social network analysis as distinct to social cohesion. Direct and indirect heirs of White might be divided in three groups. A first group, exemplified by Mark Granovetter (and as a matter of fact, one of the White’s supervisees), attempted to understand whole structures and how information flows through these structures. A second group, exemplified by Ronald Burt, reduced the idea of structural equivalence to an individual actor’s feature. Thus, a strategic actor should improve his structural position in order to exploit the lack of connections among isolated actors. Burt labeled such lack of ties “structural holes” (BURT, 1992). By focusing on the individual actor, Burt brings back the methodological individualism that was refused by the early economic sociological tradition. Finally, a third stream of scholars, not satisfied to limit themselves to purely structural analyses, chose to understand how the structure of an organizational field affected the diffusion of rules and norms (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1983; DIMAGGIO, 1993). 2.4.2. Neo-Institutionalism and Social Networks In the Powell and DiMaggio’s proposal of neo-institutionalism, the idea of field was originally inspired on Bourdieu and Warren (MOHR, 2005), on the extent that it referred to a social space that includes all relevant actors in an economic sector and encompasses shared 25 meanings and schemata. Yet, the conflictive aspect, present in both Bourdieu’s and Collins’s writings was downplayed by the early neo-institutional theorists. Abundant bibliography has explored the limitations and developments of the neoinstitutional school. I want here to point three limitations: tendency for reification of social forms (Mohr, 2005), lack of prominence to agency (DIMAGGIO, 1988; MACHADO-DASILVA, FONSECA, CRUBELLATE, 2005) and conflict (MISOCZY, 2003), and lack of emphasis on the interactional aspect of the theory (SCOTT, 2001). As the neo-institutional approach gained popularity, its phenomenological roots were displaced in favor of a more positivistic approach. In that sense, social meaning, as a product of social construction, was taken as a “thing” that diffused across a given community. Several studies tried to explore how these social forms diffused, were adopted and how they affected companies’ survival (for instance, see BAUM; OLIVER, 1992). This trend cut loose the need to ask some basic questions on social dynamics: who create new forms? How do these forms and meanings change as they diffuse across a field? How do competitive forms interact in a given field? How do conflict and coalitions affect the construction of these forms and meanings? Most importantly for the scope of this article: how does the field’s social network change in tandem with the construction of meaning? The Neo-Institutionalist effort to introduce the interactionist aspect to the Field theory, although explicit in its initial proposition (DIMAGGIO; POWELL, 1983), received little attention from its followers (SCOTT, 2001). One of the few articles that included a social network aspect to field was DiMaggio’s (1986) study of U.S. museums’ managers. In this study, DiMaggio borrows White, Boorman and Breiger approach of structural position in order to understand whether museum managers in the same position would share the same features. Although the study was successful in uncovering common features among individuals in the same position, its cross-sectional approach limited the possible inference of the field’s dynamics. In other words, there was still a deficit in the understanding of the underlying process that explained how networks and meaning constructed each other. 2.4.3. Contemporary Social Network Analysis If the neo-institutionalist bandwagon underplayed the role of social networks, the social network tradition went mostly to the other direction, towards a lack of emphasis on meaning, power, or less attention to a field as a whole. 26 For instance, Burt (2004) analyzed how good ideas are brought to organizations. In his study with 673 managers, he confirmed his hypothesis that individuals who control a larger number of structural holes have higher probability of bringing new ideas. Nonetheless, in this study, there is a lack of connection with the implementation phase, which touches the hierarchical and power structures of any organization (OBSTFELD, 2005). Gulati and Gargiulo’s (1999) study on strategic alliances is an example of social network analysis that almost doesn’t take in consideration the meaning that is embedded in social ties. The authors use longitudinal data on strategic alliances to predict future alliances. Although the authors are successful in building a robust explanatory model, we find a reification of social ties. Questions like, “what does flow within these ties” or “how does the creation of new ties connect with the overall social context” remain unanswered. A better attempt to understand the nature of ties and their role in construction of organizational fields might be find at Powell et al. (2005). In this research, the authors reconstruct the strategic alliances among 482 firms. Their analysis explores how the logics of strategic alliances evolve as the field turns to be more mature. To be sure, their effort achieves a high understanding of how individual actions structure the whole field, and conversely, how the whole social context influence individual action. Nevertheless, the conflictive aspect remains barely untouched. The social network tradition might have swerved to a “too structuralist approach”, meaning that the questions it has proposed to answer generally converged to a reification of social ties, lack of understanding of the total social context and underrating of the role of power and conflict. This criticism was absorbed by Harrison White in his later writings on social networks and markets, which suggested better perspectives of convergence between Bourdieu’s field approach and the social network studies. 2.3. The “linguistic turn” in the Social Network Analysis White (1992a), in his book “Identity and Control” proposed that markets are organized around “disciplines”. A discipline imposes the pecking order that allocates customers and suppliers. As a consequence, the social ties among commercial partners follow a pattern dictated by these disciplines. One might observe a Parsonian departing point in White’s theory, as “disciplines” could be compared to “functions”. However, White departs from the Parsonian model in at least two dimensions. 27 First, White stressed the structuralist dimension of social allocation. In one of his early writings, “Chains of Opportunity” (1970), White modeled the migration of priests among temples using stochastic equations. In other words, he seeks to understand in what extent the career ladder is determined not by the skills of an individual, but just “structural luck”. The stochastic models provided a random factor in the allocation of priests to churches, where vacancies and individuals flowed. When White reincorporates his idea of “chains of opportunity” to his studies of social networks and disciplines, he proposed that disciplines play an ex-post role of explaining the allocation already occurred. As a consequence, disciplines would be, to a certain extent, subordinated to purely structural randomness. Second, White proposed that identities are social constructs aimed at establishing control over a pattern of allocation. Here, in contrast to the Parsonian idea of allocation of individuals to social roles, White reverted the causality that links social roles and patterns of interaction. It is exactly in order to maintain or change a given pattern of relations that a group of individuals enact a new social identity. In consonance to Abbott’s (1988) study of how different professions interact to form a complex system, White understands the coupling of professions as regulated by disciplines that are constantly under revision due to the struggle among the professions. One may observe here the points of contact between Bourdieu’s cultural capital and White’s identity, as important institutional devices on the allocation of personnel to economic activities. In addition, both see the relationship of different professions as conflictive, as individuals try to control the social interactions to their favor. Although both admit a certain degree of fuzziness in the social allocation, White proposed that in several regions of a given social network disciplines (or identities) and social networks are only loosely coupled. In such regions, the phenomenon of “cat-net” emerges. The cat-net phenomenon depicts situations where individuals take up categorical roles, but are able to establish social relations that are not predicted by that category’s script (WHITE, 1992b). As individuals establish social ties outside their original social groups, they are led to acquire new information not originally included in their social milieu (in consonance with Granovetter’s, findings). Above all, such ties have also the constitutive effect of affecting one’s identity. As Mische and White (1998) argued, as individuals cross different social milieus, they are led to develop linguistic skills that enable them to perform such transitions. Here, White established an important departure from his own earlier propositions. While in “Identity and Control” the individual was considered as almost only the confluence of social ties, in his later writings the individual is brought back as the a point of tension among diverse social contexts. That is to 28 say, individuals constantly face streams of experience which are not necessarily consistent with the social roles they took up6. By facing these contradictory situations, individuals develop strategies to handle ambiguously conflictive claims and potentially reenact their identities (WHITE, 2002a). From this perspective, a “too structural approach” is phased out in favor of a phenomenological approach. In the same way that social ties influence one’s identity, it is also one’s identity and social skills that will permit and explain the establishment of social ties. As a consequence, this later approach places linguistic skills as important as social ties7. Conversely, White tries to avoid the reification of social ties, for now they must be understood as the crystallization of linguistic interaction. White brings these intuitions back to markets as social networks (WHITE, 2002a) in order to understand how suppliers and customers are coupled (and uncoupled) in markets. The starting point to define the relevant unit of analysis is the same of Bourdieu’s: The social field, to use Bourdieu’s term (…) is an inhomogeneous collation among levels of embedded identities, and moreover such organizations themselves become embedded in still-larger contexts in diverse ways. Nonetheless we uncover plausible regularities in strategizing across many scopes and domains. (WHITE, 2002a, p. 13) White states that in any market a price/quality schedule is established. Suppliers who deviate from the expected schedule will either be expelled from the market, for their quality is not consistent with the customers’ expectations, or they will lose money, for they will be offering larger volumes at the same quality point. A price/quality schedule depicts the identity of a market, and, again following the simmelian intuition, it is not established by direct contact among suppliers, but through interaction with common customers. In opposition to the neo-classical model of perfect market, White envisions the coupling of suppliers and customers regulated by the concentration of players and the substitutability of goods. In consonance with Industrial Organization insights, White states, the higher the concentration, the higher the leverage of a given group. As a consequence, if suppliers are few and control scarce resources, they are able to impose an “upstream” logic to a field. This is the case of several industries strongly dependent on basic material supply. Conversely, if customers are powerful and they rely on gatekeepers in order to make their purchasing decisions, a 6 Students of Organizational Theory will notice that White’s ideas resonate Weick’s (1969, 1976) phenomenological approach to sensemaking and loosely coupled systems. 7 The phenomenon that describes the establishment of social ties as an effect of individuals’ identities is called “homophily” (MARK, 1998). Fligstein (1997) explored how actors are able to explore institutional structures to their advantage. 29 downstream logic is imposed. This is the case of artistic fields, where artists have to submit themselves to critics’ scrutiny in order to have their artistic production distributed. In either “downstream” or “upstream” markets, customers and suppliers are coupled in chains that reflect their positioning in the market’s price/quality schedule. This positioning is established and reinforced through signaling and the narratives around each supplier, which constitute the social construction of reputation. As a market evolves to be a mature field, the web of narratives coalesces around taken-for-granted codes that regulate how individual firms should be coupled to the market. “Code-switching”, or the capacity of subverting the established taken-for-granted codes, is possible, but it is a rare event and possible only in those areas where social networks and disciplines are loosely coupled and the outcomes less predictable. In these occasions, firms are able to uncouple or decouple downstream or upstream claims and get fresh action, while enacting new codes for the field. At this point, I’d like to take stock and discuss the points of contact and divergence between Bourdieu’s concept of field and White’s social network theory. 2.4. Fields and Networks – is a convergence possible? Frame 2.1 depicts a comparison between Bourdieu’s field and White’s social network main elements. Concept Bourdieu White Social Space Unit • • Inspired in Bourdieu’s social space, is defined as a domain where several identities are embedded • Structure is given by the set of relationships among individuals • Given by an individual’s degree of similarity in its pattern • Structure • Position • Field is an analytical category that depicts the social space where individuals invest their capital Social Space where actors share cognitive schemata, but also struggle for better positioning The structure (of a Field) is given by the distribution and volumes of different kinds of capital Given by the individual’s volume and kinds of capital 30 Actors’ Schemata • • The perception of how a field works is embodied in one’s habitus The habitus is the product of an actor’s trajectory in the field • • of connections to other actors (structural equivalence) An actor’s schemata and linguistic skills is driven by her switching across social domains Collocation in structural equivalent positions accounts for similar cognitive schemata Frame 2.1: Analytical Tools Source: Author’s elaboration As both Bourdieu and White draw on the Simmelian intuition of indirect conflict to understand the phenomenon of competition, we are tempted to consider the two theories as equivalent or at least comparable. From this perspective, comparative studies should be able to depict a given field from both capital structure (following Bourdieu) and network structure (following White and followers). Anheier, Gerhards and Romo’s (1995) study on German writers somewhat followed this logic, by testing Bourdieu’s propositions against a social network based social space. To be sure, Bourdieu himself implied that his capital-based construct should be empirical more stable than other constructs. Nevertheless, a comparison of theories solely based on their results might lead us to an “epistemological fallacy”. In other words, when we restrict ourselves to compare theories only on the basis of their methodology, we might lose the underlying theoretical assumptions that help us to make sense out of the observed social phenomena. Swedberg (2004) clearly states this point, as he defends Bourdieu’s approach as the one that most makes sense for an interpretative sociology. As Bourdieu builds the habitus as an embodiment of the field’s structure, he is assuming that individuals are geared towards accumulation and advantageous exchange of capitals (although obdurate schemata might preclude one’s adaptability to new circumstances). As a result, stresses Swedberg, the way that we understand one’s interest is consistent with our analysis of a field’s capital structure. From this perspective, our understanding of one’s social network structure is only a secondbest, for social ties are conceived as a byproduct of one’s action. Again, following Swedberg, one’s action is best understood as motivated by her interests, which are better described as 31 constructed in tandem with the evolution of a capital-based field rather than a social networkbased field. But here we face a conundrum: if the establishment and disruption of ties are proxies of social action, we should ask whether all social action is always coupled to capital-driven interests (capital, here, in Bourdieu’s broadest sense). Conversely, if not all social action is hastily explained by capital-driven interests, that would open up several novel avenues of investigation: a less intellectualized conception of agency would emerge (SCHATZKI, 1997), while we would be able to avoid an over-determination of social action. In short, even when I advocate that social networks are second-best to explain interests, they are still a promising methodological device to uncover unexpected social action. In short, capital and social network constructs are not reducible to each other. At this point, I shift our attention to some central substantive themes in both theories, namely how the authors understand stability, change and the role of conflict. Table 2 summarizes Bourdieu’s and White’s positions around these themes: Theme Bourdieu White How is stability sustained? • • Powerful actors Incumbent actors enact reproduce the identities that establish a domination relationship of control relationships in the field over other actors by defining its “rules of • the game” “Downstream” or “upstream” logics are established depending on the concentration of players How is change possible? • • • External changes impact • “Cat-Net” phenomenon the field’s internal permits the decoupling distribution of capital between categorical Crises reveal the roles and social dogmatic dimension of networks; this the Field’s rules phenomenon is possible Internal subversion of only in certain areas of a rules are rare events social network 32 What is the role of • conflict? Conflict is central to • Actors do struggle explain position and around codes (code- position-taking in a enacting and code- Field switiching), but most change is due to ambiguous action Frame 2.2: Major Theoretical Themes Source: Author’s elaboration As pointed above, Bourdieu’s approach tends to focus on the reproduction of the structures of domination, and social change is best explained as the outcome of a chain of events triggered by either an exogenous change of resources or an internal upheaval. Although White supports Bourdieu’s thesis that the system’s coupling is a reflection of the power relations, his gaze is always seeking for that action that is played out of ambiguity. Before concluding this article, I will explore an empirical example that brings together both Bourdieu’s and White’s insights. 2.4.1 The Rise of the Medici in Florence Padgett and Ansell (1993) recovered the blockmodeling technique proposed by White, Scott and Breiger (1976) and applied to organizational fields by DiMaggio (1986) to understand the process that led the Medici to power in Florence. For that purpose, the authors reconstructed the following layers of network relationships: economic transactions (mostly capital lending), marital exchanges among families and political affiliation and influence. Their study shows that when the Florentian elite became polarized, due to the ostracism of those involved in the revolt of the Ciompi, the Medici were able to occupy a privileged space among groups that wouldn’t be connected otherwise. While the Medici were able to establish marital relationships with the old aristocracy, at the same time they were the only ones to lend capital to the impoverished mercantilist classes. In other words, the logic of ostracism imposed by the old elite created an obstacle to this very elite to sustain its hegemony in the whole social space. Due to this polarization, the Medici were able to establish connections among the dispersed groups. For a long period, the Medici followed closely the hegemonic logic imposed by the elite, offering no resistance. Against the flood of conflictive prerogatives stemmed from opposing parties, the Medici 33 utilized ambiguity and geographical compartmentalization in order to keep their relationships apart from one another. It was only when large contingents of the important families in Florence were indebted with the Medici that they seized power. In parallel to the effort of seizing power, the Medici also embraced a Republican discourse that justified their action. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that the development of this new discourse (or new category, to use White’s terminology) was possible only when the structural allowed such turn. This analysis contrasts, but at the same time, complements Bourdieu’s theory. How would be a Bourdieusian interpretation of Padgett and Ansell’s analysis? My attempt would be to characterize the Medici’s action as occupying a position (in Bourdieu’s sense) unoccupied by other actors. By accumulating social and economic capital, the Medici were eventually able to achieve political power as well. But two aspects contrast with Bourdieu typical empirical approach. First, Padgett and Ansell’s network analysis provided a hint of the underlying conversion of capitals that would be available to Bourdieu only through qualitative research. Second, their study showed a temporal uncoupling of discourse and structure. To be sure, such temporal uncoupling of intention and results of the action is observed in both Bourdieu and Giddens proposition. Giddens refers to nonintentional action, to that course of action that aims at A but achieves B. And by achieving B (at the structural level) it influenced back the actor’s choices. Bourdieu refers to “unconscious” action in a similar way. However, when Bourdieu depicts cross-sectional fields, a tight coupling of categories (and correspondent discourses) occurs in tandem with positioning. But Padgett and Ansell go beyond the non-intentionallity of Guiddens and Bourdieu. Following White’s footsteps, the authors suggest that the Medici were conscious that they were occupying a privileged position in the field, and were able to sustain this position by the recourse of “Robust Action”. Robust Action is the kind of action that permits a multivocality, or in other words, the actor is able to relate to different, and possibly conflictive, claims. In the case of the Medici, they were able to sustain relationships with opposing groups. The possibility of maintaining a practice that is acceptable by two opposing groups is as important as the construction of the structure itself. As a consequence, it wouldn’t be possible to explain how the Medici were able to seize that unique position without, in parallel, explaining how the attached practices were still legitimate to other actors in the field. An orthodox Bourdieusian approach would have troubles to arrive at the same conclusions, for it wouldn’t be able to explain why powerful actors, from both opposing sides, refrained from imposing sanctions against the Medici, or conversely why the friction of opposing power turfs 34 was not transformed in a generalized crisis (as described in the educational field in France, in 1968; BOURDIEU, 1984b). 2.5. Conclusion and Perspectives for Future Research Our “background” departing point was Parsons’s functional-system architecture. In his model, individuals take up roles, which entail scripts of behavior and pattern of relationships. Such roles are interconnected by a societal system that eliminates enduring conflicts. Norms and rules flow top-down in order to establish social roles changes. A sharp contrast was drawn from both Bourdieu’s and White’s perspectives. My approach to Bourdieu’s concept of field reconstructed the relationship between one’s interests (embedded in his habitus) and the construction of a field. While the concept of habitus links Bourdieu’s practice theory to his concept of field, the grounding of interests on capital and closure restricts the possibility to explain some situations when social change takes place. White, in contrast, recovers the social network embedding of actors to explain how signaling and narratives are constructed. These narratives collectively constitute a market’s identity. In the same way, code-switching enables less powerful actors to change a market’s dynamics. Although the social network approach follows closely the byproduct of social action, it takes pains to explain why the actors took that chain of actions. In spite of this contrast, both approaches might be complementary. As shown above, Padgett and Ansell reconstruction of the social networks among the Florentine families combined both Bourdieu’s and White’s elements. As such, White’s approach might help the researcher to understand how “fresh action” is taken a given field. Finally, a remarkable point of contact between Bourdieu and White (as well as the Neo-Institutionalist) approaches is the incorporation of Simmel’s intuition that competition is best explained as indirect conflict. But while White builds his social network approach to group together actors in structurally equivalent positions, Bourdieu seeks to understand how actors are similarly positioned in relation to the forces in a field. Future research might explore how social changes occur when social networks are uncoupled from other social structures. 35 3. Jazz Field Evolution, 1930-1969: from Centralized to Decentralized Field Abstract By reconstructing the social networks among Jazz musicians, from 1930 to 1969, I obtain topography of band leaders and their respective styles. The field of Jazz makes a transition from more centralized to more decentralized. The findings suggest one might explain the locus of new style emergence by the field’s structure evolution. When the field is centralized, innovations are born in the core of the field. When it becomes decentralized, one observes innovation at the fringes. Also, the uncoupling of structural and capital variables helps to explore the dynamics of social change. Finally, conflict might precede the transition between centralized and decentralized, suggesting an intermediary transitional stage. 3.1. Introduction The discussion on legitimacy in the production of art has been present at least since Plato’s writings. As a matter of fact, the question whether an art work is appropriate in relation to a given ethical, religious or philosophical authority has been the core of art studies. From this perspective, the investigation on the development of artistic styles has been traditionally coupled with theological or philosophical accounts. Although Danto was not the first scholar to criticize this perspective, he was probably one of the first contemporary philosophers to formalize the separation of philosophy and art (DANTO, 1964). Danto establishes the idea of “Art World”, which encompasses artists, critics, curators, gatekeepers and audience. In this article, Danto claims that only accepted members of art worlds are entitled to establish aesthetical judgments on art pieces produced by this community. Although members of an art world might appropriate philosophical arguments in order to legitimize and rank art pieces, the production of art is not ultimately subordinated to philosophical claims. In other words, it is the art world’s member’s responsibility to establish the dichotomy between art and non-art8. For Danto, members in an art world produce aesthetical judgments based on assertions grounded on theories of beauty. These assertions are not necessarily arrayed in a coherent way. Moreover, states Danto, the richness of an art world is given by the plurality of assertions that coexist. 8 Danto explores Duchamp’s art as examples of pieces that would be conventionally classified as mundane objects. They are considered art pieces due to the reception and judgment of members in the XX century Art World. 36 Becker (1982) argues that Danto inaugurated the possibility of institutional analysis of artistic production. From this perspective, the evolution of styles would not be considered as subsidiary to the societal development, but gains the status of an autonomous object for scientific investigation. To be sure, art worlds are not insulated from society. Technological, demographic, legal, political, economic and other factors do impact the evolution of art worlds (PETERSON ; ANAND, 2004). However, art world members have to interpret and enact exogenous impacts in order to take action (SCOTT, 2001). As a result, the response to external stimuli is also affected by institutional constrains. Moreover, actors might interpret these stimuli in different ways, which might produce conflicting views on the community’s future perspectives. The relative protection of artistic spheres from the other social spaces has been object of study of classic sociology. Weber, for instance, claimed that the constitution of an autonomous artistic sphere occurs in tandem with the process of rationalization and modernization. The uncoupling of economic, religious and aesthetical values permits, from Weber’s perspective, the emergence of autonomous spheres in a society. As a result, the source of legitimacy for the artistic production is increasingly found inside artistic communities (WEBER, 1995). Bourdieu (1993a,1993b) takes both Weber’s and Danto’s intuition in order to elaborate his conception of artistic field. For Bourdieu, actors in a field engage in a plurality of purposes. These purposes might be contradictory, which leads the actors to clash with each other for legitimacy. Frith (1996) identifies in Bourdieu’s writings three sources of legitimacy that commonly clash inside an artistic field. First, art is considered as an intellectual production and correlates with the expression of social distinction (BOURDIEU, 1984a). From this perspective, art should be justified by critics who are usually linked to academic institutions (GREENFELD, 1989). Conversely, the elites enact and support the legitimacy of academic institutions in order to establish the boundaries between low and high-brow art forms (DIMAGGIO, 1982). In music, the classical music is the best example of genre linked to the intellectual source of legitimacy. The second source of legitimacy is the consumption market. Sheer success in sales is found to motivate many artists to follow fads and fashions. Although aiming at commercial success is considered as deconsecrating the artistic sphere, several artists insist that their purpose is not to attend to transcendental philosophical claims, but to entertain their audiences. From this perspective, insists Frith, the live experience and relationship between 37 artist and audience justifies the commercial appeal. Country music is probably the best example of genre grounded on the commercial source of legitimacy (PETERSON, 1997). Finally, Frith identifies the folk roots as a source of legitimacy. Folk artists claim that they produce pieces that follow a consolidated tradition. Attempts to include foreign elements to this tradition are seen with suspicion. Also, commercial success is regarded as deleterious to the continuity of folkloric heritage. Finally, Frith depicts folk art as belonging to the dayby-day habits of a community. As a consequence, the boundaries between audience and artist are murky, as all individuals involved share the same cultural background. The Blues is one example of genre close to folkloric roots. Peterson (1997) believes that all styles are grounded in one or another source of legitimacy. Although not all styles migrate across sources of legitimacy, Peterson (1972) developed a model where Jazz would have crossed these three institutional boundaries along its history. In its inception, in the dawn of the twentieth century, Jazz was closer to its folkloric roots. As it achieved commercial appeal, it was transformed to entertain larger audiences. Finally, its artists promoted the transformation of Jazz in a high art form, and institutionalized it in academic courses. The evolution of Jazz from folk to high art form should not be seen as a general law. On the contrary, Peterson takes pains in explaining that at each stage several exogenous and endogenous factors led Jazz musicians to pursue this path. He is explicit in arguing that if more advanced recording technology existed in the forties, jazz might have never crossed the high art boundary. Although Peterson is careful in avoiding a teleological account of Jazz evolution, his description of a macro process tends to overshadow the inner conflicts within the Jazz field along this path. Also, it may lead us to believe that once the jazz field crossed an institutional boundary, all its members were converted to a new ethos. In contrast, I will show that the evolution of the Jazz field is not explained by the substitution of legitimacy sources, but by the increasing plurality of legitimacy sources. Once this is accepted, then the challenge is to understand how the field evolved internally towards this stage and what new field logics emerged in tandem with this plurality of styles. 3.2. An Institutional Account of Jazz Evolution The history of an art field might be told from several perspectives. A musicologist would choose those records that were landmarks in the evolution of a style. Such history would depict how innovations like dissonant scale changes, atonal chords and instrumental 38 development were created and diffused in the field. Such effort would necessarily need the support of musicologists and critics in order to codify several albums under these music categories. A historian of music would be interested in the macro societal trends that occurred in tandem with and might have influences the evolution of a music. Such factors include the technological changes, demographic and taste shifts, economic development or slowing down, and the industrial organization of the phonographic and entertainment sectors. Although these elements are crucial for understanding the macro surrounding of the development of a style, they do not suffice for exogenous impacts are translated to fields through specific endogenous mechanisms. Although my focus will be on the internal mechanisms, I will not overlook those crucial societal changes, neither the more important musical innovations. I want to pinpoint those processes that constituted the internal sources of legitimacy and mechanisms in the functioning of the field. I argue that these processes interact to each other and explain the emergence and evolution of styles in the field. These elements are: (1) the emergence of a professional body of musicians, (2) formalization and rationalization of Jazz, (3) the emergence of a professional body of critics, and (4) the consolidation of academic institutions that supported directly or indirectly the education of jazz musicians. 3.2.1. Emergence of a Professional Body of Musicians New Orleans is celebrated as the geographic place where Jazz was born (GIOIA, 1997; BERENDT ; HUESMANN, 1998; LOPES, 2002; GRIDLEY, 2003). It is there where important African-American musicians like Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet started their careers. Most musicians assembled around schools bands, temples and entertaining venues. From this perspective, Jazz was present in several spheres of a musician’s life: at his community and at his job place. The continuity of day-by-day life and professional performance is typical of music styles linked to folk roots (FRITH, 1996). Trained black musicians moved away from concert music (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 55). In comparison to this body of African-American musicians, we observe an emergent group of White musicians educated in conservatories. A high-brow/low brow relationship is established, where the “formally educated” musicians are regarded as superior in artistry to their self-educated counterparts. As Swing emerges in the thirties, white and conservatoryeducated musicians and black and self-educated musicians started to play together. 39 A young generation of white musicians like Benny Goodman, Bix Biederbeck, Bunny Berigan, Frank Trumbauer, Artie Shaw, Red Nichols, Red Norvo, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, were trained by sweet bands like Paul Whiteman, influenced by the original “hot” New Orleans’s vernacular. As romantic or deviants, they clashed with black musicians who struggled to establish a serious professional ethos (LOPES, 1997, p. 143). The commercial success of Swing led several African-American musicians to join the jazz market at large cities like New York and Chicago. An army of leaders and sidemen start to interact in jam sessions, where they could exchange information, learn and get gigs. The jam session served as a rank mechanism, where musicians disputed for status among their peers. A musician’s rank was based mostly on his capacity of improvising (LOPES, 1997, p. 96). This contrasts sharply from the sweet band’s ethos (LOPES, 1997, p.147). Jam sessions were also important to allow musicians to develop new styles and buffer them from commercial pressures. Finally, musicians looked for sheer pleasure with their peers (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 30; LOPES, 1997, p. 151-153): The practice of jamming – groups of musicians improvising outside regular commercial jobs – represented the extent to which this practice defined these musicians’ artistry (…) It was a performance space in which musicians could articulate an ethos independent of commercial popular performance conventions. This separate cultural space as ritual became the locus for various transformations in the ethos of professional musicians. The first transformation, of course, was improvisation becoming the defining skill of this professional class of musician. Eventually, however, this autonomous cultural space was where professional musicians developed the ethos of improvisational jazz as a distinct ‘art’ separate from commercial popular music. (LOPES, 1997, p. 153) Following Parsons (1959), we observe an institutionalized way socializing new members and dealing with competition. Musicians frequently played different songs and styles at jam sessions and at Swing concerts. At the former venues, they played for themselves. While at the later venues, they followed the band leader’s request. I suggest that a mechanism similar to decoupling (MEYER ; ROWAN, 1991) occurred with this separation: musicians ritualistically behaved in one way in front of a white middle class audience, while behaved in another way at jam sessions. As Scott (2001) suggests, decoupling mechanisms should not be understood as dichotomist phenomena, as if decoupling entailed in complete buffering against external influences. On the contrary, Swing orchestra leaders frequently did absorb innovations originated at jam sessions. 40 The Bop revolution (DEVEAUX, 1997) promoted the music played at the jam sessions as the “real” Jazz, while Swing would be a commercial distortion. I believe that Bop was a revolution not only in musical terms, but as an evidence of the affirmation of the body of professional Jazz musicians as hegemonic in the field. As a result, whatever was produced at jam sessions was now of interest of most jazz fans. To be sure, the jazz audience mingled, as it turned more intellectualized. However, those who attended to Bop performances were loyal to what they believed to be the true Jazz. As the jam session mechanism became more tightly coupled with the commercial side of the music industry, social attainment became closer to achieved rather than ascribed features (PARSONS, 1959). The consequence was a crystallization of social hierarchies: a musician’s career was linked to a ladder grounded in the jazz community. Moreover, the higher the importance of this hierarchy, the higher was the centralization of musicians in the field. In that sense, the Bop revolution helped to reinforce and strength the earlier hierarchical ladders. Jam sessions phased away in the fifties for several reasons: emergence of real state speculation in mid-Manhattan, watering of the disputes at jam session, and sheer ritualization of the improvisation. The rearticulation of musicians took place around associations during the sixties. Many of these associations were responsible for training and launching many Free Jazz musicians (GIOIA, 1997). 3.2.2. Formalization and Rationalization of Jazz Weber (1995) describes how the Western music evolved from its folk roots to the classical vernacular. Within this process, Weber sheds light on the process of rationalization and formalization of music. The adoption of music sheets, the creation of standards and rational division of notes occurred in tandem with the process of modernization in the Western world. To be sure, this process was supported by different social groups. In medieval times, monks were in the forefront in this process. During the eighteenth century, in contrast, a professional body of musicians pushed this process forward, with the inception of tempered scales (ISACOFF, 2003). The formalization and rationalization in music supports the normative constitution of a professional body. Those who are skilled in a particular set of rules are accepted by its professional community. While the formalization is important in order to create and diffuse common language and norms among musicians, the process of rationalization occurs in 41 tandem with the establishment of professional musicians as an autonomous source of legitimacy. We may compare the Weberian account with Bourdieu’s description on how art fields become autonomous (BOURDIEU, 2002). As art fields become autonomous, its members will generate and share cultural capital, which becomes a distinctive feature of its participants. Nevertheless, Bourdieu doesn’t expect this process to follow a linear path. A similar process may be observed in Jazz, but its evolution follows an oscillating movement between improvisation and formalization. In its origins, the New Orleans and Classic Jazz had little formalization. Musicians used to improvise barely relied on any written records. In contrast, the emergence of the white bands (either in New Orleans, Sweet Bands, or Big Bands) was marked from its inception with the introduction of musical sheets. The formalization of several Jazz elements helped its absorption in the emergent American Classic music, exemplified in the work of George Gershwin, Rhapsody in Blue. The diffusion of music sheets led many African American musicians to learn how to read and write them. Ironically, during the thirties, when the Swing bands were in their apex, and AfricanAmerican bands played to white audiences, the former had to memorize music sheets, for white audiences could not bear the idea that African-American musicians could read. In spite of these contradictions, Duke Ellington is probably is considered one of the most important composers of the Swing era (WILLIAMS, 1983). Berliner (1994) describes the evolution of Jazz as a constant tension between the freedom of improvisation and the boundaries imposed by the composition. When Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie started their experiments with Bop, a new wave of improvisation took place in Jazz – mostly based on soloist improvisation. Although the improvisational feature had regained a foothold in commercial venues, it didn’t take long until bebop started to be codified in music sheets. As with Swing, the formalization of Bop helped to its diffusion. By the late fifties, musicologists already observed exhaustion in the Bop paradigm. Several pundits described many improvised solos as previously rehearsed and thus unauthentic. When Ornette Coleman introduced his version of Free Jazz style, one of the most important features was the return to the collective improvisation that existed in the New Orleans and Classic Jazz. It is not surprising, for that reason, that so many European musicians took a leap from Trad Jazz (New Orleans and Classic Jazz) directly to Free Jazz – the collective improvisation basis was a springboard in this transition. 42 3.2.3. Emergence of a professional body of critics I suggest that the evolution of the body of critics in Jazz followed three stages: (a) ideal consumer, (b) educator and (c) narrator on the Jazz evolution. The first issues of Metronome and Down Beat, traditional jazz magazines, already brought critical appraisals on Sweet and Swing bands. “Since the new jazz art world was to be built on connoisseurship, jazz criticism as the domain of special connoisseurs was a regular refrain among early jazz critics.” (LOPES, 178). Most of these accounts were concerned in portraying the experience these critics had at the concert. As a consequence, the reader was led to become identified with the critic as his representative (WHITE, 1993; CAVES, 2000). Musicians were not always in agreement with the critics’ assessment of their work. Duke Ellington’s complaints on how his work was analyzed became a historical landmark in the Jazz field, for it called both for the legitimacy of a body of critics, but at the same time, the formalization of criteria (LOPES, p.199). In tandem with the increasing success of Swing, many fans and musicians grew concerned with how new listeners were introduced to the field. Their fear was that many new listeners would take the commercial side of Swing as the true Jazz. As a consequence, many of these acknowledged fans became critics themselves, and took up the role of educators of the masses of new listeners. The emergence of these body of critics led to what Gendron (1995) called the first war in Jazz. One group of critics, in the early forties, defended that “Swing” was harmful for “Jazz”, and the true jazz was that played in New Orleans style. In contrast to standardized “riffs”9, widely used in Swing, these critics defended that musicians should rely on collective improvisation. In contrast with European influences, they should stress the African roots. A dialogue between critics and musicians was established (LOPES, 171), where critics at small magazines like “Record Changer” defended the return to the New Orleans tradition, while critics at Metronome and Down Beat defended the modernist push of Swing (LOPES, p. 201). Charged with the attack that Swing was too commercialist, the critics at Down Beat and Metronome started to develop criteria to distinguish between “art” and “commerce” in Swing. Duke Ellington would be in the former group, while Glenn Miller would be in the latter. 