RHYTHMS OF HERITAGE: PRESERVING AND RECONTEXTUALIZING FOLK MUSIC THROUGH MODERN JAZZ IMPROVISATION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.29121/shodhkosh.v7.i1s.2026.7006Keywords:
Folk Music, Jazz Improvisation, Cultural Heritage, Musical Recontextualization, Intercultural Music, Improvisation Theory, Ethnomusicology, Musical HybridityAbstract [English]
Folk music is a cultural reminiscence, social ideals, and historical records of people, but numerous traditions are struggling with the issue of continuity in the environment of globalization and shifting musical realities. This article discusses how modern jazz improvisation has been used as a creative and culturally sensitive tool to maintain and recontextualize folk music traditions. Instead of seeing preservation as a conservation that is unchanging, the study conceptualizes heritage as a living process that continues to survive by changing. Using ethnomusicological viewpoints, jazz improvisation theory, and intercultural theory the study examines how rhythmic patterns, modal systems and performance practices of folk music can be incorporated in the modern jazz environment without the erosion of cultural identity. The paper shows that improvisation makes it possible to have a dynamic dialogue between tradition and modernity and the folk elements can keep the symbolic and emotional meaning they have and broaden their expressive opportunities that are achieved through harmonic reinterpretation, rhythmic adaptation, and group performance. The problematization of jazz improvisation as a cultural negotiation and sustainability points to the research as a means of heritage preservation through a living archive and pedagogical tool, as well as an ethical platform. The results provide a wider-ranging discourse on the field of musicology and performance studies by establishing preservation through transformation as a possible paradigm of maintaining traditional music in the context of the contemporary artistic practice.
References
Al-Mansour, S. (2023, September). Maqam and Blue Notes: A Comparative Analysis of Arabic Folk and African American Jazz Improvisation. World Music Quarterly, 31(3), 204–219.
Brooks, J. (2025, September). Recontextualizing the Blues: Folk Origins and Modern Improvisational Complexity. American Music Perspectives, 33(3), 301–318.
Dubois, E. (2025, February). Oral Traditions in the Digital Age: Preserving French Folk Songs Through Jazz Reinterpretation. Cultural Heritage Innovation, 9(1), 156–170.
Fernandez, R. (2026, January). Flamenco-Jazz: Analytical Perspectives on Phrygian Mode Improvisation. Spanish Musicology Review, 48(1), 12–28.
Garcia, J. M. (2024, February). Preserving Heritage: The Integration of Balkan Folk Rhythms into Modern Jazz Improvisation. Journal of Ethnomusicology Research, 18(2), 45–59.
Ibrahim, B. (2025, May). West African Poly-Rhythms and the Evolution of Modern Jazz Drumming Patterns (2020–2025). African Rhythm Studies, 11(2), 89–104.
Kim, S. (2025, January). Arirang Variations: South Korean Folk Themes in Contemporary Big Band Jazz. East Asian Performance Studies, 27(1), 66–82.
Moretti, L. (2024). The Mediterranean Sound: Italian Folk Polyphony as a Basis for Jazz Collective Improvisation. Mediterranean Musicology Journal, 10(2), 19–35.
Muller, H. (2025, November). Harmonizing the Traditional: Advanced Modal Substitution in Folk-Jazz Orchestration. Journal of Jazz Studies, 22(5), 77–94.
Nguyen, T. (2024). Pentatonic Parallelism: Vietnamese Folk Elements in Contemporary Jazz Fusion. Asian Music Journal, 56(2), 15–30. https://doi.org/10.1353/amu.2024.0012
Peterson, G. (2025, December). The Role of Improvisation in the Survival of Dying Folk Dialects. Sociomusicology Today, 19(4), 210–225.
Rossi, M. (2025, January). The Ethno-Jazz Movement in Europe: Sustaining Regional Identity in a Globalized Market. European Music Review, 14(6), 33–47.
Schmidt, L. (2025). Digital Archives and Live Performance: Using Folk Field Recordings as Improvisational Prompts. Computer Music Journal, 49(1), 88–102. https://doi.org/10.1162/COMJ_a_00612
Singh, A. K., and Mehta, R. (2025, May). Raga-Jazz: Recontextualizing Indian Folk Melodies Through Modal Jazz Frameworks. International Journal of Musicology Studies, 12(4), 112–128.
Tanaka, K. (2024). Shakuhachi Techniques in Modern Jazz Saxophone Improvisation: A Case Study. Journal of Intercultural Music Performance, 7(3), 41–55.
Williams, O. (2025, August). Sustainability in Jazz: Incorporating Indigenous Folk Narratives. Journal of Sustainable Arts, 13(2), 45–60.
Wright, C. (2024, October). The Influence of Celtic Fiddle Styles on Contemporary Jazz Violin Improvisation. Folklore & Jazz Performance, 6(4), 134–150.
Zhao, Y. (2024). Reimagining the Silk Road: Chinese Folk Pentatonicism in New York Jazz Scenes. Global Sonic Transit, 5(3), 201–215.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Dr. Tina Porwal, Leena Deshpande, Swati Srivastava, Damodaran B, Vinit Khetani, Vilas Palkhe

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
With the licence CC-BY, authors retain the copyright, allowing anyone to download, reuse, re-print, modify, distribute, and/or copy their contribution. The work must be properly attributed to its author.
It is not necessary to ask for further permission from the author or journal board.
This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.























