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Kris, I say yes and no.
Definitely better to take the chords from an original recording over just accepting a real/fake book's changes.
But better than that is to listen to 10 different recordings of the tune, and glean what you like from each. It's jazz! There's no one right way to do anything.
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01-01-2011 03:23 PM
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>>>>>Definitely better to take the chords from an original recording over just accepting a real/fake book's changes.<<<<
The problem here is that some standards have been recorded so many times, so many ways, what counts as an "original recording" is debatable. There's no debate when we're talking "Freddie Freeloader" from Kind of Blue, but there's no similarly definitive version of "They Can't Take That Away From Me." (My favorite is the one by Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald.)
I don't think of original recordings as God anymore than I do fake books, unless you're in a period band---like a swing band that wants to sound as much like Basie or Goodman circa 1940 as possible.
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Fake/real books exisit from 70's... I think.
How jazz musicianswork with new tunes earlier?
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Originally Posted by monk
I think much of the criticism of fakebooks is misplaced. They are not *meant* to be transcriptions from classic recordings. (That's what "Guitar Recorded Versions" are for!) They provide the tune, lyrics, and basic changes (-given what the publishers take to be common practice among their audience). That's a helluva lot for 25 bucks or so!
By the way, there's an interesting book out about the "Tune-Dex" which provided changes on 3x5 cards for working musicians who had to keep up with what their audience wanted to hear (-or at least what the band leader wanted them to hear). I forget the name of the book but here's a link to a story about 7,000 such cards in a single collection. You can see one such card, "Everything Is Peaches Down In Georgia.' Talk about simple changes!
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Originally Posted by markerhodes
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Wow, thanks for all the great advice guys! Sometimes I'm going bats trying to make a chord work per the fakebook. It's great to know there is no one "right" way. I feel a lot better about it now.
I've got to learn to trust my own ear more.
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Yeah, I think you have to learn several versions and have a good enough ear to hear what is going on. After a while, you begin to know where the "trouble" spots are. Whenever I get to bar 26 of "All of Me," I just have to listen to hear if the bass/piano is playing an Fm7 or an F#dim7 there. Either is fine with me, I just listen and figure out what they're doing. There are a lot of little spots like that in songs.
Peace,
Kevin
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Yeah Kevin, I think that's probably where I'm going wrong - not knowing or at least not listening to several different versions of a song. I believe that's why I'm having trouble with some of the fakebook chords.
I'm only listening to a couple of versions of a song and when I come across a chord that seems "wrong" I can't deal with it because it's not what I'm hearing in the few versions of the song I know.
Thankfully there's YouTubeI think I need to find as many versions of a song I'm working on and give them all a listen.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Maybe that comes from being a songwriter, maybe it's just a quirk, but for example, I was visiting a friend once and he kept singing "Atchison, Topkea and the Santa Fe," a Harry Warren tune with a Johnny Mercer lyric. I'm a big Mercer fan and I made a vow to learn that tune. As it turns out, it's a crap tune for guitar. So I play it like no version I've ever heard---which is not to say it's anything special, just that there was no version I wanted to copy anything from--and I"m happy with that. The only thing I learned from a record--Marie Claire Hardin singing with a piano trio--was the lyrics!
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Originally Posted by markerhodes
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I don't know about y'all, but youtube and other online sources have made it so much easier to compare 10 (-plus) different versions.
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Originally Posted by markerhodes
Maybe it's because I've been into jazz for a long time now, but I've lost that kind of "respect" a lot of rock/pop players have for a song where they feel it needs to be played "correct" or not at all. I hear a song I like and I immediately think "Oooh! How can a fuck with this one?!"
Don't feel like you need to treat songs like a sacred entity-- a song is a melody, sometimes with words, sometimes without. Everything else, harmony, rhythm, phrasing (including that melody sometimes) is up for interpretation. That's jazz.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Sorry about the sidejack. Mr B's comment just got the wheels spinning.
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Originally Posted by monk
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Lets face it if you never listened to any other versions of the song you would end up playing an original tune.Surely you have to reference one of the other versions a some point oterwise youve written your own song(NOT THAT THATS A BAD THING)
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Originally Posted by Stackabones
Most of the songs I play now are songs I wrote, though since taking up jazz, I've learned a lot of tunes other people wrote. I hated jazz guitar for years and still am most likely to learn a tune I heard sung well than one I heard a guitar player do something remarkable on. (The first standard I learned was "Mean To Me" because I liked the lyric and tune; I've yet to hear a guitarist play it and have no interest in seeking one out, though I'm sure some good guitarists have done fine things with the tune and if I ever hear them, I'll no doubt say, "That's grand," but if I never do, that's fine too.)
