Spank jazz is an underground musical genre which combines
jazz idioms with elements of
funk,
hip hop,
rock,
popular and
electronic music. The name of the style was coined in 2005 upon the release of the
Coventry UK band
Hojo's debut, and only album
Glassbox. The album itself features the track
Spank Jazz from which the style's name and slovenly characteristic is derived. The style of spank jazz was notably pioneered by
Sunim Koria; a composer, producer and multi-instrumentalist, and a founding member of Hojo, together with musician/composer
Rudy Gaw and singer-songwriter
Verity Pabla. A vast number of stylistic influences of spank jazz are drawn from a diverse range of artists such as
Beck,
Tricky,
James Brown and
Brian Wilson, together with the arrangements of
Gil Evans (
Miles Davis' collaborator) and the work of the American composer
George Gershwin.
As of 2006 spank jazz remains deeply rooted in the underground music scene of Coventry, possibly to be long-lost due to the disbanding of Hojo in mid-2005. However, spank jazz remains an eclectic style of music playing a significant, albeit minor role in the evolution of contemporary jazz.