Jazz, where to start?
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- David Mason
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In the interest of "turning you on" (ahem) there is a great site on Cannonball Adderley with quite some bits of transcriptions:
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonball.htm
My favorite Miles Davis record* of the late 1950's was actually a Cannonball recording in 1958 called "Somethin' Else." Miles did the arranging, stealth motivating and played very, very well; it's a typical Alfred Lion/Rudy Van Gelder recording, i.e. sublime, i.e. shut up and play. Doc Stewart used to have all the solos up, including Miles'; now it looks like you have to buy some. Little devil. However there's still enough of "Autumn Leaves" to keep you twisted for a very long time. If you to "1958 Recording Sessions" and dig out "Cannonball's Five Stars", there you are.
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonbal ... _index.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2xx3YTu2ac
*(Kind of Blue is merely second. Seriously. "Somethin Else" is the record I play for people who believe "da blues" are only playable on guitars. )
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonball.htm
My favorite Miles Davis record* of the late 1950's was actually a Cannonball recording in 1958 called "Somethin' Else." Miles did the arranging, stealth motivating and played very, very well; it's a typical Alfred Lion/Rudy Van Gelder recording, i.e. sublime, i.e. shut up and play. Doc Stewart used to have all the solos up, including Miles'; now it looks like you have to buy some. Little devil. However there's still enough of "Autumn Leaves" to keep you twisted for a very long time. If you to "1958 Recording Sessions" and dig out "Cannonball's Five Stars", there you are.
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonbal ... _index.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2xx3YTu2ac
*(Kind of Blue is merely second. Seriously. "Somethin Else" is the record I play for people who believe "da blues" are only playable on guitars. )
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I often wondered if the band students at that high school in Florida, where Mr. Adderley taught, ever realized that one of the icons of jazz, alto saxophone, and simply immaculate hipness was their instructor.
Some of them MUST have!
Some of them MUST have!
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Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
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It is a great album, with Bill Evans on piano, Paul Chambers on bass and Jimmy Cobb on drums - hmmmmm. I love the intro to "Autumn Leaves" and "Waltz for Debby".David Mason wrote:In the interest of "turning you on" (ahem) there is a great site on Cannonball Adderley with quite some bits of transcriptions:
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonball.htm
My favorite Miles Davis record* of the late 1950's was actually a Cannonball recording in 1958 called "Somethin' Else." Miles did the arranging, stealth motivating and played very, very well; it's a typical Alfred Lion/Rudy Van Gelder recording, i.e. sublime, i.e. shut up and play. Doc Stewart used to have all the solos up, including Miles'; now it looks like you have to buy some. Little devil. However there's still enough of "Autumn Leaves" to keep you twisted for a very long time. If you to "1958 Recording Sessions" and dig out "Cannonball's Five Stars", there you are.
http://www.cannonballjazz.com/Cannonbal ... _index.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2xx3YTu2ac
*(Kind of Blue is merely second. Seriously. "Somethin Else" is the record I play for people who believe "da blues" are only playable on guitars. )
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Something Else....
....is a must have album for aspiring jazz players, according to a brilliant jazz guitarist and instructor I had the opportunity to take a workshop with. I agree 100%.
I'll not forget my first listen to Autumn Leaves; Miles is playing the head,and when he gets to bar seven he plays E natural over the Gm harmony instead of Bb and leans on it. I leaped to my feet, grabbed my guitar, to figure out what he just did that stood me right on my ear.
Kinda says something about the importance of "that one note".
You can download this album for about $0.99.... Do it!
Chris
I'll not forget my first listen to Autumn Leaves; Miles is playing the head,and when he gets to bar seven he plays E natural over the Gm harmony instead of Bb and leans on it. I leaped to my feet, grabbed my guitar, to figure out what he just did that stood me right on my ear.
Kinda says something about the importance of "that one note".
You can download this album for about $0.99.... Do it!
Chris
Last edited by Chris Reesor on 21 Mar 2012 5:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Paul - I sent you an email.
If anyone wants the other pages of the 50 Bebop licks, just send me an email
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So many great jazz musicians being mentioned here. Many of them played together and learned from one another, and challenged each other to push the envelope. Learn what you can, then find some "Cats" and start playing.
Look for an album by Sonny Stitt, "Constellation". He is Ferocious... Fast, Clean, and Articulate, and these guys did not overdub. Stitt never got the credit he deserved IMO. Think he's still living in St Louis. I'd love to meet him.
