That being said, here's some content that explores the connection between jazz and Toni Morrison's writing:

If you're interested in reading "Jazz", I recommend exploring options to obtain a legitimate copy of the book, such as:

No. Toni Morrison wrote Jazz to be experienced visually and rhythmically. The novel mimics the structure of a jazz composition: improvisation, repetition, call-and-response, and sudden key changes.

Then, the music began. A lonely, wailing trumpet. It was "St. Louis Blues," but slower, mournful, played as if the musician was crying. And underneath the music, a voice, faint, as if speaking from the bottom of a well, whispered along with the text on the screen.

Suddenly, through his headphones, which had been silent, a sound started. It wasn't a virus alert. It was a scratchy, popping static—the sound of a needle dropping on an old vinyl record.

He scrolled down to the opening lines, the ones he knew by heart but had only ever read in sterile paperback editions.