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Well said!
Originally Posted by lawson-stone
For me, So What is the type of tune easy to noodle over but difficult to make interesting.
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07-03-2024 12:54 PM
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
Fixed
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These points all support my thesis that’s it’s not a good place to start.
Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Reg’s point agrees with me too.
I’m not the one counting 24 bars, the hypothetical guy who knows Rolling Stones and Allman Brothers tunes who’s getting into jazz is counting it as 24 bars.
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Man, I’m glad somebody understood me.
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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that's what I was saying. One way to make it interesting is to think of it the way you'd play an AABA standard, Idea, Elaborated Idea, Break out for the bridge, return to first idea but stomp it.
Originally Posted by jameslovestal
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Not the most or least of anything.. just a few anecdotal thoughts from someone who came to jazz rather late.
Take 5 - Because it's not 4/4. That and it teaches you to be a bit more creative with your melodic/rhythmic improvisation. It's also a good tune if you grew up with Allman Brothers. I play it in Em because guitar.
Mahna D Carnival - Transition from rock to Bossa and like it.
Autumn Leaves - While appreciating all the jazz progression foundations, listen to the Eva Cassidy version and hope some of that soulfulness rubs off.
Nature Boy - Harmonic minor and cool transitions
All of Me - At 200bpm so you can show off a bit to your rock and roll friends
Also.. All Blues and Blue in Green. Easy tunes to help you put your pentatonic blues away and try something cool.
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Groovin' High
Daahoud
Jordu
Have You Met Miss Jones
Yes And No
In Your Own Sweet Way
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Why Have You Met Miss Jones?
Originally Posted by Isfahan
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The modulations in the bridge. Trane wrote Giant Steps as an etude for that bridge.
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Cool, I never noticed. It just sounded like standard GASB vocal jazz to me. That’s the best kind of cleverness, the kind that doesn’t stick out.
Originally Posted by Bop Head
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What teaches you about jazz isn't a particular number of set tunes, it's experience.
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Autumn Leaves, Take the 'A' Train, Blue Bossa, So What
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I VI II IV in the A part and unusual sequence of II-Vs in the B part, develops the ear
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Hi!
Everyone likes shortcuts and no one has so much time and so much desire to work.
But unfortunately Jazz is not easy.
Many years ago, during one of his workshops, the great Bruce Forman said that to reach a certain level it is necessary to know how to play (obviously from memory) 50 songs.
After learning these, understanding and memorizing all the others tunes will be very easy. Personally, I have a very hard time getting past 20 songs (approximately). My problem is memory....in fact, while I remember some songs easily (ATTYA, Wine & Roses, Blues For Alice, Autumn Leaves, Satin Doll, Ipanema, Blues, Green Dolphin, Scrapple, Blue Bossa, No Greater Love, Wave, Rainy Day, Polkadots, Miss Jones....) in other cases I have some HOLES (!) and I forget some parts...
...it's not a nice experience!
For example at the end of Foggy Day, There Will Never Be, Alone Together and others......I never remember some chords
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That's why I have to keep playing them almost every day.
However, one thing is sure: to learn 10 or 20 songs is not enough to understand what Jazz is and how to play Jazz.
Ettore
My YouTube Channel
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write out the changes you forget and then throw the paper away and write them out again. It's called rote memorization, I tell my kids the brain is lazy and sometimes you have to hold it's mouth open and shove the facts in there while it fights back.
Originally Posted by equenda
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Do you learn the changes as Roman numerals or by chord names in the original key?
Originally Posted by equenda
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Numbers. I "learned" maybe 30-40 tunes and found that in a jam, I was worthless without a chart. So in the past 2 months, I have gone back to learning maybe 6 tunes in all 12 keys using numbers. Chords and melody. It's driving it all home. As I get thru 12 keys, I add another tune or two and start again. Tunes chosen because I know the melodies (I know melodies to many others but this was a random start): No Greater love, Blue bossa, Exactly like you, How High the Moon, Lady be Good, There Will Never Be Another You. Whatever works for you, start there.
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I've posted this before, so forgive the repetition.
Everybody, just about, can sing a song they know. And, if you play guitar while they sing it, they'll know if you play a wrong chord.
The point is that when people know a popular song, they know the melody and the sound of the harmony. They don't have to think about it.
So, to play the melody of a tune, you just have to go from the memory to the fretboard. Can you think of a melody and then play it without difficulty in any key? That's a skill you need to seem like you have a zillion tunes memorized. It comes with time on the instrument.
To play the chords of a tune, you have to do more or less the same thing. You have a memory of the harmony and you need to be able to play what's in your mind. Irrespective of key.
I find it pretty easy with melody and pretty hard with harmony.
I guess the idea is that you already know the tune and you just have to translate that to the fretboard.
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Leaving aside specific tunes, you'd probably want to include this (arrangement) for the feel.
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Just wow. This clip blew me away. And she even looked a little bored with it!
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Erm … that’s not Emily Remler.
Originally Posted by Mick-7
I believe the caption of her video is suggesting that she is covering Emily Remlers cover of Wes’s D Natural Blues.
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Guess I should have listened to the video before commenting rather than just read the subtitle.
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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If the proposition is "teach or cover as much as possible", I take that to mean using the songs through a series of lessons, not in a hurry, where the songs may be initially captured in simple form and developed over time to explore them. Here are my "6"; really five with the option of selecting the sixth from the last two.
Just Friends - "slipped form", cool chords and subs
Angel Eyes - nice B section with psuedo-deceptive modulation
Killer Joe - octaves! and a very "interpretable" B section harmony
C'est Si Bon - B section of quartals, maj9th, 11th, sus13ths, #9ths, may be played Bossa style
Drown In My Own Tears - 72 chord 3 minute Blues form if you do all the changes
Masquerade - gorgeous tune throughout
Funny Valentine - gorgeous tune throughout
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Jazz Standards Songs and Instrumentals (Rosetta)
Originally Posted by Mick-7



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