In the old days you could take a 33 1/3 speed album and slow it to the 78 speed which is about half, and follow the lines a little easier for transcribing them. I also believe there is a printed book with many of Birds recordings. I'll look now.
Butch
Look for an album by Sonny Stitt, "Constellation". He is Ferocious... Fast, Clean, and Articulate, and these guys did not overdub. Stitt never got the credit he deserved IMO. Think he's still living in St Louis. I'd love to meet him.
In the old days you could take a 33 1/3 speed album and slow it to the 78 speed which is about half, and follow the lines a little easier for transcribing them. I also believe there is a printed book with many of Birds recordings. I'll look now.
Butch
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- Dave Mudgett
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I play a lot of styles, and don't claim to be a great jazz guitar player, but I do play jazz guitar. I studied with a really fine jazz guitarist named Dave Klein off and on, starting in the late 80s. On our first contact, just to see where I was at, he put up sheet music of On Green Dolphin Street and Autumn Leaves, played them, and then asked me to play them, with a "Doesn't everybody know these?" kind of look. Let's just say, I could deal with the second, but failed on the first. But it's a great tune for jazz guitar, into the woodshed I went. There is such a vast repertoire of great jazz tunes - I wish I had about 10 lifetimes to explore it.
I agree with most of what's been said here. Listen, listen, listen to all kinds of jazz, don't restrict yourself to one instrument like guitar or steel - pay attention especially to the great horn players. Learn everything you can about intervals, melody, harmony, rhythm, and chord progressions. Play different types of melodies and chord-melodies over every kind of chord progression you can and learn how they sound against each other. The blues is a good place to start - all my favorite jazz musicians play great blues. Robert Kramer's list of Emmons influences is great - let me add Kenny Burrell, Grant Green, Jimmy Raney, Jim Hall, Tal Farlow, Howard Roberts, Joe Pass, Bill Evans, Bud Powell, Oscar Peterson, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Christian, Dizzy Gillespie, and Charlie Parker (obviously), Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, John Coltrane, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, Cannonball Adderly, Art Blakey, Max Roach, Charles Mingus, and (for people still alive) don't miss a chance to see people like Martino, Joey DeFrancesco, and Joe Lovano if you get the chance. I also really like to hear vocal versions of jazz tunes by singers like Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Carmen McRea, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Lena Horne, Nat King Cole, Billie Holiday, and Dinah Washington if I really want to hear great melodic phrasing on the pure melody that was written for a tune.
btw - Sonny Stitt died a long time ago. I agree, a great player who, however, tended to walk in Charlie Parker's shadow.
I agree with most of what's been said here. Listen, listen, listen to all kinds of jazz, don't restrict yourself to one instrument like guitar or steel - pay attention especially to the great horn players. Learn everything you can about intervals, melody, harmony, rhythm, and chord progressions. Play different types of melodies and chord-melodies over every kind of chord progression you can and learn how they sound against each other. The blues is a good place to start - all my favorite jazz musicians play great blues. Robert Kramer's list of Emmons influences is great - let me add Kenny Burrell, Grant Green, Jimmy Raney, Jim Hall, Tal Farlow, Howard Roberts, Joe Pass, Bill Evans, Bud Powell, Oscar Peterson, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Christian, Dizzy Gillespie, and Charlie Parker (obviously), Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, John Coltrane, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, Cannonball Adderly, Art Blakey, Max Roach, Charles Mingus, and (for people still alive) don't miss a chance to see people like Martino, Joey DeFrancesco, and Joe Lovano if you get the chance. I also really like to hear vocal versions of jazz tunes by singers like Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Carmen McRea, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Lena Horne, Nat King Cole, Billie Holiday, and Dinah Washington if I really want to hear great melodic phrasing on the pure melody that was written for a tune.
btw - Sonny Stitt died a long time ago. I agree, a great player who, however, tended to walk in Charlie Parker's shadow.
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The Book is the Omni book: http://www.amazon.com/Charlie-Parker-Om ... 0769260535n the old days you could take a 33 1/3 speed album and slow it to the 78 speed which is about half, and follow the lines a little easier for transcribing them. I also believe there is a printed book with many of Birds recordings.