But it is like the garage in the sense that if I decide to play a tune, I work it up the best way I'm able, trying this and that, and if it sounds okay, I keep playing it and refine it. If not, well, on to something else. Yesterday I opened the Real Book to the last page just to see what was there and it's "You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You." I've heard Frank Sinatra sing it. Nice little tune. I'll see what I can do with it. Maybe a lot, maybe a little. Meanwhile, I don't want to hear anyone else play it, especially a guitar player.
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Of course, in one of life's many ironies, you'll find a slightly different versions in the Sixth Ed. Real book and in Real Book Volume II, second ed.
Bars 23-24--forget the slash chords and just roll with an A-/E7/A-
Oh, and just for clarity, when I'm "researching" a tune, I'm definitely not just listening to guitar.Last edited by mr. beaumont; 01-03-2011 at 07:36 PM.
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The best advice I ever got from any guitar player fits in with this, learn the plain vanilla changes, then get as fancy as you please.
Fake books are just that, and not always with the plain vanilla or even the correct chords.
The art of jazz is in how you arrange any song to suit your own taste.
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Originally Posted by mrbean
Here, here. Well said, sir. At least for amateur players, that's been (sorry, should that be 'bean'..?) my approach for over 40 years. Not the same if you're animating with a big band, or contracted on a cruise ship, I'm sure, but that's not been (oops, at it again...) my reason for playing. I have a healthy 'garage' approach, and, as a hobby, am not constrained by anything other than my own (admittedly poor...) taste. I quite often start playing in G, with Mickey Baker chords, only to finish up 30 minutes later in D with Joni Mitchell, or Fairport Convention. Mix'n'match, so to speak.
I have tons of Fake Books, but rarely try to learn a whole piece. It takes me ages to sort out the first few bars even. I try, but it's darned slow. Vanilla is fine for me (or vanilla fudge..?)
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Originally Posted by Stackabones
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Im in high school jazz band and we have all those voicing in our chords, but we play power chords which are basically 5th and 7th chords depending on the shape, but its a lot more easier and I am looking to get this book for some local coffee shop gigging and what not.
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I go to Ralph Patt's site and take a look at his Vanilla book.
Love his site. Ralph is in his 80's. (Sent him an email once thanking him for his site but never heard back unfortunately.)
Now you could do what Ralph does yourself if you understand the process. Which is the key.
The experienced guys (gals) know this so bear with me as this is for the newbs.
When I learn a tune I simplify the changes using either Ralph ideas or maybe with my own. I defer to Ralph however in most cases. It's much easier to learn a tune this way with the vanilla changes. I'm lazy. Ha! Ha!
If you understand chord substitution you can modify these vanilla changes as you play.
I'll take a look at the Real Book too and compare that. The Real Book has substitution possibilities generally. But I don't necessarily use them. I use my own from what I like which means from my jazz chord vocabulary as it exists which has its limits.
Now for the newbs you need to get into chord substitution to understand. I cannot emphasize this enough. Chords, chords, chords.
Going right to the Real Book is fine but if you do not understand the process you are missing much.
Develop a love affair with chords. Don't spend all your time improvising over "So What".
Uh...now what was the question???Last edited by Drumbler; 02-05-2011 at 08:49 AM.
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Originally Posted by Drumbler
I have goodness knows how many versions of 'Misty', but the only way I can make sense of them is by referring to the Vanilla book. It's the only version I can play, for now (although I have recently acquired the 'Conti' one, in Vol VI; looking good...).
The 'roots' are in the Vanilla book, the 'Real' books are what others have already created from that (or rather from the basic composition...), but these variants are up to us to adopt or modify, or even ignore, depending on our taste and level of playing and understanding.
I've never been able to play 'as is' from a real book, but using Mickey Baker chords over Vanilla, I can work out my own. My referencing the 'Real' books only serves me by illustrating how little I know..!
(but I'm lazy, too. I consider it to be a quality...)
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Originally Posted by derek
love the Vanilla concept
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Theoretically, yes. That is correct.
Last edited by John Curran; 05-04-2009 at 10:55 PM.
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