9 "[A riff] is a short melodic ostinato, usually two or four bars long, which may either be repeated intact (strict riff) or varied to accommodate an underlying harmonic pattern. The riff is thought to derive from the repetitive call-and-response patterns of West African music, and appeared prominently in black-American music from the earliest times." The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 43 Critics who supported Traditional Jazz triggered more profound studies on Jazz, which spurred the quest to define Jazz’s boundaries. At the same time, they intended to impose obstacles to inner development in Jazz. As bop players started to introduce new elements to Jazz, these critics were mostly concerned in maintaining the traditional Jazz intact. Intentionally or not, these critics defended the buffering of early Black culture from the European (and white) culture, for only the protected black culture created genuine Jazz (i.e. New Orleans Jazz, in contrast with the decadent bop, LOPES, 2002, p. 189). The end result was a patronizing position towards Jazz musicians; yet paradoxically, it also represented leftwing intellectuals identified with New Deal policies and against commercialism (LOPES, 2002, p. 194). Nevertheless, the introduction of the discussion around “how should Jazz be judged” opened the way for the introduction of Bop as a legitimate and modernist style. Regardless of the conflict between jazz traditionalists and jazz modernists, early jazz enthusiasts did create the foundations of a jazz art world that made in many ways the modernist revolt possible. Ironically, the high art appreciation promoted by jazz enthusiasts for genuine jazz was easily co-opted by professional musicians as they occupied the emerging art world. (LOPES, 2002, p. 216) The clash between Bop (modernists) and New Orleans and Dixieland (traditionalists) constituted the second war in jazz (GENDRON, 1995). The clash between traditionalists and modernists was favorable to the latter. As Jazz faced a decline in late forties, with the decline of big bands, critics in Down Beat and Metronome embraced the Bop trend as an alternative to revitalize the Jazz world. As a consequence, the role of criticism was not anymore of the priest, who sanctions deviations from the established tradition, but it was much closer to the prophet, who saw in new talents the revelations of the Jazz to come: The critic and musician are fellow acolytes of the first church of jazz. (…) The magical mysteries of the universe and the teleology of jazz are decoded by the keepers of the holy secrets of intuition. (ELWORTH, 1995)10 10 It is striking that the Elworth compares critics to religious roles. Following a sociological approach, Greenfeld (1989) analyzed the Israeli art market using Weber’s accounts on prophets and priests. The key distinction proposed by Weber (1952) is between the legal and rational authority of the priest in contrast with the charismatic authority of the prophet. While the priest would be institutionally linked to the temple, prophets were seen as isolated individuals, and as such, had greater freedom to challenge the established institutions. Berger (1963) revised this model and proposed that prophets were themselves linked to local sects; hence the distinctive feature between prophet and priest is not on whether prophets were institutionally coupled, but to which institutional sphere he was linked. Also, as a member of a sect, the prophet counted not only with his charisma, but with reinterpretation of the Divine Law. As a consequence, the prophetic movement offered the elements of alternative path of rationalization. 44 See for instance how the critic Martin Williams (1983) defends Ornette Coleman as at the same time the heir of Charlie Parker and the initiator of a new avenue in Jazz. If critics are entitled and expected to infer an evolutionary pattern from new talents and new albums, it is unavoidable the clash among these multiple conceptions. During the sixties, Nat Hentoff and Martin Williams confronted each other through the pages of Down Beat on whether Jazz albums were to be judged on aesthetical values only, or whether political affiliation was an important factor. Both had in mind quite different conceptions on how Jazz had and should evolve. Conversely, if during the Bop era we observe an increasing collusion between critics and musicians, when Jazz fragments in several styles and tendencies during the late fifties and sixties, we observe an alignment of factions of critics and musicians (KOFSKY, 1971). As we will see below, the emergence of academic institutions and courses was crucial for housing and legitimating the jazz critics (LOPES, 2002, p. 264). 3.2.4. Consolidation of academic institutions in Jazz In the early jazz, musicians learned one from each other its “chops” (required skills for the job). Among these skills, we find ways of making a horn sound like human voice, chord progressions and collective improvisations. The informal signals, standards and etiquette at the stage are still today largely diffused in informal settings (BERLINER, 1994). From this perspective, the academic institutions might seem irrelevant for the first Jazz musicians. As a matter of fact, musicians like Duke Ellington even avoided the formal education in conservatories. Because the racial segregation made slim the odds of African-American musicians ascend to orchestras, these musicians looked at informal settings as more attractive places for learning. In comparison, most white musicians went to conservatories to gain formal musical education during the early Jazz and Swing era. As Lopes (2002) points out, when Swing reaches a larger audience in the U.S., it is the feature of high education that gave legitimacy to white leaders to conduct the most successful big bands. This situation was almost unchanged until the inception of Bop. Several biographies on Charlie Parker showed that he yearned for a formal education. The picture “Bird” on his life shows the character standing out the house of Stravinsky, as he hoped for a contact with the maestro. Around the same period, Miles Davis was already attending the Julliard School in New York (SZWED, 2002). After few months he gave up his classes, favoring the jam sessions and informal settings. At some point he claimed that he learned more with Charlie 45 Parker and Dizzy Gillespie rather than at Julliard’s classes. In spite of Miles’ disdain to his Julliard background, his formal learning helped him to develop the Modal style he would introduce to Jazz years later. By the late forties, several white musicians who attended conservatories would blend Bop elements with classic elements, generating the predecessors and the seeds of the Cool style (GIOIA, 1992). In contrast, many African-American musicians, in opposition to a “European” influence into Jazz looked for reintroducing the Blues and other African elements in the music. This movement towards African elements was later known as Hard Bop, in opposition to the “Coolness” of white, European influenced musicians (BERENDT ; HUESMANN, 1998). During the fifties several new Jazz schools were established, as well as high school and college Jazz classes are introduced in order to educate new jazz musicians. It was also during the late fifties and sixties that musicians create associations to develop new styles. This effort towards formal institutionalization of Jazz (LOPES, 2002) resulted in the consecration of Jazz as a high-brow art, and the placement of academic institutions as a substitute (or at least complementary) to the earlier jam sessions11. In addition, the consolidation of academic courses and research programs on Jazz is important to house critics in academic positions12. 3.3. A History of Jazz Chart 1 depicts the evolution of Jazz sessions from 1930 to 196913. It confirms the insights collected in secondary bibliography on Jazz history. From 1930 to 1934 we observe a sharp decline in sessions, due to the Great Depression. This is a result of a sharp decline in the overall phonographic industry, which saw its sales decreasing from $106 million in 1921 to $ 5 million in 1933 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 121). The decline in sales led to a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the industry. As a result, Victor, Columbia and Decca emerged as the survivals (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 121). Few recording companies controlled a hierarchical and vertically concentrated industry: “The industry in the early 1930s moved towards a more centralized organization in radio, recording, publishing, film and live performance, which included a greater concentration in booking and management of musicians.” (LOPES, 2002, 11 Whoever visits nowadays Jazz classes at the New School in New York will observe that improvisation has become a regular university discipline. 12 For instance, Dan Morgenstern, former jazz producer and editor of the magazine Down Beat today heads the Jazz Institute at Rutgers. 13 See in the attachments the section “Jazz Recording Sessions Data”, for the description on the source and methodology on recording session data. 46 p.100). The phonographic and entertainment industry became highly concentrated and tightly controlled by few companies. This was expressed through a “tightly integrated networks of production and dissemination of cultural content [which] matured by 1930 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 118). Because these companies favored styles with better commercial fit (like Sweet Bands), we may conclude that the New Orleans and Classic Jazz styles suffered with the Great Depression in the U.S. and with the contraction in the Music Industry. The low wages during the depression allowed the assembling of large and hierarchical big bands (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 117): Life in the big bands was always difficult and never as glamorous as the tuxedos, stage lights, and mirrored balls in the dance halls would suggest. Bands were loosely strung together groups of men, most of whom shared little more than music, and on long and arduous trips their personal habits and problems, their differences in ages and backgrounds, could make for chaotic life. The bands were paternalistic at best, despotic at worst, and could make demands on individuals that were brutally unrealistic. (SZWED, 2000, p. 56). In 1935, the United States started to present signals of recovery. This recovery is expressed on the increase in recording sessions, which coincided with the increase in the Big Band and Swing popularity. Benny Goodman’s famous concert in the Carnegie Hall marked the dawn of Swing’s golden age, as the most popular style in the U.S. Lines of teenagers packed the streets of New York City and Chicago in order to have the opportunity to dance with their friends14. The introduction of the Juke Box in the late 1930s helped to revive the recording industry (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 126). 14 As Swing penetrated the recording industry, it was possible the emergence of soloist improvisers who would be precursors to Bop (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 11) 47 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 19 68 19 66 19 64 19 62 19 60 19 58 19 56 19 54 19 52 19 50 19 48 19 46 19 44 19 42 19 40 19 38 19 36 19 34 19 32 19 30 0 Chart 3.1: Evolution of Sessions Source: Summary of data extracted from Jazz Discography The whole organizational field was marked by a strong centralization. There were few intermediary agents (William Morris Agency, Music Corporation of America (MCA), General Amusements Corporation) who played the broker role in the distribution of content (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 122; Lopes, 1997, p. 101). White managers booked black musicians engagements, which led to the emergence of white gatekeepers (Lopes, 1997, p. 113-114). The forties experienced two important drawbacks in recording session volume. In 1942, just before U.S.’s joined the World War II, musicians went on strike against recording companies. The ban on recording started on August 1st, 1942 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p.7)15. James Petrillo, president of the American Federation of Musicians (AFM) was leading the ban. The American Guild of Musical Artists and the Boston Orchestra followed Petrillo’s leadership. The motivation for the strike was the fear that recordings would eventually substitute live performances. As a consequence, the struggle was not for control of recordings, but for a fixed fee from every sale (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 295). The ban led to the creation of several small independent record companies who complied with the musicians’ requirements (DEVEAUX, 1999, p. 30). Small labels (although more flexible and willing to decrease margins) could not take musicians bound by contractual obligations with larger labels. Hence, they looked for new niches (gospel, R&B, etc.) 15 Another ban against the recording companies was called in 1948. 48 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 303). One of the unexplored niches was the small-combo jazz. Labels that followed this lead included Commodore, Blue Note, Signature, Keynote and Savoy. When the big companies finally folded under the musicians’ pressure16, they followed the small companies in recording small combo jazz (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 297). During the war, recording companies faced important obstacles to produce and distribute records. First, the material used in the records was imported from Eastern Asia, which was under Japan’s control. The war in the Pacific Ocean threatened the supply of shellac, an important ingredient of 78 rpm records (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 297); hence, recording companies stopped channeling investments to slow selling and low margin LPs in the Jazz genre. (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 297) Second, fuel and train usage was channeled to war efforts, which made distribution costly. As a result, the U.S. government imposed harsh restrictions on ‘nonessential’ driving, from January 1943 until September 1944. This restriction impacted black bands, for they were more dependent on road for income (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 244)17. As traveling went down, the Jazz world became increasingly concentrated in the 52nd street in New York City, where the majority of black combos played (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 285)18. The post-war was a watershed for the Jazz history. The original Swing fans were growing older, and less prone to attend all-night concerts. In parallel, the black youth was shifting to Rhythm-and-Blues (closer to African roots and more accessible to the black workers). Also, the post-war recession helped to depress the music industry. These effects combined led to a fast decline among Swing bands (LOPES, 2002, p. 217) and the choosing of Bop as the scapegoat for the relative decline of Jazz in comparison with other genres (SZWED, 2000, p. 86). Swing faced a sharp decline after the war for reasons related with the field’s dynamics. First, several Swing musicians were drafted during the war (DEVEAUX, 1997, p.7). Second, the increased competition among new big bands forced prices down (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 143). Third, because the quantity of talent was constant, musicians didn’t have many constraints in staying at a single band. As a consequence, recognized talent created their own bands, diluting talent and increasing competition (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 144). Fourth, as 16 Decca folded in September 1943, Columbia and Victor folded in 1944. Since white bands had better access to venues, black bands were forced to travel, in order to find gigs. These trips could include incursions into the U.S. “deep south”. 18 The emergence of the 52nd street as a Jazz hub is due to the availability of venues. As Prohibition ceased to rule, Jazz was no longer constrained to underground venues (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 126). Also, in the Spring of 1944 the cabaret tax increased to 30% on venues that promoted public performance. But this tax was not applicable to instrumental music, like Jazz, which led to the flourishing of 52nd street. 17 49 venues were crowed by white Swing bands in the large urban centers in the north, Black musicians had to go to Southern states for available audiences. But discrimination was even stronger there, what made such traveling unattractive (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 150). As a consequence, the several dissolutions of black bands led to the over supply of well qualified musicians, that migrated to the small combo format. The early fifties staged a fast recovery in the U.S., which may be observed in the increasing figures in recording sessions. This increase should be qualified for two reasons. First, due to the shift from 78 rpm to 331/3 rpm technology, more songs could be compiled in a single album, and the cost of minutes per album decreased. As a consequence, recording sessions were longer, in order to record more songs. It was not unusual to consume several days in order to fill up an album. Second, Jazz increased less than other genres, like R&B. As a result, while the overall music industry volume increased, Jazz was not able to retain its share. Nonetheless, the apex in the late fifties also coincides with the period when some of the best known Jazz albums were released: Miles Davis’s “Kind of Blue”, Charles Mingus’s “Mingus Ah Um”, Dave Brubeck’s “Time Out”, Ornette Coleman’s “The Shape of Jazz to Come” and John Coltrane’s “Giant Steps” (BARBER, 2004). Szwed (2002, p. 127) and Lopes (2002) interpret that the surge in quality was an indirect effect of the overall recovery in the phonographic industry. The late fifties and during the sixties the Jazz community observed a steady decline in absolute volume of work, upon the surge of Rock-n-Roll (PETERSON, 1990) and the strengthening of R&B. A recover in the late sixties is probably due to external influences like Bossa Nova and the Rock-n-Roll fusion. Chart 2 depicts the evolution of the leader population in my sample. It contrasts with the evolution of recording sessions in two significant ways. First, from 1930 to the late fifties we generally observe a steady increase in the total number of active leaders, which expresses an increase in total resources available for this population. Second, the decline in number of sessions in the early sixties is much sharper than the decline in number of leaders, which shows a declining rate of sessions per leader. In other words, leaders were willing to stay in the industry, even at lower average work volume. 50 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 66 64 62 60 68 19 19 19 19 56 54 58 19 19 19 50 48 46 44 42 40 38 36 34 52 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 30 19 19 32 0 Chart 3.2: Evolution of Active Leaders Source: Summary of data extracted from Jazz Dischography 3.3.1. The Styles of Jazz The AMG’s classification of albums includes 63 different styles in the Jazz genre. These styles are grouped in “style families”: New Orleans and Classic Jazz, Swing and Big Band, Bop, Cool, Hard Bop, Soul, Fusion, Free Jazz and Latin/World. I use these families of Jazz styles along this chapter, for I believe they borrow legitimacy from distinct sources. 3.3.1.1. New Orleans/Classic Jazz: The “New Orleans/Classic Jazz” comprises in Chart 3 the styles “Hot Jazz”, “New Orleans/Dixieland” and “Revival, Trad.”. It is mostly associated with the roots of Jazz and for many it was considered the true Jazz (PANASSIE, 1973). As many accounts of the history of Jazz go, Jazz was originated in New Orleans in the beginning of the twentieth century. As the African-descendent masses of laborers started to immigrate to the northern industrial cities, the style was spread across the country. Important names like Louis Armstrong, King Oliver were associated with “hot jazz” in the twenties and thirties. 51 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 FOLK Hot Jazz Revival, Trad New Orleans/ Dixieland Swing, Big Band POP Progressive Big-Band AfroCuban Bop FINE ART Cool, West Coast Hard Bop, Post-bop Third Stream Easy Listening Fusion AvantGarde, Free Jazz Adapted from Peterson (1972) Chart 3.3: Jazz Styles’ Time Line Several contemporary scholars show that this style was considered low-brow for several reasons (LOPES, 2002; APPELROUTH, 2003). It resembled African music for its “call-and-response” dynamics, didn’t follow the Western canon of notes, included improvisation and imitated the human voice (APPELROUTH, 2003, p. 119). With the inception of Swing, a way of blending earlier Jazz elements with orchestral features, New Orleans and Classic Jazz was overshadowed by its successful cousin. For years, the word “Jazz” was replaced by the word “Swing”. In contrast with the Europe-oriented Swing, “hot” Jazz was stereotyped as black (and hence libidinal) music, generating a monopoly for black musicians on New Orleans and Classic Jazz (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 125). A strong reaction came in the forties, as Jazz collectors looked for the original roots of Jazz in order to resist the commercial trends in Swing. Lopes (1997, p. 160) depicts them as “self-proclaimed” Jazz experts whose mission was to educate the audience. This education could encompass a dismissal of musicians’ desires and ethos. Hugues Panassié, for instance, claimed that jazz had to be protected from the phonographic industry’s commercialism. 52 DeVeaux (1991) labels such position as “primitivism”, for it aims at keeping the community of Jazz musicians apart from any musical change. This group also saw in the emergence of Bop in the forties a threat to their conception of real Jazz19. From their perspective, Bop represented just another attempt to turn Jazz in merchandise. Although Williams (1983) doesn’t draw a sharp boundary between these styles, Peterson (1972) associates this family with the folk roots of Jazz. If in its beginning mostly African-American musicians played this style, later White and non-American musicians adopted, diffused and transformed this vernacular. 3.3.1.2. Swing/Big Band Early versions of Swing existed at least since 1916 (LOPES, 1997, p. 108). It became hegemonic during the thirties, as a synthesis of sweet music and hot jazz. As pointed above, Swing combined both orchestral and original Jazz elements, making extensive use of big bands. However, we should make a distinction between Swing and its predecessor, the Sweet bands. Sweet bands were also constituted by large sets of musicians, and might incorporate some Jazz elements. One famous example was Paul Whitman’s band. Ironically, he was called the “King of Jazz”, while in reality his music contained very little Jazz. Nonetheless, it was Paul Whitman who ordered from George Gershwin the piece “Rhapsody in Blue”, in 1923. Some of Whitman’s sidemen were able to incorporate some “hot” elements from the original Jazz in their music. Among them, Benny Goodman was one of the most famous and popularized Swing among teenagers in 1935. Besides its undisputable commercial success, it brought together black and white musicians, blurring the established “racial” boundaries. One of the reasons for this integration was the white musicians’ sheer lack of repertoire. For instance, Benny Goodman was one of the first white musicians who played with black musicians (LOPES, 1997, p. 123). 3.3.1.3. Bop Bop was born in the jam sessions at the Harlem. In contrast with Swing’s riffs, Bop playing was unpredictable (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 425). 19 Louis Armstrong was believed to scorn Bop (PORTER, 2002). 53 The new bop melodies were more angular than pop songs and older jazz tunes, and the intervals between notes were wider. (…) [B]op melodic phrases were longer and less repetitious, but at the same time unevenly structured and irregularly placed. (SZWED, 2000, p. 35). It is filled with drum accents, erratic “bombs” (SZWED, 2000, p. 36). DeVeaux (1997) considers Bop as a major revolutionary watershed in the history of Jazz. If before bop Jazz was strongly associated with folk roots or commercial appropriation, Bop opened the way for an intellectual appropriation of the Jazz idiom. Szwed (2000) and DeVeaux (1997) point that Bop was not born out of nothing. The discontinuity and ambiguity in chord progression was already applied, in a lesser scale, by Lester Young (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 113). It was actually a creative blending of elements already present in the playing of the following precursors: Roy Eldridge (trumpet), Charlie Christian (electric guitar), Art Tatum (piano), Jimmy Blanton (bass), Lester Young (tenor sax) (SZWED, 2000), Coleman Hawkins (DEVEAUX, 1997). DeVeaux (1997) goes beyond the musical elements in Bop. For this researcher, precursors like Coleman Hawkins introduced the ethos of the Jazz musician as a professional musician. This ethos favored the development of Bop as closer to an art form, rather than another fad. Bop musicians, like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, pushed the borders in terms of musical sophistication, while recovering elements from “hot jazz”. The dissonances and scale changes introduced in Bop made it increasingly harder to dance and less attractive for the large audience20. Conversely, several Bop musicians developed hostility towards the dancing audience (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 24)21. In contrast, musicians like Dizzy Gillespie attempted to combine bop and big band elements, in order to gain legitimacy with a commercial side of industry (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 338)22. Although attempts to keep Bop closer to the commercial side of Jazz existed, as a sub-style of swing, it was doomed to fail. Benny Goodman didn’t acknowledge it as late as 1949. This ambiguous position was hardly sustainable. At some point, Bop musicians gave up promoting Bop as a dancing style. It eventually became appreciated by smaller groups of 20 Several established Swing musicians (among them, Louis Armstrong, Fletcher Henderson, Tommy Dorsey) reacted negatively towards Bop. Many argued that Bop destroyed the possibility of dancing with “weird” chord progression, hurting jazz in general (LOPES, 1997, p. 222). 21 Bop’s image’s association with drugs, spurred by the mass media, reinforced this reciprocal estrangement. Gillespie was among those who struggle to disentangle Bop from drugs (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 398). 22 This gives us an idea of Swing institution’s robustness, for Gillespie tried to combine bop and swing for a long period (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 439). 54 fans, who attended small clubs, instead of dance halls and carved a niche in the periphery of the industry in 1945 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 364). While at jam sessions Bop’s harmonic obstacles served as a strategy for winning cutting sessions, in recording sessions it became codified (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 311), which allowed the diffusion and institutionalization of the new style23. And still, in its pure form it was short-lived, as many small clubs disappeared with the real-estate speculation of the mid-fifties (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 442)24. 3.3.1.4. Cool The style “cool” is regarded as a natural development from Bop. It is closer to contemporary classical music. Miles Davis is known as one of the first musicians to play in this idiom, when he recorded the album The Birth of the Cool in 194925. Yet, many scholars consider cool mostly associated with White musicians. First, the incorporation of classical music elements took the idiom away from its African blues roots26. Second, it spread rapidly among White musicians who attended classic music conservatories. The very word “cool” is controversial among Jazz scholars. Among some, cool is related to “intellectual”, but also “European”, in contrast with “hot”, found in Hot Jazz a later in Bop. In contrast, many scholars see in the word “cool” a link with the African’s value of proud and self-possession (SZWED, 2000, p. 199). A derivative of cool is the “West Coast Jazz”, played by musicians based in the West Coast. Many critics, however, do not consider West Coast as a distinct style. 3.3.1.5. Hard Bop Hard Bop emerged in the fifties, mostly as a reaction from African-American musicians to the presence of white musicians in the recording industry with Cool (LOPES, 1997, p. 252, SZWED, 2000, p. 253). As Cool became strongly associated with European 23 One may relate the formalization effort to the social construction of reality (BERGER; LUCKMANN, 1966). As Bop became more formalized, it became also more objectified. The neo-institutionalist tradition links the formalization and codification to the diffusion of social forms in a field (see for instance, LOUNSBURY; RAO, 2004). Bourdieu (1990 – coisas ditas), suggests that the codification and formalization are the final outcomes of the process of fixing forms to phenomena previously not classified. Bourdieu proposes that classificatory systems are stable because they gain a status of “natural” to social actors. Bourdieu suggests that one of the most important tasks for the analyst is to describe the “naturalization” of classificatory and code systems. 24 Becker (2002) suggests that a sociology of places should complement a sociology of social actors. He shows that the Jazz styles evolved in tandem with the different types of venues available to musicians. 25 As Bop became less accessible to the large white audience, Miles perceived that some changes in the music were required. These changes led to Cool (SZWED, 2002, p. 70) 26 Szwed (2002) suggests that it recovers certain sweet elements from Swing developed by Lester Young. 55 elements and White musicians, many African-American musicians turned to African and Blues elements in order to express their ethnic identity: Stronger, more interactive drumming, funky and soulful melodies, and a reassertion of the primacy of the blues. It is a music that rejected the reserve of cool jazz and reclaimed the principles of bebop in a more recognizable and accessible African American form. (SZWED, 2000, p. 114). Thus, their playing contrasted with the “coolness” and “softness” of Cool. As a consequence, they adopted the adjective “hard” in order to contrast their playing to Cool. Some scholars believe that Hard Bop is nowadays the mainstream idiom in Jazz. In comparison to Bop, it softened the musical sophistication and made the music more accessible to the black audience lost to R&B. Also, many claim that Hard Bop is more assertive in incorporating blues elements. Yet, some scholars find it difficult to define exactly what is the “blackness” feature in the Hard Bop playing. Berendt and Huesmann (1998) find that this distinction is arbitrary and is mostly used to distinguish African-American from White musicians. Moreover, several scholars suggest that African-American musicians promoted the label Hard Bop in order to segregate white musicians and revert the “Jim Crow” relationship (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 18; LOPES, 1997, p. 254): “Some white critics, especially Nat Hentoff and Leonard Feather, did point to how the experience of Jim Crow created Crow Jim.” (LOPES, 1997, p. 255) One way or another, hard bop was also very associated with the Civil Rights movement in the fifties and sixties. Max Roach was among the most politicized side of hard bop (SZWED, 2000, p. 230). 3.3.1.6. Soul If Hard Bop attempted to recover African roots and conquer a black youth lost to R&B, Soul went in a bolder towards this direction. Musicians like Julan Adderley and Brother Jack McDuff included soul and funk elements in Jazz, towards a fusion with these genres To be sure, it is not just a development from Hard Bop (SZWED, 2000). The further detachment from the Bop paradigm was not well received by all Hard Bop musicians (GIOIA, 1997). 56 3.3.1.7. Free Jazz and Avant-Gard Retrospectively, scholars have found elements of Free jazz in early pieces as in Lennie Tristano’s in the forties and fifties. But it was only in the late fifties with Ornette Coleman’s recordings that the Free Style emerged as a distinct idiom. The free jazz broke with several standards consolidated in jazz since the inception of Bop. Paradoxically, its defenders were both accused of disrupting the Jazz tradition (LOPES, 1997, p. 264), and at the same time, they were celebrated for resuming the revolutionary efforts initiated by Charlie Parker (WILLIAMS, 1983). Besides Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Charles Mingus were among the most influent musicians in this style (JOST, 1994). Most of the resistance against Free Jazz came from mainstream musicians, who claimed that it “was not based on harmonic progression, it did not rely on modes or scales, it was not tempered in pitch, and it did not always follow a strict rhythm” (RADANO, 1985, p. 72). In comparison to other styles, the Free Jazz was well received by critics (RADANO, 1985). The intellectual interpretation of its evolution, and the effort to associate it to the classic music avant garde movement made Free jazz strongly associated with high art form. Ironically, however, “avant-garde musicians were unconcerned” with the criticism’s support (RADANO, 1985, p. 74). In contrast, free jazz musicians disdained the criticism as another attempt to freeze the Jazz musicians’ creativity in a new label. Yet, it was not as popular as other styles: While a more accessible version of avant-garde jazz would later reach the popular ear, it was, and still is in its ‘purest’ form, inaccessible to the masses. Musical norms operate like all other social norms – they change slowly. And the acceptance of the abstract music of jazz avant-garde could not be forced; only gradually could it reach popular tastes. (RADANO, 1985, p.77). 3.3.1.8. Fusion It is not impossible to find the word “fusion” applied to any blend of Jazz and foreign idioms27. Nevertheless, this style has been usually associated with the blend of Jazz and Rockn-Roll. A word of caution should be made here. It is true that Rock was usually associated with pop and commercial vernacular, especially by actors within the Jazz field: 27 From this perspective, albums like “Sketches of Spain”, by Miles Davis, would be considered fusion. Blends with other styles, but Rock, were classified under the “Latin and World Fusion” category. 57 From their position on the fringes of the commercial music world, jazz musicians had always assuaged themselves with the belief that they were superior musicians, that they had chosen the more difficult road with their art. (…) As they watched the current boom in pop music, many harbored the faith that if they wanted to, they too could sell out and make best-selling pop albums. Yet the truth is that they seldom had anything to sell a pop market and no idea about how to make a pop record, and when they were offered the chance, the results were often comic or dreadful. (SZWED, 2000, p. 283). However, Rock itself was dramatically transformed during the fifties and sixties. Also, many of the Jazz elements blended were borrowed from Free Jazz. For that reason, Williams (1983) considers that Davis actually attempted to cross two boundaries at once. First, Jazz’s internal boundaries, by embracing free jazz elements, and second, Jazz external boundaries, by blending it with Rock and introducing electronic instruments. 3.3.1.9. Latin and World Fusion As the Bop and its offspring achieved maturity by mid-fifties, Jazz musicians increasingly incorporated elements external to Jazz into their music. These elements ranged from Indian music (John Coltrane’s “My Favorite Things”, in the album “My Favorite Things”, released in 1960) to Brazilian Bossa Nova (see Stan Getz, “Desafinado”, 1962). Chart 4 depicts the evolution of styles, associated with recording sessions. 100% Soul 90% New Orleans and Classic Jazz 80% 70% Latin Hard Bop Bop 60% Cool 50% Fusion 40% Free 30% Swing and Big Band 20% 10% 0% I II III IV V VI VII VIII Chart 3.4: Evolution of Sessions per Style Family 58 Source: Author’s analysis Note: vertical axis depicts total number of sessions. Leaders classified under multiple styles had their sessions split proportionally. Horizontal axis depicts periods. Following, I collected from the secondary bibliography reviewed some of the most important albums that established new styles and innovations. This list will help me to locate in the social network those musicians who introduced novelties in the Jazz field. Style Musician or Band New Orleans/Classic Jazz • ODBJ (and Revival) • King Oliver • Swing/Big Band • • • • • • • • Bop Cool (and West Coast) • • • • • Multiple 1959 Hard Bop Revolution • in • • • • • • • Record or Song (Year) • “I’ve lost my heart in Dixieland” (1920) • “Dippermouth Blues” (1923) • “West End Blues” Louis Armstrong (1928); “Satchmo at Symphony Hall” (1947) • “Copenhagen” (1924) Fletcher Henderson • “Carnegie Hall Concert” Benny Goodman (1938) • “White Jazz” (1931) Casa Loma • “Cotton Tail” (1940) Duke Ellington • “Jumpin' at the Count Basie Woodside” (1937) • “1937-1938” (1938) Louis Armstrong • “Koko” (1945) Charlie Parker • “Cubano Be/Cubano Dizzy Gillespie Bop” (1947) • “Un Poco Loco” (1951) Bud Powell • “Misterioso” (1948) Thelonious Monk (p) • “Birth of the Cool” Miles Davis (t) (1949) Stan Getz, Kenny • “People Time” (194X) Barron Modern Jazz Quarter • “Django” (1954) (MJQ) • “Bernie’s Tune” (1952) Gerry Mulligan • “Giant Steps” John Coltrane • “Kind of Blue” Miles Davis • “Time Out” Dave Brubeck • “Mingus Ah Hum” Charles Mingus • “The Shape of Jazz to Come” Ornette Coleman Clifford Brown, Max • “Daahoud” (1954) Roach Quintet Art Blakey • “Hard Bop” (1957) 59 • • Soul • • • Free Jazz Gard and (Rock) Fusion Avant- • • • Horace Silver • Julian “Cannonball” • Adderley Brother Jack McDuff • Richard "Groove" • Holmes • Stanley Turrentine Cecil Taylor Ornette Coleman Albert Ayler • • • • • “Senor Blues” (1956) “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy” (1966) “Brother Jack McDuff Live!” (1963) “Blue Groove” (1966) “That's Where It's At” (1962) “Unit Structures” (1966) “Free Jazz” (1960) “Spiritual Unity” (1964) “Ascension” “Jazz in Silhouette” (1958) • • John Coltrane Sun Ra • • Archie Schepp Miles Davis • • “Four for Trane” (1964) “Bitches Brew” (1969) Stan Getz Stan Getz/João Gilberto • • “Desafinado” (1962) “Getz/Gilberto” (1964) Latin and World Fusion – • Bossa Nova • Frame 3.1: Major Art Works by Style and Musician Sources: Gioia (1997), Szwed (2000), AllMusic.com. 3.4. Theoretical Development: Field, Institutional Change, and Circulation of Elites A central concern for this investigation is the understanding of how groups attain better positions in their social milieu in tandem with the creation or transformation of institutions. This concern touches on two theoretical bodies: on one hand, a theory of fields, institutionalization processes, and institutional change and on another the theories on how elites attain their prominent position. This effort requires the creation of hypotheses that bridge these two theoretical bodies. Fields are understood in the neo-institutional traditional as those social spaces where the involved actors share standards, norms and meanings (DIMAGGIO ; POWELL, 1983). It is also a locus for struggle, where the involved actors fight for resources and symbolic hegemony (BOURDIEU, 1993b). Several scholars on field developed the idea that fields differ in internal institutional logics, structure and relative autonomy to other fields. Following, I propose two ideal types for fields: “centralized” and “decentralized”. 60 3.4.1. Centralized Fields A centralized field resembles the “normative” field proposed by Anand (2000), and Peterson and Anand (2002)28. Institutionally, centralized fields are organized mainly under macro-coercive or normative rules. In the former case, a heteronymous power imposes common practices. In the latter case, a cohesive professional body enacts common norms. Structurally29, a centralized field presents a distinctive core (a set of central actors that hold central positions in the social network) that dominates its periphery by controlling the majority of resources. Its structure resembles a “star”, as a consequence, the central player will have a disproportionate betweenness centrality: F G E A B D C “Star” structure Schema 3.1: Star Structure Source: Author’s adaptation of Kadushin (2004a) The central actors control the field’s schemata. Thus, it is not surprisingly that the introduction of innovations is usually top-down, held by central entrepreneurs, whose position is relatively buffered from market pressures. By this account, a classical example of a normative field is given by DiMaggio’s research on U.S. art museums (1991), where a handful of central player’s action modified the field’s logic. Nonetheless, it doesn’t mean that innovations are not created at the periphery. In centralized fields, innovations from the periphery are gradually absorbed into the core, as incumbent actors are able to incorporate them while avoiding threatens to their position. This behavior is also supported by Schumpeter’s (1934) studies on innovation. For him, only oligopolies would be able to accumulate enough resources in order to introduce innovations. 28 I don’t the term “normative”, for any field, by definition, entails a diffusion of norms and practices. Here “structure” refers to the social network configuration. It is not directly related to Giddens’s concept of structure. See “Glossário” for a full discussion on the term. 29 61 As Faulkner (1983) shows, central players tend to be at the same time actors who have a long track record, and concentrate most opportunities in the field. Bourdieu’s reading on incumbent players goes along the same lines. Players who are “old” in the field tend to become more dominant and concentrate most market share in an industry (BOURDIEU, 1993b, 2005). Norms will be stable as long as not perturbed by a sudden change in the market’s logics or a break in the organizational core coalition (MARCH, 1962). As long as the central coalition of power is stable (FLIGSTEIN, 2001), the field institutions should be stable. In tandem, in an oligopoly, we expect higher homogeneity of art forms, due to a high coercive dominance of core over peripheral players (PETERSON ; BERGER, 1975). In our example, this should be reflected in stability of musical styles and tastes. Hence, in centralized fields, we should find high homogeneity and stability of styles. 3.4.2. Decentralized Fields Decentralized fields are similar to Peterson and Anand’s “competitive fields”. They are much less autonomous in relation to market trends. Competitive forces mark a balance between innovation and imitation; as a consequence, they are marked by the predominance of mimetic isomorphism. Structurally, the field is still articulated by a core, but a more differentiated periphery emerges. Kadushin (1976) suggests that networks in “circle” shape occur in tandem with the introduction of innovations in a field. He offers the example of avant-garde painters in the apex of their creativity: instead of being organized under a hierarchy, they form circles of innovators. Although one has little power to impose its dominance over others, reputation and status are central in order to gain access to resources and opportunities (JONES, 2002; PODOLNY, 2001). The association with prominent players provides legitimacy to those associated with them. Hence, novice players will be driven to develop joint projects with already established players in the field. As a consequence, a core will emerge around those more prominent players, even in the absence of formal sanctioning rules. The proposed “decentralized structure” takes a mid-ground between the “star” structure and the “circle” structure. A core is still recognizable, but the periphery is connected as if in a circle30: 30 Future analysis could compare the “star” structure with the “small world” structure (WATTS, 1999). In comparison with the former, the later requires unconnected “pockets” of cohesive groups in the periphery. In comparison with the “decentralized structure proposed”, it might provide a better explanation for differentiated spaces in the field (UZZI ; SPIRO, 2005). 62 F F E G D A B E G C “Circle” structure Core A B D C “Decentralized” structure Schema 3.2: Circle and Decentralized Forms Source: author’s adaptation of Kadushin (2004a) This structure occurs in tandem with the emergence of higher agency discretion for bottom-up innovations31. Leblibici, Salancick, Copay and Kinget (1991) provide the example of the transformation of the radio broadcasting industry in the U.S, showing that most innovations were introduced by peripheral actors. Powell suggests that “In the absence of incentives embedded in existing institutional arrangements, innovation and diversity will be more likely to come from the periphery of organizational fields or from outside sources” (POWELL, 1991, p. 198). Bourdieu’s (1993b, 2002) analyses on art fields show that younger and less powerful actors introduce avant-garde styles. As these styles become consecrated, the artists who introduced them become themselves incumbent actors in the field. A Paretian account of “elite circulation” (PARETO, 1935) would expect that older incumbent artists be expelled by younger and up-coming artists. In contrast, old and new styles co-exist (SIMMEL, 2004). For that reason, old and new generations of elite co-exist in the field. Because decentralized fields tend to promote innovations in a faster way, we should expect that newer artists will achieve success (market share in number of sessions) faster. If that is true, it follows that age in the field and market share might not coincide: older artists might present lower success than their younger competitors. As suggested above, the higher periphery differentiation and the co-existence of several generations might lead to a higher heterogeneity of styles. As a result, decentralized fields present a “fragmented” picture of styles. Also, in a decentralized field, struggle for 31 One must be careful when linking a social network structure with its actors’ underlying dispositions. Swedberg (2005) shows that a univocal association between these two categories was exactly what Weber harshly criticized in Simmel’s work. For Weber, sociology could not be wholly developed only on the study of social network structures. A similar criticism might be found at DiMaggio’s (1993) criticism on research based only o social network analysis. 