To slow down for transcribing you take a 78 and play at 33 1/3, or record on tape and play back slower, but the pitch changes. Those with some technical savvy knew you could take an Ampex video recorder and put independent speed controls on the transport and spinning heads and if you left the heads at the right speed, slowing the tape will make the music play slower but at the right pitch! Zappa did the opposite but I'm sure he knew this, maybe Abersold knew it too.
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I've been challenged alright, but my post card has short changed me.challenged each other to push the envelope.
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I think it's an irrefutably-splendid idea to listen to enough jazz to pick out a few artists who resonate strongly with YOU - and then listen to them, very, very carefully. As Chris Reesor says, grab your guitar... There's a danger in listening non-critically, promiscuously, just "letting it wash over you", it's like trying to learn a foreign language by reading their dictionary.
I have never been able to like or dislike an entire musical genre by a label or an instrument, I always get the tingle from individual artists.
Miles Davis - Yay!
Chuck Mangione - Bhlarrgh!
And I think it's perfectly acceptable to acknowledge that there are great artists - whom you don't particularly like. The reasons that we resonate with certain artists are pretty simple, I think. Their general emotional "center point" on the happy/sad scale, their range across that scale (Q width) and how it matches yours, your very early listening experiences - the 2nd movement of Beethoven's 6th symphony is what they ALWAYS played when Bugs Bunny is strolling around the forest bucolically, just before Elmer shows up with his gun.
But then when you pick YOUR guy, or a few of them, boil it down further to just a few albums and WORK on just them mightily for a while, because you can get totally scatterbrained trying to "do it all." I also tried this approach of listening to, and burning a CD of, just one particular song* by many different artists, and I couldn't make heads or tail of that approach - jazz is so individualized, still (and that's GOOD thing!).
When I decided to BE a "jazz guitarist" several years back (oh sure), I bought up a bunch of chord DVDs and books, from Danny Gatton and Scotty Anderson to Joe Pass and Martin Taylor. And I found out that even when approaching something really straightforward like a IIm-V-I progression - they all did it in completely different ways! Not a single thread of continuity across different artists - the scatterbrain gremlin awaits...
*(Autumn Leaves was one, surprise surprise)
I have never been able to like or dislike an entire musical genre by a label or an instrument, I always get the tingle from individual artists.
Miles Davis - Yay!
Chuck Mangione - Bhlarrgh!
And I think it's perfectly acceptable to acknowledge that there are great artists - whom you don't particularly like. The reasons that we resonate with certain artists are pretty simple, I think. Their general emotional "center point" on the happy/sad scale, their range across that scale (Q width) and how it matches yours, your very early listening experiences - the 2nd movement of Beethoven's 6th symphony is what they ALWAYS played when Bugs Bunny is strolling around the forest bucolically, just before Elmer shows up with his gun.
But then when you pick YOUR guy, or a few of them, boil it down further to just a few albums and WORK on just them mightily for a while, because you can get totally scatterbrained trying to "do it all." I also tried this approach of listening to, and burning a CD of, just one particular song* by many different artists, and I couldn't make heads or tail of that approach - jazz is so individualized, still (and that's GOOD thing!).
When I decided to BE a "jazz guitarist" several years back (oh sure), I bought up a bunch of chord DVDs and books, from Danny Gatton and Scotty Anderson to Joe Pass and Martin Taylor. And I found out that even when approaching something really straightforward like a IIm-V-I progression - they all did it in completely different ways! Not a single thread of continuity across different artists - the scatterbrain gremlin awaits...
*(Autumn Leaves was one, surprise surprise)
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- Dave Mudgett
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Dave M. - maybe you're not saying this, but I don't think it's a good idea to filter artists or styles early on. You don't know 'em if you've never heard 'em - how can one possibly make an educated choice what moves you before you've heard a wide range?
So I think that, early on, it is, in fact, a good idea to just listen to a very wide range and "let it wash over you". In computer science, which articulates the science of searching (it doesn't matter what you're searching for), this is called, "Breadth-First Search", as opposed to "Depth-First Search". Breadth-First is great when you don't know much, and you want to avoid missing things you might never have thought of. Then start to filter and dig deeper as you start to get a clue.
I, myself, have definite favorite approaches, styles, and players - and conversely, approaches, styles, and players that don't move me as much. But that's only after giving a lot of stuff a chance. And, in retrospect, I'm still surprised at some of the stuff that I've gravitated towards as I've moved down the line.
My take.
