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Originally Posted by zigzag
But hey, I like some Percy and Mitch too. It's got a melody.
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05-22-2012 05:00 PM
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
I was tempted to jitterbug but somehow contained myself.
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Originally Posted by paynow
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What is Jazz?
Why do our ears like the fourth, fifth, minor thirds in relation to a starting pitch? Why do our brains catch on to a pretty melody or our emotions stirred when a dissonant change occurs.
Music to me is a metaphor of the universe/life. The above questions can all be answered in a fashion by science/physics- take a length of string, shake it, look for the nodes then extrapolate a twelve note scale (then compromise it for just intonation!) BUT the "why our hearts and minds like it" is more spiritual, not easily answered. Like trying to understand an expanding universe (if that's what it is?)
Forgive me, I'm having a deep moment.
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Originally Posted by Fletch
What is jazz and why is it no longer popular? Jazz is music that demands the artist to have a deep sense of syncopated rhythm and harmonic concepts that puts the melody on top in the right places. Many people have redefined jazz since its inception as a musical genre, which is cool, but it still must be deeply rooted in the tradition. Jazz is no longer popular, because people are not given a chance to listen to it by those running the music industry. The only way people would enjoy jazz is if all they were able to listen to for a year was jazz. Believe me, most would appreciate it after that.Last edited by smokinguit; 05-23-2012 at 10:37 AM.
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If you cant be deep as an arist, as a musician when can ya? I love deep, and encourage deep. be as deep as deep can be, and don't be ashamed of it! I am very deep.
I actually composed a post for here a while ago and then deleted it, but am inspired to try again. I was trying to explain something hard to explain. I was brought up listening to --not ALL jazz--but my mum loved Ella, and Sarah, and we had Stan Getz, and she loved the old swing bands, etc etc. My uncle--her brother was a jazz musician and played saxaphone, but he wasn't that up on modern jazz--even though he had a lot of records--cause he said it was too ego. We had a bit of an argue about it years ago. He was set in his ways. Now he has dementia bless him
So, yeah. Now in THIS phase of picking up the guitar again and looking deeper into jazzchords a dawning has come over me big time. it is how subtle these voicings are, and how they communicate very deep subtle states of feeling. This 'awakening' inspires me to keep on with it--in my own way
Jam Session Journal (April 2024)
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