63 survival is fiercer for all players. Products have shorter span of life and competitors gain and loose field’s dominance more quickly. Christensen, Verlinden and Westerman’s (2002) example of the hard-disk industry is illustrative of this point. Innovations were hardly introduced by incumbent firms, but by peripheral players. In addition, as the technology of hard disks evolved, the average time length of a company’s leadership became increasingly shorter. In other words, although novice players revolve around older players, the former efforts to displace the latter are more frequent and more successful than in centralized fields. Hence, styles will remain less time in a dominant position, given the higher motility of its musicians and faster desinstitutionalization. In other words, there will be lower stability of styles. Please find on Schema 1 a summary of features in Centralized and Decentralized fields. Features Centralized Decentralized Sources of isomorphism Coercitive and normative Mimetic Social Network Structure “Star” “Decentralized Structure” Source of Innovations Central actors, “top-down” Peripheral actors, “bottomup” Old actors concentrate most Young actors might achieve Dominance market share Styles High homogeneity stability of styles high market share and High heterogeneity and low stability of styles Frame 3.2: Centralized and Decentralized Fields Source: Author’s proposal 3.4.3. Control Variables Many studies on Jazz consulted approached the theme of “race” (some of the most important references include JONES, 1964, KOFSKY, 1971, DEVEAUX, 1997). In most of these studies, African-American musicians are depicted as segregated from the American society. At the same time, their innovations are believed to have been absorbed by white musicians, better positioned at the music industry. The theme of race is a very controversial one. As far as I know, nobody would defend that human beings are inherently different, as if a genetic analysis would provide us a palpable distinction between races. However, we should identify two opposing positions. A 64 first claims that once “race” is a driver for social segregation, analysts should consider “race” whatever is embedded in the “racist” interpretative schemata. The other position claims that because “race” is socially constructed, we should avoid this category and focus only on other (objective) social relations, like class, social strata, etc. Although this paper confers doesn’t give priority to “race”, I chose to include it as a control variable. It is large the amount of bibliography that points that “race” and ethnicity is one of the most relevant explanatory variables on social segregation. For instance, Tilly (1999, 2003) defends that social boundaries around ethnicity are created in order to maintain the protection of privileges (see also LAMONT ; MOLNAR, 2002). Lopes (2000) makes a direct criticism to Bourdieu’s conception of field for not including the category of “race”. In his opinion, an “ethnic capital” could help to supplement other types of capitals. The effect of “race” might be confounded with cultural capital (for more educated white leaders are compared with non-educated African-descendents). But the causality might be reversed at this point: low mobility prospects didn’t encourage the accumulation of formal cultural capital32. As a consequence, African-Americans were led to avoid conservatories and formal education. It is not surprising that Bebop revolution in the forties helped to reverse this trend. As African-American musicians started to claim their rights, they started to enroll in academic institutions for a formal education. This came also in tandem with the reinforcement of the normative strength originated at the professional musician sphere in the late forties. In that sense, as the internal dynamics in the jazz field changed to benefit achievement rather than assigned characteristics, we should observe the weight of variable decrease in strength. I included also “gender” and whether the leader was from the U.S. Both variables receive less attention in the secondary literature, although recent studies started to flesh important aspects in relation to gender and national origin in the history of Jazz. For instance, Tucker (2000) analyses the role of women in the development of Swing. Although women have been present throughout the whole history of jazz33, it is the Swing era when they achieved the higher prominence. As a result, we should observe a high correlation between the presence of female leaders and the Swing style. Berendt and Huesmann, German writers, argue that Jazz has been in its beginning mostly an American invention. They support such claim by depicting the European Jazz as a copy of the American Jazz (BERENDT ; HUESMANN, 1998). After the Second World War, 32 From a different theoretical approach, Fernandes (1969) suggested that the racial segregation in the Brazilian society could not be reduced to class segregation. 33 As we observe later, on Table 3.1, the percentage of female leaders is always around 10%. 65 the flow of American musicians to Europe helped to increase the proficiency of European musicians. However, claim the authors, it is only when European musicians develop local free jazz style that authentic European jazz emerges. Conversely, we are able to see an influx of Japanese, Brazilian and other nationalities to the Jazz world. In parallel, as Americans shy away from jazz during the fifties and sixties, the foreign audiences increase in relevance to jazz musicians. As a consequence, we should observe am increase in prominence of non-U.S. musicians, as well as an increasingly association with avant-garde styles. 3.5. Data Sources 3.5.1. Jazz Recording Sessions Data The source on the recording sessions is from Tom Lord’s CD-ROM (LORD, 2005). I used both the 4.0 and the 5.0 versions for this purpose. My database includes only a subset of the recording sessions stored in these CD-ROMs. The criteria applied for extracting sessions from this database was the following. First, the band leader had to have at least twenty sessions recorded. This set of band leaders amassed over 73,000 recording sessions, or 50.5% of all recording sessions included in the CD-ROM. In contrast, they represent only 6% of all 26,147 leaders present in the CD-ROM. Next, I selected only those sessions that fell within the time frame, from 1930 to 1969. As a result, many leaders were not included, for their sessions were either after 1969 or before 1930. In personal communication, Mr. Lord expressed that many non-jazz artists were included due to pressure from CD-ROM buyers. Nevertheless, Mr. Lord believes that in the coming versions he will be able to exclude non-Jazz musicians. I also asked to Mr. Lord what his criteria for including artists in his database were. My concern was that he could be excluding important artists by setting arbitrary boundaries on what is Jazz. In general, Mr. Lord tended to err in the side of inclusion rather than exclusion of artists. As a consequence, I triangulated my database with Scott Yanow’s style classification. As a result, I classified all leaders in spells of styles34. Many artists played other genres, like R&B and Rock-n-Roll. All those leaders who were never under the Jazz umbrella were excluded from my database. I ended up with 388,204 sessions35 distributed across 1,112 leaders36. 34 See below A leader’s sessions spread out in a single day were grouped in a single session. 36 Actual individual musicians, in contrast with band name. 35 66 Some bands didn’t have a single leader. They either had shared leadership or just changed leaders along their existence. As a consequence, I produced an N by N database matching sessions to leaders. The major sources of information for this table was the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz (KERNFELD, 2001), and biographies at the web sites referenced above. 3.5.2. Style Assignment Methodology Ideally, each session would be classified under the existing styles by its contemporary critics. Moreover, I would be able to combine the opinions of several experts on each session and extract an Intercode Reliability Index on each session. Alternatively, as DiMaggio (1987) suggests, I should be able to locate each recording session in a web of style classification, which would include not only the musicians’ self assessment, but critics’, producers’ and distributors’ classification. Although such material would be certainly rich for analyzing the classification methods across different groups in the jazz field, that strategy was not pursued for two reasons. First, the major question in this article is not on the sense-making processes around style assignment. On the contrary, I want to understand how the styles evolved during Jazz’s history. Hence, I was compelled to accept some degree of reification of these categories. As a result, I take for granted that a current (2005) labeling crystallizes a consensus on a classification system. The database consulted was the All Media Guide, under the direction of Scott Yanow. I triangulated several of his and his associates’ classifications with The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz classifications. There was a high match in classification, with the exception of the “trad” and “modern” labels, which are usually used in Europe. For the former, I used AMG’s “big band/swing” and “New Orleans/Classic Jazz” labels, and for the former I used the “Bop” label. Second, the large number of recording sessions included in my database would make it quite difficult to classify them all by interviewing critics, musicians, producers or distributors. Moreover, many if not the majority of these actors are not alive any more. Even if I tried to classify most of these sessions using the AMG database my effort would be frustrated. Many of these recording sessions were never released, or aired for few just minutes in a radio station. Many of them are lost or buried in collectors’ shelves. I also considered the strategy of text recognition of record criticism. By scanning contemporary criticism, I should be able to extract from this material referenced to styles. This effort would be also inappropriate for my purposes. First, many references to styles were 67 negative, rather positive association. Second, many references were unrelated to the record under review. Finally, much criticism doesn’t make any reference to style, which would make it difficult to assess the soundness of my sample. As a consequence, I would be forced to read and code each criticism, in order to extract the record classification. I adopted a more pragmatic approach. Rather than classifying each recording session, I identified for each leader in my database those records that marked any change in AMG’s classification. For instance, if a leader’s records were always classified under “Swing” and “Bop”, I stored as a turning-point event the first record classified under “bop” only. If the leader returned to Swing, I stored again only the record session correspondent to this change. As a result, I ended up with a database of turning-point events for each leader, where each record depicts a change in style classification. To be sure, each event may be classified under multiple styles. Next, I assigned all sessions between two turning point events under the first event classification. In several cases, AMG didn’t present an artist’s early albums. For these cases, I supplemented the AMG information with other data sources (see above). I also triangulated several AMG’s classification with these alternative sources. Nevertheless, some left and right censoring was unavoidable. I treated left-censored cases as missing cases. Right missing cases were treated as missing cases whenever the gap without classification surpassed a period of five years. Below I depict an illustration of the style assignment mechanism: Left Censored Swing Bop Swing, Bop AMG: Swing AMG: Swing, Bop Bop, Hard Bop AMG: Bop AMG: Bop, Hard Bop Styles are assigned to turning points, or “events”. Sessions will receive the styles assigned to their precedent event. If a session is not preceded by any event, it falls in the “leftcensored” region, and no style is assigned. Conversely, if a session is not preceded by an event at least five years old, it falls in the “right-censored” region and no style is assigned. 68 3.5.3. Musicians’ Demographic Data The most important source for demographic data came from the All Music database. At this site I was able to extract the musician’s date of birth, perform a pictorial analysis to identify whether the musician was African-Descendent37, and check the musician’s nationality38. Alternative sources included the The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, The Big bands database plus site, Jazz associations and musicians themselves, cited in the “Agradecimentos” section. 3.6. Methodology The analyses performed in this article have two purposes. First, connect the evolution of Jazz to the proposed ideal types. Second, explore the process throughout the Jazz field migrated from one type to another. 3.6.1. MRQAP It is not always possible to grasp directly a field’s institutional logics (THORNTON ; OCASIO, 1999). In such cases, this task has to be performed indirectly, through the analysis of the actors’ behavior and supplemented with qualitative research. In our case, the overall field’s logic of interest is the association patterns among musicians. In order to analyze how different factors explain the association among leaders, I let the square matrix a that relates leaders to be the dependent variable. As independent variable I used four sets of matrices. “Power matrices” comprise those privileged variables under Bourdieu’s theory of field: age at the field (Field Age) and market share (Session number). Because of the distribution of these variables are strongly skewed towards one, I used the natural logarithm. The two matrices used as independent variables had for each pair the difference between leaders. Positive and significant parameters denote a preference for leaders with higher (or lower) number of sessions or years at the field. The second set (“categorical variables”) comprises those ascribed characteristics that impacted the success and association patterns among musicians and a measure of style dissimilarity. These variables are: style dissimilarity, gender, “race” and whether the 37 The challenge here was to apply a categorization that scholars on racial boundaries could reasonably accept. I would like to make this classification available for third-party cross-checking, as far as necessary to improve it. 38 Tom Lord’s database provides an identification of nationality. 69 musicians are from the U.S. The dissimilarity measure was calculated in the following way: first, I created an affiliation matrix of all leaders by all styles (an “n” by “s” rectangular matrix). Next, I transformed this rectangular matrix in a square matrix f , containing the Euclidean distance between each pair of leaders. A positive and significant parameter denotes a preference for leaders who don’t play the same style. The gender matrix contained information on whether both leaders were of the same gender. If both leaders were women, for instance, the pair received “1”. In contrast, if one was a male and the other female, the pair received “0”. Positive and significant parameter denotes a preference for same-gender leader. I applied a stricter approach for national origin: if both leaders were from the U.S., the pair received “1”, otherwise, it received “0”. With this approach, I focused on the weight of U.S. leaders’ endogamy. I used a similar approach to “race”. I created two matrices: Both AfricanDescendents and Neither African-Descents. In the “Both African-Descendents” matrix, if both leaders were African-descendents, the pair received “1”, otherwise “0”. The same logic was used to construct the matrix “Neither African-Descents”, but now I coded “1” only for those pairs where both leaders were not African-Descendents39. The construction of these two matrices helps us to isolate endogamous tendencies among African-descendents and NonAfrican-descendents. The third set, “relational variable” comprises a comparison in betweenness centrality. The resulting matrix denotes the difference in betweenness centrality for each pair of leader. Hence, a positive and significant parameter is interpreted as a preference for leaders with higher or lower betweenness centrality. Finally, the “Styles” set comprises matrices for each style. For each style, I coded “1” whether both musicians played that particular style, and “0” if any of them didn’t play it. As a consequence, for each style I obtained a square matrix where the “1” denotes “both leaders play this style” and “0” for all other cases. A positive and significant parameter is interpreted as an endogamous preference among leaders who play that style. The first model relates the first four sets of independent variables to the dependent variables and its results are summarized in Table 2: aP Matrix (Diff. Field Age (ln)) + Matrix (Diff. Number of Sessions (ln)) + Matrix(Style Dissimilarity) + Matrix (Same Gender) + Matrix(Both African-Descendents) + Matrix(Neither African-Descendents) + Matrix (Both U.S. Musicians) 39 I also tested a matrix with “same ‘race’” coding. The separation of this matrix in the two matrices mentioned above decreased the model’ error. 70 The second model adds to the model above the matrices by style. Its results are summarized on Table 3. I estimated the odds-ratio of a by performing a MRQAP analysis (Multiple Regression Quadratic Assignement Procedure). This algorithm developed by Dekker, Krackhardt and Snijders (2005) estimates the odds-ratio of a dichotomic and square matrix. The advantage of this procedure over other available algorithms is its better sensitivity analysis to collinearity among the independent variables. 3.6.2. Blockmodeling One of our concerns is to reconstruct the evolving macro structure of the field, in order to understand the constraints imposed to musicians’ action, but also to explore how this very action affected the field’s structure. In order to obtain a topology of the Jazz field structure over time, we applied a blockmodeling approach from the Social Networks Analysis tradition. As noted in the chapter “Fields and Networks”, the methodology of blockmodeling was developed by White, Boorman and Breiger (1976) in order to extract positions from a network. Faukner (1983) a similar approach in order to recognize central and peripheral blocks among networks of film composers. The use of blockmodeling has become widespread in organizational research. DiMaggio (1986) was one of its first proponents by using it to study the relation among theaters’ managers in the U.S. Mohr’s (1994) study of non-profit organizations in the beginning of the twentieth century, and Padget and Ansell (1993) investigation of the relationships among Florentine families in order to understand the rise of the Medici are other seminal contributions that used blockmodeling. The idea of blockmodeling is to group together those individuals who share similar patterns of relationships with all individuals in network (see Breiger, 2004 for a review on the methodology). As a result, musicians placed in the same block will be structurally similar, which means that they will be likely to bear the same pattern of ties to other actors in the network. Nevertheless, structurally similar actors are not necessarily connected among themselves. We used the Tabu Search algorithm in order to obtain the networks’ partitions. The user sets the number of partitions desired. Next, the Tabu Search algorithm builds a matrix c, a p by p ideal matrix, where p is the number of partitions originally set. Next, the algortithm permutates the orginal a matrix (composed by the n individuals) and modifies c until it finds 71 the partitions that maximize the correlation between c and a. As Hanneman (2001) indicates, there is no “good” or “bad” number of blocks. I chose eight blocks, as it would yield a number of blocks still feasible to analyze, increase the correspondence between the P and N. I used UCINET 6.71 in order to obtain the permutated matrix c and its respective image matrix (Table 4). The image matrices were generated following Breiger, RL, S. Boorman and P. Arabie. 1975. I obtained the image matrix by calculating the density of ties in each block. Next, I dichotomized density matrix of each period using the following procedure: if the density of a given block was above the average density of the image matrix, I considered as having a tie between a pair of blocks. I used the average density as a threshold for dichotomization of ties among blocks. Table 6 shows correlations for 2, 4 and 8 blocks for each period. As expected, by using 8 blocks we obtain substantially higher correlations. Table 5 shows the distribution of densities for each period, for the 8-block approach. Periods V and VIII presented the lowest correlations. It is expected that the distribution be bi-modal, in order to make the analysis meaningful. Periods II and VIII had the farthest distributions from the bimodal ideal. Chart 5 reproduces the image matrices on table 4. 3.7. Results 3.7.1. MRQAP Analyses Table 2 summarizes the results for the MRQAP analysis for all periods, without the style variables. As expected, differences in Field Age and Number of Sessions were negatively related with the likeliness of tie between two leaders. In other words, the stronger the difference between two leaders’ profiles of age and share of markets, the lower was the probability of sharing sidemen. Nevertheless, the weight of these factors is not constant. In period V and VII Age Field comes closer to zero, while in periods III and VII Number of Sessions becomes less negative. 72 Table 3.1 Period Evolution of Leaders, per major Categorical Group (II) (III) (IV) (V) (I) 1930 to 1934 1935 to 1939 1940 to 1944 1945 to 1949 1950 to 1954 (VI) (VII) (VIII) 1955 to 1959 1960 to 1964 1965 to 1969 Total Number of Leaders 158 213 277 435 537 669 703 695 Non African Descendent African Descendent 103 55 144 69 184 93 255 180 318 219 396 273 407 296 410 285 Non African Descendent % 65% 68% 66% 59% 59% 59% 58% 59% African Descendent % 35% 32% 34% 41% 41% 41% 42% 41% Male Female 140 18 194 19 250 27 391 44 479 58 596 73 635 68 634 61 Male % 89% 91% 90% 90% 89% 89% 90% 91% Female % 11% 9% 10% 10% 11% 11% 10% 9% U.S. Non U.S. 134 24 162 51 205 72 344 91 413 124 502 167 507 196 472 223 U.S. % 85% 76% 74% 79% 77% 75% 72% 68% Non-U.S. % 15% 24% 26% 21% 23% 25% 28% 32% Source: Author’s analysis 73 0.179 0.089 0 25,440 Adjusted R2 0.107 Probability 0 Number of Observations 12,432 Note: Observation refer to ties valued "1" * P<0.05 ** P<0.01 ** ** 0.019 -0.022 0.029 0.145 0.201 0.01 -0.039 0.083 0.289 0.218 ** -0.077 -0.073 -0.013 0.014 1935 to 1939 ** ** ** ** ** 0.076 0 39,402 0.126 0.001 0.021 0.09 0.111 0.217 -0.073 -0.043 1940 to 1944 ** ** ** ** ** ** 0.077 0 78,680 0.187 0.028 -0.01 0.085 0.077 0.156 -0.088 -0.064 1945 to 1949 ** ** ** ** * ** ** 0.052 0 145,542 0.176 0.003 0.009 0.033 0.045 0.116 -0.053 -0.064 1950 to 1954 ** ** ** * ** ** 0.094 0 253,512 0.186 0.011 -0.026 0.068 0.033 0.187 -0.078 -0.12 1955 to 1959 MRQAP Parameters per Period, on Power, Categorical and Relational Variables (II) (III) (IV) (V) (VI) 1930 to 1934 (I) 0.031 Power Variables Diff. Field Age (ln) Diff. Number of Sessions (ln) Categorical Variables Style Dissimilarity Same Gender Both African-Descendents Neither African-Descendents Both U.S. musicians Relational Variable Diff. Betweeness Centrality Period ** ** * ** ** ** (VII) 0.083 0 270,920 0.083 0 -0.009 0.089 0.005 0.107 -0.037 -0.031 1960 to 1964 ** ** ** ** ** (VIII) 0.049 0 295,392 0.148 -0.028 0.009 0.093 -0.031 0.066 -0.043 -0.049 1965 to 1969 ** ** ** ** ** ** ** Table 3.2 74 Style Dissimilarity was usually not significant, which we may interpret that the overall style categorization was not an impediment for sidemen sharing. Exceptions are observed in period IV and period VIII. While in period IV Style Dissimilarity becomes positive, in period VIII it becomes negative. In the former period, leaders were actively sharing sidemen associated with leaders affiliated to different styles to their own. In contrast, in the later period, leaders were shying away from sharing sidemen with leaders associated with different styles. As expected, leader’s gender was weakly associated with the formation of ties. In contrast, it is enlightening to observe how ethnic preferences evolved in time. In period I, when both leaders were non-African descendent their likeliness of association through sidemen was much higher than African-American leaders’. This might be interpreted as an effect of the Jim Crow policies, which segregated African-American musicians from nonAfrican-American communities. While African-Americans were willing to associate with White musicians, the later presented much of the resistance. This relationship changed overtime. “Neither African-Descendents” factor approached zero in period VII to become negative in period VIII. In contrast, the factor “Both African-Descendents” swung around positive and zero over time. Periods IV, VI and VIII show an increased tendency for endogamy among African-Descendent leaders. Not surprisingly, the tendency that American band leaders were connected was always positive. To be sure, this is mostly due to the fact that for most of its history, Jazz was concentrated in the United States. Nevertheless, this tendency weakens, as Jazz becomes shared by communities of musicians outside U.S. The Betweenness centrality effect is usually positive, as expected. On periods I and VII it becomes non significant. At Table 3, I present the MRQAP analyses with the Style Classification factors. We promptly observe that the Field Age and Number of Sessions factors were barely affected with this inclusion. Style dissimilarity was also barely affected, although while before the period VIII factor was negative, at this analysis it became positive. As we directly account for style endogamy, the search for diversity becomes again positive and significant. 75 0.093 0 25,440 -0.005 0.064 -0.013 0.005 0.062 0.036 * 0.171 0.03 ** ** 0.021 -0.015 0.031 0.141 0.208 0.011 -0.033 0.076 0.3 0.223 ** -0.077 -0.068 -0.015 0.013 1935 to 1939 * * ** ** ** * ** ** 0.096 0 39,402 0.053 0.151 0.03 0.018 0.005 -0.004 0.11 0.015 0.036 0.085 0.116 0.234 -0.042 -0.036 1940 to 1944 * ** ** ** ** ** ** * * 0.09 0 78,680 0.003 0.053 0.096 0.029 0.014 -0.005 -0.008 0.011 0 0.185 0.028 -0.009 0.08 0.08 0.153 -0.078 -0.059 1945 to 1949 * ** * ** ** ** ** ** ** ** * ** ** 0.066 0 145,542 -0.002 0.074 0.077 0.025 0.043 0.014 0.005 0.012 0.023 0.172 0.005 0.011 0.025 0.044 0.113 -0.032 -0.063 1950 to 1954 ** * * ** * ** ** ** ** ** * ** ** 0.098 0 253,512 -0.005 0.031 0.024 0.013 0.024 0.028 -0.004 0.002 -0.001 0.187 0.008 -0.027 0.065 0.034 0.204 -0.071 -0.119 1955 to 1959 MRQAP Parameters per Period, on Power, Categorical, Relational Variables and Styles (II) (III) (IV) (V) (VI) 1930 to 1934 (I) Adjusted R2 0.11 Probability 0 Number of Observations 12,432 Note: Observation refer to ties valued "1" * P<0.05 ** P<0.01 Power Variables Diff. Field Age (ln) Diff. Number of Sessions (ln) Categorical Variables Style Dissimilarity Same Gender Both African-Descendents Neither African-Descendents Both U.S. musicians Relational Variable Diff. Betweeness Centrality Styles Both Leaders play New Orleans …………………….Swing …………………….Bop …………………….Hard Bop …………………….Cool …………………….Soul …………………….Fusion …………………….Free Jazz …………………….Latin/World Period ** ** * ** ** ** ** ** ** ** (VII) 0.066 0 270,920 -0.015 0.019 0.022 0.033 0.015 -0.019 0 0 -0.004 0.137 -0.007 -0.022 0.148 -0.019 0.059 -0.086 -0.082 1960 to 1964 * * ** ** ** ** ** (VIII) 0.071 0 295,392 0.007 0.03 0.037 0.091 0.011 0.096 0.021 0.018 0.032 0.142 0.045 -0.004 0.067 -0.01 0.06 -0.029 -0.049 1965 to 1969 ** * ** ** ** ** * ** ** ** ** ** * Table 3.3 76 Surprisingly, little effect is observed on “Both African-descendents” factor. That is to say: regardless of the style adopted, African-Descendent endogamy remained steady. In contrast, the non-African-Descendent exogamy observed in period VIII turned to be not significant, which could mean that this trend was mostly driven by style preference. With the inclusion of the “Style” matrices, the betweenness centrality difference is significant and positive in all periods, with exception of Period I. When we turn to the analysis of Style endogamy, it is worthy to comment on each one’s evolution and in tandem with their counterparts. New Orleans endogamy is positive significant at period I and III. While in the former period it is mostly associated with Jim Crow policies and the low-brow stigma, in the later period in depicts the revival reaction towards other groups. We observe the highest parameter associated with Swing at Period III, declining to become non-significant at Period VII. It is interesting that by the inception of Bop, we observe a negative trend towards endogamy. Bop leaders were strongly associated with the Swing world: they were actually former sidemen of prominent Swing leaders. At this early stage, bop leaders attempted to develop their music in the interstices of an industry dominated by Swing. This factor became positive and significant, achieving its maximum value at period IV, while declining there after. Compare the Hard Bop factors with Bop’s. They evolve as if both styles were tightly linked. Hard Bop achieves a positive and significant parameter at period IV (one later than Bebop), but declines right after. A recovery is observed on Period VIII. The trends seem to suggest that endogamy is highest at the moment of inception40: Cool at Period V, Soul at Period VI, Fusion at Period VIII, and Latin at Period V. Nonetheless, Period VIII shows a recovery in all parameters (with exception of Cool and New Orleans/Classic Jazz). 40 I offer two complementary reasons to this fact, which is epiphenomenal to this article’s scope. First, as Weber (1950) suggests, new social groups who are eager to establish their boundaries become more sectarian than the mainstream group (Weber contrasts the new Protestant groups to the Catholic group). We find the same argument in Coser (1966), where closure comes in tandem with social identity construction. A second reason is incidentally explored in the “Careers in the Right Beat” article. As a leader attempts to establish a new style, he has to rely on specialized resources. The maintenance of this resources together might occur in tandem with a higher endogamous tendency, at least until the style is ready to be codified and diffused. 77 3.7.2. Analyses of Blocks 3.7.2.1. Period I (1930-1934) A first inspection of the reduced graph gives us the picture of a shared core: Blocks I.1 , I.7, I.3 and I.6 form a connected square. I.6 serves as a broker to I.4 - I.2 side, while I.5 and I.8 are isolated. Nonetheless, a deeper analysis reveals that I.1 is clearly the dominant block in this period. Only 13 leaders concentrate 23% of all sessions. Among them, we find Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Red Nichols. They tend to be older in the field, with an average field age of 10.08, and have the highest average number of sessions, 32 (Table 7.1). In the U.S. circuit, it is the block with highest betweenness centrality (2.08, lower than I.4, constituted with European musicians, and I.6, which is occupied by a single musician who performs a bridge between the U.S. and the European worlds). Interestingly, its leaders tend to play Swing more than New Orleans, which points to the direction of adoption of the commercial style. Only 8% are African-Descendents (much below the field’s average of 29%). They are all American and mostly White. Contrast this block with blocks I.5 and I.8. These blocks concentrate most AfricanDescendent leaders. They are not connected among themselves, and have low average market share (7 and 12 respectively), although their field age are closer to average (Block I.5’s average is 8.22, close to the field average of 8.28). Block I.5 resembles a lot Block I.1 when we consider the styles played. Both tend to play Swing, while retaining New Orleans roots. Louis Armstrong, King Oliver, Sidney Bechet, in spite of being among the most important innovators in Jazz, are located in the isolated I.5. To be sure, their innovations will be absorbed by core actors (KOFSKY). It is also interesting to observe white Swing leaders like Glen Gray (from the Casa Loma Orchestra) in this block. This suggests that even those early innovators among white leaders were in close contact with African-descendent musicians while creating the new style. Duke Ellington and Fletcher Henderson had better luck than their African-American counterparts. They were located at I.7, closer and connected to the power center in the field. Consider now Blocks I.4 and I.2. They are mostly comprised by non-U.S. leaders. Between them, Block I.2 is the dominant: higher average number of sessions and field age. Also, Block I.2 is gearing towards Swing, while I.4 is strongly associated with New Orleans. It is of special interest to find musicians who occupy privileged positions in a network. During Period I, Jimmy Dorsey occupied a brokerage position between the Non-U.S. (European and mostly British), and the U.S. jazz worlds (Block I.6). 78 Block III.6 Block III.7 Block III.5 Isolated Period III – 1940 to 1944 Block I.7 Block III.4 Block III.1 Block I.3 Block I.1 Period I – 1930 to 1934 Block III.8 Block III.2 Block III.3 Block I.6 Block I.5 Isolated Block I.2 Block I.4 Block I.8 Block II.4 Block II.1 Block IV.6 Block IV.3 Block IV.7 Isolated Period IV – 1945 to 1949 Block II.7 Block II.8 Period II – 1935 to 1939 Block IV.1 Block IV.4 Block II.2 Block II.6 Block II.5 Block IV.8 Block IV.2 Block IV.5 Block II.3 Chart 3.5: Tabu Search Blockmodeling - Reduced Graphs 79 Table 3.4 Tabu Search Blockmodeling: Density Tables and Image Matrices per period Density Tables Image Matrices 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1.00 1.00 0.25 0.06 1.00 0.86 0.21 2 0.02 1.00 0.90 0.07 0.20 0.03 0.03 3 1.00 1.00 0.25 0.04 1.00 0.68 0.07 4 0.06 0.95 0.13 1.00 0.15 1.00 0.06 0.20 Period I - 1930 to 1934 5 6 7 8 0.05 1.00 0.84 0.10 0.04 0.01 0.03 0.03 1.00 0.69 0.07 0.09 0.50 0.09 0.20 0.04 0.02 0.05 0.07 0.04 0.92 0.20 0.03 0.97 0.36 0.06 0.06 0.27 0.10 0.11 Average Density 0.35 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 7 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0.98 0.01 0.04 0.15 0.24 0.20 0.33 0.26 2 0.02 0.63 0.03 0.04 0.08 0.40 0.01 3 0.03 0.01 0.77 0.22 - 4 0.18 0.04 0.14 0.02 0.21 1.00 0.06 Period II - 1935 to 1939 5 6 7 8 0.17 0.25 0.28 0.27 0.06 0.70 0.22 0.02 0.15 1.00 0.06 0.04 0.08 0.03 0.29 1.00 0.07 1.00 0.09 0.05 0.06 0.02 0.07 Average Density 0.19 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 7 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 8 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0.99 0.98 0.02 0.16 0.16 0.37 1.00 0.15 0.03 - 0.25 0.79 0.01 - 4 0.94 1.00 0.01 0.25 0.27 0.80 Period III - 1940 to 1944 5 6 7 8 0.03 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.03 0.01 0.05 0.26 0.33 0.78 0.17 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.19 0.04 0.10 0.01 0.03 0.05 0.09 0.04 0.13 0.13 0.73 Average Density 0.19 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 7 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 8 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0.92 0.05 0.03 0.82 0.03 0.22 0.10 0.95 2 0.10 0.90 0.02 0.13 0.77 0.02 0.03 - 3 0.03 0.04 0.28 0.04 0.02 0.02 0.02 - 4 0.83 0.09 0.01 0.72 0.03 0.17 0.08 0.79 Period IV - 1945 to 1949 5 6 7 8 0.06 0.27 0.20 0.98 0.87 0.01 0.05 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.19 0.10 0.68 0.37 0.01 0.04 0.01 0.04 0.03 0.10 0.04 0.02 0.06 0.05 0.02 0.14 0.11 0.98 Average Density 0.21 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 5 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1.00 0.81 0.15 0.04 0.21 0.32 0.14 0.96 2 0.96 1.00 0.90 0.04 0.38 0.25 0.24 0.91 3 0.23 0.85 0.85 0.13 0.04 0.07 0.18 4 0.06 0.04 0.19 0.01 0.05 0.01 0.06 Period V - 1950 to 1954 5 6 7 8 0.25 0.32 0.17 0.90 0.41 0.21 0.26 0.78 0.17 0.04 0.09 0.12 0.01 0.05 0.01 0.05 0.08 0.05 0.04 0.19 0.06 0.21 0.05 0.34 0.04 0.05 0.03 0.14 0.23 0.36 0.18 0.94 Average Density 0.28 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0.92 1.00 0.10 0.85 0.02 0.35 0.04 0.99 2 1.00 0.56 0.61 0.97 1.00 0.66 0.10 1.00 3 0.08 0.99 0.62 0.06 0.74 0.08 0.01 0.16 4 0.89 0.80 0.07 0.81 0.04 0.31 0.05 0.98 Period VI - 1955 to 1959 5 6 7 8 0.02 0.40 0.07 1.00 0.81 0.17 1.00 0.82 0.10 0.02 0.18 0.02 0.36 0.08 0.97 0.90 0.03 0.02 0.04 0.01 0.25 0.05 0.72 0.01 0.04 0.02 0.09 0.02 0.76 0.14 1.00 Average Density 0.43 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 3 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 5 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0.96 0.96 0.96 0.26 0.17 0.97 0.18 0.97 2 0.96 1.00 1.00 0.84 0.16 1.00 0.76 0.98 3 0.96 1.00 1.00 0.94 0.17 0.98 0.93 0.96 4 0.32 0.78 0.97 0.96 0.09 0.73 0.94 0.33 Period VII - 1960 to 1964 5 6 7 8 0.20 0.95 0.16 0.97 0.18 1.00 0.38 1.00 0.21 0.96 0.88 0.96 0.10 0.78 0.91 0.25 0.03 0.17 0.04 0.16 0.22 0.98 0.14 0.97 0.06 0.20 0.86 0.08 0.20 0.93 0.07 0.98 Average Density 0.63 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 4 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 7 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 8 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1.00 0.18 0.02 0.23 0.27 1.00 0.25 2 0.22 0.20 0.04 0.01 0.02 0.04 0.18 0.02 3 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 4 0.02 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.02 0.03 Period VIII - 1965 to 1969 5 6 7 8 0.36 0.36 1.00 0.31 0.03 0.05 0.19 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.03 0.75 0.05 0.18 0.06 0.05 0.22 0.04 0.25 0.26 1.00 0.05 0.05 0.04 1.00 Average Density 0.16 Blocks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 8 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Blocks Blocks Blocks Blocks Blocks Blocks Blocks Blocks 80 Table 3.5 Tabu Search Results: R2 per Period and Number of Blocks Number of Blocks 2 4 8 I 0.114 0.262 0.455 II 0.170 0.165 0.185 Period IV 0.070 0.113 0.162 III 0.097 0.140 0.217 V 0.047 0.072 0.121 VI 0.063 0.294 0.351 VII 0.045 0.236 0.225 VIII 0.056 0.089 0.131 Table 3.6 Block Robustness: Distribution of Densities Period I II III IV V VI VII VIII 0% ≤ D ≤ 25% 66% 78% 80% 77% 70% 51% 34% 83% 25% < D ≤ 50% 5% 10% 6% 5% 11% 6% 6% 8% 50% < D ≤ 75% 3% 3% 2% 3% 0% 10% 2% 2% 75% < D ≤ 100% 27% 10% 13% 16% 19% 33% 58% 8% Table 3.7.1 Period I: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block I.1 I.2 I.3 I.4 I.5 I.6 I.7 I.8 Total Total Number % Leaders number of % of Avg. Num. Avg. of Leaders on Total Sessions Sessions Sessions Field Age 10% 23% 13 420 32 10.08 4 2 4 50 1 39 15 128 3% 2% 3% 39% 1% 30% 12% 100% 113 41 65 325 21 632 183 1,799 6% 2% 4% 18% 1% 35% 10% 100% (5.38) 28 (8.2) 21 (2.5) 16 (6.34) 7 (1.02) 21 N/A 16 (2.29) 12 (3.73) 14.05 (1.3) (0.83) 7.25 (2.72) 8.00 (0) 6.25 (0.95) 8.22 (0.72) 10.00 N/A 8.74 (0.71) 6.47 (1.02) 8.28 (0.4) Avg. Betweeness Centrality 2.08 (0.44) 0.34 (0.18) 0.94 (0.07) 3.34 (3.06) 0.28 (0.09) 5.85 N/A 0.49 (0.12) 0.55 (0.14) 0.71 (0.13) Table 3.7.2 81 Period I: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables AfricanDesc. Block I.1 I.2 I.3 I.4 I.5 I.6 I.7 I.8 Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Female 1 0 0 0 24 0 5 7 37 0.001 Non U.S. 2 0 1 0 4 0 2 1 10 0.412 0 3 0 3 9 0 1 4 20 0.000 New Orleans Swing 6 1 1 2 26 0 17 4 57 0.831 8 2 1 2 30 1 18 10 72 0.695 Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Block Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing I.1 8% 15% 0% 55% 73% I.2 0% 0% 75% 33% 67% I.3 0% 0% 50% 50% 50% I.4 0% 0% 75% 50% 50% I.5 48% 8% 18% 57% 65% I.6 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% I.7 13% 5% 3% 52% 55% I.8 47% 7% 27% 33% 83% Avg. Total (in Blocks) 29% 8% 16% 51% 64% 82 3.7.2.2. Period II (1935-1939) The square-like core structure seems to remain in the field (II.1, II.7, II.4 and II.6), while less connected than before (II.1 and II.4 are not connected). Also, we don’t observe isolated blocks as before. But analyze Table 8.1: the disparity among blocks is striking. Eighteen leaders in II.1 have in average 52 sessions and concentrate 31% of the field’s production. Their average field age is higher than the field’s (10.67 versus 9.22), and yet, slightly lower than II.7’s age (12 years). Leaders at II.1 play mostly Swing. Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Red Norvo are among the prestigious white leaders in this block. But now the integration of African-American popular leaders permits the presence, inter alia, of Billy Holiday and Louis Armstrong who climbed from less prominent blocks in the previous period. Right after II.1 we observe that leaders at II.6 produced in average 23 sessions, and concentrated 13% of the field’s production. Nevertheless, their field age is almost identical to II.1. They are connected to II.1 and are playing mostly Swing. In comparison to II.1, II.6 has a higher rate of African-descendents. Duke Ellington and Fletcher Henderson are among them. These “field-young” leaders tend to play Swing and their success brought them to an advantaged position in the field. In contrast, Benny Carter at block II.7 is one of the oldest leaders in the field and has the highest betweenness centrality among all blocks. Blocks II.5, II.3 and II.2 tend to be non-U.S. leaders, especially the later. They tend to be younger than the average leader. II.2 has also the lowest average session in the field. Among its leaders, we find Coleman Hawkins. Table 3.8.1 83 Period II: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block II.1 Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions II.2 II.3 18 10 8 10% % of Sessions 936 6% 79 4% 112 31% 3% 4% II.4 12 7% 214 7% II.5 4 2% 96 3% II.6 17 9% 386 13% II.7 1 1% 17 1% II.8 111 61% 1,165 39% 181 100% 3,004 100% Total Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age 52 (14.28) 8 (1.87) 14 (3.41) 18 10.67 (1.11) 8.90 (2.02) 2.63 (0.5) 8.42 (5.23) (1.82) 24 (14.29) 23 (4.79) 17 N/A 10 (1.14) 3.00 (1.08) 10.18 (1.03) 12.00 N/A 9.62 16.60 (1.92) (0.64) 9.22 (0.47) Avg. Betweeness Centrality 2.29 (0.5) 1.12 (0.59) 1.16 (0.79) 0.85 (0.46) 0.17 (0.11) 0.86 (0.26) 13.92 N/A 0.21 (0.04) 0.69 (0.12) Table 3.8.2 Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Period II: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop II.1 4 3 0 4 14 II.2 3 0 6 4 9 II.3 0 0 8 0 7 II.4 4 2 4 3 10 II.5 1 0 2 3 3 II.6 6 3 9 7 15 II.7 1 0 0 0 1 II.8 38 5 12 46 63 57 13 41 67 122 0.411 0.199 0.000 0.119 0.018 Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Block II.1 22% 17% 0% 25% 88% 60% 44% 100% II.2 30% 0% 100% 100% II.3 0% 0% 0% 33% 17% 33% 100% II.4 30% 50% 75% II.5 25% 0% 75% 35% 18% 53% 88% II.6 41% 100% 100% II.7 0% 0% 0% 34% 48% II.8 5% 11% 66% 31% 7% 23% 42% 76% Avg. Total (in Blocks) 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 6 0.765 6% 11% 0% 10% 0% 6% 0% 2% 4% Hard Bop 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 10 0.663 Hard Bop 13% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 8% 6% 84 3.7.2.3. Period III (1940-1944) Period III, from 1940 to 1944 was marked by the World War II. Not surprisingly, Blocks III.2, III.3 and III.5, mostly non U.S. leaders are not connected to the U.S. circuit. In contrast, we found III.1, III.7, III.4 and III.8 forming again an almost entirely connected square. III.4 and III.8 are by far the dominant blocks. The former’s leaders have in average 54 sessions, and the highest field age, 16.6 years. Their betweenness centrality was also the field highest, 3.82. Leaders at III.8 had in average 52 sessions, and 13.5 years in the field. In contrast to III.4, they presented an average betweenness below Block III.3’s average (2.18). Together, III.4 and III.8 amassed 45% of all field’s production, with only 14% of leaders. They tended to play Swing, but is worth noting the presence of Bop leaders. At Block III.4, we find Benny Goodman, Coleman Hawkins and Eddie Condon. At III.8 we find Artie Shaw, Bing Crosby, Gene Miller, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey and Woody Herman. Famous African-American Swing leaders like Louis Armstrong, Fletcher Henderson, Benny Carter, Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington are all in III.7, as well as the Bop innovators like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. This is the largest block in the field, with 137 leaders, 48% of them are African-descendents (lower than Block III.1 80%). When we inspect the percentage distributions of styles at Table 9.2, we find this block’s leaders following closely the field’s average. III.1 also includes famous African-American leaders: Billy Holiday and Hot Lips Page. It is interesting to note the inception of Bop at Blocks III.1 and III.7. These are the blocks that most concentrate African-descendent leaders. They are both connected to the dominant blocks III.4 and III.8. Also, worth noting that many of these African-American leaders mentioned above were at dominant blocks in earlier years. Perhaps the subsequent segregation of successful African-American leaders had created the context for the emergence of Bop. 85 Table 3.9.1 Period III: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block III.1 III.2 III.3 III.4 III.5 III.6 III.7 III.8 Total Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions 10 2 10 5 15 20 137 26 225 4% 1% 4% 2% 7% 9% 61% 12% 100% 175 22 137 268 181 228 1,220 1,358 3,589 % of Sessions 5% 1% 4% 7% 5% 6% 34% 38% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age 18 (2.42) 11 (4) 14 (3.08) 54 9.90 (1.53) 12.00 (2) 7.00 (0.45) 16.60 (21.06) (2.11) 12 (2.05) 11 (2.26) 9 (1.14) 52 (12.69) 9.73 (1.57) 12.10 (1.49) 11.36 (0.63) 13.50 15.95 (1.95) (1.03) 11.43 (0.45) Avg. Betweeness Centrality 1.02 (0.25) 0.69 (0.54) 2.18 (1.42) 3.82 (0.72) 0.02 (0.01) 0.41 (0.11) 0.23 (0.04) 1.49 (0.61) 0.59 (0.11) 86 III.1 III.2 III.3 III.4 III.5 III.6 III.7 III.8 III.1 III.2 III.3 III.4 III.5 III.6 III.7 III.8 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block 0.403 0.000 0.000 0 2 10 0 11 10 12 0 45 Non U.S. 2 1 1 2 3 5 55 6 75 0.185 New Orleans Swing 0.012 8 2 9 5 11 15 79 21 150 Bop 0.060 3 0 1 1 1 0 8 1 15 0.681 Hard Bop Cool 0 0 0 1 0 1 13 2 17 0.297 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 0.962 Soul 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0.999 Free Jazz Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz 0% 25% 0% 0% 0% 80% 20% 100% 38% 13% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% 50% 100% 0% 0% 10% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% 90% 10% 20% 0% 0% 0% 0% 20% 40% 100% 20% 20% 7% 7% 23% 0% 0% 0% 0% 73% 85% 8% 25% 0% 29% 0% 6% 0% 0% 0% 50% 88% 9% 65% 7% 2% 48% 12% 45% 11% 2% 1% 0% 4% 0% 26% 4% 0% 0% 91% 9% 9% 36% 9% 20% 33% 67% 7% 8% 2% 1% 0% 2 0 0 1 1 0 16 1 21 Female Period III: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 8 0 0 1 1 5 66 0 81 AfricanDesc. Table 3.9.2 87 3.7.2.4. Period IV (1945-1949) The block structure on period IV brings a novelty. Instead of the square structure, we observe a triangle, formed by IV.1, IV.4 and IV.8. Block IV.1 is clearly the dominant in this period. Its leaders produced in average 65 recording sessions (Table 10.1). They presented also the highest betweenness centrality and their average field age (15.08 years) is statistically equivalent to IV.4 (15.65). Five of these leaders are African-Descendents (Table 10.2; in percentage terms, similar to the field’s average). They play mostly Swing and Bop, while already including one leader who plays Cool. They are all Americans. This block brings together famous white leaders of Swing band like Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Woody Herman. At the same time, Louis Armstrong is also in this block. In contrast, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Sarah Vaughan, reknown leaders in the aggressive and emergent Bop movement are also in this block. It is ironic that these two conflicting groups share the same position at this period. While Benny Goodman claimed in an interview that he didn’t know Bop and Louis Armstrong mocked publicly the new style while reintroducing his New Orleans style, Parker and Gillespie struggled to advance Bop. Attached to IV.1, in a clearly peripheral position, we observe IV.6. This is the largest block in number of leaders (272 musicians, or 80% of leaders). Nonetheless, they concentrate only 57% of the recorded sessions. Thelonious Monk, one of the exponents in the Bop movement, is in this block, as well as Stan Getz, who was developing his own approach which would influence the Cool style. IV.4, also in the dominant axis, concentrates old leaders in the field, and their betweenness centrality is second only to IV.1’s. Yet, their average session production was 21, much below IV.1’s average. Similarly to IV.1, its leaders are predominantly AfricanAmericans. In contrast, they present more leaders playing New Orleans/Classic Jazz. As a matter of fact, we observe in this block all styles represented, at higher rates in comparison with the field’s average. This is a position where established African-American Swing leaders share common sidemen. Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Billy Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald are in this block. It is worth noting the first two in this list were predecessors to Bop. It is also of interest the presence of the young Miles Davis in this position (perhaps Grandfather effect – with Coleman?). Although leaders at IV.8 presented a lower field age in comparison to IV.4, they produced more than IV.4’s leaders, achieving an average of 41 sessions. They are all white 88 and Americans. They tend to play Swing and Bebop, shying away from New Orleans/Classic Jazz. Traditional white leaders are here: Artie Shaw, Gene Krupa and Harry James. Compare this axis with Block IV.7. Its leaders have the lowest average production of sessions, and, at the same time, still closer to New Orleans/Classic Jazz style. In comparison, Block IV.6 lump together 272 leaders (almost 80% of the field’s leaders) produce only 57% of the field’s sessions. And yet, their average field age is 11.57, only 3.5 years below the elite’s average at IV.1. Their demographics resemble a lot the field’s average (concentration of African-descendents, women and non-Americans) as well as the styles played. Blocks IV.2, IV.5 and IV.3 constitute the burgeoning jazz world outside U.S., mostly in Europe. While block IV.5’s leaders tend to play Swing and Bop, block IV.2 geared towards Bop. IV.3, in contrast, tend to play only Swing and Bop, shying away from New Orleans/Classic jazz. These are very field young leaders (as a matter of fact, the youngest block in the field), and yet their average production of sessions surpasses the field’s average. Table 3.10.1 Period IV: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block IV.1 IV.2 IV.3 IV.4 IV.5 IV.6 IV.7 IV.8 Total Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions 12 5 9 20 6 272 12 7 343 3% 1% 3% 6% 2% 79% 3% 2% 100% 785 48 135 488 75 2,529 74 290 4,424 % of Sessions 18% 1% 3% 11% 2% 57% 2% 7% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age Avg. Betweeness Centrality 65 (13.33) 10 (2.04) 15 (4.38) 24 15.08 (2.33) 7.60 (1.54) 5.00 (2.59) 15.65 (0.46) (3.48) (1.44) (0.29) 13 (5.49) 9 (0.87) 6 (2.19) 41 (14.21) 10.17 (2.33) 11.57 (0.49) 11.83 (1.78) 13.86 12.90 (1.09) (2.1) 11.73 (0.43) 1.97 (0.46) 1.21 1.17 (0.72) 1.30 1.01 (0.83) 0.20 (0.03) 0.23 (0.13) 0.52 (0.08) 0.38 (0.05) 89 IV.1 IV.2 IV.3 IV.4 IV.5 IV.6 IV.7 IV.8 IV.1 IV.2 IV.3 IV.4 IV.5 IV.6 IV.7 IV.8 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block 0.704 0.020 0.000 0 4 8 0 6 44 3 0 65 Non U.S. 3 1 7 6 0 72 6 1 96 0.004 New Orleans Swing 0.001 10 2 2 17 5 144 2 7 189 Bop 0.300 4 2 0 5 2 45 0 2 60 0.311 Hard Bop Cool 1 0 0 5 0 27 2 0 35 1 0 0 1 0 9 0 0 11 0.955 Period IV: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 0 0 0 1 0 14 1 0 16 0.870 Soul 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 3 0.047 Free Jazz 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 3 0.026 Fusion 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 0.996 Latin/World Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz Fusion Latin/World 42% 8% 0% 25% 83% 33% 8% 8% 0% 0% 0% 0% 20% 80% 50% 20% 25% 50% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 89% 88% 22% 0% 25% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 55% 15% 32% 89% 26% 26% 5% 5% 5% 5% 0% 0% 100% 83% 33% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 44% 9% 33% 66% 21% 12% 4% 6% 1% 16% 0% 0% 25% 75% 25% 13% 13% 17% 0% 25% 0% 0% 0% 0% 14% 100% 29% 14% 0% 0% 14% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 41% 9% 19% 28% 55% 17% 10% 3% 5% 1% 1% 1% 1 1 0 3 0 24 0 1 30 Female 5 1 2 11 0 119 2 0 140 AfricanDesc. Table 3.10.2 90 Block VII.5 Isolated Block VII.8 Block VII.7 Block VII.2 Block VII.4 Block VII.3 Block VII.1 Block V.1 Block V.8 Block V.4 Period VII – 1960 to 1964 Block V.6 Block V.7 Isolated Period V – 1950 to 1954 Block VII.6 Block V.3 Block V.2 Block V.5 Block VIII.6 Block VIII.2 Period VIII – 1965 to 1969 Block VI.5 Block VI.7 Block VI.6 Period VI – 1955 to 1959 Block VIII.7 Block VIII.1 Block VIII.8 Block VI.2 Block VI.8 Block VIII.5 Block VIII.4 Block VIII.3 Isolated Block VI.3 Block VI.1 Block VI.4 Chart 3.6: Tabu Search Blockmodeling - Reduced Graphs 91 3.7.2.5. Period V (1950-1954) The structure of Period V brings us back to the quasi-connected square we have observed on earlier periods. Again, we are able to identify a dominant block: V.2. The three leaders in this block have the highest average of production (48 sessions). Their field age average (17.67) is the second, preceded by (22.33). They have also the highest average betweenness centrality (3.74), which we may observe on the reduced graph: V.2 connects the square to V.5 and V.3. The leaders in this block are all African-American men, who play mostly Swing, Bop and Latin. It is worth noting that their rate of Bop and Latin playing surpasses by far the field’s average (67% versus 26%, and 33% versus 2%). These leaders are Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Roy Eldridge. Block V.8 is very similar to V.2: its leaders have a high average number of sessions (41) and field age (17.07), although their average betweenness is lower (1.21 versus 3.74). Five of the fifteen leaders are African-descendents. There are mostly American musicians, with higher presence of women. They tend to play Swing (much above the field average), Bop and Hard Bop. These are in fact traditional white and African-American Swing leaders: Stan Kenton, Artie Shaw, Billy Holiday, Louis Armstrong, Harry James, and Count Basie. Block V.1, connected to V.2, counts with the highest field average in the period, although their average betweenness centrality is lower than V.2’s and equivalent to V.8. These established musicians tend to play Swing, are all American men and have a lower presence of African-descendents that the field’s average. This is a declassé block: once hegemonic leaders like Benny Goodman, Red Nichols and Tommy Dorsey used to be in the dominant block in earlier periods. If V.1 and V.8 have lower presence of African-Descendent leaders, V.3 and V.5 (again, connected to the former by V.2) have higher presence of African-descendent leaders. These two blocks are shying away from New Orleans/Classic (especially V.3, with Bing Crosby). V.3 is also shying away from Swing. Their tendency is to play Bop and related styles (Hard Bop, Cool and Soul). It is in this block that Clifford Brown introduces his style, predecessor of hard bop. Observe their average session number and field age: both blocks count with field young leaders. Leaders at V.5 (which includes established swing leaders like Louis Armstrong, Coleman Hawkins, but also the bop innovator Bud Powell and cool innovators like John Lewis and Gerry Mulligan) produced fewer sessions than the field’s average, while V.3 produced somewhat above (13 versus 10.17). This figure was much below 92 their neighbors at V.2. It is worth noting that the once well connected Louis Armstrong is now brokered by Bop leaders. Isolated blocks confirm that victorious musicians are also well connected and play trendy styles. Look at Block V.4. Fourteen out of eighteen leaders play New Orleans/Classic Jazz. They are unconnected among themselves, and have lower average number of sessions produced (11). The situation at Block V.7 is even more dramatic. It concentrates 68% of the field’s leader, while controlling only 48% of its session production. Their average session production is the lowest in the field (7). Finally, observe block V.6. Although connected to the square, leaders in this block is not connected among themselves. This is a typical situation of a fragmented periphery. Altough its leaders are traditional in the field (average field age of 17.18 surpasses Block V.8’s 17.07) they were not able to keep up with new times. They play New Orleans/Classic more than the field average, and have low acceptance of new styles. Table 3.11.1 Period V: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block V.1 V.2 V.3 Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions 9 3 12 2% 1% 3% 258 144 158 % of Sessions 6% 3% 4% V.4 18 4% 192 4% V.5 48 11% 454 10% V.6 V.7 V.8 Total 33 289 15 427 8% 68% 4% 100% 440 2,078 620 4,344 10% 48% 14% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age 29 (6.44) 48 (17.32) 13 (2.75) 11 22.33 (2.11) 17.67 (3.18) 11.58 (2.67) 14.17 (2.66) (2.52) 9 (1.73) 13 (2) 7 (0.46) 41 (8.42) 12.10 (1.02) 17.18 (1.36) 12.26 (0.47) 17.07 10.17 (0.65) (1.8) 13.11 (0.4) Avg. Betweeness Centrality 1.28 (0.26) 3.74 (0.21) 0.56 (0.13) 0.68 (0.25) 0.23 (0.06) 0.40 (0.11) 0.19 (0.03) 1.21 (0.21) 0.33 (0.03) 93 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block V.1 V.2 V.3 V.4 V.5 V.6 V.7 V.8 V.1 V.2 V.3 V.4 V.5 V.6 V.7 V.8 0.189 0.004 0.007 0 0 2 2 10 1 81 1 97 Non U.S. 2 1 1 14 8 20 77 1 124 0.000 New Orleans Swing 0.004 9 2 4 3 20 17 133 12 200 Bop 0.001 1 2 7 0 17 4 76 3 110 0.070 Hard Bop Cool 0 0 4 0 10 2 49 3 68 1 0 2 1 7 2 40 0 53 0.495 Period V: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 0 0 4 0 10 0 28 0 42 0.001 Soul 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 0 8 0.938 Free Jazz 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 0 7 0.737 Fusion 0 1 0 0 0 0 8 1 10 0.034 Latin/World Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz Fusion Latin/World 22% 0% 0% 22% 100% 11% 0% 11% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% 0% 0% 33% 67% 67% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 33% 58% 0% 17% 9% 36% 64% 36% 18% 36% 0% 0% 0% 22% 6% 11% 20% 0% 0% 7% 0% 0% 0% 93% 7% 54% 15% 21% 20% 50% 43% 25% 18% 25% 3% 0% 0% 18% 3% 3% 63% 53% 13% 6% 6% 0% 0% 0% 0% 37% 7% 28% 30% 52% 30% 19% 16% 11% 3% 2% 3% 33% 20% 7% 7% 80% 20% 20% 0% 0% 0% 0% 7% 37% 7% 23% 29% 47% 26% 16% 12% 10% 2% 2% 2% 0 0 0 1 7 1 20 3 32 Female 2 3 7 4 26 6 106 5 159 AfricanDesc. Table 3.11.2 94 3.7.2.6. Period VI (1955-1959) At the center of the reduced graph on Period VI we observe a prominent position: Block VI.2. It connects three separate groups: the first is composed by VI.6, VI.8, VI.4 and VI.1, the second is formed by VI.5 and VI.3 and finally VI.7. Surprisingly, this block is occupied by only one leader, Woody Herman, an established white American Swing musician who is now playing Bop and Cool as well. He is one of the oldest musicians in the field (27 years), has a high number of sessions (35) and the highest betweenness centrality. What different worlds does he connect? Blocks VI.8, VI.6 and VI.4 tend to combine higher rates of African-Descendent leaders. VI.4 achieves 58%, in comparison to the field average of 40%. In terms of styles, leaders in these positions share the taste for Swing, Bop, Hard Bop. In contrast, VI.4 and VI.6 tend to play Cool, Free Jazz and Soul, while leaders at VI.8 gear towards Fusion and Latin/World. At Block VI.4 we observe important names in Hard Bop: Art Blakey, Julian “Cannonball” Adderley, Miles Davis, as well as Bop/Latin leaders like Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, or older Swing leaders like Count Basie. In average, their field age (16.77 versus 18.45) is close to VI.8, although their average session produced is much lower (18 versus 32). It is at this period that Miles Davis records “Kind of Blue”, one of the most influential records ever released. VI.6 counts with traditional leaders like Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. Younger and successful leaders pushing the music towards Cool and new experiments are also present (see above, the “Multiple Revolution in 1959”): Charles Mingus (strongly influenced by Ellington), John Coltrane , Art Pepper, Abbey Lincoln, Chet Baker,. This is a block where “West Coast” musicians are strongly represented. It is interesting to observe how this block resembles VI.4 in field age (16.30 versus 16.77) and average session number (15 versus 18). Block VI.1 presents unexpressive average session number (15, just above the field’s average), and its leaders’ average field age is not much higher than the average (16.71 versus 15.21). These are mostly white American men who play Swing, Bop and Cool. Between these two positions, Block VI.8 represents a bridge. It brings together famous names in Swing like Benny Goodman, Coleman Hawkins, Gene Krupa and Billy Holiday. VI.8 would be the dominant block in the whole structure, if VI.2 didn’t play such role. Its 95 eleven leaders have in average 32 sessions produces, and their average field age (18.45) is second only to VI.2. Also, their average betweenness centrality is the second highest (1.29). These results are quite surprising for two reasons. First, we would expect that these old leaders at blocks VI.8 and VI.2 be completely displaced by younger generations. Second, we would expect younger generations to be cohesive in establishing a dominant core. The reverse occurs: the young leaders build up separate Jazz worlds, not necessarily based on style differentiation, but on geographic distance (East and West Coast). What is on stake here is the hegemony of New York City as the center of Jazz. Also, old leaders are able to provide the bridge between these two worlds: their prestige allows them to participate in both worlds. Block VI.7 is the largest block in terms of quantity of leaders. Although it concentrates 277 leaders (51%), it represents only 31% of all field’s sessions. Moreover, its leaders presented the lowest betweenness centrality. As a peripheral block, it is surprising that it is internally cohesive. Some important names are in this Block: Dave Brubeck (Cool innovator), Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra (Free Jazz innovators), and Horace Silver (Hard Bop innovator). Brubeck released “Time Out”, a still popular record among Jazz fans, and Coleman was introducing his first free jazz album (“The Shape of Jazz to Come”). Most of the leaders who compose blocks VI.3 and VI.5 are not Americans. In terms of styles played, they tend to converge to the field’s average. VI.5 presented a higher rate of leaders playing New Orleans/Classic Jazz than the field’s average. In contrast, we observe on block VI.3 a higher rate of leaders playing Latin/World styles. In general, it is interesting how well balanced all blocks are in terms of age field and session number. Especially on the former dimension, the blocks are not too disparate from each other. 96 Table 3.12.1 Period VI: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block VI.1 VI.2 VI.3 VI.4 Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions % of Sessions 17 3% 258 4% 1 0% 35 1% 18 77 3% 14% 321 1,384 5% 22% VI.5 5 1% 82 1% VI.6 134 25% 1,946 31% VI.7 VI.8 Total 277 11 540 51% 2% 100% 1,968 357 6,351 31% 6% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age 15 (1.54) 35 N/A 18 (3.54) 18 16.71 (2.13) 27.00 N/A 12.78 (1.82) 16.77 (1.53) (0.83) 16 (3.23) 15 (1.29) 7 (0.45) 32 (3.42) 10.40 (1.25) 16.30 (0.77) 14.24 (0.57) 18.45 11.76 (0.53) (3.53) 15.21 (0.39) Avg. Betweeness Centrality 0.32 (0.04) 3.04 N/A 0.64 (0.21) 0.39 (0.05) 0.34 (0.13) 0.21 (0.03) 0.07 (0.01) 1.29 (0.17) 0.21 (0.02) 97 VI.1 VI.2 VI.3 VI.4 VI.5 VI.6 VI.7 VI.8 VI.1 VI.2 VI.3 VI.4 VI.5 VI.6 VI.7 VI.8 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block 0.010 0.000 0.000 2 0 16 3 5 5 96 1 128 Non U.S. 3 0 3 15 2 29 88 2 142 0.035 New Orleans Swing 0.259 9 1 7 42 2 68 100 6 235 Bop 0.049 7 1 6 28 1 38 52 4 137 0.693 Hard Bop Cool 3 0 6 27 1 40 65 3 145 5 1 3 14 1 29 24 1 78 0.007 Period VI: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 3 0 3 15 0 25 52 2 100 0.965 Soul 0.958 0 0 0 3 0 3 6 0 12 Free Jazz 2 0 0 1 1 4 5 3 16 0.000 Fusion 2 0 2 2 0 4 9 1 20 0.379 Latin/World Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz Fusion Latin/World 24% 0% 12% 18% 53% 41% 18% 29% 18% 0% 12% 12% 0% 0% 0% 0% 100% 100% 0% 100% 0% 0% 0% 0% 11% 6% 89% 19% 44% 38% 38% 19% 19% 0% 0% 13% 58% 14% 4% 20% 55% 37% 36% 18% 20% 4% 1% 3% 0% 0% 40% 20% 20% 0% 0% 0% 100% 40% 20% 20% 46% 8% 4% 22% 52% 29% 30% 22% 19% 2% 3% 3% 35% 6% 35% 36% 41% 21% 26% 10% 21% 2% 2% 4% 45% 36% 9% 18% 55% 36% 27% 9% 18% 0% 27% 9% 40% 8% 24% 26% 44% 25% 27% 14% 19% 2% 3% 4% 0 0 1 11 0 11 18 4 45 Female 4 0 2 45 0 62 96 5 214 AfricanDesc. Table 3.12.2 98 3.7.2.7. Period VII (1960-1964) Period VII probably presents the most strongly connected structure. At a first glace, we observe a fully connected (Blocks VII.2, VII.7, VII.4 and VII.3) square and a fully connected pentagram (VII.2, VII.3, VII.6, VII.8 and VII.1). Block VII.1 is one of the most important positions in the field, and yet, it is not as hegemonic as were the dominant blocks in earlier periods. To be sure, its eight leaders have the highest average session number (38 sessions) and the highest field age (26.38 years). Yet, their average betweenness is dwarfed by the more central leaders at Block VII.3. They are all African-American leaders: Budd Johnson, Coleman Hawkins, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Etta Jones, J.J. Johnson, Donald Byrd, Nat Adderley. Isolated, but powerful, they play a mix of already “old” styles like Swing and Bop, with Soul, Free Jazz and Fusion. In contrast, the six leaders at Block VII.3 occupy a very privileged position. Although they amass in average a lower number of recording sessions (28 versus 38), their field age (21.33 years) is very close to VII.1’s and their average betweenness centrality is the highest in the field. Benny Goodman, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles and Sammy Davis Jr. are among the leaders in this field41. They are all American leaders, and four out of six are AfricanAmericans. They tend to play Swing, Bop, Soul and Latin. Together with leaders in Block VII.2, the leaders in this block connect the square with the pentagram. Compare these blocks with Block VII.8. It is the most numerous block in the field (39 leaders) after the isolated and fragmented VII.5. Most of them are African-American leaders, and they tend to play Bop, Hard Bop, Soul, Cool and Fusion, shying away from New Orleans and Swing. They achieved the third place in average sessions number produced, while their field age is statistically equivalent to the field’s average. At the heath of the Civil Rights Movement, we find in these block conscious band leaders like Charles Mingus, as innovators in Soul like Julian “Cannonball” Adderley, Brother Jack McDuff and Stanley Turrentine. It is surprising to find Stan Getz at this same block, for this is the period when Getz is introducing Bossa Nova to the Jazz field, and won the Grammy for “Desafinado” in 1963. A possible explanation could try to describe how Charles Mingus (and other West Coast Hardboppers) and Stan Getz shared the same resources (west coast musicians) and were led to differentiation in style later on. In contrast wit the ecological argument that differentiation is 41 If in earlier periods the collocation of Swing and Bop musicians could spur (or occur in tandem with) public conflict, now these two social groups seem to be integrated under the wider umbrella of “Jazz”. At this period Gillespie is no longer seen as rebellious. As a matter of fact, he was chosen by the U.S. government to represent his country abroad. In contrast, the spot light is shifted on the conflict between mainstream jazz and “free-jazz”. As a consequence, I focus my investigation on where new conflicts emerge vis-à-vis structural changes. 99 preceded by crowding out a niche, we may observe a different movement: Charles Mingus later shift to free-jazz might have been a move taken in order to differentiate himself from the more commercial Stan Getz. Still in the pentagram, we observe Block VII.6, which is also connected to VII.4, in the connected square. Fifty percent of the eight American leaders in this block are AfricanAmericans. But in comparison to VII.8, they still tend to play Swing more than the field’s average. In many aspects, but one, they are quite similar to VII.8. They have a relatively high average session number (19 versus 20), and betweenness centrality (0.75 versus 0.62). However, their field age is much higher (20.25 versus 16.46). This block includes leaders like BenWebster, Gerry Mulligan, and SarahVaughan. Block VII.2 groups only three leaders, Gene Krupa, Lalo Schifrin and Mark Murphy. These leaders do not have an expressive average number of sessions, nor field age. Yet, their betweenness centrality (0.95) is second only to Block VII.3. Block VII.2 is connected to Block VII.7, whose seven leaders together have the second oldest average field age (24.43 years). They are all men, mostly white and American. They present the lowest average betweenness centrality (0.12) in the field. Nonetheless, their average number of sessions is higher than the average field. Laurindo de Almeida, Frank Sinatra e Charlie Barnet are in this position, strongly associated with Swing and Latin/World styles. There are fifteen leaders at Block VII.4, who present the third highest field age (21.33 years). Like Block VII.7’s, this block’s average number of sessions is relatively higher than the field’s average (17 versus 9.95), but in contrast, its betweenness centrality is higher than the field’s average (0.39 versus 0.25). There is a high presence of women, as well as leaders who play Swing, Cool and Latin. Among them we observe Stan Kenton, who was a Swing leader. He was famous and controversial for his experiments. 100 Table 3.13.1 Period VII: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block VII.1 VII.2 VII.3 VII.4 VII.5 VII.6 VII.7 VII.8 Total Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions 8 3 6 15 461 8 7 39 547 1% 1% 1% 3% 84% 1% 1% 7% 100% 302 38 169 262 3,629 151 104 786 5,441 % of Sessions 6% 1% 3% 5% 67% 3% 2% 14% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age Avg. Betweeness Centrality 38 (15.03) 13 (0.33) 28 (3.28) 17 26.38 (4.66) 18.00 (9.5) 21.33 (3.64) 21.47 (0.04) (3.78) (1.53) (0.07) 8 (0.41) 19 (5.22) 15 (4.82) 20 (1.95) 16.49 (0.46) 20.25 (3.68) 24.43 (1.67) 16.46 9.95 (11.78) (1.11) 16.99 (9.7) 0.79 (0.23) 0.95 1.43 (0.32) 0.39 0.18 (0.02) 0.75 (0.16) 0.12 (0.04) 0.62 (0.08) 0.25 (0.46) 101 VII.1 VII.2 VII.3 VII.4 VII.5 VII.6 VII.7 VII.8 VII.1 VII.2 VII.3 VII.4 VII.5 VII.6 VII.7 VII.8 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block 0.365 0.000 0.001 0 1 0 0 129 0 1 2 133 Non U.S. 1 1 1 0 126 1 1 5 136 0.069 New Orleans Swing 0.051 4 1 3 9 156 3 6 10 192 Bop 0.066 3 1 3 3 101 2 0 17 130 0.005 Hard Bop Cool 5 1 1 3 152 3 0 24 189 0 0 1 4 55 2 0 6 68 0.485 Period VII: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 3 0 2 0 107 1 0 20 133 0.001 Soul 0.760 1 0 0 0 28 1 0 1 31 Free Jazz 1 0 0 1 16 0 0 4 22 0.487 Fusion 0 0 2 2 20 0 1 1 26 0.033 Latin/World Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz Fusion Latin/World 100% 13% 0% 13% 50% 38% 63% 0% 38% 13% 13% 0% 0% 0% 33% 33% 33% 33% 33% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 67% 0% 0% 17% 50% 50% 17% 17% 33% 0% 0% 33% 27% 20% 0% 0% 60% 20% 20% 27% 0% 0% 7% 13% 39% 7% 23% 4% 5% 28% 29% 36% 35% 13% 25% 6% 50% 13% 0% 13% 38% 25% 38% 25% 13% 13% 0% 0% 29% 0% 14% 14% 86% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 14% 79% 13% 5% 13% 26% 44% 62% 15% 51% 3% 10% 3% 43% 7% 24% 25% 35% 24% 35% 12% 24% 6% 4% 5% 1 0 0 3 30 1 0 5 40 Female 8 0 4 4 181 4 2 31 234 AfricanDesc. Table 3.13.2 102 3.7.2.8. Period VIII (1965-1969) It is worth recalling that the blockmodeling analysis found the weakest correlation in this period. That means, on one hand, that our technique for grouping around positions was not acceptable for this period. On the other hand, it also means that the specialization of resources was not strong enough to generate distinct blocks. In other words, musicians were widely shared by leaders. When this occurs, I suggest that the allocation of musicians to leaders gets closer to an ideal decentralized type, where resource specificity decreases and a commoditization permits fluidity of personnel. Bearing that in mind, let us analyze its structure. The structure at Period VIII brings us back to centralization around a dominant block. The four leaders at Block VIII.1 present both the highest average session number (33) and highest average betweenness centrality (1.40). Its average field age is second only to VIII.2 (20.75 versus 21.29 years). They are all American men, and three out of four leaders are African-Americans. Bop, Hard Bop, Soul, Fusion and Latin are the prevalent styles in this block. We do not observe Swing nor New Orleans played anymore. Among them, Herbie Mann and Wes Montgomery were in the spotlight for advancing the Fusion-Rock experiments. Compare this block to VIII.2. Although leaders in this block present the highest average field age (21.29 years), their average session number is just above the field average (8 versus 7.65). Their average betweenness is also not much higher than the field’s average (0.43 versus 0.25, take in account the respective standard deviations). This block is occupied mostly by American white men, who play Swing and New Orleans in much higher rates than the field’s average. It is surprising that it has any connection at all with the modernist VIII.1. Nevertheless, leaders like Stan Getz (who at this period won a Grammy award for his “Girl of Ipanema”) was able to connect modern and traditional styles. Better challenge to VIII.1 would be expected to come from VIII.7. Its 27 leaders have the second highest average session number (14), and yet, it is far below VIII.1’s average. It is also the second highest in average betweenness (0.86 versus 1.40), although their field age is just equal to the field average (18.44 years). Most of its members are African-Descendents. Although the styles played are much closer to the field’s averages when comparing to VIII.1, we still observe a bias towards Hard Bop and Soul. Dizzy Gillespie, Herbie Hancock and Clark Terry are among the leaders in this block. 103 Block VIII.8 presents the second highest average field age (20.75), the same of its neighbor VIII.1. And yet, its average session number and betweenness centrality (respectively 11 and 0.54) are about a third of the numbers achieved by leaders at VIII.1. The eight leaders at Block VIII.8 tend to be Non-Americans. But in comparison to their isolated and noncohesive counterparts at Blocks VIII.3 and VIII.4, they are cohesive and connected to the U.S. Jazz world. Nevertheless, there is a clear tendency to play older styles like New Orleans/Classic Jazz and Swing. The non-cohesive Block VIII.6, connected to VIII.2, VIII.1 and VIII.7 is the largest block in the period. It contains 392 leaders (71% of the total), but they produced in average only 7 sessions. Their average betweenness is just below the field’s average (0.2 versus 0.25) and their average field age is just above the field’s average (18.54 versus 18.44 years). Due to the high number of leaders, in almost all styles and demographics it resembles the field’s averages: above 40% are African-descendents, and they tend to play modern styles. Although this block could be considered to lump together less successful musicians, we find leaders as diverse as Miles Davis, Max Roach, Astrud Gilberto, Art Blakey, Benny Goodman, Ornette Coleman among many other ones. Richard “Groove” Holmes, Julian “Cannonball” Adderley Soul. In average, Block VIII.5 contains the youngest leaders in the field (8.82 versus 18.44). Although its average session production is above average (13 versus 7.65), it is much lower than VIII.1’s figure. They tend to be African-descendents, and play Soul and Free Jazz. In spite of the avant-gardist preference, these leaders are not sectarian, as we observe an average betweenness centrality of 0.63 (higher than the field average of 0.25). Among the eleven leaders in this position we will find Archie Shepp, Cecil Taylor, John Coltrane and Albert Ayler, exponents of Free Jazz. The isolated and non-cohesive Blocks VIII.3 and VIII.4 present the lowest average session number in the field (respectively 4 and 5), and the lowest average betweenness centrality. Yet, leaders at Block VIII.3 present the fourth highest average field age (20.45). Both VIII.3 and VIII.4 present a high percentage of Non-American leaders who tend to play older styles like Swing and New Orleans/Classic Jazz. Neverthless, it is remarkable the higher rate of Free Jazz leaders at VIII.4. Although European leaders were struggling to create their own version of Free jazz, they did not share sidemen with their American counterparts. 104 Table 3.14.1 Period VIII: Selected Statistics per Block (Number of Leaders and Discrete Variables) Block VIII.1 VIII.2 VIII.3 VIII.4 VIII.5 VIII.6 VIII.7 VIII.8 Total Total Number % Leaders number of of Leaders on Total Sessions 4 17 29 67 11 392 27 8 555 1% 3% 5% 12% 2% 71% 5% 1% 100% 133 140 112 317 146 2,937 369 91 4,245 % of Sessions 3% 3% 3% 7% 3% 69% 9% 2% 100% Avg. Num. Avg. Sessions Field Age Avg. Betweeness Centrality 33 (6.09) 8 (1.77) 4 (0.63) 5 20.75 (2.32) 21.29 (2.96) 20.45 (2.54) 17.40 (0.12) (0.63) (1.42) (0.02) 13 (3.3) 7 (0.48) 14 (1.18) 11 (2.19) 8.82 (1.52) 18.54 (0.53) 18.44 (1.7) 20.75 7.65 (9.2) (1.78) 18.44 (10.71) 1.40 (0.45) 0.43 0.13 (0.09) 0.10 0.63 (0.29) 0.20 (0.02) 0.86 (0.19) 0.54 (0.09) 0.25 (0.51) 105 VIII.1 VIII.2 VIII.3 VIII.4 VIII.5 VIII.6 VIII.7 VIII.8 VIII.1 VIII.2 VIII.3 VIII.4 VIII.5 VIII.6 VIII.7 VIII.8 Avg. Total (in Blocks) Block Total Pearson Chi-Square Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Block 0.844 0.000 0.000 0 3 13 35 1 105 1 6 164 Non U.S. 0 14 11 19 0 71 3 3 121 0.000 New Orleans Swing 0.154 0 5 10 17 0 101 10 4 147 Bop 0.012 2 2 2 11 0 88 10 4 119 0.001 Hard Bop Cool 2 3 4 18 4 161 18 3 213 0 1 2 4 0 48 3 0 58 0.492 Period VIII: Number of Leaders Classified under selected Dichotomic Variables 3 0 3 7 3 110 16 1 143 0.000 Soul 0.000 0 0 3 11 11 40 1 0 66 Free Jazz 2 0 2 5 0 35 4 0 48 0.063 Fusion 1 1 1 1 2 18 4 0 28 0.039 Latin/World Percentage on total number of leaders in each block (Yellow, Bold Italic: above average) AfricanDesc. Female Non U.S. New Orleans Swing Bop Hard Bop Cool Soul Free Jazz Fusion Latin/World 75% 0% 0% 0% 0% 50% 50% 0% 75% 0% 50% 25% 24% 6% 18% 82% 29% 12% 18% 6% 0% 0% 0% 6% 28% 7% 45% 41% 37% 7% 15% 7% 11% 11% 7% 4% 28% 4% 52% 28% 25% 16% 27% 6% 10% 16% 7% 1% 0% 9% 0% 0% 0% 36% 0% 0% 73% 27% 100% 18% 43% 8% 27% 19% 26% 23% 42% 13% 29% 10% 9% 5% 81% 4% 4% 11% 37% 37% 67% 11% 59% 4% 15% 15% 13% 0% 75% 38% 50% 50% 38% 0% 13% 0% 0% 0% 42% 7% 30% 22% 26% 21% 38% 10% 26% 12% 9% 5% 0 1 2 3 0 31 1 0 38 Female 3 4 8 19 8 167 22 1 232 AfricanDesc. Table 3.14.2 106 3.8. Discussion The MRQAP analyses give us a sense of how the field changed. It is against these trends that we compare the results in the blocks. As a general trend, the preference for leaders with similar field age and number of sessions decrease in time, which may be interpreted as a lower level of centralization among top leaders. Nevertheless, the preference for partners with “equal power” never vanishes. Instead, the element of “race” changes significantly within this period. If during the “Jim Crow” era success was linked to ascribed characteristics, the Bop revolution reinforced two phenomena: mobility and endogamous association of African-decedent leaders, which was frequently, interpreted as a “Crow Jim” phenomena (LOPES, 2002). Nonetheless, as we observed at Table 3, this effect loses much of its strength when we added the “style” matrices, which denotes that “racial” preference was intermediated by style preference. It is also worth noting the periods when the field experiences turning points. Period IV announces a change: as style dissimilarity becomes slightly positive and significant, we interpret that leaders seek leaders who are not originally affiliated with their own styles. But at the same time, the African-American endogamy increases. We observe at this period the Bop revolution that occurred in the inner core of the Jazz world. Young African-American sidemen who were tightly connected to Swing leaders become leaders themselves and introduce the new style in the core of the network. This revolution is felt on Period V: leaders seek leaders who have different field age and lower (or higher) number of sessions. The example of Coleman Hawkins is illustrative of this change: some old and established Swing leaders seek to adapt themselves to the new times. A new point of inflection comes at the Period VII. Again leaders associate with leaders with different field age and level of sessions produced, which denotes an interchange between prominent and up-coming leaders. Also, this is the period when white endogamy finally approaches zero. But most important is the fact that the difference in betweenness centrality lost its significance. This does not mean that the actors are equally connected and have similar betweenness centrality. Instead, that means that the association is not ruled by “star” structure logic as it was in earlier periods. At Period VIII the significance of the betweenness centrality difference becomes again significant and positive, which may characterize a return to equilibrium. But we observe a quite different picture in comparison with earlier periods. The Neither-African Descendent factor becomes negative (which is strongly intermediated by Style affiliation, as we observe 107 on Table 3). Style dissimilarity becomes negative in period VIII (Table 2, although becomes positive when we account the styles individually at Table 3). The affiliation to styles becomes an important explanatory factor for association. In summary: • The preference for association with leaders of same age at the field and same level of production (or market share) decreases but never disappears • The “Jim Crow” effect becomes less significant for association. Instead, we observe a rising endogamy among African-Descendent leaders and exogamy among non-African-Descendent leaders. • These effects become highly intermediated by style endogamy. It is against these trends that we now discuss the results observed among and within blocks. A centralized structure remains apparent from period I to period IV. At Period I, block I.1 is dominant in field age, number of sessions produced and betweenness centrality. It is at that block that Benny Goodman introduces innovations in Swing that led him to the famous Carnegie Hall concert in 1935. Period II follows closely this model with some interesting deviations. II.1 is the dominant block, but it has not the highest field age. Nevertheless, the position with the highest field age is II.7, occupied by only one individual. Also, we see now Louis Armstrong in the dominant block (II.1), which shows some social mobility, especially crossing racial boundaries. Nevertheless, a Paretian follower would not be surprised with this finding: it is important for the incumbent elites to absorb some of the most talented individuals from the lower strata, in order to contain conflicts. Yet, the structure is clearly centralized and the “racial” segregation is observable within blocks. Period III is again clearly centralized. III.4 has the highest average session production, field age and betweenness centrality. However, III.7 shows a motility effect of leaders, like Louis Armstrong, and competition with same resources with up-coming boppers. The meeting at the same social space of individuals who descended from upper strata, with individuals who are ascending to better positions promises future conflicts but at the same time interchange of ideas42. Finally, Period IV has still a dominant structure. Block IV.1 is the dominant position: the average sessions number is much higher than other blocks, statistically its leaders are as old as the oldest (IV.4) and its average betweenness centrality is the highest (1.97). It combines leaders 42 It is believed that Jazz was born in similar conditions: as the Creole (free men, descendents of AfricanAmericans and French descendents in Louisiana) lost their social status and were forced to live with former slaves. The cultural interchange between the two groups mingled together Blues roots (from the slaves) with orchestral elements (from the Creole) to create the predecessors of jazz (Rag Time, Boogie-Woogie). 108 from III.7 and III.4, and now the conflict between boppers and traditional leaders is open in the air. At the same time that Armstrong performs a return to his New Orleans roots by innovating in that style, Gillespie and Parker introduce Bop innovations at the core. As Collins (2000) suggests, frequently many relevant innovations are not introduced by new comers, but by incumbents afraid of losing their position. In contrast with Kadushin (2004a), conflict is not preceded by fragmentation among blocks. On the contrary: conflict is stronger exactly among those leaders who share the same resources and because of that are placed in the same block43. This confirms Blau’s insight that conflict stems from interaction (BLAU, 1977). This is a period when conflict reveals some core latent values within the Jazz community: both Trad and Bop musicians agree on reinforcing the worth of a professional career in Jazz. Both look for Jazz’s original roots: while Trad musicians recover the collective improvisation and typical voicing from New Orleans, Bop musicians stress the solo (individual) improvisation and dissonant scales. Nevertheless, Charlie Parker is deeply influenced by the Blues, and that affects his music and his followers’. As a new moral order emerges, new deviants are regarded with suspicion. Miles Davis’s association with Mulligan at the “Birth of the Cool” yields a sound too close to Harry James’s: a vibrato too far from the African tradition. He introduces what will become a predecessor of cool in a peripheral block. It is also, nevertheless, an attempt of a young leader to dissociate himself from his former leader: Charlie Parker. In the Period V, Bop is no longer a fad. V.2 (where we observe Gillespie, Parker and Eldridge) is the dominant block in average number of sessions and betweenness centrality. But the leaders are significantly younger than other blocks. One may suspect that the emergence of Bop as a new paradigm (DEVENAUX, 1997) places the Bop masters where the Swing leaders were before them. Thus, although the style changed, the field’s structure is still centralized. Nevertheless, the centralization occurred during the war (DEVENAUX, 1997) is counterbalanced by a post-war migration to West Coast cities. Period V also shows the emergence of the Cool style with the Modern Jazz Quarter and Gerry Mulligan at a peripheral 43 The temptation at this point is to give in to a functional analysis of social differentiation. A functionalist (durkheimian, and later ecologists’) interpretation would follow this rationale: crowding out leads to competition for the same resources, which leads to social differentiation, as actors look for new niches. However, these phenomena might be described from the creation of discourses and the underlying legitimacy of style affiliation. From this perspective, I rephrase my interpretation along the lines: a hegemonic style constraints differentiation, which leads to crowding out of central positions. Conflict emerges as social actors’ habitus are no longer able to interpret their new social reality (scarcity of resources previously abundant). New niches are created as rebellious actors generate new discourses that at the same time create novelty and articulate with the core values in the field. These processes occur almost in parallel, robbing the causality explanation from the ecologists: new niches are above all new discursive places. 109 block (V.5). In another peripheral block (V.3) Clifford Brown develops his Hard Bop style. If at Period IV both conflicting styles (Trad and Bop) where in the same block, now the conflicting styles (Hard Bop and Cool) are in separate blocks, but intermediated by the dominant V.2. This intermediation is also a “linguistic” intermediation: in a genealogical analysis, Bop antecedes both Cool and Hard Bop. Thus, it is not surprising that V.3 and V.5 are peripheral to V.2. These are stylistic differentiations from the same root: Bop. Period VI brings signals of change: Woody Herman is central to the field, at Block VI.2. He has the highest filed age, highest average number of sessions, and the highest betweenness centrality. To be sure, this finding is counter-intuitive: Woody Herman was at that period an established Swing leader who incorporate Bop elements in his music. How was he able to conquer this position? As DeVeaux (1997) shows, Herman was able to record Bop before Gillespie44, which gave him a better position in the field. In addition, the increasing tensions among younger leaders created a void in the core of the field. I offer the interpretation that when a conflict becomes disruptive, the empty space among the contending parties is occupied by a third party, who is able to bridge them. Herman occupied it. This interpretation would be supported by Simmel’s intuituion on the tertius gaudens (SIMMEL, 1950), Burt’s (1992) concept of structural hole. But my question goes beyond the social network intermediation: I am concerned in asking how an actor is able to perform a brokerage between the two opposite sides, when both exert pressures on the third party to take sides. In other words, I am concerned in identifying how the third party is able to sustain the legitimacy of that position. I propose that as young leaders depleted their legitimacy through predatory struggle, older leaders (like Herman) who have their reputation intact are able to bridge the contending parties. But who are the contending parties at this period? Gioia (1997) refers to a “fragmentation” in the Jazz world. Szwed gives us the picture of “multiple” revolutions. Throughout this turbulent period we observe leaders developing Jazz in very different directions: Miles Davis advanced his modal style with “Kind of Blue”, Coltrane departed from Davis’s band to develop his own style, exemplified in “Giant Steps”. It was also the moment when Ornette Coleman recorded “The Shape of Jazz to Come”, in the forefront of Free Jazz. Charles Mingus was going in a very counterintuitive direction: he recovered Bop elements and combined them to a novel Swing orchestration. All these leaders were positioned at peripheral blocks. Also, in the forefront of Hard Bop we observe Art Blakey and Horace Silver at a peripheral block: VI.7. (it is uncohesive block, whose link to VI.2 is 44 See Chapter 4 on Trajectory for an analysis on Herman’s trajectory as distinct from Gillespie’s. 110 unidirectional – see Table 4). Below VI.2, all blocks have average session production much lower and closer to the field’s average. The reorganization in the field continues through Period VII. VII.1 is the most prominent block, but we should suspect that it is not dominant. To be sure, it presents the highest session number (38) and highest field age (26.38), but is not the central in terms of betweenness centrality (0.79). Compare this figures to Period IV’s block IV.1’s statistics. The latter presented in average 65 sessions produced. It is not only the sheer absolute number, but the relative number in comparison to the second in the list. While VII.7 presents an average session number of 24.43 (8% lower than VII.1), IV.8 presents an average session of 41 (35% below IV.1!). Now, compare the field average in both periods: Period IV had in average 12.9 sessions, while Period VII presented 16.99. I hope these are enough evidences the Period IV was more centralized (in terms of sessions) than Period VII. Another important insight here is that the most central block in the network is not necessarily the one that yields the higher number of sessions anymore. To be sure, Period VII is also a period of absolute decline in number of sessions (see chart 2). As a consequence, boundary-spanning actors at the fringe of the Jazz world might be able to bring fresher ideas and new influences. The grammy recipient Stan Getz, who was one of the Jazz leaders who brought Bossa Nova to the Jazz world was not in the center, but in the periphery - Block VII.8. In the same Block (VII.8), we observe Brother Jack McDuff and Stanley Turrentine developing a Soul version of Jazz. Before proceeding to the analysis of Period VIII, it is worth noting a word of caution. Table 5 and Table 6 show very little fit between the block model results and the expected image matrix. To be sure, VIII.1 is a candidate for a dominant block. It presents a high average number of sessions (33) and relatively high betweenness centrality (1.40). Also, its average field age is high (20.75 years) but it is not the highest. It suggests that at Period VIII the field is rearticulated, in comparison to Period VII. But this articulation is far from the concentration in the first periods of this analysis. The features of a decentralized field are still present. Miles Davis recorded “Bitches Brew”, an innovative Fusion album, at a non-cohesive peripheral position - VIII.6. In the same block, Soul leaders like Richard "Groove" Holmes and Julian “Cannonball” Adderley are located. Leaders engaged in the Free style are located at a cohesive block, but still peripheral VIII.5. When we return to the ideal types proposed above, and compare the evolution of the jazz field, we are able to assess (1) the models seem to fit our empirical findings and (2) to understand the process underlying a change between these models. Following, the confirming evidences that support the proposed ideal-types. 111 Social network structure: while in the first four periods the field presented a centralized structure, with one or few dominant blocks, later periods (especially on Period VII and onwards) presented a decentralized structure, where blocks were highly interconnected. Source of Innovations: During Periods I to IV, innovations (Swing and early Bop) are mostly introduced by central actors. This trend is slowly reversed in later Periods: Cool and Hard Bop are introduced in blocks connected to dominant players. When we arrive to Period VIII, we observe Fusion at the fringes of the social network. Profile of dominant leaders: in early periods, we generally observe a coupling between field age, number of sessions and betweenness centrality. Dominant leaders tended to combine these characteristics. It doesn’t mean, however, that old musicians were always dominant. King Oliver, one of the innovators in the Early jazz style, is placed in the peripheral strata in the Jazz world, as Swing achieves success. Yet, as we advance in the history of Jazz, we observe that dominant players become younger. The most important example is the emergence of Gillespie and Parker. The decoupling of variables shows interesting phenomena: old players may introduce innovations at the peripheral positions of the social network. Homogeneity and Stability of Styles: the sheer fragmentation of styles depicted at Chart 2 shows the decline of the Swing paradigm. In its place, Bop seemed to be an alternative paradigm, but it was quickly overshadowed by its heirs (Cool and Hard Bop). The same cycle is observed again, with the emergence of Free jazz, Soul and Fusion. The style fragmentation becomes more accentuated, and the permanence shorter. Types of Isomorphism. DiMaggio and Powell (1983) suggested three types of isomorphism (coercive, normative, and mimetic) as competing mechanisms of diffusion within fields. The way I explored this three mechanisms was indirect: I first linked the styles to their legitimate sources and then, by analyzing both the evolution of the institutional spheres and the evolution of styles I inferred the prominence of one or another mechanism. We may observe that the shift from Swing to Bop and finally to Fusion marks a change in the fields meta logics, which favor first coercive mechanisms from the recording industry, then the normative body of musicians and finally the mimetic processes of absorbing external influences. When we turn to the transition process between these two models, some interesting findings propose it is possible further development in the original model. First, we observe that declassed Swing leaders at Period III meet the up-coming Bop leaders in the same social network position. This interaction might have spurred competition 112 for the same resources in the same block, as old and young leaders compete for the same sidemen. This seems to contradict Burt (1987), for leaders structurally equivalent are not pursuing the same style, but antagonist styles. I interpret this in the following way. First, we observe an ecological competition for resources, as old and young leaders compete for the same resources. This competition among leaders is transformed in a competition among forms (Bop and New Orleans jazz). The legitimacy clash around these two styles brings, in a first moment, the emergence of common values: jazz is linked to African roots, it is characterized by improvisation (collective or solo) and is linked to the construction of a solid career. As a result, the similarity between Boppers and New Orleans leaders was not at the form level, but on the underlying value level. This increase in the legitimacy of both styles is due to the emergence of values that serve both purposes. In that sense, the conflict between them generated positive outcomes for both. At Period IV, both bop (Gillespie and Parker) and traditional leaders (like Louis Armstrong) are located at the core. As Baum and Oliver suggest (1996), the increased legitimacy of forms might compensate for the increasingly crowding effect. At Period VI, the clash among leaders pushing to different directions was not concurrent on finding latent values in the Jazz paradigm. On the contrary, the emphasis was on the emergence of individuality and pluralism. At first, this new ethos emerged in opposition to the establishment of the Jazz canon. Critics would ask “where is Jazz going”. At this transition point, older and well positioned leaders like Woody Herman were able to bridge contending parties. But unless the central actor is able to seize power and establish his own paradigm as dominant45, his position will be hardly sustainable in the long run. Elworth (1995) shows that the sixties and seventies were the decades when “teleological” interpretations on Jazz were dropped and the value of pluralism emerged. No longer only one paradigm would rule the field, as internal dissent and external influences flourished across the Jazz world. At this point, it might be worthwhile to discuss whether the plurality value emerged before or in tandem with the field decentralization46. A facile answer in the Jazz evolution would be to assume that both, decentralization and emergence of new values occur in tandem. However, we should ask whether the split in different styles would be possible without the 45 We observe this shift from a advantaged social network position to an advantaged political and coercitive position in the emergence of the Medici family (see Padget and Ansell, 1993). 