Why Jazz Standards Still Matter: The Blueprint of the Genre
Why do musicians still play songs written 50–100 years ago?
Because in jazz, standards aren’t “oldies”—they’re blueprints.
The Perfect Harmonic Lab
Standards from the Great American Songbook are harmonic masterpieces.
- Logical Progressions: Built on functional harmony
- Building Blocks: Master one progression, unlock dozens of songs
Learning “Autumn Leaves” teaches concepts you’ll use everywhere.
A Universal Handshake
Jazz is a conversation.
At a jam session, musicians don’t rehearse—they communicate:
“All the Things You Are, concert Ab, medium swing, standard intro”
That’s all it takes.
The “Spinach” of Music Theory
Learning standards (the music theory inside the music) builds real musicianship:
- Ear Training: Recognize complex harmony
- Transcription: Learn directly from recordings
- Vocabulary: Understand the “grammar” of jazz
This is the foundation behind players like Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, and John Coltrane.
A Blank Canvas
Jazz flips the script of popular music.
Instead of recreating the original, musicians reinterpret:
- One tune → infinite possibilities
- Each performance → brand new creation
The Evolution: Contrafacts
Musicians often wrote new melodies over old chord changes:
- “Ornithology” → based on “How High the Moon”
- “Oleo” → based on “I Got Rhythm”
This kept the music evolving without abandoning its roots.
Standards endure because they’re not fixed—they’re flexible.