So I think that, early on, it is, in fact, a good idea to just listen to a very wide range and "let it wash over you". In computer science, which articulates the science of searching (it doesn't matter what you're searching for), this is called, "Breadth-First Search", as opposed to "Depth-First Search". Breadth-First is great when you don't know much, and you want to avoid missing things you might never have thought of. Then start to filter and dig deeper as you start to get a clue.
I, myself, have definite favorite approaches, styles, and players - and conversely, approaches, styles, and players that don't move me as much. But that's only after giving a lot of stuff a chance. And, in retrospect, I'm still surprised at some of the stuff that I've gravitated towards as I've moved down the line.
My take.
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My favorite and everyday listening Jazz artists.
Miles
Bill Evans
Oscar Peterson with Herb Ellis on Guitar.
Lionel Hampton
Art Pepper
Stanley Turrentine
Coleman Hawkins
Wes Montgomery
Lenny Breau
Kenny Burrell
Any of these guys will give you ideas and are easy to listen too.
Buck Reid's PSG album has some great Jazz tunes on it.
Miles
Bill Evans
Oscar Peterson with Herb Ellis on Guitar.
Lionel Hampton
Art Pepper
Stanley Turrentine
Coleman Hawkins
Wes Montgomery
Lenny Breau
Kenny Burrell
Any of these guys will give you ideas and are easy to listen too.
Buck Reid's PSG album has some great Jazz tunes on it.
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- Carl Mesrobian
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Re: Jazz, where to start?
Wherever you want to go. I have played regular guitar for a long time and in the late 70's got into listening to Benny Goodman stuff with Charlie Christian on guitar, then started listening to Zoot Sims on tenor sax, Joe Pass, Kenny Burrell, Chuck Wayne, Wes Montgomery.Jason Rumley wrote:I've been listening to Buddy Emmon's jazz cds and I'm really liking them. I've never played jazz before and wouldn't know where to start for chords/scales, etc. I'm trying out Herb's C6 instruction for Western Swing and they're working out great but after that I'm not sure where to go. Thoughts?
Get the Real Book, the one that's under the counter, if you know what I mean. Then I took lessons from many jazz guitar players and learned stuff they'd just scribble down each week - jazz blues form, rhythm changes form, Latin, scales (diatonic, modal, bebop, blues),IIm-V7 riffs, intervals, voicings, etc., etc. I learned tunes, listened to the players I like, learned phrasing from different instruments, not just the guitar. Make the instrument sing the way you would sing the tune! Learn to swing time, don't play dead on top of the beat! It kills the feel totally.
I just started learning PSG last winter and it's totally frustrating for me not to be able to do what I can do on guitar. I pretty much threw the 6 string fretboard out and kept the theoretical knowledge and now have all this hardware to figure out Love the C6 neck and have thought about having a single neck C6, if there is such an instrument. C6 is all right there, and I think would be easier to learn jazz on than E9. Guess I could take an S-10 and convert it and add 2 pedals.. People have always commented on my solos as being lyrical - I hope so, I sing the song in my head and improvise over the melody. I think your best bet is to find a pedal steel teacher that's hip to jazz. They're out there
--carl
"The better it gets, the fewer of us know it." Ray Brown
"The better it gets, the fewer of us know it." Ray Brown
- Carl Mesrobian
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- Carl Mesrobian
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Definitely a top shelf list. Lenny Breau, Wes, Kenny? Yeah, man!George McCann wrote:My favorite and everyday listening Jazz artists.
Miles
Bill Evans
Oscar Peterson with Herb Ellis on Guitar.
Lionel Hampton
Art Pepper
Stanley Turrentine
Coleman Hawkins
Wes Montgomery
Lenny Breau
Kenny Burrell
Any of these guys will give you ideas and are easy to listen too.
Buck Reid's PSG album has some great Jazz tunes on it.
--carl
"The better it gets, the fewer of us know it." Ray Brown
"The better it gets, the fewer of us know it." Ray Brown
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Similar are the eighth note scale fragments given by John Mehegan in Volume 1 of his four volume work, Jazz Improvisation, as follows: 1235, 3457, 5672, and the reverse pattern, 5431, 7653 and 2175.Quentin Hickey wrote:I've read but haven't had the chance to explore Coltrane's 1 2 3 5 approach. I believe he uses it on four and giant steps.
I don't know why he used "2" in the description of these instead of "9" since the note designated is in the next higher octave. Anyway these fragments can be practiced over various scales/modes and rhythms, and used as raw material for learning to improvise.