46 This discussion touches a central debate between Simmel and Weber (SWEDBERG, 2005). While Weber understood the emergence of values as a major driver of social change (WEBER, 1950), Simmel stressed that changes in social forms (e.g. changes in a social network structure) led to changes in values. On the first page of “Economy and Society” (WEBER, 1978) we observe a criticism to Simmel’s approach. 113 conflict observed on Period IV. We may speculate whether Jazz musicians would remain in the same world if the discussion on “what is jazz” never happened. 3.9. Conclusions When we observe the transition between a centralized to a decentralized field, an array of questions emerges. First, what did we learn with the transition path? Second, what are the limits of the decentralization trend? Becker (1998) proposes that we deal with the ideal-types’ unbundled features when we describe the underlying processes within the transition between them. The features that I chose to perform this analysis are the homogeneity/heterogeneity of styles and the centralization and decentralization of the network. Below, I depict a schematic framework of Homogeneous Heterogeneous these two dimensions: Open-conflict field: • Normative isomorphism Decentralized field: • Mimetic isomorphism Centralized field: • Coercitive isomorphism Centralized Network Decentralized Network Schema 3.3: Transition Path between Types of Fields Source: Author’s proposal When we observe Periods I to III, we observe Swing overcoming New Orleans and Classic Jazz. This ecological process depicts a substitution of one dominant paradigm by another. At Period IV, we observe both the recovery of New Orleans and Classic Jazz under the revivalist auspices and the emergence of Bop. To be sure, the Jazz field is still centralized, but the increasingly heterogeneity of styles leads the field to a conflictive competition and 114 discussion of legitimacy. Periods V and onwards (especially VII and VIII) depict a field where decentralized structure occurs in tandem with a fragmentation of styles. The centralization and decentralization of the network occurs in tandem with the evolution of the Jazz musicians’ perspective. During the centralized period musicians are focused inward the field: success comes with alignment with the industry’s requirement or with the professional body’s imposition. The institutionalization of an industry requires the institutionalization of a professional body. As this professional body strives for autonomy, internal sources of legitimacy emerges (BOURDIEU, 1993b). The increase in autonomy reinforces the inward tendencies in the field. Paradoxically, professional socialization and ethos might evolve in conflictive ways, which leads to the polarization and weakening of the professional authority. As the (professional) normative authority is relaxed, a more outward perspective emerges. It is possible to introduce influenced from outside the field without threatening the survival of Jazz. To be sure, this transition is not smooth. There is no assurance that crises will lead to emergence of more cosmopolitan values, and that the fragmentation of forms will not lead to the fragmentation of the social tissue47. But as Coser (1966) suggested, the absence of conflicts might be indicative of a moribund community. 47 Again we face a classic discussion. Toennies perceives individualism as a threat to a community, due to intestinal conflicts. In contrast, Weber and Simmel stress that conflict doesn’t lead to fragmentation, but reinforces values (SEGRE, 1998). 115 4. Careers in the Right Beat: U.S. Jazz Musicians’ typical and non-typical trajectories Abstract Recent research has shed light on career trajectories outside enclosed organizations and linked individual careers to institutional fields. This article explores the careers of Jazz musicians, and builds a typical career path. Career stages and turning points deal with a high degree in risk and uncertainty related with resource allocation decisions, both at the individual and the band’s level. In addition, this paper contrasts two non-typical career paths and explores how these musicians were able to sidetrack from the typical path. Changes in the normative institutions of the jazz field explain why musicians were able to conduct nontypical trajectories and switch resource allocation logics. 4.1. Introduction Organizational fields and individuals’ trajectories are thought to be co-constitutive. At the same time that fields constraint individuals’ trajectories (BOURDIEU 1993a), individual action impacts its surrounding field’s functioning (DIMAGGIO, 1988). Research on careers and individual action as embedded in fields, rather than enclosed in organizations has been vastly explored in the research in the last years (BOURDIEU, 1993b, FLIGSTEIN, 1997). This investigation has brought a range of insights on how actors proceed in order to survive and advance their interests. As a consequence, it has been possible to derive normative directions from exemplar individual action (FAULKNER, 1983; PETERSON ; WHITE, 1979; JONES 2002). In artistic fields, such normative institutions are expressed in several ways. Industry conventions, like the time length of a music record or the content of contracts between musicians and recording companies shape the creative action (BECKER, 1974, 1983). Styles also embody not only a way of playing, but also the ethos of those artists affiliated to it (GREENFELD, 1989). Formal and informal professional organization dictates how newcomers are recruited and advance in their careers (FAULKNER, 1983). Conversely, individual action may shape normative institutions (DIMAGGIO, 1991, Peterson and Anand, 2002). In sum, research has a twofold approach for this subject: how individuals conform to fields in order to attain success, or how individuals change institutions in order to achieve their goals. 116 My objective through this article is to explore a middle ground between these two approaches. By exploring the biographies of several Jazz musicians, I build a typical career path and show the institutional grounding of each stage. Rather than depicting a deterministic path, I consider the role of uncertainty and risk along one’s trajectory. Following this initial construction, I will present Coleman Hawkins’s and Ornette Coleman’s biographies, who didn’t follow the typical career path, but were, nonetheless, successful. I will show that their success was partially due to important institutional changes in the field. Their action (intentionally or not) was instrumental to such changes. 4.2. Artists’ Careers and art Fields Menger (1999) describes the competition among successful artists as a “monopolistic competition”, where one’s value stems from its uniqueness. In a tentative model, Menger depicts new artists as trying to establish a public persona, while established artists had their talents already recognizes. Following this schematic model, an artist’s career would correspond to one’s talent development and recognition. If talent were exogenous to the art field and information perfect, demand and supply should reach equilibrium. In this model, there would be no oversupply of artists. This model would be also consistent with the resource-based view and human capital perspectives (WRIGHT; SMART; MCMAHAN, 1995, KAMOCHE, 1996). These perspectives would advocate that musicians should develop their public persona to be rare and hard to imitate. The scarcity of these resources should lead to competitive advantage. However, as Menger points in his review, talent recognition is not exogenous to the artistic field. In contrast, the concept of reputation as a social construct emerges as more realistic. In addition, information is not perfect, as artistic trends are hardly predictable (HIRSCH, 2001). Finally, one’s action depends on other individuals’ action. As a consequence, resource deployment assumes a relational dimension not entirely captured in the RBV and human capital perspectives. I argue that a resource based view should be complemented with Bourdieu’s conception of field. For Bourdieu, a field is a social space where individuals deploy their resources (generally economic, cultural, social and symbolic). At the individual level, the habitus corresponds to the interpretative schemata constructed along one’s trajectory. These interpretative schemata explain why different individuals make distinct trade-offs among diverse kinds of capital and deal differently while facing risk and uncertainty. At the field 117 level, successful individuals perform timely conversions among capitals (or resources). At the same time, the possibility of conversion is constrained by the field’s normative institutions. In tandem with his broad “field-habitus-practice” framework, Bourdieu (1993b) offers a simpler model for art field dynamics. He suggests that incumbent musicians and recording industry players together in a coalition against new entrants. Within this model, younger musicians are expected to introduce new styles in the field, in order to amass symbolic capital not attainable though the established styles. Because large recording companies are resistant to change, the former will record with smaller and fringe labels. Conversely, new magazines will support new musicians and their styles. As a new style becomes institutionalized, their defendants will move from a dominated position to a hegemonic one. Once at a dominant position, incumbent actors will succumb to inertial forces that will lead them to conservative behavior towards newness. Finally, conflict among new entrants and incumbent musicians will create a dialectic among generations (PETERSON, 1997) that constitutes a major source of institutional change in the field48. Bourdieu’s model suggests that established musicians are typecast in a given style. The way a new musician is recruited, introduced to the field and advances in his trajectory may be object of appraisal by his peers, record critics and producers (FAULKNER, 1983). As a result, career trajectories are enacted and institutionalized by field’s members. Following the same logic, new actors might try to replicate successful past trajectories (EMIRBAYER ; MISCHE, 1998). Among the possible institutionalized practices, we may observe typecasting as an entry cost for entering and surviving in a field (ZUCKERMAN, 2003). Yet, established musicians might move towards innovation and cut loose from their stereotypes. The reasons, tactics and outcomes linked with this movement have to be analyzed against the opposing institutional barriers. In the following session I propose in broad strokes a typical pattern of successful musicians in the Jazz field. In addition to this typical path, I will contrast the deviances around such pattern. Deviance and its correspondent sanction are likely to assess the robustness of this career path. These contrasts may constitute just variance around a norm. As a deviance, the sanction against it will reinforce our belief in the robustness of the institutionalized career track. Alternatively, deviances might be functional to the field’s working. For instance, mavericks might be seen as exotic counterparts in a field as avantgarde artists still share tacit conventions and norms with mainstream players (BECKER, 48 I claim that this is a simpler model, for Bourdieu underplays the role of habitus towards a more deterministic conception of social allocation of new entrants. 118 1982, BOURDIEU, 1977). Finally, such deviances might also constitute genuine movements towards change in the field, as they introduce new conventions and open up alternative strategies. The raw material for this exercise is the biographies of several renowned Jazz musicians. Most of these musicians were active from the 1930s to 1970s, in a period when the Jazz field observed deep changes. From these biographies I extract what is common in their paths (HEIMER, 2001), the typical stages in musicians’ careers. In addition to the typical stages, I draw attention to the turning points between these stages (ABBOTT, 2001). We might understand turning points as the critical events linking different stages. For instance, a jazz musician enrolled in a local band goes through a turning point when he is hired by a national band. However, as Abbott suggests, turning points might be understood as the process surrounding these critical events. Just before being hired by a national band, a jazz musician might consider dropping the profession to become a post man. When we enlarge our focus to the process of going through turning points, we are able to shed light on the uncertainties one faces, and how he deals with them. Abbott’s view on turning points is not incompatible with Bourdieu’s conception of field. For the latter, a field’s turning point corresponds to the aggregate individual trajectories’ turning points. 4.3. Typical Career Stages and Turning Points 4.3.1. Introduction to the Field The Jazz musicians in our time frame started their exposure to the field early in their lives. Typically, they enrolled in school bands, church choirs and other community institutions (BERLINER, 1994; for Ornette Coleman’s example, see WILSON, 1999, p. 9) and attended private classes (e.g. Charles Mingus took classes with Lloyd Reese, see Priestly, 1983, p.11), where they were able to hone their skills and acquire technical knowledge. Older friends helped in this introduction, as we observe how important was Clark Terry for the young Miles Davis (SZWED, 2002, p. 19). Upon this initial exposure, they started playing with local bands and participate in informal gatherings and beginners’ jam sessions (e.g., John Coltrane, see PORTER, 1999), where they were submitted to informal ranking mechanisms (DEVEAUX, 1997). The participation in local bands could be followed by the inclusion in a “territory band”. In a territory band, a musician traveled with his band across several states, performing for black as well as white only audiences. 119 For several poor black teenagers, becoming a musician meant the possibility of earning an income that wouldn’t be possible to attain by other means (WILSON, 1999, p. 11, DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 47, SZWED, 2002, p. 20). Frequently, this income was channeled to support the musician’s family. Also, as a Jazz musician, the prospect of social mobility was higher in comparison with manual labor opportunities. Moreover, black musicians had few or no opportunities to fill orchestra positions. Ultimately, a refusal to go to conservatories was predominant among early jazz musicians. Duke Ellington is known to say that he didn’t find in formal education what he wanted to learn (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 58). As a consequence, the choice of becoming a Jazz musician was natural for talented black teenagers. Later generations of jazz musicians looked for formal musical instruction, although the practice among them was perceived as more valuable. For instance, in spite of being one of the first black musicians to enroll in Julliard School’s course, Miles Davis dropped it in order to play with Charlie Parker’s band. As the Jazz idiom became institutionalized as an art form (PETERSON, 1972; LOPES, 2002), formal education became highly valued, which we observe in Wynton Marsalis’s role as the director of Jazz Studies at Julliard. Several scholars employed a deviance framework in order to explanation why white teenagers chose to become Jazz musicians (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 207). Also, romantic feelings towards black culture are invoked as rationale (LOPES, 2002, p. 135). Following this logic, white young men would choose to become Jazz musicians in order to find a refuge against mainstream society. The example of Bix Beiderbecke is often cited (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 49). Nonetheless, black musicians were also thought as deviants, as they came mostly from Black ghettos. Also, we may find examples of white musicians aiming for social mobility, as many were children of immigrants (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 59). 4.3.2. Introduction to a National band Musicians would try to have as much exposure as possible to national bands. Although local bands gave an opportunity to enter the field, they were rarely recorded (PORTER, 1999, p. 35) or achieve a national reputation (PORTER, 1999, p. 59). Regional bands could eventually achieve national status if performed and recorded successfully in New York (LOPES, 2002, p. 150), but that was a rare event. In contrast, national bands had national status by traveling across the country and capturing most of the recording opportunities. Wages were higher than those offered in local bands, and, above all, they gave a chance for 120 young musicians to position themselves in the urban hubs of Jazz (Chicago, then New York, and expanding to Los Angeles). Traveling bands were a source of novelty and opportunities. Eckstine’s band provided to Miles Davis his first exposure to bop, when they played in St. Louis (SZWED, 2002, p. 29). They were also a source of opportunities, as young musicians would seek exposure to national bands by sitting-in at the band’s performances, or just attending to the jam sessions held after the concerts. If a band liked the up-coming musician, its leader would eventually invite him to join it, travel along, and move to the city where the band was based. That was the trajectory of many musicians, including Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 177). Early in his career at East St. Louis, Miles Davis was invited to join Illinois Jacquet’s and McKinney’s Cotton Pickers’s bands. Nonetheless, he still lacked skills to travel with Eckstine (SZWED, 2002, p. 30). 4.3.3. Climbing the Sidemen Hierarchy A musician’s progression was perceived within distinct but interdependent subsystems. Within the symbolic system, a musician accumulated recognition from audience, critics and peers. To be sure, although recognition from these different groups was highly correlated, there was not a perfect fit, which permitted some degree of uncoupling in the system. Conversely, musicians would shift among bands, while seeking to optimize the tradeoff between better wages, autonomy, job stability, skill acquisition, or aesthetic preferences. Again, recognition and the shift across bands were correlated, but not tightly coupled. Following, I will explore how these mechanisms worked and interacted with each other. Recognition among peers was amassed in two ways: from the musician’s performance at jam sessions and from one’s string of engagements (as in FAULKNER, 1983, the same occurs with film composers). A musician “too available” would have lower chances to get the best opportunities (PORTER, 1999, p. 200). Once at a central hub, like New York, musicians participated in jam sessions and bands, but now facing the best musicians in the field. Another name for jam sessions was “cutting session”, where a competitive performance took place. Famous cutting-sessions include John Coltrane’s victory over Stan Getz in 1956 (PORTER, 1999, p.99) and Lester Young’s victory over Coleman Hawkins in 1933 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 37). Such cutting-sessions were important mechanisms for establishing a hierarchy among musicians; as such, they were clearinghouse for employment. If a new musician outplayed an older musician, the field’s symbolic hierarchy was modified. For that reason, even during 121 gloomy periods, musicians continued to attend jam sessions in order to maintain the link with the industry. A good reputation could yield to a skilled black musician the opportunity to cross racial lines and increase his income substantially (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 259).They were also important rituals where different groups could challenge each other. At these jam sessions, musicians learned the tacit codes that were eventually important in small combo informal coordination and rehearsed the jazz standards. Also, musicians established social ties that would bring new engagements (gigs) and information. It was also a source of recreation (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 207). Most importantly, it staged a passage ritual for beginners. Humiliation could happen, as we observe in Charlie Parker’s defeat in the Reno Club in Kansas City. As in other studies, a musician’s attractiveness is thought to be coupled with the field’s trends and needs (BECKER, 1982, PETERSON ; WHITE, 1979, FAULKNER, 1983). As bands started to play more sophisticated jazz pieces in mid-thirties, they started to look for musicians with a greater degree of musicianship. In this wave, Dizzy Gillespie received the opportunity to join Cab Calloway’s band in 1939 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 181). The survival in such bands depended on whether the musician was reliable and respected both the band’s internal hierarchy and aesthetic choices. Ornette Coleman “was fired for trying to teach a fellow saxophonist a bebop number” (WILSON, 1999, p. 12). Coltrane revealed in an interview: “I stayed in obscurity for a long time, because I just played what the others expected from me, without trying anything original. I saw so many guys get themselves fired from a band because they tried to be innovative that I got a little discouraged from trying anything different!” (cited by PORTER, 1999, p. 88). To fit in a band didn’t mean necessarily to be conservative, especially after the diffusion of small combos. Miles Davis was known for insisting with his sidemen to develop their own voices. However, even in these bands where individuality was promoted, reliability was crucial. Davis fired Coltrane for his playing being too erratic (PORTER, 1999, p. 107). Yet, reliability was not sufficient. In several bands, and especially in small combos, musicians had to fit in the overall aesthetic frame. The pianist Steve Kuhn didn’t fit as supporter of Coltrane’s solos, which eventually led to his dismissal (PORTER, 1999, p. 176). In addition, a leader might have a non-expressed preference for a musician that was not available at the time when the vacancy existed. In the same anecdote, Coltrane possibly preferred McCoy Tyner to Steve Kuhn, thus, as the former became available, it was easier for Coltrane to dismiss the later (PORTER, 1999, p. 177). 122 Clashes among musicians could lead to one’s dismissal or quitting. Age difference was one reason for attrition, as in the example of Dizzy Gillespie’s clash with older musicians at Teddy Hill’s band in 1935 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 178). Personality disaffection was not rare, either. The famous fight between Juan Tizol and Charles Mingus at Ellington’s band led to the dismissal of the later (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p. 50), while Coleman Hawkins and Louis Armstrong intense rivalry at Fletcher Henderson’s Orchestra led the former to quit the band and become a freelance soloist. On aesthetical grounds, Elvin Jones and Ali Rashied, both Coltrane’s drummers, frequently disagreed on stage. As a result, Jones eventually accepted Duke Ellington’s offer. Nonetheless, the shifting from one band to another was not only a matter of survival, as it was an expression of deliberate social attainment in a hierarchical ladder. Within this ladder, the musician amassed recognition, beyond his affiliation to a given band. In this way, he would eventually be cited and elected one of the best players of his instrument, and invited to play for several bands during the same period. At this point, the musician would probably be able to play with bands that had access to the recording industry. Once he was recorded, a larger audience had access to his music, and his chances of public recognition increased. The Miles Davis first record with Charlie Parker as a leader in 1945 was a landmark for the former (SZWED, 2002, p. 48). As a musician got established as a soloist, he might prefer to launch a freelancer career. As in the example of Dizzy Gillespie, the freelancer job permitted more autonomy to improve one’s skills and avoid commitments that would block him from accepting attractive opportunities. Of course, this freedom came at expense of job stability (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 187). One way or another, musicians strived to establish themselves as unique voices in the market. For instance, John Coltrane was known in his youth to strive for his own “sound”. “In African-American jazz circles, this is the most valued goal.” (PORTER, 1999, p. 72; see also BERLINER 1994). As the musician became recognized as a unique musician, his bands’ leaders might incorporate his voice in the band’s compositions. The coupling of a musician’s unique voice to a band’s overall frame helped to balance the resource dependency between bandleader and musician. For instance, Dannie Richmond was “indispensable ingredient of the ‘Mingus sound’” (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p. 75). Not only prestige explained the shifts among bands, as many musicians privileged aesthetic and learning opportunities. For instance, Coltrane’s frustration and eventually quitting from Dizzy Gillespie’s band was due the latter’s increasing insistence to introduce commercial songs and restrict improvisation in order to make bop acceptable to the large audience (PORTER, 1999, p. 78). Also, the relationship with the bandleader was an important 123 factor. Coltrane compares Miles Davis’s and Thelonious Monk’s styles of communicating and discussing music. For Coltrane, the later was much more communicative (PORTER, 1999, p. 108). Finally, conflict over monetary terms led to sidemen’ quitting. One might feel that the criteria applied in sharing the earnings were unfair. In 1941, Dizzy Gillespie left Coleman Hawkins, for the later paid only $66 dollars a week, not reaching $75 required by the former (DEVEUX, 1997, p.290). The same reason explains the leaving of Howard McGhee from Hawkins’s band (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 406) and Miles Davis from Charlie Parker’s band (SZWED, 2002, p. 66). In addition, his compositions might not receive the credits he believes he deserves (as Monk didn’t receive from Coleman Hawkins, DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 403). 4.3.4. The Launching of a new bandleader Prestigious sidemen might not only amass public recognition (e.g. PORTER, 1999, p.141 on Coltrane, SZWED, 2002, p. 63 on Miles Davis), but also develop, under the auspices of his bandleader, original compositions. Also, he might start developing with his band peers new ways of playing. At some point, he might feel confident enough to initiate his own band (e.g. PORTER, 1999, p. 132, on Coltrane). This confidence might also be complemented with attrition with his band’s leader, as shown in the previous section. Also, as many of his band mates established their own bands (as PORTER, 1999, remarks on Coltrane in late 1950s), the musician faced peer pressure to start his own. Finally, new leaders might be born out of unemployment. DeVeaux suggests that if Parker and Gillespie had found steady stream of gigs at the Eckstine’s band in mid-forties, perhaps they wouldn’t be compelled to found their own bands49 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 363). The transition to become a leader could be slow, as the new leader would start recording albums under his name while participating as a sideman in other bands. Hawkins recorded under his name while still with the Fletcher Henderson’s band (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 76). In 1957, Coltrane was at the same time recording his own albums and playing with Miles Davis. By 1961, Coltrane was able to sign a very attractive contract with Impulse, which granted him high artistic autonomy, and a sizeable yearly advance of twenty-five thousand dollars (PORTER, 1999, p. 191). 49 DeVeaux believes that if they didn’t establish their bands, the creation of bop might never happen. The same idea is in Peterson, 1972. Peterson defends that the lack of resources led young musicians to gear Jazz towards avant-garde, leaving the pop segment to R&B and eventually Rock-‘n’-Roll. 124 To be sure, a new leader could attempt to just mimic his former leader or competitors. However, in several cases mimicking was not an available option. New leaders had to strive for innovation in order to achieve distinction from his precedent leaders, which was invaluable for his gig string. Until Miles Davis recorded Birth of the Cool, he was widely recognized as a Parker’s former sideman (SZWED, p. 144). A new leader striving for innovation usually assembled musicians that were unique in their way of playing. Duke Ellington was known for composing pieces having in mind the uniqueness of his sidemen. Charles Mingus found in Eric Dolphy a distinct voice for his group (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p.109). A leader’s sidemen had to be like-minded in risk-taking and experimenting towards the creation of a new way of expressing themselves. For that reason, the ideal line-up of desired musicians might not happen at once, since many of them might have other commitments or just blocked from playing, due to arrest or cabaret license lost (on Thelonious Monk example, see GOURSE, 1997). Also, very talented and at the same time reliable musicians could be costly and frequently unavailable. As a consequence, new leaders frequently faced trade-off decisions. By mid-forties, Thelonious Monk was well recognized as a talented musician, but few saw him as a dependable musician. Coleman Hawkins hired Monk when nobody else would risk doing so (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 322). We would typically expect the leader to bring most of the compositions to the new group. Hence, it was critical to accumulate compositions before launching the new band. Also, the leader was usually the best improviser in the group (SZWED, 2002, p. 263). On the other end of business, the leader strived to get recording and performance engagements to the group. The odds to become an established leader depended on his ability to put together all these elements. Failure to bring revenues would lead the sidemen to seek for opportunities outside the group. A new band required time to be “up and running”. The musicians had to learn its repertoire, acquire new arrangements. They had to find comfortable to work with each other (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 137). However, the stream of gigs might not come as soon as needed in order to provide enough time to the band settle down. Needless to say, the timing when the new band was introduced was crucial. Coleman Hawkins set up his big band just before the Swing’s bubble burst. As a consequence, he saw himself forced to dismiss it few years later50. Charles Mingus lost several of his sidemen for he was not able to provide 50 The awareness that a speculative bubble may burst didn’t stop agents and producers from launching new big bands. They provided the initial start-up capital to set-up the band, in order to buy uniforms and assign some gigs. These initial investments were enough in order to extract some cash from the band’s revenues at some 125 enough gigs (PRIESTLEY, p. 95). The same occurred with Ornette Coleman (WILSON, 1999). In addition, the lack of originality would lead the band to have low attractiveness in comparison to existing groups. Conversely, a lack of focus and the mixing too many influences might confuse the public. Charles Mingus faced such criticism as he tried to find his own identity: “Mingus, a resolute independent of many faces,… has had a fling at every trend in jazz that has come along – cool jazz, hard bop, Third Stream, soul jazz, and more recently ‘all-out’ jazz – yet has failed to make a lasting stylistic impression” (Dick Hadlock, cited by PRIESTLEY, 1983, p.120). Finally, the ability to manage and keep the musicians together was a challenge in itself. Sidemen might turn to be undisciplined or get unproductive habits as drug addictions (SZWED, 2002, p. 220). If the leader didn’t assume control, the sidemen would require his leadership (SZWED, 2002, p. 74) or even disband. The organizational structure of the band could also impact its stability. Cooperative ventures, where musicians shared leadership, tended to be less stable than those bands where leadership figure was still central (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 332). Conversely, recording companies would prefer to sign contracts with leaders who were able to maintain a steady band. Miles Davis’s lack of a steady band was a negative factor for Columbia Records in the early fifties (SZWED, 2002, p. 118). The same discipline the leader expected from the sidemen was also required from the recording company towards the bandleader. Unreliability and drug addiction were strong negative factors to Miles Davis reputation with his prospective producers (SZWED, 2002, p. 121). We may think about innovation in several aspects. It could be simply the introduction of variation around a given style. This is exemplified by Coleman Hawkins’s way of changing chords. Although it was new, his music was still classified under “Swing”. Conversely, the early boppers experiments on chord progressions were innovations even before what they were playing received the name “Bop”. Another kind of innovation was the incorporation of elements foreign to Jazz tradition, but readily identifiable with outside influences. Examples are many in the Jazz history, from the introduction of Bossa Nova elements by Stan Getz, to Flamenco elements by Miles Davis. The incorporation of outside elements was often controversial, for it challenged the borders established between the community and its neighbors. The change in the field’s conventions was another kind of highly visible clubs. After these first assignments, the band would see itself jobless. Agents and producers, having achieved their break-even, would not provide any further funds to the band. On the contrary: the bankruptcy was desirable, for it would lead to a decrease in competition and the protection of prices which would benefit the other bands in their portfolios (DeVeaux, 1997, p. 145). 126 innovation. For instance, John Coltrane extended the solo duration to a point beyond a single LP side possible time limit. Charlie Barnet and Benny Goodman were convention breakers in a different way. They hired black musicians in a time when sharp racial lines endured (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 256). Finally, the founding of a new style, as a new category was another kind of innovation. Dizzy Gillespie was perceived as creating and insisting on the label “bop” to promote the style and himself as his creator (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 175). Whether the new category entailed substantive musical innovation was a matter for discussion and never free from conflicts among actors in the field. For instance, the West Coast jazz was perceived by many as just a “marketing” label in order to promote Jazz produced in California (BERENDT and HUESMANN, 1998, p. 51). The introduction of innovations was permeated with ambiguous trade-offs and risky bets. For instance, when Miles Davis assembled the Birth of the Cool group, he hoped that the new style (precursor of Cool) would be successful, and dismissed invitations to be a sideman, like Ellington’s. Unfortunately, the group was a flop (SZWED, 2002, p. 79). Miles Davis faced the risk of newness several times during his career. When he and Gil Evans’s attempted to introduce European elements to Jazz that was perceived as “too academic, too commercial, too white” (SZWED, 2002, p. 76). Miles Davis faced repeated negative reactions from critics for his dove-tailing with the commercial side of the music industry (SZWED, p. 107, CROUCH, 1990). Innovations in the group management could find resistance from the sidemen. Many of Charles Mingus’s original pieces were not written down, which forced his sidemen to cocompose with him on the stage (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p.66). The choice of sidemen was another risk. Gillespie tried to blend bop and swing by building a big band with several swing associated sidemen. They were out of sync with the new style (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 414). As a consequence, this was a failure for Gillespie. Recording industry personnel could help to match sidemen to leader. That was especially important when “racial” boundaries were still strong. John Hammond was able to match Benny Goodman and Teddy Wilson. In the same way, Leonard Feather matched Dizzy Gillespie and Sarah Vaughan with an “all-star” group of white musicians (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 419). Leaders who followed the mainstream styles had less difficulty in managing their sidemen, and experienced lower dependency on their uniqueness. They were able to use many of the experienced musicians available in the market, instead of specific musicians. This tendency was reinforced as the leader was able to attract audiences mostly due to his own musicianship and charisma. This was the case of Lionel Hampton, who established his big 127 band offering variable income to his sidemen, instead of guaranteeing a fixed wage. As a result his expenses were almost all variable (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 156). As big bands declined, this alternative became more difficult to implement. Cab Calloway was known for relying on accomplished musicians, not investing in new musicians, in spite of their potential. Not surprisingly, at the same period, Dizzy Gillespie wanted to invest in new musicians and develop their talents (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 183). Thus, we can observe a field level tension between exploration and exploitation of resources (MARCH, 1991). In spite of all these risks and uncertainty, many new bandleaders endured even when the prospects looked bleak. The quest for autonomy could surpass the economic risk: “It is remarkable, in the face of these difficulties, how many prominent black musicians tried to remain bandleaders when they could have enjoyed a more secure and profitable existence working as arrangers, or even star soloists, for white orchestras” (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 157). But why would a musician face such uncertainty in order to introduce a new style? Economic interest is certainly one possible drive, as we observe Miles Davis move away from Bop to Cool: “The problem with bebop, [Miles] thought, was that it was not being fully appreciated and needed to be slowed down to be understood by a broader audience, especially a white audience” (SZWED, p. 70). Other strategic considerations could see in the innovation a way of gaining time over potential competitors. However, that worked only as temporary relief, for any innovation could be eventually copied. DEVEAUX (p. 351) points that the innovations flowed from black to white musicians, while the latter were not the innovators, they were better positioned in the recording industry. Not all successful bandleaders were considered innovators. Charles Mingus frequently referred in a negative way to leaders who were “impresarios’ construction” (Charles Mingus, cited by PRIESTLEY, 1983, p. 51). In order to be a successful “copier”, a leader had to explore a privileged position in the recording industry. For instance, Woody Herman introduced jam session’s bop innovations into his swing band in mid-forties (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 357) through Neal Hefti, who learned them from Gillespie. Herman would be eventually known as one of the first bandleaders to record of bop, although the first bop big band would be Gillespie’s in 1946 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 359): “[G]illespie faced new competition. By 1945 Woody Herman had stole much of Dizzy’s fire. Thanks to hit records like ‘Caldonia,’ the public was more likely to associate soaring double-time trumpet lines with the Herman band than with Gillespie, leaving the originator of the style in the uncomfortable position of apparent imitator (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 433).” 128 4.3.5. Institutionalization of Innovation and Innovator An innovative bandleader brought to the field novelties that would hopefully be welcomed by his peers and brokers. The innovator built up his reputation as his innovations became not only accepted, but also influent and diffused in the field. As a consequence, his band’s style would become a new institution. For instance, Count Basie’s style was paradigmatic to Swing (SZWED, 2000, p. 140). Thus, a musician and his works became “exemplars” in the same sense as Kuhn’s exemplars in science. Louis Armstrong is thought as an exemplar for the whole Jazz genre (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 73) Signing with a large recording company could be a signal that the new leader’s style was in the verge of institutionalization51. Large recording companies were able to produce in large scale and promote aggressively, increasing the artist’s target audience. Nonetheless, a trade-off took place. As a leader recorded for a large company, his room for experimentation decreased substantially, for the recording company’s audience was generally less opened to surprises than the small companies’ public. Also, the leader had to juggle with past commitments. When Miles Davis shifted from Prestige to Columbia Records, he faced both the change in audience profile and the challenge of overlapping contracts (SZWED, 2002, p. 233). The institutionalization of a new style triggered inertial forces that kept the leader from innovating. This is the phenomena of typecasting, and may occur independently from the musician’s consent. If an established leader attempted to change his style in a direction not expected in the field, he might receive harsh criticism from critics, peers, and audience. Conversely, the consecration of a leader and his style might be described as the accumulation of symbolic capital hopefully convertible into a steady stream of economic capital (BOURDIEU, 1993b). As a consequence, the cost of innovating was usually too high (FAULKNER, 1983). Typecasting was strongly related to media promotion. Depending on what records and tunes were aired and distributed, the audience requested the musicians to perform those tunes at shows (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 348). Also, as a musician became a renowned leader with a distinct style, it turned harder to sit-in in other bands. As a consequence, his fate was linked to the fate of his style, which reinforced the typecast lock-in. When Charles Mingus became a renowned leader, he deemphasized his “instrumental prowess” in favor of promoting his new 51 Of course that could also signal a temporary fad. See Lawrence, Winn and Jennings (2002) for distinctions among institutional processes over time. 129 compositions (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p. 88); when he experienced a downturn in gigs, he found himself unemployable for he was hardly considered as a sideman52. Typecasting could be a hurdle for a musician’s career. Billy Eckstine was able to explore the “race” market as a popular singer, but was gradually excluded from other kinds of repertory (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 335). Once a musician public persona became associated with the institutionalization of a new style, he was compelled to defend it, for the fate of the institutionalized style was deeply related to his own fate. While bop was associated with drugs, musicians struggle to either not to affiliate themselves to this label (even if their music is still bop), or counter-attack with marketing tools (for instance, see Gillespie’s defense of Bebop as part of the Jazz tradition and not related with drugs; DEVEAUX, 1997). 4.3.6. Style Deinstitutionalization and Leader Decline Differently from the dynamics among science paradigms, artistic styles are not entirely displaced by new ones (KUHN, 1977). In modern societies, styles co-exist with each other, constituting a mosaic at any point of time (SIMMEL, 2004, p. 474). Nonetheless, as new styles emerged, musicians associated with previously institutionalized styles lost room for innovators. This occurred for several reasons. First, the older style was not as attractive as it was in the past, and at the same time younger audience looked for innovations. Second, a band suffered erosion as it grew older, for ambitious sidemen established their own bands and the remaining sidemen eventually retired and left the field. At the same way, younger musicians were socialized to play newer styles. Even if the leader succeeded in attracting new musicians to the band, he would have little incentive to create new compositions to incorporate the uniqueness of these new sidemen. Quite the opposite: these new sidemen would have to “wear the shoes” of those sidemen who left the band and adjust to sound like them while interpreting the band’s consecrated repertoire. In consequence, these new sidemen’ skills were underutilized in the band, which effected in their frustration with the lack of opportunities to develop their uniqueness and establish themselves as prestigious musicians. That happened with Duke Ellington’s band, who found his band eventually unable to able to attract the most skilful in the field (LAWRENCE, 2001, p. 418). 52 Typecasting might occur with sidemen, too. When Miles Davis replaced John Coltrane with Sonny Stitt in early sixties, he risked employing a musician who was already typecast in the Jazz community (Szwed, 2002, p. 215). 130 Moreover, an older musician’s reputation declined once his achievements didn’t look as impressive as before. Remarkably exceptions were Coleman Hawkins and Duke Ellington. Both are accounted for accomplishing deeds seldom imitated by younger musicians (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 64)53. 