Now, looking at the full list, each entry is a musician followed by a colon and a description. For example, Duke Ellington: developed a unique blend of jazz, blues, and classical music. Proper nouns are "Duke Ellington," so I need to change "developed" to three synonyms. Then "blend" to three synonyms, etc.
Let me start processing the text line by line. For each line, replace each non-proper noun word with three alternatives. For example: big band
Wait, maybe the user wants each word in the sentence to be replaced with three options, even if they are part of a phrase. Let me look at the user's example response. They have "Paul Whiteman: popularized jazz music among mainstream audiences" transformed into "Paul Whiteman: promoted modern tunes within mainstream listenders." Now, looking at the full list, each entry
The next paragraph talks about films, TV shows, commercials. "Featured" can be "shown," "displayed," "presented." "Numerous" might be "numerous," "multitude," "plenty." "Introducing" becomes "launching," "leading to," "bringing." "New generations" could be "new generations," "fresh cohorts," "next generations." Then "blend" to three synonyms, etc
Blues → folk
So putting it together:
Next part: "Many modern jazz musicians, including... have been influenced by the big band tradition." "Modern" could become "contemporary," "current," "present-day." "Musicians" might be "musos," "artists," "performers." But "musicians" is too specific, maybe "artists." Wait, in context, "musicians" is a general term here, so possible variants could be "artists," "players," "performers."