it became well known
Jazz
Prohibition, enacted in the United States from 1920 to 1933, significantly influenced the jazz scene by fostering a vibrant underground culture. Speakeasies, illegal bars that served alcohol, became popular venues for jazz musicians, providing them with new opportunities to perform and reach diverse audiences. This environment encouraged innovation and experimentation within the genre, leading to the rise of iconic figures and styles, such as Louis Armstrong and the Harlem Renaissance. Ultimately, prohibition helped solidify jazz as a central element of American culture during the Roaring Twenties.
jazz's
street jazz is a street,but regular jazz is music.
There is no antonym for jazz
Jazz Age
Jazz Age
Jazz
It diddn't.
i caused crime
Prohibition caused much political attention to be diverted from other very important matters.
1959 is the year of Jazz
1920-1933
The prohibition years were the years when alchool was prohibited in the United States until Presiden Roosvelt cut this law off.
because people lissened to lit to get away from the stock crash >Impossible. The stock crash happened after the Jazz Age. In fact it marked the Jazz Age's end and the beginning of the Great Depression.
Nicknames for the decade of the 1920s include The Roaring 20s, The Jazz Age or The Prohibition Era.
Prohibition made organized criminals rich and also profited the many corrupted public officials.