4.3.7. Recurrent Innovator An established leader might struggle against the inertial forces associated with his success and attempt to introduce new innovations to the field. The reasons that led a bandleader to break with his associated institutionalized style varied. One may claim that the artistic calling was the major reason among innovators. As a matter of fact, musicians like John Coltrane were compelled to follow their “musical daemons” and pursue innovation in spite of the loss of audience and critic support. As his wife Alice Coltrane clarifies, he couldn’t come back to his earlier ways of playing (PORTER, 1999, p. 275). The sheer boredom with previous played style was a related reason, as artists are conceived as resistant to routines (DIMAGGIO, 1977). Miles Davis, for instance, after completing Sketches of Spain in late fifties, was yearning for artistic renovation. Yet, more mundane reasons account for innovation. A bandleader might be reacting to a downfall in revenues and prestige and hard-pressed by financial commitments. For instance, Miles Davis was not only bored with his way of playing by mid-sixties and envious with the success of younger black musicians (DAVIS ; TROUPE, 1989, p. 277), but he was also in need of an increase in income in order to honor his financial commitments with Columbia Records (SZWED, 2002, p. 269). Depending on how a musician performed in sales and in the poll awards, he would be eligible to higher advances. As Miles Davis geared towards rock, the Columbia executives monitored his success on Down Beat (a Jazz magazine) and Billboard charts (SZWED, 2002, p. 217). Also, the loss of older sidemen and the recruiting of musicians trained in new styles might be an incentive to experiment with new formats. When Vinson Ork decided to introduce bop in his big band, he established age as a requirement for recruiting new sidemen (PORTER, 1999, p. 73). Coleman Hawkins’s secret for success was to be surrounded by younger sidemen (SZWED, 2002, p. 237). At a very late stage in his career, Duke Ellington proved that he was able to experiment with new styles, when he recoded with Charles Mingus 53 In the case of Hawkins was the control of harmony as source for improvisation. Duke Ellington was known for his harmonic originality. 131 and Max Roach the Money Jungle album. As Miles Davis observed the leaving of important sidemen in the late fifties, like John Coltrane, he was much freer, but also compelled, to recruit resources that would be closer to pop and rock-‘n’-roll. Finally, the need for innovation may come from sheer change in the audience profile. As Miles Davis became more famous, he started to play in richer clubs, whose audiences were predominantly white (SZWED, 2002, p. 257). As suggested above, shifting away from an established style spurred positive and negative reactions in the field. The likeliness that a leader would be able to overcome such criticism was based in part on the same kind of risk that he faced while he was a new leader. First, he depended on a receptive audience. For instance, Miles Davis found in a young black audience the new listeners to his Fusion style. Although sympathetic, his new audience didn’t identify Miles Davis’ music with rock. Second, critics saw in Davis’s later work an attempt to cross two boundary lines at once: the Free Jazz and Rock-‘n’-Roll. For many reviewers, 1969’s Bitches Brew was “a foolish and desperate attempt by an aging man to attract a young audience by creating a new genre of music, jazz-rock” (SZWED, 2002, p. 297). One way of mitigating the negative reaction from critics was to pursue a decoupling strategy. In the mid-forties, Coleman Hawkins had his “Body and Soul” hit as an important source of income stemming from Juke Boxes. The popularity of this song was fueled by radio playing. Because he feared that his new bop playing would puzzle his radio audience, he avoided recording bop style with large recording companies; instead, he preferred to play it only at clubs (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 324). Eventually, records with the new style were spawned through small labels, which still enabled him to establish himself as the leader of the progressive movement (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 367). Many bandleaders avoided the pressures from recording companies, criticism and audience by establishing their own labels. “Dave Brubeck had helped start the Fantasy label in 1950, the in 1951 Dizzy Gillespie (Dee Gee) and Lennie Tristano (Jazz Records) had created their own outlets, as did Woody Herman (Mars) around the same time that Debut was founded. Also, despite still being contracted to Columbia, Duke Ellington has in 1950 formed Mercer label to record small-group track which would not tempt the major companies, and he it was too who a decade earlier had set the precedent of an independent publishing company (Tempo Music) for his less commercial compositions.” (PRIETLEY, 1983, p. 46). Coltrane was working on this project in 1967 before dying (PORTER, 1999, p. 289), while Charles Mingus succeeded to create his own label. 132 Another way of easing the reception of innovations was the threat of retirement. In the early sixties, Miles Davis threatened to leave the Jazz field. That helped him to adopt a new way of playing and ultimately the jazz-rock identity (SZWED, 2002, p. 231) Finally, the likeliness that a leader will be able to establish a new style was strongly related to his status as a “star”. Stars are those artists who have a direct relationship with his audience, and such relationship transcends the institutionalized styles existent in the field or associated with his trajectory. Through charisma, the star is able to break rules and change the norms in a field (GREENFELD, 1989). By positioning himself above such stylistic institutions, the star is able to introduce new ways of playing. Following, I present a table summarizing all career stages and respective distinctive characteristics, risks involved and requirements for advancing to an upper stage: Stage Characteristics Requirements for advancing to next stage Local band’s sideman • • National band’s sideman Sidemen Hierarchy • • • • • New bandleader • • • Institutionalization of Innovator Leader Decline • • • Minimum skill level Access to institutional channels and social networks Exposition to the center of the Jazz World Musicianship excellence Participation in jam sessions and cutting sessions Reliability and fit to employing band Opportunistic horizontal shifting Put together, maintain and provide a minimum of discipline to like-minded and complementary musicians Generation of “gigs” and establishment of contracts with recording companies Establish the band’s original identity Signing with a major recording company Change in the public’s taste Emergence of (disruptive) new styles • Attention from a National band’s leader • Introduction to the Jazz community Prominence among peers Development of own style and compositions Exposition to the media and public awards Presence at recorded albums Innovations become an influence to other bands and is eventually copied Albums eventually become “exemplars” Former sidemen establish their own bands and establish a musical genealogy Leader typecasting Obdurate identity • • • • • • • • • 133 Recurrent Innovator • • • • • • Loss of important sidemen Long term artistic project Financial pressures (or financial detachment) Substitution of sidemen Prominence in order to break typecast identity Establishment of own recording company and distribution channel The identification of the key-characteristics of the stages, as well as the requirements for advancement plays a twofold function. First, it will support the formalization and operationalization of hypotheses in order to analyze musicians’ trajectories in future studies. Second, and most important for this paper, it prepares the background against which we will test whether the regularities extracted constitute rules of the field. As Bourdieu (1990b, p. 79) warns, regularities cannot be taken as rules. In the same token, Durkheim (2003) suggests that the investigation of deviation from the rules is privileged way of studying of institutions that constrain one’s action as external social facts. 4.4. Non-typical Career Paths The description of the typical stages above might give the impression that a musician must go through all these phases, from sideman in a small town, to a recurrent innovator, in order to be considered successful. This belief might be reinforced by the small probability of becoming a star in any artistic field (ROSEN, 1981; FAULKNER, 1983). Following this logic, failure to migrate from one stage to another might determine stagnation or exclusion from the field. Nonetheless, actual careers glue and combine these stages in manifold ways. The field of jazz, as any other field, is saturated with romantic biographies of heroes who fail, stay “quite” for a while (FAULKNER, 1983) and return. The research interest, within our framework, is to explore whether such disrupted, non-linear accounts tell us something about the field’s evolution. A field’s dynamics might provide room for these unlikely trajectories. For these exercise, I will focus on the trajectories of Coleman Hawkins and Ornette Coleman, for both exemplify how irregular trajectories help us to explain major turning points in a field. 134 4.4.1. Coleman Hawkins In his book The Birth of Bebop, Scott DeVeaux develops the argument that Coleman Hawkins was one of the precursors of Bebop, although his name is mostly associated to Swing. Hawkins built his reputation of good instrumentalist in the pre-Swing Era, at the Fletcher Henderson’s big band (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 134). At Henderson’s, he grew frustrated as Louis Armstrong overshadowed all sidemen. In 1934, Hawkins engaged in a self-imposed exile in Europe (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 68), where he found plenty of opportunities as star soloist. Beautiful women and fine liquor were some of his awards (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 88). In addition, he achieved a degree of autonomy that allowed him to avoid bandleaders’ caprices. Moreover, in Europe, his music was perceived as closer to classical music. As mentioned above, Hawkins’s leaving to Europe happened just before the Swing boom in the U.S. In 1935, as Benny Goodman attracted crowds of teenagers to his concert at the Carnegie Hall, Swing was officially the most popular style in America. As pointed above, Hawkins pick up with the bandwagon. He returned to the United States and established his own big band in 1939 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 134), just before the Swing bubble burst. Again, this was the major reason for his failure. In addition to Hawkins’s poor timing, he was not able to offer those features that made other bandleaders successful. His major distinctive feature was his improvisation skills. However, the commercial side of Swing favored the whole big band entertaining show, rather than soloist musicianship. This was an era when standard packages were more to the taste of the public (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 134). Although everybody expected Hawkins to be a leader of a dance band, he resisted the typecasting that helped Fletcher Henderson, Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. In spite of his winning the Metronome’s annual popularity contest, he was forced to dissolve his band by 1940 due to very low wages ($33 per man, $50 for the bandleader) and little prospects of future work (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 142). He was never again a dance bandleader. His shift to small combos was far from smooth. Due to the lack of opportunities in the small clubs in NY, he was forced to move to Chicago. In 1942, the security of big band vanished and his prospects looked bleak (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 276). Nonetheless, Hawkins was at easy with Bop innovations (PORTER, 1999, p. 71). His improvisational style was built upon chromatic alterations (in contrast with his contemporary peers) (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 104), which was also a feature in the emergent bop movement. As a result, Hawkins found a new community of musicians to play with: “Far from being on 135 the periphery of the music business, Hawkins found himself at the center of a new network: working continuously, recording prolifically, and – perhaps most satisfying – surrounded by young musicians as dedicated to the progressive ideal as he was” (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 277). His embrace of Bop was the new identity that Hawkins needed to move on (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 310), and he was well positioned to capture this opportunity. First, to be a freelancer was an advantage, for he was not bounded by contract to any label. Thus, he was able to record as many as one hundred tunes during 1944 (DEVEAUX, 1997, p. 306). Also, in comparison to younger musicians, he had already established a prestigious name. Finally, in contrast with musicians of his age cohort, he was able to play the new style. As a result, Hawkins served as a catalyst and helped to legitimate the Bop movement (DEVEAUX, p. 316) 4.4.2. Ornette Coleman Ornette Coleman, one of the founders of Free Jazz, was never invited to join national bands (WILSON, 1999, p.12). He was always a heretic. His harmonic conceptions, although derived from bebop, didn’t follow the current conventions (WILSON, 1999, p. 21). As he was rarely invited to sit-in, and when that happened, he was frequently left alone on stage, he was never introduced to the informal hierarchical ladder of jam sessions. In spite of this exclusion, Coleman eventually gained support among peers, like Billy Higgins, Walter Norris and Don Payne (WILSON, 1999, p. 17). In the early inception of Free Jazz, it was his supporters, not Coleman, who diffused the style; Coleman wouldn’t be accepted in any club or recording company. Once Free Jazz gained legitimacy, Coleman’s colleagues were able to include him in paid gigs (WILSON, 1999, p. 18). In the late fifties, prominent musicians and critics, like John Lewis and Martin Williams saw in his musical innovation a relationship with Charlie Parker’s ideas (WILSON, 1999, p. 23, MARTIN, 1983, p. 235). The enactment of such relationship helped to legitimate the Free Jazz movement as an authentic and original expression in the Jazz field. In spite of this acceptance, traditional players like Miles Davis (SZWED, 2002, p. 236), Coleman Hawkins, and Red Garland reacted with hostility. The critic John Tynan referred to Free Jazz as “ultra-individualism”, “nihilism”, and “staged anarchy”. Coleman found himself between two contradictory forces. On one hand, he didn’t enter the field through the right channels: “that someone who had not paid his dues for years in the New York musical hierarchy could meet with such success provoked resentment, even 136 some anxiety (…)” (WILSON, 1999, p. 27). On the other hand, he amassed recognition from prominent musicians and critics, which granted him in 1966 the Down Beat’s award of Jazzman of the Year. Coleman was convinced that had he gone to New York earlier, he would be able to save ten years in his life (WILSON, 1999, p. 12). In spite of this recognition, the stream of gigs just didn’t come accordingly, and he was not able to hold up a group together. “[D]espite the opportunities New York presented to perform regularly, it was plainly impossible to hold a group together in a constant line up – an for Coleman’s music, with its new style of ensemble playing, this was essential.” (WILSON, 1999, p. 28). In addition to this mismatch between musicians’, audience’s and critics’ opinions, perhaps Coleman wasn’t a skilled business man. He dismissed engagements for they didn’t meet his monetary expectations. As a result, Coleman didn’t play live from 1963 to 1965 (WILSON, 1999, p. 41). It was due to the persistence of collaborators in the sixties, like Stefan Sharp, David Izenzon, and Charles Moffett that Coleman was able to maintain and evolve his style. Wilson (1999) believes that Coleman was not naïve. On the contrary, his reason for refusing engagements was a struggle to establish his music as art. This was not rare among jazz musicians in the sixties. Mingus is known for requiring unconventional terms on clubs and recording companies (PRIESTLEY, 1983, p. 92, p. 132). 4.5. Discussion: Resources and Fields Along the typical path, we observe how musicians deployed effort, reputation, funds and social contacts in order to advance their careers. Not less important, these musicians also faced challenges in disrupting social networks, changing their public identities and managing their sidemen. Underlying these decisions, sidemen and band leaders tackled different levels of risk and uncertainty. Within the typical trajectory developed above, it is possible to observe how actors are coupled to a field as their trajectories unfold. Failure to achieve a superior stage leaves the actor to stagnation or expulsion from the field. The challenge, then, is to explain why and how deviant actors are able to pursue alternative career paths. Although different dispositions may explain why musicians like Coleman Hawkins and Ornette Coleman pursued unexpected strategies, we should still discuss why they succeeded. Coleman Hawkins could fall, by Bourdieu’s typification, in the naïve category. He left the United States just before the Swing boom, which was concurrent with the general 137 economic recovery in the country. And again, he set up his big band just before the Swing’s bubble burst. For Bourdieu, such moves correspond to a waste of time. If we understand “time” as a relational rather absolute category, we monitor an actor’s progression only in relation to his peers. Hawkins seemed to have missed entirely the point. However, the Jazz field’s institutions and meta-logics were experience fast change. With the decline of Swing, younger musicians found weakened obstacles against their efforts to promote Jazz as an art form. Hawkins, as showed above, was instrumental in the shaping of the Bop musician’s new ethos, and consequently, the emergence of a new professional conscience. The professional body that Hawkins helped to create was highly identified with the informal hierarchical ladder among New York musicians. Also, it benefited directly from Down Beat’s increasingly specialized criticism, which in the early fifties provided massive support to Bop as an expression of Jazz as art. In tandem, small and then large labels started to record Bop and later styles. In other words, Hawkins successfully migrated from the Swing system to the Bop system, mostly by relying on the emergent professional body, rather than on commercial claims. When we observe Ornette Coleman, we face again a matter of timing. In comparison to Hawkins, Coleman also lost “field-time”: he didn’t conform to the field’s norms and didn’t enroll in the New York hierarchy. However, when Coleman entered the Jazz field, we observe again an uncoupling of legitimacy sources. While the several critics and musicians supported Coleman, he lacked the approval from much of the audience, peer musicians and critics. What can we learn from Coleman Hawkins and Ornette Coleman experiences? Sure we should agree with Bourdieu that timing is crucial for a successful actor. However, when the field meta-logics face transformation, ambiguity takes place. Changes in a field’s institutional meta-logics are not likely to happen at once and in a coordinated fashion. Critics may disagree with audience, who may, in turn, disagree with other public opinion formers and the audience in general. Also, critics might disagree among themselves. In sum, as inter- and within-groups clashes emerge, and the sources of legitimacy wither, the valuation of a field’s resources becomes more uncertain. As a consequence, conversion between capitals becomes an exercise fraught with uncertainty. As Menger (1999) points out, the higher the uncertainty in an artistic market, the higher the probability for non-instrumental oriented action. Hence, both Hawkins’s and Coleman’s (inter alia) action and discourse towards less commercial music might be 138 explained by a mismatch among legitimate sources. This is also consistent with DiMaggio’s (2002) analysis on the emergence of non-instrumental action in tandem with uncertain times. 4.6. Conclusion and Future Research Opportunities The study of individual trajectories and careers within fields has evolved rapidly in the last years. This body of research has provided a wealth of normative insights that may inform how professions will face challenges outside closed organizational structures. This article attempted to contribute to this discussion by letting the underlying field to vary over time. As a result, individuals face two sources of variability. One source stems from the odds that he will be able to migrate from one stage to another, given as taken for granted a field’s meta-logics. Another source of variation comes from the field evolution. If the field’s normative institutions change overtime, individuals might face their resources reevaluated over night. Moreover, the field’s agents might send conflicting signals on the field’s trends. Further research could focus on individuals’ resource development and deployment under conditions of fast legitimacy change. Future research might provide a sounder basis to the intuitions laid in this article. First, a more robust analysis of musicians’ trajectories might be performed through the reconstruction of longitudinal networks (see SNIJDERS, 2001; DE NOOY, 2002, for possible approaches). Second, there is an important lack of research on musicians’ perspectives, which might shed some light on the actor’s subjective perception of their networks. This might be mitigated by further analyses of biographies. However, biographies are always limited in their depth and reliability. Also, discourse analysis might be applied to ethnographic material collected from living musicians. But this choice would require a new research object. Finally, too much focus was given to vertical attainment mechanisms. Even when I analyzed the “deviant”54 cases of Coleman Hawkins and Ornette Coleman, they end up climbing the hierarchical ladder in the jazz world. Future research might reveal horizontal paths encapsulated within and between these stages. 54 At this point, the term deviant seems ill-placed. One is deviant only in relation to a given order. But one’s action might contribute to change such order. 139 5. How do Outsider Styles Become Legitimated? A dialogue between Bossa Nova musicians and Jazz critics Abstract This paper explores the emergence and enactment of new musical styles from the perspective of critics. As the field absorbs a new style, the critics assess whether it belongs or not to the established tradition. In parallel, as musicians produce art works following the new style, critics classify and rate them. This signaling activity helps us to understand how the legitimacy process takes place vis-à-vis the production of new records. For that purpose, we explore the introduction of Bossa Nova in the Jazz field. Our results show that as this process evolved, records that combined Bossa Nova elements with Jazz were more likely to penetrate the core of the community. Conversely, musicians who played pure Bossa Nova were kept in the periphery. Finally, the assessment of “what is Bossa Nova” moved back and forth from positive statements (BN “is” Brazilian Music, inter alia) to negative statements (e.g. BN “is not” Jazz, inter alia). This swing between positive and negative statements accompanied distinctive inflection points in the institutionalization of Bossa Nova. 5.1. Introduction The central concern of this paper is to explore how new musical styles get legitimated. This question is not only localized within Sociology of Art and the study of Creative Industries, but it also refers to a broader institutional question: what is the underlying process that leads to the legitimacy of new categories? Like an institution, a musical style works as a system of beliefs and cognitive frames that organizes collective action (DOUGLAS, 1986). It is through style that critics categorize musicians and their records (DIMAGGIO, 1984; HSU ; PODOLNY, 2005). It is also through styles that musicians negotiate their way of playing. Conversely, musical innovation occurs through stretching a style to its limits, or introducing unexpected elements to an enacted identity (WHITE, 1992a). The institutionalization of a new style refers to the institutionalization of new social forms. Generally, the neo-institutional tradition has explored how new forms are diffused within an organizational field (BURT, 1987, GALASKIEWICZ ; WASSERMAN, 1989, BAUM ; OLIVER, 1992). Although such tradition has its roots in a phenomenological approach to the cognitive systems of actors in an organizational field, less attention has been 140 devoted to how the underlying belief systems change (one important exception is RAO; MONIN ; DURAND, 2003). The aim of this paper is to explore the process of legitimating beyond the analysis of diffusion of new social forms. The emergence and institutionalization of new musical styles is a privileged object for such investigation, for there is a split between musicians and critics in the production of music and discourse. In a schematic way, while musicians produce new records, critics generate the discursive analysis about this production. To be sure, this separation is not rigid, and the moments when boundaries were blurred constitute important events in the evolution of any artistic field (for an example in Jazz studies, see PORTER, 2002). Nevertheless, if we assume that critics are the major source of discursive production in a field, we should also expect that major changes in the fields’ discursive space should occur within critics’ discourse. Critics are generally viewed as gate-keepers of a Art World (BECKER, 1982, DIMAGGIO, 1977). With such role, critics have been able to permit the introduction of new artists, art works and styles in a field. White (1993) characterizes critics as playing the role of supervisors of an agent-principal relationship. While final consumers are the principal, musicians are the agents in creating new music. Critics, then, categorize, rate and compare new art works with previous works. Bourdieu (1993b, p.78) radicalizes such view as portraying critics as belonging to a close-knit network and sanctioning any art work that deviates from the consecrated rules. Such critics are “guardians of a temple” who seek the monopoly of discourse creation. If we accept such proposition as our departing point, we face a paradox: if critics enact and protect the hegemonic rules in a field, how is it possible to explain the acceptance of new styles? Conversely, if our findings show that established critics do accept new styles a new problem emerges: if the enactment of new styles occurs in an easy and frictionless way, we should suspect that the precedent institutions were not strong enough. As a consequence, if the institution has always been weak, the very role of criticism would be meaningless. In order to avoid such dead-end conclusion, I explore how critics change their belief systems while maintaining the strength of institutions. In other words: as new styles are enacted into an established tradition, critics have the role of reconciling the new art works with the established tradition and explain why such musical innovation (and perhaps not others) should be welcomed into the field. Following this line of reasoning, the conflict that marked the division between musicians and critics is now transferred to the realm of critics. It is in this realm where new discourses are formed, through the activity of coupling and uncoupling the new style within the web of meanings shared by the community of critics. 141 The object that I chose for this investigation is the introduction of Bossa Nova in the Jazz field in the sixties. While Bossa Nova sprung from a hybridism of Samba and Jazz, the Jazz tradition was well established, after sixty years of history. 5.2. Theory on new Styles 5.2.1. Outsider as a source of innovation A cultural turn was experienced in the second half of the twentieth century, as mostly post-modern scholars have observed that all cultures are a product of hybridism (ANDERSON, 1998). From this perspective, a concern in identifying pure cultural forms would be doomed to failure. When we complement this array of analysis with the study of social relations, we come back to the Simmel’s suggestion that individuals are regarded as intersections of groups. Also, groups can not be understood as closed entities, but intersecting with other groups through their individuals’ co-memberships (SIMMEL, 1955). Pescosolido and Rubin (2000) radicalize the original simmelian intuition to localize in the post-modern era a time where criss-crossing group affiliations give room to complex social network structures and social boundaries are loosely defined. Burke (2003) identifies several types of hybridisms: imitation, appropriations, acommodations and syncretism. An imitation occurs when the borrower of the external culture doesn’t perform any adaptations to the recipient location. The example the author offers is the usage of wool coats in the ever-summer Rio de Janeiro in the beginning of the XX century. Such “immitation” had the purpose of creating a distinction between the carioca elite and other strata in the society. An appropriation occurs when the borrower selects only few elements from the external culture, and fit them to the recipient context. An example of appropriation is observed on how Brazilians absorbed and changed Italian words into its spoken Portuguese. Accommodations occur when different cultures live side by side, influencing each other, although maintaining their identities. An example of accommodation is observed on the presence of Jesuits in China. The priests absorbed some of the local habits, without completely losing their identity. Finally, syncretism is a completely distinct social form, created out of a blend of different cultures. The Afro-Brazilian religions, like Ubanda, combine Christian with African saints in a unique religious and symbolic system. 142 Burke identifies several situations where these hybrid forms emerge, most prominently, in cosmopolitan cities, where different cultures interact, and along countries’ borders. In such situations the sharing of common objects among cultures makes it difficult to identify its true origins. Burke suggests that a circulation of social forms among cultures better describe the history of these artifacts. In addition to identifying these hybrid forms, Burke also points out that societies and individuals may express different reactions to the combination of cultures. A more welcoming society may present low resistance to new hybrid forms. In the opposite pole, closed societies might reject external cultural elements. Between these two poles we may observe societies that accept external elements, but segregate them at the fringes of the community. Conversely, several societies might accept only certain aspects of an outsider culture, while rejecting other elements. Negative reactions, points Burke, occur even in our open-society times, when we expect that cultures would freely mingle with each other. Negative reactions towards hybridization express attempts to impose social boundaries. Although such enacted boundaries always present some porosity and let communication to the outside world, they may constrain and regulate the way that social actors, and in our case, artists, establish their social networks. 5.2.2. Boundary work and sources of conflict The study of social boundaries is one of the most important themes in sociology. Its origins bring us back to the very origins of sociology (DURKHEIM, 1995, WEBER, 1978), leading to contemporary scholars like Bourdieu and Douglas. Mary Douglas, from an anthropological perspective, and drawing on the durkheimian tradition, proposes the comparison of social boundaries to the boundaries of an individual’s body (DOUGLAS, 1984, p.115). From this perspective, one’s body is regarded as sacred and the exchanges with the environment are strongly regulated. Douglas goes on to describe how different societies preserve the relationship of purity of the body by avoiding the ingestion of specific kinds of food. Conversely, the appearance of certain body fluids is interpreted as impurity, or “pollution”, and requires a ritual of purification in order to reincorporate the individual to the society. The requirement of maintenance of body purity is central for these societies, for two reasons. First, and more obvious, a society concerned with purity should restrain to accept polluted elements. But most importantly, by excluding impure elements, the society thinks itself as a body, that needs to expel those inappropriate elements. These 143 requirements relate to the purity of the individual’s body, but also to the relationship with other bodies. The way that kinship relations between members of different tribes are permitted or sanctioned refers also to the requirement of maintenance of the purity of the society’s body. Surprisingly, shows Douglas, certain fluids and elements that are considered pure while inside the body, once expelled are not considered pure anymore (e.g. saliva). Although it is not impure while inside the body, once it is placed outside one’s mouth it should not be reincorporated. When we tie Douglas’s discussion back to the innovation in music, we observe several phenomena that suggest an analogy to her model. One may speculate that as a genre becomes institutionalized, and its internal rules more crystallized, the absorption of foreign musical elements becomes increasingly regulated by such norms. Nonetheless, through the history of Jazz, for instance, periods of strong institutionalization of norms were followed by periods of deinstitutionalization of old norms and enactment of new ones. As a matter of fact, the development of new styles in Jazz, from Hot Jazz, Swing to Avant-Garde and Fusion might be interpreted as such normative upheavals. In contrast with the concept of sacredness of the individual, DOUGLAS (1984) points the role of becoming an outsider as an important stage for rites of passage. For instance, in order to be accepted as an adult, a child has to go outside the limits of the community in order to challenge the community’s rules. In his return, the individual embraces again the community’s rules, but now as an adult. WHITE (1993) recovers the idea of liminal experiences in order to explain how artists decouple their activities from their field’s established rules. However, in contrast with Douglas, White foresees in this movement of return as a source of innovation to the community of artists, as new artistic forms are developed and brought back by the artist. Conversely, while the return of the recent adult within Douglas’s theory is unproblematic, for she embraces her community’s rules, the return of White’s artist is prone to conflict, as her new creation is likely to clash with the established rules. 5.2.3. Making sense of change From a phenomenological perspective, styles are categories that entail cognitive schemata for classification of art works. From that perspective, styles could be compared with scientific paradigms (KUHN, 1970). As in scientific paradigms, styles embody the abstracted elements of phenomena, namely art works. Also, as in scientific paradigms, the constitution of 144 styles takes place when the community chooses a set of exemplars, among a population of art works, that embody the core elements of that new category. However, as Kuhn (1977) informs us, we should distinguish the artistic and the scientific production for the following reasons. First, while new scientific paradigms destroy older paradigms as they reorganize the observed phenomena in an entirely new schemes, new artistic styles don’t destroy, but dialogue with older styles. A remarkable example brought by Becker (1982) is Duchamp’s Monalisa. By drawing a moustache on Leonardo’s Gioconda, Duchamp challenged the idea that a masterpiece could not be altered. Nonetheless, Duchamp’s art work value is graspable only when considered in relation to the original Mona Lisa. Hence, artistic innovation dialogues with the past in a way that doesn’t occur in science. Second, while innovation in art is a value itself (KUHN, 1977), highly valued by consumers (SIMMEL, 1957) and necessary for absorption of new artists into the field (BOURDIEU, 1993a), the development of new scientific paradigms is highly problematic for scientific communities (KUHN, 1970, 1977). As Becker (1982) points out, although new art works to be successfully accepted by an Art World should comply with its conventions, entirely conforming works are perceived as non-creative. In spite of the requirement of constant innovation, changes that go beyond the boundaries spanned by the standards decrease the value of the institutions for its participants (CAVES, 2000, p. 202). As a consequence, critics have to apply a meta-classification on new labels and determine whether they are fads or should be accepted as new categories within the tradition. Weick’s study on the sensemaking phenomena in organizations (1969) clarifies that categories and labels emerge as ex-post to action. In that sense, a practice that has been occurring as ‘emergent’ is eventually recognized by the organization and legitimized. The process of legitimating occurs in tandem with the very labeling of the phenomena. This perspective doesn’t contradict Douglas’s model, for the enactment process is strongly regulated by the boundary setting rules defined by the purity laws. Nonetheless, such model is not able to explain some extreme changes in the Jazz field like the introduction of Bop scales or the Fusion’s electric guitar. Such new practices went against the institutionalized rules. To be sure, Weick’s studies on sensemaking accounts for two opposing situations to explain change in crystallized schemata. The first situation is extreme crises, which led Weick to study disruptive events like fires and accidents. On the other extreme, Weick brings the very example of Jazz, where musicians consciously improvise and eventually create new ways of playing Jazz (MEYER; FROST ; WEICK, 1998). Although Weick’s account on Jazz 145 musicians might well explain the behavior of innovators, it is still left to investigation how disruptive new art forms are enacted and legitimized by other types of actors (critics, producers, etc.). 5.2.4. Conflict and Changes in Power Musicians do not depend entirely on critics to establish new styles. In relation to the critics’ community, musicians count on external or semi-external forces like increasing audience (as in the case of Rock and Roll, see PETERSON, 1990) or the establishment of new media organizations. Bourdieu (1993b, p.89) mentions how newly created avant-garde periodicals support avant-garde artists. If that is true, new styles should be always accompanied with the creation of new organizations that hire sympathetic critics. This proposition is much in line with Christensen’s (1997) idea that disruptive technologies emerge within new organizations. The creation of new organizations that permit the introduction of new styles reflects changes in the power sources in a field, as the distribution of resources shifts to accommodate new players. This power-based interpretation of how institutions endure or change is supported by recent scholarship on institutional change (HOLM, 1995, HININGS et al, 2003). This perspective assumes that established critics, as well as their recipient organizations, stick to their belief systems and schemata, denying change. Nonetheless, such proposition would assume that critics do not review their belief systems even under extraordinaire pressure from musicians, audience and recording companies. An interpretation of new styles as emerging out of conflicts among musicians, critics and organizations bring us back to Bourdieu’s concept of field (1993a). Within a field, artists position themselves accordingly to the quantities of capital that they control, and the composition of such capital. As a consequence, the search for external new forms or subversion of internal rules might be better described as the consequences of a practice from actors who are seeking to improve or consolidate their positions and achieve a better conversion of their capitals. From this perspective, Bourdieu departs from an orthodox durkheimian view of social boundaries as a matter moral density, to understand how social boundaries encompass not a body, but a field where its different components continuously struggle. Nonetheless, although the internal conflicts are described as confrontations in a battle field, the boundary setting with the external world is still treated as if Jazz were a body. As a 146 consequence, internal conflicts might be translated into the discussion on where the external boundaries are enacted. Musicians in different positions might be more or less conservative in relation to established boundaries. 5.2.5. From Periphery to Core: latency and visibility As the innovative artist migrates from the periphery to the center of a community, he enters in a social space that is not only dense in social ties, but also saturated with symbolic network ties and correspondent conflicts. As Melucci (1985) puts it, such movement describes a trajectory from latency to visibility. As an artist penetrates denser areas of the community, his art works are also appreciated by a larger audience. The increase in audience leads to a sharper separation between artist and his audience. For instance, listeners to Jazz are much closer to artists when they attend to jam session rather than when they listen to records. As this separation increases, the need for exposition through media and the scrutiny of critics also increases. As a new style migrates to the core of a community, its distinctive elements might be preserved. In that case, the host community is itself also embracing a new set of elements that hasn’t recognized as part of its tradition. This migration has the effect of provoking conflict for it challenges the established traditions and stretch the established boundaries. Another possibility of diffusion is the absorption of diluted versions of the new artistic form into art works that compromise with traditional elements. Following this way, we should expect lower resistance to the new style. These two phenomena are of central interest for us, not only because they permit us to trace the trajectory of new styles, but also because whenever a new style is introduced, critics are forced to verbalize what they believe the traditions are. Also, as the new style is accepted, critics also verbalize what the new style is. Conversely, while the field lacks a set of agreed exemplars and criteria to establish a style, for every new art work assessed, critics will express whether in their opinion that art work belongs or not to the host tradition and whether it belongs or not to the emergent style. Following, I will approach the construction of the Jazz tradition and the Bossa Nova history, in order to introduce my analytical strategy to this process. 147 5.3. Jazz and Bossa Nova 5.3.1. Enacting the Jazz Tradition Gridley’s (2003) “Jazz Styles” is already the 8th edition of a textbook devoted to teach what is Jazz. Along the book, Gridley identifies the most important styles in Jazz, their prominent musicians and musical innovations. In addition, Gridley poses a puzzling, but necessary, question for his readers: how can we set the boundaries of Jazz? The author offers four visions. The strictest of them requires that a song to be considered part of the Jazz repertoire must present elements of improvisation and a certain feeling of swing. Given the failure that many pieces face in matching these requirements, Gridley reviews his criteria, loosening either the improvisation or the swing dimensions (respectively the second and third views). But still several art works don’t attend to any of these requirements (several of Duke Ellington’s pieces are among the most prominent examples). As a consequence, we are left with the fourth, more inclusive definition: if a piece resembles the consolidated repertoire of the Jazz tradition, we should consider it Jazz (ibid. p. 6). In an earlier study, Gridley, Maxham and Hoff (1989) draw on Wittgenstein to explain what he means for “resemblance”. Wittgenstein proposes to group theories under families given a similarity of epistemological approach. In analogy, Gridley proposes that the critic of Jazz is able to assess the proximity of a given piece to Jazz by analyzing in which extent it resembles the elements present in the Jazz tradition. Although this later definition is quite inclusive, it raises at least two crucial questions. The first question is whether, by loosening so much the membership criteria, Gridley is not proposing a definition that is unable to distinguish Jazz from non-Jazz. A possible answer could argue that such evaluation is grounded on a comparison with the Jazz tradition’s musical elements. But then, it leads us to this paper’s central question: who established the Jazz tradition? Also, if Gridley’s later definition is comprehensive, we should not assume that it has been in the same way along the history of Jazz. As a matter of fact, harsh conflicts over what is Jazz paved the development of this genre as critics resisted to new variations (KOFSKY, 1998, LOPES, 2000). Both questions relate to the Jazz’s boundaries. Moreover, they challenge us to understand the historical process that formed the institution of Jazz. 148 5.3.2. Bossa Nova in the Jazz Field Medaglia, a writer on Bossa Nova (2003), affirms that BN was a one of the most important musical innovations in Brazil in the last century. Some historians go even farther in their defense of the importance of this new style. Bossa Nova would have played an important role in revitalizing the American Jazz, as the Jazz family of styles (bop, hard-bop, post-bop, cool) lost its ability to innovate (SEVERIANO ; HOMEM DE MELO, 1997). Other observers place the introduction of Bossa Nova in the American market as an impressive success history, for it shows how a musical style developed in a peripheral country was introduced in an large and central marketplace as the American one was in the beginning of the sixties (CASTRO, 1990). From the American side, Jazz writers describe the Bossa Nova style as an important influence in the sixties, and a still viable idiom (YANOW, 2005). Based on these statements, we are tempted to infer that Bossa Nova was warmly received by musicians, critics and public in the American Jazz community. Such inference couldn’t be farther from reality, for it dismisses the institutionalization process of this new idiom. Such procedure privileges the point-of-view of an observer placed at an ex-post temporal moment, and detached from the participants’ perspectives. 5.4. Methodology 5.4.1. A theory of Jazz and Bossa Nova Jazz critics need a theory of what is Jazz (in the durkeimian sense of “belief system”) in order to assess whether a given record fit to the Jazz tradition. We collected 184 record reviews from the magazine Down Beat, from 1962 to 1969 (Table 1 for a longitudinal evolution of the sample). Whenever a record review had the word “Bossa Nova” in the body of the text, we considered it as part of our sample. For each review, we analyzed how the critic perceived the relationship between the following entities: “Bossa Nova”, “Samba/Brazilian Music” and “Jazz”. For that purpose, we set four questions for coding: 1. Is Bossa Nova considered either Brazilian Music or Samba? 