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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
sounds like a good way to really learn a tune so one doesn't forget. Who knows maybe I could learn a solo in that timeframe for the song (Billy Bean comes to mind). Thank you for the patience I know I can get a bit much lol
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09-10-2023 12:16 PM
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Tbh I have trouble finding the motivation to learn stuff unless I’m on gigs.
otoh all the tunes I learned over lockdown - can’t remember any of them.
A friend of mine pointed out it’s less about learning tunes and more about learning to learn tunes.
I think the tune a week schedule is sound.
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Originally Posted by jazznylon
Regarding repertoire it is kind of a distance run. Put in the miles and it will add up. You can’t sprint to the end
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Needless to say, one could learn a simple blues tune in a day after some time spent learning other blues tunes. And a Shorter tune or Monk tune or something like Giant Steps might be a lifelong endeavor. But you have to start somewhere.
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I was learning a tune a week - I even have a list of a year's worth of tunes to learn. What happened? I had a couple of holidays and since then sort of got stuck on 'Confirmation' and decided, after transcribing it, that I wanted to master it and go deep in it to an extent that one week would not allow. That being said, it will be time to move on at some point... when I can perform it with a backing track in a way that is reasonable by my standards. It's one of those things that isn't really quantifiable, you know? But I will resume with my list at some point. Or maybe I'll rejig my practice schedule so that I have time for both a long project - get real good at 'Confirmation' - and a short term one i.e. learn a tune a week...
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Confirmation is quite hard tho. Even among bop heads.
Do not overlook the low hanging fruit!
You can keep hard stuff on the back burner and learn simple standards and so on on the day to day.
the reason I say this is you need data to develop your pattern recognition skills.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I should definitedly touch and smell grass outside more often. But yeah you raise a good point about the meatspace thing
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Originally Posted by jazznylon
- instead of a linear passive straight path from book chord to guitar grip you form multiple interrelated loops actively bringing in your ear, hands, and the song
- learning a song by ear uses many of the same mental pathways as composing a song (critical testing and analysis of the sound of the result). You will recognize this if you have composed songs and noticed how easy they are to remember
- the approach focuses on the sound (with respect to how the song goes), the most effortless and natural way of acquiring, holding, and recalling of songs
- if nothing else, it will slow you down*; you will not make much progress trying to "finish" a list of tunes in a short period or selecting "stunt songs" like 26-2
* if you prefer the pressure and pace you have been pushing, the best environment for that is live performance. Find some people to play with and book some gigs. Everything will become much clearer when you have performance dates on your calendar.
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Originally Posted by James W
You learn a dozen or so fairly simple tunes and get some things that work for you and things that don’t. But the fact that you come to a tough tune and go “whoa, I need more time with this,” means the arbitrary time per tune kind of did its job.
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Originally Posted by pauln
But yeah thankfully tommorow I'm going to jam/rehearse with this pianist so we can get gigs in a few weeks time. I definitedly do have multiple lists of songs to possibly learn (how do you people know are you mind readers!?)
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After you learn the first 50 songs you can loosely learn two or three in a week. Loosely learn means the drummer asked “can we play Sugar” 3 days before he gig and I got through it fine.
Will I know it in 3 year’s? Probably not, I’m not going to keep it in my personal repertoire. But it’ll only take me a day to relearn it.
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50 tunes eh? If I work on each tune for a week it'll take me almost 12 months to get to that point which isn't too bad all things considered. In any case I'm gonna take a bit of a break today as its good to take breaks sometimes. I'll work on what I need to work on starting tommorow
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Since you’re taking a break. What’s your favorite standard? Your favorite recording?
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
I feel like its hard to do this standard justice when it comes to improvising especially as it has such an impactful melody but yeah. Another standard that is my favorite is this one
Now as for favorite recording I can't just list one or two, but several (I already mentioned Mr. P.C. - Doug Raney and Straight no Chaser - Billy Bean). Here goes nothing...
This trumpet solo is the most swing I have ever heard, not to mention Charlie Christian pulls off a respectable solo too.
I really like Chet Baker's solo here especially the part around this mark 1:09-1:30. Very melodic. I also like what Jim Hall's doing too for the entirety of the recording.
I really like the head of this tune there's just something about it you know? Especially the part starting at 1:20. The solos are cool too.
The energy of this one is intense. I like the synchronization between sax and guitar
A classic! I'm pretty sure everyone has heard this one though..
I really like the head/melody to this one. Very cool stuff
I like everything about this
When I first got started listening to jazz when in college I came across this recording. Django's playing astounds me to this very day
And thats pretty much it. There's more but I can only put a max of 10 videos in a post. Its a lot but yeah.. hope you all enjoy it!
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There you go, that’s the first ten songs you should learn.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Noice!
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Similar to you list, my favorite standard is a ballad, Moonlight in Vermont. But I also like jazz that is fun.
Listening to Lips Flips, that's a jam session where everyone is smiling. The trumpet(Dizzy?) is bouncing and fun, you can hear them cheering each other on in the background. When I think of jazz in my head this is how it sounds. The band is having fun playing off each other, not sitting in their own bubble trying to force as many chord substitutions and exotic scales as they can into a solo before their turn is up.
I won't go play by play through the list, but I like how you have modern players on the list too. You could still see Joshua Redman or Kevin Eubanks preform.
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Yotam Silberstein has said he knows around 700 tunes.
Yotam Silberstein was recently recording a record with Billy Hart.
That should give you an idea of what knowing 700 tunes looks like.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by BreckerFan
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I wasn't trying to put you personally down. Just a lot of threads here get VERY VERY technical and stuffy, someone staring out can easily think they need to be a master at so many things before they venture into playing with anyone. But really, the stakes aren't that high. You should keep learning all that stuff, but also, get out and play.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
UK jazz guitar dealers
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