Jazzy tunes and dreamy images in the cold war era

launching Finnish jazziskelmä on-screen

Författare

  • Kaarina Kilpiö
  • Terhi Skaniakos
  • Ari Poutiainen

Nyckelord:

Film music, jazziskelmä, jazz-pop, modern jazz, music in advertising, television music

Abstract

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, a highly original mixture of modern jazz, popular and dance music occurred in Finland: the jazziskelmä. It was successful in record sales and in giving a new image to local popular music publicity. Its image was predominantly jazzy and female: the stars associated with jazziskelmä were almost exclusively young vocalists who frequently featured in movies, television shows and advertising. In this article, we discuss jazziskelmä and its launch on the silver screen and on television, in the context of the cold war. Finland’s geopolitical position and relation to the Soviet Union was complex. This was reflected in all areas of politics and culture. In the early days of the cold war, many young urban Finns favoured North American music trends, especially modern and cool West-coast jazz, effectively marketed in post-war Europe as an example of a democratic art form. The visual imagery was multifaceted, and there was already an intimation of the upcoming, strongly western audio-visual form of the music video. However, we do not regard the professionals who positioned their work musically closer to the western world as being intentionally engaged in political activity or propaganda. Many of them certainly had a genuine appreciation of jazz, and part of the charm of this music stemmed from its western origins, its freshness and unforeseeable nature. Primarily, the integration of jazz into the local popular music culture demonstrated a tendency to lean towards the exotic, modern and exciting North America.

Författarbiografier

Kaarina Kilpiö

Kaarina Kilpiö (Doctor of social sciences) currently works as a University Lecturer at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki. Her research interests include the study of different (mainly historical) uses of music and sound technologies. She has studied the use of music in advertising films, as background music and for propaganda purposes, as well as the Ccassette culture in Finland. kaarina.kilpio@uniarts.fi

Terhi Skaniakos

Corresponding author Terhi Skaniakos (Doctor of philosophy) is specialised in the field of cultural musicology, especially in the audio-visual analysis of music. Her main interest lies in documentary films and their sounds. She is currently working as a University Lecturer at the University of Tampere. terhi.skaniakos@uta.fi

Ari Poutiainen

Ari Poutiainen (Doctor of music) works as a University Lecturer of Music Education at
the University of Helsinki. His research focus has recently been on creativity, improvisation, violin technique, jazz history and pedagogy. Poutiainen is also an established jazz
violinist and composer. ari.poutiainen@helsinki.fi

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Publicerad

2019-03-27

Referera så här

Kilpiö, K., Skaniakos, T., & Poutiainen, A. (2019). Jazzy tunes and dreamy images in the cold war era: launching Finnish jazziskelmä on-screen. Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning Swedish Journal of Music Research, 100, 25–46. Hämtad från https://publicera.kb.se/stm-sjm/article/view/33454

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