2. Is Bossa Nova considered a blend between Samba and Jazz? 3. Is Bossa Nova considered part of the Jazz tradition? For each of these questions, our coding procedure admitted three possible answers: the statement is true (e.g. Bossa Nova is equivalent to Brazilian music), the statement is false (e.g. Bossa Nova is not equivalent to Brazilian music) or neutral (the review is silent towards this 149 question). Figure 1 summarizes the findings of this analysis, where we report only the affirmative and negative assessments, but not the neutral ones (total number of assessments is disclosed in Table 1). Table 5.1: Evolution of Bossa Nova Records and Assessments 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Total Total Sample 12 52 17 35 26 14 21 7 184 BN Theory Assessments 12 44 4 7 6 4 5 2 84 100% 85% 24% 20% 23% 29% 24% 29% 46% % on sample Records Classified % on sample 11 49 16 33 26 14 21 7 177 92% 94% 94% 94% 100% 100% 100% 100% 96% Source: Author’s analysis 100% Isn't Jazz Is Pop/Mood 80% Is Blend 60% Is Samba/Brazilian 40% 20% Isn't Samba 0% 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Figure 5.1: Evolution of the Theory of Bossa Nova Note: 100% denotes the total number of record reviews that contained statements on what is Bossa Nova Source: Author’s analysis 5.4.2. Classification of Records Following Burke’s suggestion that there are several types of hybridization, we identified four levels of Bossa Nova presence. The highest presence of BN was classified as “Record is BN”, indicating that the whole album followed the idiom. Following, we coded 150 “Song is BN” whenever a record had one or more BN tracks, although some tracks were not identified as belonging to this idiom. We classified “Record has a BN flavor” whenever the critic identified an influence of BN, but not the idiom per se. Finally, the mildest classification was “Song has BN flavor”, indicating that the critic observed BN influence in one or more tracks (but not in the whole album). As we proceeded in our coding of the evolution of BN theory, we allowed the assessment to be negative as well (e.g. “Record is not BN”). As we can observe on Figure 2, such negative form of valuation occurs in a much lower frequency when compared to other classification groups. Table 1 brings the total number of records classified under the categories mentioned above. 100% Some songs have BN flavour Some songs are BN 80% 60% Record has BN flavour 40% Record is BN 20% Record isn't BN 0% 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Figure 5.2: Classification of Records Note: 100% denotes the total number of record reviews that contained statements on whether the record belonged to Bossa Nova. Source: Author’s analysis 5.4.3. Ratings Down Beat critics rated each record under a rating system that ranged from 1 to 5, where 1 is a poor record, and 5 is an excelent record. The average rating of the universe of records reviewed by Down Beat in the sixties was slightly above the mid point, achieving 3.5. 151 Not differently, the average rating of our Bossa Nova sample was 3.42. The longitudinal analysis of the trend in rating hasn’t revealed any important deviation from this level. For each record classification category, we calculated the mean rating for each year. Next, we standardized this figures using the year’s global average rating as a benchmark. Figure 3 brings the trends of relative ratings by record classification group, where the horizontal axis stands for the year’s global average rating. 30% 20% Record is BN Record isn't BN Record has BN flavour 10% Some songs are BN 0% 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Some songs have BN flavour -10% -20% -30% -40% Record isn't BN -50% Figure 5.3: Evolution of Rating by Record Classification Source: Author’s analysis 5.4.4. Social Networks The analysis of social networks provides an alternative approach to assess the penetration of a social form in a community. Traditionally, social scientists analyze the adoption and diffusion of social forms in a social space by keeping constant the social form. In our analysis, we attempt to observe the penetration of Bossa Nova in the Jazz community by identifying whose actors in the social space adopted the idiom. In addition, we mapped the diffusion of BN in its different record classifications. As a consequence, we let mutation of the social form be a dimension of our analysis. In order to gather the LPs data, we collected a sample of credit information from Jazz LPs on the “Crazy Jazz” web site. Crazy Jazz is a CD seller, specialized in Jazz titles. It is 152 recommended by the “Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD” as the best Jazz CD seller. Furthermore, Crazy Jazz shows up to nine most important musicians involved in the LP. Our original sample covered 5,572 LPs, between 1930 and 196955. A sub-sample was extracted covering the period under analysis, from 1962 to 1969. Ideally, we should consider as relational data only those titles that reflect original recording sessions. However, many titles available are collections and compilations that might interfere with our interpretation. Collection titles might establish relationships that were inexistent (e.g. “All Star Swing players” could wrongly link Benny Goodman to Duke Ellington). On the other hand, compilations might cover a quite long period of the artist’s production and changes of style, bringing difficulty in establishing when those relationships were established, and when that artist developed that style (e.g. “Dizzy Gillespie’s biography” could mistakenly relate Swing to Afro-Cuban Jazz). In order to minimize these effects, we eliminated from our database collection titles. Nonetheless, we could not just eliminate compilation titles. The reason is that several titles were originally recorded in compacts, and were relaunched in compilation CDs. Nonetheless, we restricted compilations to maximum of five years range, and considered its release year the initial year of the covered period. 5.4.5. Preparation of the Network From the information of LPs and its featuring artists, we built three preliminary databases: a list of musicians, a list of LPs and the relationships between LPs and musicians. We divided the LPs database in eight years, from 1962 to 1969. For each period, we counted the number of titles recorded by all pairs of musicians. Whenever a pair of musicians shared at least one record, we considered that the musicians had a tie in that year. Next, we dichotomized all relationships, not considering the strength of the tie. 5.4.6. Preliminary Analysis We used extensively the software UCINET, version 6.0, in order to calculate the betweenness centrality of each musician. Next, we calculated the average betweenness 55 We should bear in mind the consequences of building our database using current commercial data as its major sources. The first consequence is that we depend on “Crazy Jazz” criteria on defining what is relevant. In terms of revenues, low selling sales might not included, although they might have reflected important relationships in their time. Also, Crazy Jazz’s commercial classification of what is Jazz might differ substantially from other Jazz community members’ point of view. These sampling constraints reinforce the exploratory status of this paper. See DiMaggio (1984) for problems of classification in art, as well as proposed solutions using network analysis. 153 centrality for each record classification category. Kadushin (2004a) suggests that the between centrality measure provides some insight on the extent that an actor controls a brokering position in a network. Figure 4 shows the two-year moving average by classification category. 0,04 0,035 Song is BN 0,03 0,025 0,02 Song has BN flavour 0,015 0,01 Record is BN 0,005 0 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 Figure 5.4: Evolution of Average Betweenness Centrality by Record Classification Category Note: the vertical axis denotes musicians’ Average Betweenness Centrality per record classification Source: Author’s analysis 5.4.7. History and Narratives In a recent study on the institutionalization of the Nouvelle Cousine in France, its authors (RAO, MONIN and DURAND, 2003) introduce their investigation with the history of the origins this new style of cooking. In the history of Jazz, we find such approach problematic. There exist a wide variety of narratives on the “true” origins of Jazz. A narrative that gives emphasis on the Blues roots strengths the link between Jazz and its Afro-American identity. In contrast, a narrative that places the New Orleans’ Creole origins as more central will give more salience to the syncretic aspect of Jazz. Finally, a narrative that explores nonAmerican influences, as Gypsie’s (Reinhardt), Cuban (Gillespie) or Brazilian (Getz) will shed a “global” flavor to Jazz. To be sure, each of these narratives attempts to establish the “true” 154 identity of Jazz in two ways. First, they aim at establishing a link between Jazz and a given social group. Second, they seek to influence the formalization of the essential characteristics that define the boundaries of Jazz. The same phenomena occur when we analyze the history, or histories, of Bossa Nova. Rather than trying to establish the true roots of Bossa Nova, which would turn this study in a Musicology or History of Art piece, we take a neutral approach to its roots, displacing it from the background of the article towards a position where the narratives become part of the material to be analyzed. Part of our motivation is to monitor the emergence of new narratives in tandem with the very process of institutionalization of Bossa Nova. In parallel to the records’ reviews, the editors of Down Beat devoted considerable space to explain and clarify the history of Bossa Nova. As a matter of fact, several narratives coexisted for a while, providing ambiguity on which records would be the true exemplars for Bossa Nova. 5.5. Results 5.5.1. Bossa Nova Narratives In 1962, Bossa Nova was officially introduced by Down Beat. At that point, the “new thing” achieved a considerable commercial success among Jazz consumers, especially among those closer to the Cool style. The most prominent musician playing Bossa Nova was Stan Getz, who was believed by many to be the very one who brought it from Brazil. This first version of the origins of Bossa Nova was problematic for many for two reasons: first, it dismissed the role of other musicians, like Charlie Byrd, in its introduction in the U.S. Second, it signaled to consumers and musicians that such style was entirely created by Brazilian musicians. In reaction, Tynan (1962) offered an alternative narrative on the origins of Bossa Nova. Laurindo Almeida (Brazilian) and Bud Shank (American) would have developed the origins of Bossa Nova in a studio in Los Angeles in 1953. Although Shank and his colleagues perceived in the new thing an opportunity for innovation, Laurindo preferred to follow a classic guitar career, overlooking the potential of the new style. As the narrative goes, eventually a Shank-Almeida’s record achieved João Gilberto and Antonio Carlos Jobim in Brazil. These Brazilian musicians would have taken the original BN from Shank and Almeida and formalized it to follow a more rigid beat, robbing from the percursion its original freedom. As a consequence, the Brazilian adaptation of BN dismissed the freedom of 155 percussion, crucial for identifying the new style with Jazz. A return to its American roots would lead BN to the Jazz tradition: Despite several attempts at delineation in the press and liner commentary on recordings, a central fact concerning the practical beginnings of this jazz samba has been ignored: bossa nova, as we know it, is neither new nor wholly Brazilian. Its roots trail back a decade, and its practical application as a new form found birth in Hollywood, Calif. (Ibid, p. 21). This later version was not accepted by either Antonio Carlos Jobim or Laurindo Almeida. Jobim, in an interview to Gene Lees, stated that Bossa Nova was not Jazz, but a “tamed” version of samba, with strong Jazz influences: Bossa Nova has a jazz influence. Gerry Mulligan had a great influence on us. You could call bossa nova ‘cool samba’ and somebody did call it that in Brazil. The authentic Negro samba is very primitive. They use maybe 10 percussion instruments and maybe four or five singers. They shout and the music is very hot and wonderful. Bossa Nova is cool and contained, on the other hand. It tells the story, including the lyrics, trying to be simple and serious and lyrical. (…) You could call bossa nova a clean, washed samba without the loss of the momentum. (LEES, 1963). Also, the Brazilian musician claimed that he had never heard the Shank-Almeida experiment, but it was Gerry Mulligan’s influence on his and Gilberto’s playing that led to the development of Bossa Nova: “We never heard Laurindo Almeida. Gerry influenced us, you must tell the people.” (Ibid). In addition, Laurindo Almeida stated that his experiment with Shank was far from Gilberto’s and Jobim’s style. Theirs, affirmed Almeida, was the real Bossa Nova. In summary: Bossa Nova was considered by the Brazilian musicians as an evolution of samba, influenced by Jazz. By the end of 1963, Stan Getz received the Grammy award for his “Jazz Samba” record, placing him as the best known musician associated with Bossa Nova. In reaction, Leonard Feather tried to provide to the readers of Down Beat a more complete picture of the Bossa Nova style, collecting Charlie Byrd’s narrative on the emergence of Bossa Nova. By 1965 the critics declared the Bossa Nova fad over, and tried to assess its “profit and loss” balance: Though interest in Bossa Nova has abated quite a bit after the deluge of a couple of years ago, it hardly has withered on the vine 156 of popular acceptance. The flood of BN discs apparently had the result of creating a stable core of fans for the delightful, airy, graceful music of contemporary Brazil. (WELDING, Down Beat, 1965, 32:26, p. 24) 5.5.2. The Evolution of the BN Theory A first analysis on the evolution of the sample shows that the apex of critics’ attention towards Bossa Nova occurred in 1963, with 52 records reviewed. There was a fall in 1964 to 17 records, as a result of a band-wagon bursting, but a significant recovery in 1965 as a lagged reaction to Getz’s award. After 1965, there is a declining trend in the number of BN records reviewed. As we observe the evolution of the Theory of Bossa Nova on Figure 1 and the number of records in our sample, we are able to complement the existing narratives of the reception of BN in the U.S. with intuitions on its different stages of institutionalization. From 1962, since its inception, towards 1964, we observe a predominant, although declining, classification of Bossa Nova as a type of Samba or Brazilian music. Few critics ventured to classify BN as a blend of Jazz and Brazilian music, while few already expressed that BN was not Jazz. In 1965 we observe a reversal in this trend. Bossa Nova is no longer considered Brazilian music or Samba. In contrast, several critics point out that Bossa Nova is not Samba, whenever they identified in the record under criticism that traditional “samba” elements were introduced under the disguise of the Bossa Nova label. Nonetheless, we observe in parallel an increase in criticisms that considered Bossa Nova as different from Jazz. It is worth noting that in 1965, we observe either neutral or negative assessments of Bossa Nova, which marks a point of inflection in the institutionalization of the idiom. Also, we see a significant drop of assessments of “what is Bossa Nova” on a percentage basis, in comparison to previous years levels (Table 1). In the couple of years that followed this point of inflection, we observe an increase in positive assessments, and most of these reviews classified Bossa Nova as a blend of Jazz and Brazilian music. In 1967, we observe any negative assessment of Bossa Nova, which indicated a trend towards the institutionalization of BN as a separate and distinct field from the Brazilian and the Jazz fields. Nevertheless, the years of 1968 and 1969 are marked by a return of the negative assessments. Classifications of Bossa Nova either excluded the idiom from Samba or excluded it from Jazz. By performing this double negation, the critics could at the same time 157 accept the absorption of Bossa Nova without either defining it or putting in jeopardy the formal boundaries of Jazz. 5.5.3. Evolution of Record Classification In the beginning of the history of BN, we observe a bandwagon of records with some BN influence. As a matter of fact, on Figure 2 few of the records reviewed in 1962 were entirely BN. In parallel, many reviews point out the launching of records that are not genuinely following the Bossa Nova style. This bandwagon effect is a consequence to the perception that the new style is only a momentary fad. At this moment, the critics play a disciplinary role in the field. They recognize those records that claim to be Bossa Nova (“Record isn’t Bossa Nova”) from those that are, in their opinion, the true Bossa Nova. In order to establish the new style as sacred, the critics refer to the “original” Bossa Nova, electing exemplar records as referential points. As a consequence of this movement, critics, and in consequence consumers and the field as a whole, give higher priority to those exemplars that will serve as a compass to the coming production. From 1963 to 1965 there is an increase of “pure” Bossa Nova records reviewed by Down Beat. Nonetheless, from 1963 to 1965 we observe a decrease in the number of records classified as Bossa Nova, probably as a consequence of the higher institutionalization of the new style. As a consequence, pure BN records leave room to records with only some influence of Bossa Nova. 5.5.4. Evolution of Ratings by Record Category The trends de described above are accompanied by significant changes in the average rating by “record category”. Records that are fake BN, or just free-riders of the bandwagon effect are severely punished with below average ratings. In contrast, the BN records that serve as exemplars to critics receive the highest scores in comparison with the other categories. As BN becomes more institutionalized, and its presence felt as a mild influence in “traditional” Jazz musicians’ work (e.g., Duke Ellington or Miles Davis), records with some BN influence (especially those where “some songs have BN flavor”) increase in their average rating (Figure 3). In contrast, the rating of pure BN records decreases. 158 5.5.5. Penetration of BN in the Jazz community Figure 4 indicates that high centrally actors introduced BN to the Jazz community in the early sixties (e.g. Stan Getz). Nonetheless, as the most prominent original musicians shifted to other styles (Stan Getz eventually migrated back to hard bop) or adopted milder forms of Bossa Nova, the pure BN leaders decreased in centrality. The result is twofold. First, the pure BN players remained in the periphery of the community, becoming a quasi-outsider reference. In contrast, milder versions of Bossa Nova were adopted by more prominent and central musicians in the community. We observe on Figure 4 an increase of in the average betweenness centrality of those musicians who adopted milder versions of BN. 5.6. Discussion: a tentative model for a process of institutionalization The introduction and evolution of Bossa Nova in the Jazz field suggests a pattern of institutionalization of new social forms. Following, we will attempt to combine these insights in a cohesive model. The first stage is the introduction of the new style: a musician launches the “new thing” and achieves a sudden and unexpeted success. The recognition of a new style occurs with full publicity and high awareness of all actors, although its creation might have been buffered for years before its recognition. This characteristic is similar to technology oriented fields, such those described by Christensen (1997), where new technologies evolve and are buffered in peripheral sectors of a community of organizations. However, in contrast with technological fields, cultural fields permit a wider ceremonial adoption of the new style56. Such practice leads musicians to adopt the new style label, without truly absorbing any of its characteristics. At this stage, the critics emerge as playing an important disciplinary role in the field, for they identify those records that deviate from the perceived standard. The sanction against “free-riders” is expressed in bad ratings, which serve as signaling to consumers, distribution channel and other musicians. In a very mechanical flavor, we may perceive the critics as the executors of the function of selection in this system. In order establish the legitimacy of the “standard” of the new styles, the critics elect those records that will play the role of exemplars to the field. At this second stage, reviews give higher priority to “pure” exemplars, in order to consecrate a new tradition. At this point 56 The ceremonial adoption of a style is comparable to the ceremonial adoption of an institution, as proposed by Meyer and Rowan, 1977. 159 we are forced to depart from the mechanical model, for two reasons. First, critics will not necessarily elect the same set of exemplars, creating some ambiguity on the boundaries of the new style. Second, musicians will perform unexpected appropriations of the new style into their music. As a consequence, new launched records will only resemble the elected exemplars. Nonetheless, Stan Getz’s award served as a strong signal to the field to elect his album as an exemplar, which provided a shared standard to subsequent records. The proliferation of appropriations leads the field to a third stage, when critics are forced to review their definitions and formalizations. Now, instead of affirming what the style is, the critics choose a more conservative strategy: they affirm what the style is not. This shift in their position occurs as a reaction towards the flush of new records that perform legitimate appropriations of the new style. In a forth stage, a new standard is recognized as legitimate. As a consequence, critics migrate from negative assessments back to positive assessments. But now the theory of the new style accepts that it is a blend. In tandem with the establishment of new accepted standards, musicians continue to produce new records under influence of the new style. Rather than strictly follow the established standards, they will twist it to further adaptations. Also, those musicians closely associated with the pure exemplars are kept in the periphery, as if segregated from entering the core of the field. In contrast, more central actors will introduce diluted versions of the new style. As a consequence, new classification crises will come, bringing the field back to its third stage of segregation. As in a systemic loop, the feedback process goes back and forth from the third and fourth stages, until the style reaches a level of absorption that critics are unable to notice further changes. Following this systemic approach, when this final stage is achieved, the system approaches its equilibrium. This trend occurs in tandem with a decline of the number of records reviewed. At this point, we must place two warnings against this schematic model. The first warning is against a suggestion that the system is purposive as a whole. The process described reflects the history of the introduction of Bossa Nova in the Jazz field. Nonetheless, the introduction of other styles followed different patterns that differ from this scheme. Fusion, for instance, emerged as an evolution of Jazz and Rock, mostly introduced by hard-bop musicians. After its initial inception, Fusion musicians created a new field with distinct audiences, recording companies and venues, although not entirely breaking the ties with the Jazz world. Another example is the introduction of Bebop: this new style was not just absorbed by the Jazz field. Musicians who played bebop were able to displace Swing musicians and occupy and hegemonic position in the field. Finally, Bossa Nova could have 160 followed a much shorter and fad-like life cycle. As a consequence, its presence would be purged without any relevant absorption. 5.7. Implications for the study of institutionalization Traditionally, the study of the introduction of new social forms investigates the adoption and diffusion of a fixed form within a given community. In this paper, we attempted to give room to the adoption and diffusion of hybrid and quasi-forms, enlarging the scope of analysis of social forms. This enlargement was achieved by letting the classification of records to follow a coding ranging from “pure BN” to “a flavor of BN”. A second innovation introduced by our paper is the usage of negative semantic relationship between objects and categories and among categories. The cognitive tradition in organizational studies usually investigates how individuals activate schemata in order to classify objects or interpret an experience. Usually, such classification processes place all given objects under pre-existent categories by establishing positive semantic relationships among objects and categories. Theories of categories (i.e., how different entities relate to each other) usually build systems of concepts with positive semantic relationships. Our study tried to bring the role of negative semantic relationships as an attempt to protect the boundaries of cognitive systems. As a consequence, not only the similarity, but also the dissimilarity and the differentiation are brought back to the study of cognitive aspects of institutionalization. This intuition brings back the original idea of Levy-Strauss that culture is built upon binary relationships. 5.8. From the System towards the Field thinking Our study was reductionist in the extent that it limited itself to the evolution of only one style, Bossa Nova, within only one periodical, namely Down Beat. Nonetheless, the adoption and diffusion of a new social form is rarely isolated from other contemporary forms and competitive organizations. When a musician considers adopting Bossa Nova, she has to perform a trade-off between the gains of adopting it, against what she will lose for not adopting other styles or abandoning previous successful styles. Moreover, even if that musician tries to reach a compromise between the new style and previous styles, she has to aim for the right balance, otherwise her musical identity with consumers and critics will be put in jeopardy. Our 161 findings show that such musicians, like Duke Ellington, absorbed the new style in a much milder form in comparison to original exemplar creators, like João Gilberto. A study of evolution of musical styles that comprehended all contemporary competing styles would still benefit from a system-like approach. From this perspective, the analyst would be able to analyze the interplay of parallel processes. The introduction of new styles would be interpreted as events that would trigger new processes that eventually interfere with the ongoing maturation processes of existing styles. As a consequence, critics would be led to spread their attention among different trends in the community. Although such approach would be rich in describing the perceived mechanisms governing the evolution of styles, we suggest that we would risk overlooking its human agency aspect. Future studies should cover a broader range of styles, but also attempt to preserve the analysis of how the adoption and diffusion of new styles occurs in tandem with the positiontaking action of different actors (BOURDIEU, 1993a). The introduction of the concept of field as a space for internal conflict will bring us better understanding on why musicians shift to new styles. Conversely, the investigation of how new positions are formed and taken will bring us a better intuition on the alignment of critics towards positive and negative semantic classifications. Following this logic, the investigation of whether individual critics stick to their schemata or adapt it as the field evolves would bring us a glimpse on how the gatekeepers’ cognitive schemata evolve. 162 6. Tropicália: Strategic Maneuvers in Networks of Musicians Abstract This article aims to build bridges between three theoretical fields: Organizational Strategy, Social Networks, and Social Identities. By analyzing the networks of Brazilian musicians (interpreters and composers), we monitor the emergence of new styles, along with the structural changes in the network. Within the period in analysis, from 1958 to 1969, four musical styles emerge and consolidate: Bossa Nova, Jovem Guarda, MPB and Tropicália. We utilized Social Networks in order to grasp three dimensions of the field evolution: network evolution, creation of structural holes and transformation of actors’ centrality. The key insights we provide are: (1) interpreters identities suffer transformations as their repertoires change, (2) composers’ centrality increase as they become more influential in the field and (3) new styles may emerge from the exploration of structural holes. This paper attempts to exhibit the potential contributions recent Social Networks theory may provide to the Organizations Theory and Strategic Research. 6.1. Introduction Weick’s (1969) classical study on sensemaking in organizations was one of the first to set the problem: much of the management activity is about classifying objects and let the system treat them accordingly, and yet, reality is more complex than our categories are able to grasp. Acceptable raw material has to be separated from low quality material, but surprises at the factory do happen. Patients in hospitals have to be constantly labeled under a known disease, and treated (WEICK; SUTCLIFFE ; OBSTFELD, 2005), and still, doctors make mistakes. Category systems is among human beings since the beginning of civilization (DURKHEIM, 1917), and support the functioning of institution (DOUGLAS, 1986). The music industry relies on category (and symbolic) systems. Thus, categorization occurs as new music albums are released (DIMAGGIO, 1987). Recording companies, as well as record stores, radio stations apply labels to records and their creators. These labels are styles. For musicians, the labeling process is a mixed blessing. On one hand, their music is accepted as legitimate under the existing categories. On the other hand, they struggle to maintain their uniqueness and freedom to change. In other words, musicians strive to maintain their identities intact, free from typecasting. 163 This article explores these tensions between musicians and the music industry. For that purpose, it builds bridges among three important concepts in organizational theory. It brings together a theory of social networks, a theory of identity and a theory of strategic behavior. Its intended contribution is integrating these three perspectives into a single theoretical explanation of strategic behavior that is dependent both on the individual identity of the social actors and from the network configuration they are embedded. After a brief introduction (1), our study starts by (2) revisiting the literature on strategic behavior in networks (mostly based on the rational choice paradigm). This perspective is complemented with (3) a proposal that individual identity and network position are mutually reinforcing concepts, giving birth to the idea of embedded identity. Following, we introduce our object of study: (4) networks of artists (interpreters and composers) in the Brazilian phonographic industry during the 1960’s. The period under analysis, from 1958 to 1969, revealed the emergence of several new musical styles in Brazil, including Bossa Nova, MPB, Jovem Guarda and Tropicália. In a first analysis we qualitatively explore the history of these concurrent styles. The review of this musical history will provide the needed background in order to understand the quantitative network analysis we performed next. By stating the (5) entities analyzed along this network (interpreters, composers, LPs, songs and styles), we are able to describe the methodology used (6) and the observed results (7). Discussion and suggestions for further research follows (8). 6.2. Strategic behavior in social spaces: rational choice and economic sociology approaches Powell and Smith-Doerr (1994) suggest that researchers have depicted social networks in two ways: (a) as an “Analytical Device” and (b) as a “Governance Device”. From the former perspective, which is the focus of this paper, network structures may constrain actors’ behavior: “Networks of relations among individuals in different organizations and among organizations in a field are critical in explaining how organizations adopt similar structures and pursue common strategies” (POWELL ; SMITH-DOERR, 1994, pg. 368). The intuitive idea is that an actor’s position in a network might provide a privileged way or an obstacle for access to relevant resources and information. In other words, network positioning influence the strategies actors may adopt. To clarify this concept we contrast two theoretical approaches to explain strategic action. Firstly, following the Hotelling game, we reconstruct a Rational Choice approach to 164 social identities (HOTTELING, 1929). Secondly, we introduce a social network approach, building on the works of Granovetter and Burt (GRANOVETTER, 1973; BURT, 1992). 6.2.1. A Rational-Choice Preliminary Model: The Hotelling Game In the early 20th century Harold Hotelling introduces the idea of equilibrium in unidimensional competitive games. Hotelling imagined that several competitive settings could be expressed spatially, where competitors would struggle for consumers along one-dimension scale (HOTTELING, 1929). This scale constitutes a market’s identity, for it express how the existent competitors are positioned. Let us suppose that in a given one-dimension scale (see Figure 1), consumers’ preferences are equally distributed from 0 to 100. In order to make the example more concrete, let us suppose that the product is cereal, and the feature measured in the scale is degree of sugar. A 0 25 B 50 75 100 Figure 6.1: The Hotelling Game Source: Author’s adaptation of Downs (1999) If companies A and B position themselves in positions “25” and “75” of sugar, respectively, it can be shown, from Hotelling’s model, that both will converge to position “50”, at the center. This convergence occurs because both A and B realize that by changing their products to be “50” in sugar, it will be accepted by a larger number of consumers for two reasons: first, consumers in the extremes will continue to purchase only from that producer that has relatively better fit to their preferences; second, players will dispute moderate consumers that fall in the middle the extremes. This model has been traditionally applied in Political Science, for voting analysis (see for instance BIERMAN ; FERNANDEZ, 1998; DOWNS, 1999). In spite of the criticism it has received, for not contemplating multidimensional positioning, for instance, it still provides a powerful insight on basic positioning dynamics that can be found, especially when dealing with identity positioning. 165 From Downs’s (1999) discussion, we recover the following assumptions. First, political struggle is fairly reducible to a one dimensional. In other words, it is possible to compare similarity among parties using only one dimension scale. Second, politicians will converge to the center (as in Hotelling) whenever the society is not polarized and its voters are equally distributed in the Right-Left dimension. Finally, once a party picked a side, it can converge to the center, but it cannot flip sides with its opponent. If that occurred, it would create cognitive confusion among constituencies, jeopardizing its electoral advantage. We may challenge this model on the following grounds. First, it depicts social actors as isolated from each other (DIMAGGIO, 2002). In contrast, actors are interconnected in social networks, which makes the Hotteling’s model an abstraction far from empirical evidence. Second, as suggested above, it assumes that all conflicts are reducible to a single dimension. Against this last criticism, we should consider Down’s rationale. It is reasonable to believe that if actors played in multiple dimensions, the market would lose its identity. Translating this insight into sociological concepts, we would face a market where actors follow different legitimate sources. As a result, they would have little socially oriented action. White (2002a) and Podolny (1993) offer a sociological treatment for this last problem. White retains the idea that a market has an identity. To be sure, this identity is cognitively established through cross-monitoring and shared narratives. Nonetheless, it is not tightly coupled to the actual social networks. The mismatch between an established market identity and the actual actors’ positioning in social networks introduces a dimension not captured by Hotelling’s model. Podolny, in contrast, agrees with Hotelling that a market identity might be depicted in an one-dimensional scale. However, poorer positioned actors might try to break the market identity, in order to promote an identity repositioning. In the following section, we will explore how social network researchers developed the idea of positioning. 6.2.2 Strategic Action in Social Networks: from Closure to Structural Holes The intuition that strategic action is closely related to one’s social network might be traced to classic sociologists. A central concept is the closure-inspired social capital57, developed separately by Coleman (1990) and Bourdieu (1986). Following the weberian idea of closure, both Coleman and Bourdieu see social capital as those social ties that might be mobilized in order to tap resources. Moreover, in order to protect a group’s membership and 57 There us a vast bibliography on social capital (see Kadushin, 2004, for a review), to the extent that we might be far from a consensus in the field. We restrict our discussion to the cohesion versus structure equivalence debate, proposed by Burt (2001). 166 restrict the distribution of resources, these social forms converge to closed and cliquish networks. Conversely, individuals are coerced to consent with the group’s identity, in order to maintain their membership. This group’s identity is might be enforced at an institutional level or at an individual level. Krackhardt (1990) shows that even at situations when institutions permit that individuals establish ties with outsiders, informal sanctions might emerge from other members. Granovetter (1973) recovers this discussion when he analyses the “forbidden triads”. According to Granovetter, if A is strongly connected to B and B is strongly connected to C, then A and C are necessarily connected, either by a strong or weak tie (GRANOVETTER, 1973). This is due to the scarcity of resources available to relationship maintenance. If the resource “time” is heavily invested by A on its relationship with B, there will be too little spare time to be invested by B with C, unless there is a large overlapping between the time A spends with B and the time B spends with C; therefore, A and C must have a relationship (see Figure 2a). Central to his argument is that while strong ties are bound by group norms, weak ties are less constrained. As a consequence, they play a role of bridge among groups. In contrast, Burt (1992) suggested that “forbidden triads” could exist. He conceives a triad with only two edges (see Figure 2b), opening the possibility of brokerage strategies to the actor that occupies the central position in the triad. By doing so, he opposed the proponents of closure as social capital. In his analysis of social networks, Burt conceived the idea of “structural holes”. From Simmel’s conception of situations where an individual benefits from the conflict of another two, Burt (1992) suggests the idea of structural holes. Simmel’s original idea, inspired in the Latin expression “Tertius Gaudens”58, explains the freedom of action an individual obtains from intermediating a triad, which would be otherwise closed (SIMMEL, 1950). The definition of structural holes, for Burt, “is the relationship of nonredundancy between two contacts.” (BURT, 1992, pg. 18). From this perspective, if an actor X’s surrounding nodes are highly interconnected among themselves, there is little opportunity of arbitrage for X. This is due to the high redundancy of X’s ties – very little new information flow among these ties. Conversely, if X’s surrounding nodes are sparsely interconnected among themselves, X will have several opportunities to brokerage information among them, which will provide high importance to its position in the network. 58 “The third party profits” 167 This brokerage (and the very maintenance of the open triad) is possible only if the intermediary exploits or foments discord or significant separation between the intermediated. To be sure, if discord or separation is necessary in order to maintain the open triad, then we should observe, in the due time, the formation of strong opposing identities between the intermediated members. If this segregation provides to the entrepreneur an opportunity for intermediation, it also brings a challenge: how is it possible to establish relationships with both contending parties, without jeopardizing her own legitimacy? (a) Granovetter’s closed triad: strong or weak ties (b) Burt’s opened triad Figure 6.2: Closed and Opened Triads Source: Author’s adaptation of Granovetter (1977) and Burt (1992) 6.3. - Social Networks and Social Identities Social identity has been traditionally viewed in sociological theory as an attribute of individuals. Hogg, Terry and White for example draw a picture of the research on identity in which they depict identity theory and social identity theory as two similar perspectives on the dynamic mediation of the socially constructed self between individual behavior and social structures. They argue that while there is almost no systematic communication between these two perspectives, they have share many common features. Identity theory is a microsociological theory that aims at explaining role-related behaviors. In contrast, Social Identity theory is rooted in social psychology studies and aims at explaining group and inter-group behavior (HOGG; TERRY ; WHITE, 1995). These identity theories, while taking into account several aspects of the individual’s environment, define identity in terms of espoused values and the belonging to certain predefined categories (such as race, nationality, profession, etc.). 168 In this article we advance the role-taking idea of identity, by introducing social network insights. As Berger and Luckmann’s (1966) and Scott (2001) propose, the first step in the construction of social identity happens as actors externalize symbolic networks through their actions and interactions. As a consequence, the enactment of one’s identity is somewhat dependent on the recognition by the actor’s counterparts. White (1992a) proposes that actors establish social identities in order to control their relationship patterns with other actors. For instance, in primitive societies, gender-based identities were tightly linked to specific relationships, as only men hunt together, etc. In the extent that actors are able to establish relationships that are not predicted in their role, social change takes place. White (2002b) called “cat-net” (from categories and network) the incongruence between one’s identity and relationships, for the actor engages at the same time in a categorical identity that doesn’t match her social interactions. From this perspective, embedded identity is constantly transformed, as the actor establishes new relationships along her trajectory. This idea has been advanced by DiMaggio when exploring what he calls the Nadel’s paradox (DIMAGGIO, 1993). The Nadel’s paradox presents the inconsistencies between consolidated social roles (father, mother, teacher, etc.) and the individual’s actual ties among each other. Whenever an individual successfully establishes relationships that deviate from the script described in the social role, there is an opportunity for innovation of the social role itself. That’s what White called “fresh action” in a social network (WHITE, 1993). Because identity adoption is the entry ticket in order to integrate the field network, actors will embrace identities (ZUCKERMAN, 2003). However, identity adoption has its price: once adopted, a label may lock actors (the typecast phenomenon), diminishing their mobility along the social space. On the other hand, discrete relationship establishment outside of the identity group may provide to actors some degrees of freedom. As Padgett and Ansell (1993) suggest, actors might be able to pursue a “robust action” strategy and establish ties with opposing groups. This is accomplished by carefully compartmentalizing the conflicting actors, as suggested by Burt. In contrast, actors might attack the entire symbolic order (PODOLNY, 1993). We summarize the concepts seen so far in the following schema: Concept Social Network Insights Market Identity • Markets have identities, as buyers and suppliers are paired Individual Identity as Positioning • Constant patterns of relationships entail 169 “positions” • Individuals position themselves in social networks, assuming identities • Social identities, as labeling categories, might lock-in their holders • The cost of shifting identity might be higher than perceived gains • Actors might be able to pursue ties outside their roles’ scripts • The mismatch between one’s identity and relationships might trigger the emergence of new identities Robust Action • Actors are able to bridge a structural hole between opposing groups, by compartmentalizing interactions Change in the Symbolic Order • Actors might pursue an attack to the symbolic order, aiming at a general repositioning Labeling and Typecast phenomenon “Cat-Net” Schema 6.1: Social Network Insights Source: Author’s development In the analyses that follow, we will describe how musicians in the Brazilian scene engaged in social identities, disengaged from these very identities by pursuing Robust Action, and eventually recreated them. 6.4. - Musicians in Social Networks: Emergence of Tropicália The object chosen for this investigation is a network of musicians. We found this object appropriate, for the following reasons: (a) the consumption of cultural goods is strongly related with identity creation (SIMMEL, 1957), (b) artists themselves must engage, at least in the beginning of their careers, in one identity group, in order to be accepted by the industry (RAO; MONIN; DURAND, 2003) and (c) artists will try to differentiate their perceived identities, in order to create a unique image to the Industry and public (PETERSON, 1997). Specifically, we chose the 1958-1969 period in the Brazilian Popular Music, for the rapid emergence of several new styles: Bossa Nova (BN), Jovem Guarda (JV), MPB and Tropicália. Each of these styles not only were based on different musical rules, but also 170 corresponded to different social identities. The phenomenon that we want to observe is the interplay of these styles, from the perspective of network-based creation of identity by these artists. 6.4.1 Bossa Nova (BN): the paradigm of the ascending middle-class The emergence of BN is understood by several Brazilian music historians as a Rio de Janeiro middle-class phenomenon. Tinhorão, for instance, observes the movement of the emerging middle-class to the South area of Rio de Janeiro as one prerequisite to the BN (TINHORAO, 1997). As this new middle class started to take shape, a new identity needed to be established. In the musical field, they could not identify with the romantic music adopted by the traditional higher class, and could no longer identify with the traditional samba of lower classes. The solution seemed to incorporate Jazz to Brazilian music. The influence of Jazz in the Brazilian music is observed since the forties (MEDAGLIA, 2003). When Antônio Carlos Jobim and other pioneers of BN started to experiment the first combinations of samba and jazz, the music played was still a hybrid style. It was the incorporation of João Gilberto to the group (CASTRO, 2003) and his unique way of playing the guitar, that allowed BN to gain a very distinct musical identity. In parallel, BN became the most influential music style of that generation of musicians. 6.4.2 The pop Jovem Guarda (JG) and its counterpoint to BN In parallel to the emergence of BN, a number of artists started to introduce Rock and Roll to the Brazilian music. Led mostly by Roberto Carlos and Erasmo Carlos, the Jovem Guarda (JG) style aimed to create or recreate rock music in Portuguese. They were also known as “iê-iê-iê”, for their adaptations of early Beatle songs, or just pop music. It is important to notice that the JG style was mostly bounded to fifties and early sixties Rock. The revolution Rock experienced with the emergence of Rolling Stones or the second phase of the Beatles was not absorbed by JG. If BN aligned the emergent middle class to the same intellectualized spirit of Jazz, JG brought the same joviality of Rock. Hence, the opposition of Jazz and Rock was translated into the Brazilian music. 171 6.4.3 Emergence of MPB, and its clash with JG Since the emergence of BN, there were disputes around whether BN was a legitimate national style, or just an adaptation of Jazz. Carlos Lyra, one of the pioneers of BN, at some point initiates the creation of a new version BN with a more Brazilian face. Nara Leão, along with Lyra, started to launch songs with strong social criticism content, attempting to provide a synthesis between BN with protest music. This was the beginning of MPB. Exponents of MPB, like Elis Regina and Chico Buarque, occupied a musical space left behind by traditional BN musicians, who were developing their careers outside Brazil. The creation of a nationalist identity, in both content and form provided revitalization to BN and the reintroduction of traditional samba composers, like Noel Rosa. This “nationalist” and “protest” features of MPB’s identity led many of its composers and interpreters to refuse any music expression that could reveal foreign influence. Although the very traditional BN was heavily influenced by Jazz, it was the JG style the target of MPB’s charges. For MPB’s musicians, JG’s use of eletric guitars and attempt to absorve Rock was equivalent to attempt to alienate Brazilian youth from Brazilian reality. The conflict achieved its peak when “Fino da Bossa”, a TV show led by Elis Regina, started to loose audience to “Jovem Guarda”, a TV show led by Roberto Carlos. Elis Regina, in reaction to JG advances, promoted a parade, entitled “Parade against the electric guitars”. This parade established strong boundaries around MPB and JG, clarifying the identities around these styles. Because of the common heritage of the BN and the MPB groups, and strong mobility of artists between them, they could be considered to integrate the same BN/MPB community. 6.4.4. “Baianos” penetrate the BN/MPB community In spite of the strength of the MPB group, it could not articulate all artists of the BN/ MPB community to position themselves against the JG style. BN traditional musicians, like Tom Jobim and João Gilberto, continued their careers overseas. On the other hand, new comers like the “Baianos” (from the state of Bahia), would be more resistant to discard new musical possibilities, like the use of electric guitars. As Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and the Mutantes started utilizing electric guitars, they positioned themselves between the BN/MPB and JG styles. This position was strongly attacked by MPB artists. 172 6.4.5 Tropicália is established and becomes influential The use of electric guitars, alternative outfits and sardonic lyrics, positioned the group of “Baianos” and the Mutantes in a uncomfortable position. If not attacked by the MPB community, they were just regarded as an exotique experiment, that wouldn’t survive for a long time. The creation of a new identity was needed in order to provide legitimacy to the music played by Caetanto, Gil and the Mutantes (CALADO, 1997). When the identity “Tropicália” was born, its discourse differed from BN/MPB ones. It defended that the Brazilian music should not close itself to the world. As a matter of fact, the Tropicália music incorporated elements from BN, MPB and JG. Moreover, it claimed that art should not be subordinated to politics (VELOSO, 1997). In that sense, the Tropicália movement resembled the XIX century writers’ movement. This movement aimed the creation of an autonomous artistic field, independent from both aristocracy and from the market (BOURDIEU, 2002). Its success led several new artists to become more eclectic in their styles. Probably, the most impressive fact of Tropicalia’s influence is the very Elis Regina’s interpretation of a Roberto Carlos song in 1969, proclaiming the fall of the wall between MPB and JG. Following, a summary of the mentioned Brazilian musical styles. Styles Musical Themes Key -composers Features Bossa Nova (BN) • • • MPB Jazz influence • Love, nature • João Gilberto J.Gilberto’s • Vinicius de Morais guitar beat • Tom Jobim Social • Chico Buarque criticism • Edu Lobo Return to • samba and Brazilian roots Jovem Guarda • Electric Guitar • (JG) • Rock influence Tropicália • Eclectic • Youth themes • Roberto Carlos • Erasmo Carlos • Caetano Veloso • Gilberto Gil Eclectic influences Schema 6.2: Profiles of Bossa Nova, Jovem Guarda, MPB and Tropicália Source: author’s development based on Homem de Mello (1976) 173 6.5. Understanding Styles and Identities from a Network/Embedded Perspective A key question for this article is to answer how network analysis may improve or provide any additional insight not already described qualitatively. The answer to this question lies on the very definition of identity. 6.5.1 Identities among Musicians When analyzing a musician’s style, the direct object for investigation is her interpreted song (see Figure 3). Songs are born from earlier composers’ work, which adds up to a repository of knowledge. Next, interpreters access this knowledge repository and borrow songs in order to record them. By interpreting a song, an interpreter applies her own style to it. Her style, then, is the blending of the song utilized, the instruments used, and the very way of interpreting the song. Once the title is recorded, music critics (as well as Industry personnel, musicians and the very public) will label a style to it accordingly to their set of criteria (DIMAGGIO, 1987). Hence, style is an enacted social form, attributed to art objects. In consequence, an art object might be recategorized, as the underlying criteria change with time (DANTO, 1964; POLOS; HANNAN; CARROLL, 2002). For instance, “Coração Materno” (Motherly Heart), written by Vicente Celestino, was considered “tacky” by the BN/MPB community in the middle sixties. However, when Caetano Veloso interpreted this song and recorded for the Long-Play “Tropicália”, it was regarded by critics as something new, if not satiric, and yet, a recovery of Brazilian roots. Therefore, we are able to trace an artist evolution simply by understanding from whom she borrows her songs. Lena (2004) used a very similar methodology in order to map rap DJs’ identities. As DJs “quote” rappers in their sampling of songs, Lena was able to construct a Rapper by DJs social network. We apply the same intuition by mapping the composer/interpreter social network. The pattern of repertoire (the set of songs interpreted) may vary in ways unpredicted by the formal identity. Another example: take Nara Leão’s evolution. She was one of the pioneer interpreters of BN. Nevertheless, she was one of the first interpreters to start recovering old samba composers. It took a while until the MPB established itself as a synthesis between BN and the previous samba style, in order to categorize Nara Leão under MPB. Our claim is that it is possible to uncover the emerging identity of an artist from the changes in her repertoire. 174 Legend Composer Interpreter Actor Media Song Recorded Song Knowledge LP Style Classification Schema 6.3: How Styles and Musicians Interact Source: Author’s conceptual development based on DiMaggio (1987) and Polos, Hannan and Carroll (2002) 6.5.2. Repertoire creates Networks We can imagine three networks among musicians: (1) network of composers, (2) network of interpreters and (3) network of composers and interpreters. All three networks are important for understanding the structure of musicians’ field. However, in this article, we will focus mostly on the network between composers and interpreters, for it reveals one dimension of interpreters’ identity creation. As interpreters change their repertoire, they are signaling a change in identity. Conversely, if a composer’s songs are increasingly played, we could say that he became more influential in defining the interpreters’ identities. The concept of Influence encompasses several meanings. João Gilberto’s way of playing the guitar might be considered a kind of influence. In this article, however, we define the concept of influence to the degree a composer lends songs to interpreters. From a network perspective, interpreters’ ego networks change as their identities change (an ego network is the immediate network surrounding the actor under analysis). In parallel, composer’s centrality may increase or decrease, as his influence increases or decreases. 6.6. Methodology In this section, we describe the database of artists, songs and records underlying our analysis. Following, we display the methodology used for building the networks, which will be the basis of our analysis. 175 6.6.1. Database Period of analysis: Our period of analysis spans from 1958 to 1969. Specifically, it starts with the launching of the LP “Canção do Amor Demais” (Vinicius de Morais, 1958), ending with the LP “Elis Regina in London” (Elis Regina, 1969). The choice of these two LPs is not arbitrary. The former established BN as a new style, while the later brings Elis Regina interpreting Roberto Carlos, which contributed to blur MPB, JG and Tropicália borders. Source of Information: we included in our database 89 long-plays recorded by selected interpreters during this period (see Table 2 for a summary). The records included were those in the web site http://cliquemusic.uol.com.br/artistas, which excludes compact records. The interpreters chosen were: • BN: João Gilberto, Tom Jobim, Vinicius de Morais, Carlos Lyra and Nara Leão • MPB: Elis Regina, Chico Buarque and Edu Lobo • JG: Roberto Carlos, Erasmo Carlos and Wanderlea • “Baianos” and Tropicália59: Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Maria Bethânia, Gal Costa and Mutantes Table 6.2: Number of LPs consulted by Interpreter Period Main Interpreter 58-61 62-65 Chico Buarque Carlos Lyra 2 66-67 68-69 2 2 3 2 Caetano Veloso 4 Erasmo Carlos 1 3 1 Edu Lobo 1 1 1 6 3 3 Gal Costa 1 2 Gilberto Gil 1 2 Elis Regina João Gilberto 1 1 Maria Bethania 1 1 1 1 Mutantes 2 Nara Leão Roberto Carlos 2 1 4 4 2 4 2 2 59 We maintained the label “Baianos” together with Tropicália in order to intergrate to this group Maria Bethania, sister of Caetano Veloso. She resisted to join the “Tropicalist” group as a way of avoiding being categorized as a member of any group. 176 Tom Jobim 3 Vinicius de Morais 2 Wanderlea Total 10 1 1 1 4 1 3 2 1 25 26 28 Source: Author’s analysis Although we dealt with a limited sample of interpreters, we believe each one is highly representative of his or her represented style. From each LP, we included all songs, and their composers. That totaled a database of 950 songs and 552 musicians, including the mentioned interpreters, co-interpreters and composers. From the LPs, we were able to build three basic relational databases: • LPs and interpreters • LPs and Songs • Songs and Composers From these basic relational databases, we are able to construct a fourth database, relating Interpreters and Composers: interpreter X is present in LP “A”, which contains song “B”. Song “B” is a composition of composer “Y”. Hence, transitively, “X” borrowed a song from “Y”, establishing a link. The Relational Database between composers and interpreters is the basis of the networks we want to build in order to analyze the interpreters’ identity. 6.6.2. Sociograms Sub-Periods: From the database of Composers and Interpreters, we built four sociograms displaying graphically the relationships between composers and interpreters. The four sociograms correspond to four sub-periods: (i) from 58 to 61, (ii) from 62 to 65, (iii) from 66 to 67, and (iv) from 68 to 69 (Figures 4 to 7). The reason the first 8 years are grouped in periods of 4 years is due to the low density of relationships in these years. The field of BN was just starting by 1958, hence several of selected interpreters either were not still recording, or were not producing in a relevant level. Once the field achieved a high density (1966), we grouped the remaining years in periods of 2 years. Filtering: In each of these periods, we counted the number of songs lent from each composer to each interpreter. That produced an M by N matrix, where m is the number of 177 composers and n is the number of interpreters. Due to the large number of composers, we had to choose the criteria to capture only those relationships relevant to our analysis. Therefore, we maintained from each matrix only those relationships equal or higher than 2, which means that for a composer/interpreter relationship be graphed, the composer had had to lend at least 2 song to that interpreter in the period under analysis. Dichotomy: In addition, we transformed all relationships in dichotomy relationships. For instance, if composer Y lent 10 songs to interpreter X, and composer Z lent 3 songs to interpreter X, both relationships, Y to X and Z to X gained the value of 1, otherwise, if less than 2 songs were lent, than the relationship receives the null value. Although networks techniques permit the analysis of relationship strength, we investigated only whether there exist relationships among artists. That also affects the interpretation of sociograms: the length of the ties does not mean anything, but the existence of a relationship. 6.6.3. Network Analysis From the relational database of composers and interpreters, we built a symmetric (squared matrix) network of composers, in a similar way to Lima e Silva and his associates’ effort of mapping the network of Brazilian musicians (LIMA E SILVA; MEDEIROS SOARES, et al, 2004). The composer’s relationship strength was established by the number of songs in which they appear together60. From this network, we extracted Freeman’s centrality degree61, in order to monitor the composers’ movements in the networks (see Table 4). The more central a composer is the more links she provides to interpreters (WASSERMAN ; FAUST, 1994). As a consequence, the higher the centrality of a composer, the higher was her influence. Also, with the help of UCINET (BORGATTI; EVERETT ; FREEMAN, 2002), for each period, we divided both composers and interpreters in two factions, in order to test the inter-group and intra-group identity. The methodology of creating factions follows an algorithm that maximizes the probability of a partition of nodes be similar to a clique (see AMORIM; BARTHÉLEMY ; RIBEIRO, 1992, for details in the faction methodology). The faction methodology has been utilized to explore the existence of latent, informal groups, by grouping together nodes that have a high density of ties among each other. For instance, 60 Every time a composer appears, she receives a tie to herself and to peer composers. The Freeman’s Degree Centrality measure is simply the number of ties to others. The normalized version of this measure divides simple degree by the maximum degree possible, which is usually N-1, yielding measure ranging from 0 to 1. See Wasserman and Faust (1994), pg. 178. 61 178 LAZZARINI ; JOAQUIM, 2004, used the faction methodology in order to identify potential airline alliances. While Lazzarini and Joaquim identified five factions, we decided to locate only two factions. The division into only two factions fits well our purpose of testing the polarization of the musical fields in two poles. Once the four factions are identified for each period (two factions of interpreters and two factions of composers), we expect that strong identities will lead to high endogeny. If an interpreter identity to her faction is strong, and highly differentiated from the opposing faction, it is expected that her recorded songs will belong only to her respective composers’ faction. For instance, we expect that the Bossa Nova faction will play João Gilberto and his colleagues’ compositions. Conversely, we wouldn’t expect them to play Roberto Carlos’s songs. Adherence of interpreters to their faction identity is measured by the percentage of songs recorded that belong to their expected composers’ faction (see Table 5). If the percentage is high, it means that most of the faction’s recorded songs are borrowed from its expected composers’ faction. 6.7. Results The presentation of the results follows three steps. First, we describe the whole network evolution: number of composers, number of ties and density (ties per composer) (see Table 3 for reference). Next, we introduce the sociogram of composers and interpreters, in order to visually illustrate the current arrangement of the actors. Finally, we comment on the composers’ centrality in the composers’ network. This final analysis permits the grounding of the qualitative insights from the sociogram into hard figures from the centrality degree. Table 6.3: Network Evolution – Main Statistics Period 58-61 62-65 66-67 68-69 Number of Composers 69 225 200 178 Number of Ties 750 1227 927 1119 Density (Ties/Composer) 10.87 5.45 4.64 6.29 Source: Author’s analysis 179 6.7.1. Emergence of BN and JG: 1958 to 1961 The appearance of BN in the phonographic industry counted with a low density of composers (69), due to the low number of LPs recorded. Nevertheless, the density of ties is high: 10.9, which indicate an important overlap of composers and LPs launched. The analysis of the sociogram (see Figure 4) shows two distinct networks forming: BN on the left and JG on the right. No ties uniting these to networks are visually present. However, when we analyze the identity adherence at table 4, we observe that BN interpreters to BN composers is high (99%), while JG adherence to its own composers’ faction is lower (55%). This finding suggests that while BN identity was strong since its beginning, JG identity was still in its emerging period. Table 6.4: Interpreters and Composers Faction Adherence Period 58-61 62-65 66-67 68-69 Interpreters BN (MPB) 3 13 27 15 Interpreters JG (Tropicália) 3 3 3 12 Composers BN (MPB) 35 95 72 77 Composers JG (Tropicália) 34 130 128 101 Interp/Comp adherence BN (MPB) 99% 82% 84% 79% Interp/Comp adherence JG (Trop.) 55% 82% 82% 86% Number of: Source: Author’s analysis When we shift to the analysis of the Freeman’s Centrality degree, Carlos Lyra appears as the composer with highest number of ties, followed by Tom Jobim, Dorival Caymmi and Ronaldo Boscoli. All BN composers (Table 5). João Gilberto comes only as the fifth in ranking, in spite of his decisive contribution to establish BN’s rhythm. Nonetheless, João Gilberto lower centrality degree confirms the interpreters’ account that Gilberto was mainly a model for interpretation, rather than a source of songs (HOMEM DE MELLO, 1976). This distinction between composer and interpreter became murkier during the Festivals in the sixties. Table 6.5: Freeman Centrality Degree for Selected Composers Period Composer 58-61 62-65 66-67 68-69 180 Caetano Veloso N/A 176 (0,2%) 65 (0,4%) 1 (3,2%) Tom Jobim 2 (4,6%) 34 (0,6%) 5 (1,5%) 2 (2,8%) Vinicius de Morais 7 (2,7%) 2 (2,1%) 1 (3,3%) 3 (2,8%) Capinan N/A N/A 14 (1%) 4 (2,7%) Gilberto Gil N/A N/A 2 (2%) 5 (2,3%) Edu Lobo N/A 4 (1,8%) 9 (1,2%) 6 (2,2%) Erasmo Carlos N/A 6 (1,7%) 3 (1,8%) 7 (1,8%) Roberto Carlos N/A 7 (1,7%) 13 (1%) 8 (1,8%) Torquato Neto N/A N/A 8 (1,2%) 9 (1,8%) Ronaldo Bôscoli 4 (3,6%) 212 (0,1%) 57 (0,5%) 10 (1,5%) Baden Powell N/A 12 (1,1%) 10 (1,1%) 11 (1,4%) Chico Buarque N/A N/A 4 (1,6%) 13 (1,4%) Roberto Menescal 58 (0,8%) N/A N/A 14 (1,4%) Carlos Lyra 1 (4,9%) 1 (2,4%) 7 (1,2%) 16 (1,1%) Dorival Caymmi 3 (3,6%) 18 (0,8%) 32 (0,5%) 19 (0,9%) Carlos Imperial 8 (2,3%) N/A 6 (1,3%) 141 (0,2%) João Gilberto 5 (2,7%) N/A 155 (0,3%) N/A Newton Mendonça 6 (2,7%) 225 (0,1%) 159 (0,3%) N/A Zé Keti N/A 9 (1,3%) 16 (1%) N/A Legend: Rank in centrality (share of normalized centrality) Source: Author’s analysis Interpreter Composer Jovem Guarda Bossa Nova Figure 6.4: Network of Interpreters and Composers from 1958 to 1961 Source: Author’s analysis graphed with UCINET 181 6.7.2. Consolidation of BN and JG: 1962 to 1965 From 1962 to 1965 (beginning of the Musical Festivals on TV), the BN and JG movements gain scale. The number of LPs registered in this period increases to 25, and the number of composers achieve the 225 mark. Density, however, decreases to 5.5, which suggests a higher diversification in repertoire. Interpreter Composer Bossa Nova Jovem Guarda Figure 6.5: Network of Interpreters and Composers from 1962 to 1965 Source: Author’s analysis graphed with UCINET The sociogram of this period (Figure 5) shows two separated networks, BN on the top and JG on the bottom. As a matter of fact, only Castro Perret established the link between the two movements, not enough to blur their frontiers. Identity adherence (table 4) shows a high degree of differentiation between the two groups. 82% of the songs recorded by BN interpreters are from the BN faction. The same figure is observed within the JG group. Nonetheless, some important new players appear to the scene: Elis Regina and Nara Leão (Table 5). Both will articulate not only traditional BN composers, but also traditional samba composers, as well new composers, like Edu Lobo and Baden Powell, who reinvigorated the BN and opened a way for MPB. Interestingly, we notice some disconnected 182 nodes from both major networks: Maria Bethania, borrowing songs from Caetano and Noel Rosa. This marks the appearance of the “Baianos”, not yet well integrated to neither networks. Carlos Lyra is still the most central composer in the network, followed by Vinicius de Morais. However, new BN actors emerge: Edu Lobo in fourth and Zé Keti in ninth. In parallel, as JG gets more institutionalized, its composers increase centrality: Erasmo Carlos achieves the 6th position, followed by Roberto Carlos. 6.7.3. Emergence of MPB: 1966 to 1967 Although the number of years covered decreased to two years, the effervescence of this period is revealed by its basic figures. The number of LPs achieves 26, the number of composers achieves 200. Not surprisingly, the density of composers decreases to 4.6. As the field becomes more institutionalized, interpreters seek higher diversity of repertoire, in order to differentiate themselves. A glance on the period’s sociogram (Figure 6) reveals the peak of the Festivals era. MPB is emerging as a derivation of BN network. As a matter of fact, both networks are highly interconnected, which suggests a relatively integrated community, although not homogeneous. The BN core is highly dense, while the recently integrated MPB composers appear as sparse and peripheral. Still separated, we observe JG network (on top). The “Baianos” were absorbed by the BN/MPB community, lending songs mostly to MPB interpreters (e.g. Elis Regina). Differentiation between the two groups is also observed from the repertoire adherence (Table 4). 84% of the songs played by the BN/MPB faction stems from its preferred composers. JG presents a comparatively high adherence, 82%. The lack of bridges between the networks suggests the existence of a structural hole that might be eventually explored. Caetano, Gil, Mutantes and other musicians yearned to create a bridge between BN/MPB and JG, tapping this structural hole. However, there was an obstacle to tackle: how to introduce a new style, if the boundaries between BN/MPB and JG were so rigid? 183 Interpreter Jovem Guarda Composer Bossa Nova e MPB Figure 6.6: Network of Interpreters and Composers from 1966 to 1967 Source: Author’s analysis graphed with UCINET Actors’ centrality reveals some important changes, as MPB emerges. BN composers are still central (Vinicius de Morais occupies the first position), however, Gilberto Gil already achieved the second position, and Chico Buarque gained the fourth position in centrality rank (Table 5). JG composers maintain the high centrality, due to JG increasing success: Erasmo Carlos occupies the third position, and Carlos Imperial the sixth. Caetano Veloso, not as well connected as Gilberto Gil, occupies the 65th position. In spite of this poor position, in comparison to his peer Gil, Caetano will preserve higher freedom movement in the next phase of Brazilian Music evolution. 6.7.4. Emergence of Tropicália: 1968 to 1969 In the period under analysis, the number of LPs slightly increased to 28, while the number of composers decreased to 178. Density also dropped to 6.3, which suggest diminishing diversity, as the field achieves higher consolidation. The analysis of the sociogram (Figure 7), finally delivers the answer to our hypothesis: the emergence of the Tropicália movement explores the structural hole between the BN/MPB and JG groups. The “Baianos” (Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa) and other allies (e.g. Mutantes) places themselves in the middle of the BN/MPB and JG movements, both as 184 interpreters, borrowing songs, and as composers, lending songs. JG interpreters will lend songs to Tropicália, and play Tropicália songs. The same is true for the BN/MPB group. Interpreter Composer Bossa Nova e MPB Tropicália Jovem Guarda Figure 6.7: Network of Interpreters and Composers from 1968 to 1969 Source: Author’s analysis graphed with UCINET Endogeny in the BN/MPB faction finally falls to its historically lowest rate, 79% (Table 4), indicating higher porosity in its repertoire delineation. In addition, the JG faction increases its adherence (86%) and size (12 interpreters, in comparison to historical level of three interpreters). Most of this increase in identity definition and sheer number of components is due to the alliance of JG and Tropicália. The emergence of Tropicália as an intermediary in the network granted its actors a privileged position of influence. Caetano Veloso becomes the highest central composer in the network, from a previous position of 65th, while Gilberto Gil occupies the fifth position (Table 5). Nonetheless, this shift does not mean the disappearance of previous well positioned players. Traditional BN/MPB and JG actors are still important. Tom Jobim, Vinicius de Morais, Capinan and Edu Lobo occupy respectively the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 6th positions, while Erasmo Carlos and Roberto Carlos occupy the 7th and 8th positions. 185 6.8. Discussion and Conclusion Along this paper we aimed to show that Identity, especially “Embedded Identity” is not fixed in time. As interpreters evolve in their careers, they seek diversification of repertoire, which brings modification in their relationships, both to peer interpreters and to composers, the source of songs. This diversification will provide to the interpreter a unique identity, which will be key for her career advancement. Nonetheless, identity change poses a paradox: how is it possible to change an identity, while avoiding disruption with the Industry’s and public’s perception? Artists want to be unique, but at the same time they cannot break entirely with their communities. Otherwise, they might become marginalized in the industry. One solution, we suggest, is the gradual change in one’s identity (which confirms one of the approached suggested by PODOLNY, 1993). This happened with Elis Regina, who was strongly tied to the BN community, and slowly started to introduce new composers (including Gilberto Gil) to her repertoire. Another solution might be observed in the path chosen by Caetano Veloso. His change in repertoire was abrupt, once he adopted songs from JG, and occupied a structural hole left behind by BN/MPB and JG actors (following the second approach suggested by Podolny, Caetano Veloso disrupted the symbolic order, by introducing an identity that didn’t follow the existing cognitive dimension). These two paths, Elis Regina’s and Caetano Veloso’s, suggest two ways how innovation might occur in artistic networks. The former, evolutionary and always legitimate, where small changes in repertoire yield a change in perceived identity in the long run. The later, revolutionary and in the outskirts of legitimacy, explores a structural hole and creates a hybrid style that could not be admitted before. Let us return to our original problem. Companies and surrounding organizational fields do enact labels that help them to organize the flow of information and objects. Weick’s collapse of sensemaking occurs when the stream of experience doesn’t fit the established cognitive schemata (WEICK, 1993). In the case we described, actors might pursue change by slowly adapting their identities, without leading to a collapse in the existent sensemaking. Podolny (1993) shows that if actors are rational, they will not go against the established market’s identity, even if they occupy disfavored positions. Purposive attacks to the existent category system might drive the whole market to an uncertainty crisis. However, as suggested with the Tropicalia’s case, threats to the established symbolic order may occur when an underlying and emergent position had been already accepted. We turn, then, to the concept of 186 Robust Action. Given that a field’s actors are rationally bounded, they are not able to keep the concrete embedded identities reconciled with their shared collection of categorical identities. As Martin (2002) shows, the necessity of a tightly coupled symbolic system exists only at the societal level, not at the individual level. As a result, strategic actors are able to manipulate their embedded identities in order to reach a position that will enable them, at a favorable moment, to generate new categorical identities. There is certainly more strain on the later effort, for it the creation of a new categorical identity implies changes in the overall symbolic system. 6.8.1. Future Research Opportunities The insights observed in this research are limited due to its partial sample of interpreters and titles collected. Future research might benefit from expanding both the interpreters and LPs analyzes. Furthermore, once the network becomes closer to the population, more advanced social network techniques might be applied, from block modeling to structural roles analyses. From the composers’ network, it is possible to understand how actors’ structural hole measures evolve, vis-à-vis the evolution of styles. Finally, the expansion of the sample to cover recent years might provide a better insight whether embedded identities stay stable, vis-à-vis the formal identities attributed by music critics. 187 7. Concluding Remarks Throughout the papers in this thesis I attempted to describe the processes underlying the change in fields. This effort started with the introduction of the idea that fields could vary in their configuration. In order to analyze the Jazz field, I borrowed and adapted the idealtypes proposed by Anan and Peterson and created two models: centralized and decentralized fields. While analyzing the Brazilian music field, my focus was on integration and polarization in a field. In both cases, the transition from one situation to the next entails a change in source of legitimacy. In the case of Jazz, we observed the emergence of a strong professional body, which struggled around the future and the past of Jazz. This conflict was followed by a struggle around the absorption of external influences and the introduction of avant-garde elements. In the Brazilian music field, I described how the low-brow/high-brow, national and international categories were bridged by a new style. In all these cases, the bridging between opposing categories (internal/external, low/high, national/international, past/future, commercialism/art, commercialism/folk, etc.) was never unproblematic. On the contrary, it involved individual and collective uncertainty and legitimacy crises. My concern was to add to these debates (well recorded in the secondary bibliography) an empirical ground. For that purpose, I reconstructed the social networks among the Jazz musicians, and the symbolic networks among Brazilian musicians. To be sure, we should not confound the social network construct with Bourdieu’s concept of field. Nevertheless, the former helps us to refine our analysis of a social topography, complementary to Bourdieu’s construct. If this is reasonable, we are able to analyze action from both perspectives, while avoiding any theoretical reductionism. Fields are the social spaces where individuals invest their capitals, commit their careers and signal to other individuals the acceptance of the rules of the game, sources of legitimacy and authority, and common institutions. From this perspective, social networks provide us at the same time the finger prints of social action and patterns of interaction. As a consequence, changes in the social network (or symbolic network) might signal changes in the field. By grounding my analyses on the qualitative research based on secondary bibliography I attempted to show that these changes in the social and symbolic networks corresponded to relevant historical shifts in both field. The question now shifts to what happened within these changes, from centralized to decentralized (Jazz) or from polarized to integrated (Brazilian music). 188 Changes in the field’s meta-logics entail that the regularities embodied in the expected career tracks fall down. When these meta-logics are disrupted, individuals face both uncertainty and a higher degree of freedom to act. Such “freer” action should not be interpreted as an agency power independent from social structures. On the contrary: as institutional spheres become uncoupled from each other, actors are able to perform arbitrage between opposing legitimacy sources. Should we hastily agree with Bourdieu that one’s interpretative schemata (habitus) is revised only during periods of crises (BOURDIEU, 1984b)? To be sure, Lahire (2002) criticizes Bourdieu for not focusing on the turning points in anyone’s trajectory: the first job, the first promotion, first son, etc. In each turning point, individuals have to test whether the expected (institutionalized) path will repeat. Disruptions in this individual’s trajectory might correspond for one’s subjective perspective, as tragic as a generalized crisis in a field. Perhaps change comes in a subtler way. As everyday life poses challenges for individuals to reenact the existing social structures (GIDDENS, 1986), disturbances lead to the establishment of unexpected links and relations. This murky change in the social structures, driven by everyday action, is captured by Padgett and Ansell’s concept of robust action: new categories for action are not born yet. But still, action is still possible and necessary: Caetano Veloso borrowed songs from the Jovem Guarda, Charlie Parker developed his solos at jam sessions already in the late thirties and Miles Davis introduced some R&R guitar in his music, before the emergence of the category “Fusion”. Subtle action precedes the emergence of new identities (WHITE, 1992a). Eventually, new identities are enacted and struggle for recognition. A conflictive period might be unavoidable, as we observed in the jazz field and in the Brazilian music field. But when this conflicts became explicit, the defenders of the opposing parties claimed legitimacy for their actions on common sources. Both “Nationalist BN” and “Tropicalia” claimed to be the heirs of João Gilberto. In a similar way, both New Orleans revivalists and Boppers claimed to reinforce the improvisational character of Jazz. From these examples I infer that these conflicts play an important role in the institutionalization process within fields. At the same time that they are crucial for understanding the horizontal relationship among identities, they also help us to analyze the basis of the coming consensus. Following Simmel, conflicts have the important function of shedding light on latent values. With Weber, we agree that new institutions are at the same time the outcome of conflicts and the crystallization of latent values. This process describes the internal struggle in the jazz field. The category “Jazz” itself was enacted and reenacted in order to absorb a plurality of styles. 189 When conflict emerges between internal and external categories, as in the example of Bossa Nova, when an external category is compared to an internal category, what are on stake is not latent values that might unite both categories in a wider label. In this case, it is the inner category (Jazz) and its robustness that is tested against disturbances. 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Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2001. 3000 p. LORD, T. The Jazz Discography. Taylor Way, West Vancouver, BC, Canada Lord Music Reference Inc. 2005. 208 PFEFFER, M. L. Big Bands Database Plus. Available at: http://nfo.net/. YANOW, S. All Media Guide. Available at: www.allmusic.com www.crazyjazz.co.uk DOWN BEAT MAGAZINE, 1962 to 1969, Volumes 29 to 36. CLIQUE MUSIC - http://cliquemusic.uol.com.br/artistas 209 Glossário Art World: Becker (1982), inspired by Danto (1964), defines an Art World as [E]veryone whose activity has anything to do with the end result. That includes the people who make materials, instruments, and tools; the people who create the financial arrangements that make the work possible; the people who see to distributing the works that are made; the people who produced the tradition of forms, genres, and styles the artist works with and against; and the audience. For symphonic music, the list of cooperating people might include composers, players, conductors, instrument makers and repairers, copyists, managers and fundraisers, designers of symphony halls, music publishers, booking agents, and audiences of various kinds. For contemporary painting, an equivalent list would include painters, makers and purveryors of canvases, paints, and similar materials, collectors, art historians, critics, curators, dealers, managers and agents, such auxiliary personnel as, say, lithographic printers, and so on. (BECKER, forthcoming). This definition of Art World is close to DiMaggio and Powell’s definition of organizational field, which may be rephrased as the set of relevant actors in the creation of art works. In contrast with an organizational field, Becker focuses on the trajectories of actual pieces of work. As an art world becomes more developed, a criticism body emerges, which is able to define the objects that will be considered art. Compare this conception with Bourdieu’s (1993d). In comparison with the concept of “field”, “Art World” lacks the idea of struggle and power developed in the idea of field. Still, because it is a more neutral term, I deploy it whenever I aim at a concept wider than field. Coupled (Systems): Parsons (1959) provides a good example of a coupled system: schools exist in order to socialize children in the adult world, as well as select the brightest ones to college. Also, Parsons suggests that women pursue college education in order to become good role models to their children. Hence, we state that in a coupled system, all parts and functions are connected to each other and the feedback loops are predictable and analyzable. On the school system example, one may ask what would happen if women did want to pursue their careers, instead of simply pursuing high education in order to become good mothers. Already in the functionalist tradition we observe sharp criticism to this conception. Merton (1968) analyzed the unpredicted effects of social action. Weick (1976) provides a full rupture, suggesting the existence of loose coupling systems. Loose coupling systems are present when several means can produce the same result, there is loose coordination, weaker regulation, and slow feedback time. If feedback times are slower, organizations will not adapt immediately to environment changes. In contrast, it will probably 210 buffer its internal operations from minor changes, while providing autonomy to boundaryspanning individuals to deal with environmental turbulence. As a result, the only sub-systems will adapt to environmental changes, preserving the overall system’s consistency. Meyer and Rowan (1991) advanced Weick’s proposition, by suggesting that boundary spanning individuals might be able to decouple the signals to the environment from the internal organizational mechanisms. As a result, the signals sent to the environment would not be necessarily representative of the organization’s actual processes. Scott (2001) suggests that although the idea of decoupling was posited as opposing to the idea of coupling, one should consider that organizations fall at a continuum between these two poles. In other words, it is impossible complete coupling or decoupling. Decoupled (Systems): see Coupling. Field: In the “Introduction” and in the “Fields and Networks” sections I provide two definitions of field. The first is the neo-institutionalist’s most common intuition that a field comprises all involved actors who are involved or impact directly a sector or industry. The second comes from Bourdieu, where a field is a social space where actors struggle in two different levels: they compete to amass capital (especially symbolic) and they struggle for the right of defining what is valuable for the field’s members. I rarely use “organizational field”, for it is too close to the “art world” concept, and it requires a focus on the “organization” as an underlying and well defined sub-unit. Rather, I prefer to use Bourdieu’s “field”, for it refers directly to the set of individual musicians engaged in the creation of music and struggling for recognition, and to other actors, like critics, producers, etc. Institution: Scott (2001; 2005) postulates that institutions are “variously comprised of ‘cultural-cognitive, normative and regulative elements that, together with associated activities and resources, provide stability and meaning to social life”. (SCOTT, 2001, p. 48). This definition of institution might be too broad for an economist. North (1992), for instance, defines “institutions” only those formal mechanisms that regulate social and economic life. DiMaggio (1998) points out that the economists’ definition of institution fits well a family of theories closer to rational choice. Sociologists, in comparison, find “institutions” everywhere, from a handshake to a classification system. I espouse the sociologist definition of institution. 211 Highly institutionalized fields are marked by a intense sharing of cognitive schemata, strong professional ethos (in both musicians and critics bodies) and selection mechanisms, and emergence of formal institutions like academic programs. Institutionalized: see Institution. Organizational Field: see Field. Social Network: see Structure. Social Structure: see Structure. Symbolic Network: Ansell (1997) defines a symbolic network as the set of relations among diverse discourses. In contrast with a social network, it doesn’t entail an actual intearaction among social actors. The links between discourses might be defined as opposition, consent, articulation, etc. Ansell recovers the history of insurgence of the working class in France, from 1887 to 1894 in order to show how collective action was possible as a collective discourse emerged from previously conflictive ridden discourses. Mische (2006) performs a similar analysis by describing how the Collor impeachment was possible as conflicting disourses converged around the impeachment goal. Structure: The term “structure” is a powerful metaphor found in many all sociological schools. Whenever I refer to this broadly defined metaphor, I use the term “social structure”. As Sewell (1992) states, the word “structure” hasn’t received yet a clear-cut definition. Maryanski and Turner (2000) approach the subject tracing the use of this term to Spencer and later to Durkheim. Durkheim (1999) describes a society as increasingly structured as it becomes more differentiated. Parsons (1949) borrows from Durkheim the elements for his functionalism: differentiation has to be followed by integration and the generation of a “conscience collective”. As a result, Parsons offers a sophisticated theory on how the personality, cultural, relational and institutional dimensions are entangled together in a selfordering system. Nadel (1957) performed a critical analysis on the Parsonian system, disentangling the actual social interactions from the roles held by social actors. Nadel defines a social Structure simply as “an overall system, network or pattern of relations” (p. 12). By “Network” (sometimes I call it a Social Network Structure), Nadel meant “the interlocking of relationships whereby the interactions implicit in one determine those occurring in others” (p. 16). As Sewell (1992, p. 6) shows, while structures refer to the principles underlying action, the social system refers to the pattern of relations. As a 212 consequence, what Nadel chose to call “structure” is closer to Giddens’ “social system”. DiMaggio and Powell classic text on organizational fields (1983) depicts the level of structuration as a key variable in a field. Scott (2005) suggests that a social structure encompasses “schemas, rules, norms, routines”. By including these categories, closer to social practices, Scott suggests a concept closer to Gidden’s suggestion of structure: “[Structure is constituted by] rules and resources, recursively implicated in the reproduction of social systems. Structure exists only as memory traces, the organic basis of human knowledgeability, and as instantiated in action” (GIDDENS, 1986, p. 377). Hence, “structuration” in the neo-institutional tradition follows closely Giddens’ proposition. It is both the set of schemas, beliefs and rules, as well as the hierarchy among them, or the field’s meta-logics. As far as neo-institutionalists are concerned with how clashing institutional spheres are organized through a hierarchy, I’ll favor the use of “meta-logics” term for the neo-institutional understanding of structure. As shown on section 2.3, Bourdieu’s concept of structure is grounded on the objective difference of amount of capitals among social actors. As a consequence, Bourdieu grounds his idea of structure on an objectivistic approach. Nevertheless, this structure is enacted by individual actors and represented by one’s habitus. As far as the habitus is at the same time structured and structuring of social relations, Bourdieu attempts to avoid the objectivist and subjectivist chasm. Yet, he seems to never give up the idea of an objective social structure which is empirically given by the global distribution of capitals. Although the chapter “Fields and Networks” explores the intersection between Bourdieu’s and the social network analysis, its aim is not a synthesis between the two concepts of structure. I chose to call “structure” the pattern of relations given in social interactions (hence, in agreement with Nadel). In contrast, section 2.4 and 2.5 show that Bourdieu borrows from Simmel the same elements that fed the social network concept of structural equivalence. Because the “capital” and the “interactional” dimensions are not always coupled to each other, I claim that it is legitimate to reserve the word “Structure” for the former approach, while keeping the latter as an actor’s attribute. To be sure, the term structure is used in different ways other than Nadel’s proposition whenever I aim at discussing the other theoretical propositions. Uncoupled (Systems): see Coupling. 213