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Originally Posted by jmstritt
Part II is about melody and III about harmony, Part IV is absolutely great on rhythm, am often neglected topic.
It's a video download, you can choose the platform and download it.
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10-27-2011 02:02 PM
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
They might have personal ways of emphasizing certain things in the changes that are not bebop, and not be playing the arpeggio as much, but they are still relating what they do to the chord.
Jens
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Originally Posted by Srinjay
Originally Posted by marcwhy
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Originally Posted by Reg
Reg, isn't it an exciting time to be alive? Certainly to know these guys have such an exciting journey ahead, they indeed have a very long way to go and so many undiscovered sounds to be uncovered. Here's to their long careers.
I think it's be a sadder world if we all lived our lives staying in one place, if Joe Pass lived forever and was forbidden to play anything except transcriptions of his old solos. Spot on Reg, as so often you are! Thanks.
David
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Originally Posted by jtizzle
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I'm listening to some recordings if Rez Abassi on my ipod right now. Would love any insight into this guy's playing and composition that anyone might have. Very different stuff.
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Originally Posted by JensL
I kind of argree with Jeff on this. The old guys really stayed within chord. The new guys are definitely floating around much more and the phrasing and technique has advanced. They know much better what can be done on the guitar. The traditional jazz language, based on chords, is not used much. Swing is dead. The rhyhm sections are different and the harmonies and forms are not like the old days, so it's hard to compare. They are still playing the chord, but they are not playing traditional jazz language. They've moved on.Last edited by Kman; 10-28-2011 at 12:34 AM.
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Intentionally hitting a tension on a chord change isn't necessarily *not* hitting the chord change.
Similarly, even boppers substituted chords in their solos. You can reach a point of abstraction with substitution, depending on the listener, but the concept is still harmonic - still based on chord changes.
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+1
While they are not playing bebop lines it is still an approach based on playing changes and I they miss no more or no less changes than Parker or Bud Powell would.
Jens
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As the interpretation of the harmony gets more impressionistic, the listener might lose grasp on how the lines related to the changes - and especially to how the lines relate to the harmonic rhythm and the form. Honestly that's the part that's the most fun for me - taking an old tune and mutating it beyond recognition, but ideally keeping the spirit of the tune alive in all the experimentation. It's not a "modern" approach, in the sense that people have been doing that for a quite a while, but I think it's an important element of modern styles that's constantly evolving.
Everybody should check out Mick Goodrick playing over a blues here http://valdez.dumarsengraving.com/Ji...tCamarillo.mp3
his solo starts at 5:20. Some straight stuff but at some points they're really pushing the listener by the end of it...but it's all a 12 bar blues form!
I bet when Bird started doing his thing, people thought he wasn't playing the changes.
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Originally Posted by JakeAcci
I like that aspect as well. I am particularly fond of an album with Wolfgang Muthspiel called Real Book Stories. It is all standards, but it is a more... yes, I think impressionistic is a good word, take on them. They do Giant Steps, Solar, ATTYA, Someday My Prince Will Come, I Hear A Raphsody, etc. The approach is almost like a free jazz type of approach, but you can still hear the changes it just is more of a loose rhythm section feel. In essence, some of Bill Evan's later stuff reminds me of that as well. Maybe that is where some of the roots of this style comes from?
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Maybe free jazz is not the best description if you say you still hear the changes of the tune?
Jens
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Originally Posted by JensL
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Originally Posted by jmstritt
I try and watch and copy what players are doing, I want to play guitar with my ears not fingers. I'm on Blues / Country at the moment not really Jazz by ear yet. If your ears are well trained and linked to the fret-board then surely new things to learn become other ways of using your pallet and not so much like starting from stratch everytime you go for something new.
Not specifically related to this thread but I thought this was interesting, point no. 3 like what I'm saying.
The Importance Of Ear Training: Part 1
My technical exercises double up as ear training in that I sing with my guitar for half of them apart from speed development which my voice couldn't keep up with. Having just listened to JakeAcci link to Mick Goodricks improv however I'm sure I've heard some Jazz singers improv like that somewhere.
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Originally Posted by JakeAcci
That's a great Mick Goodrick solo! I wish I had more stuff from him.
Jens
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Originally Posted by jmstritt
I think that mostly you'll find that the difference is in rhythm, and the types of phrases. Rosenwinkel is uisng singable melodic lines as much as 8th note lines. To me it always sounded like he had listened a lot to Keith Jarret and Pat Metheny? I don't hear stuff like that from the Wes/Pass/Raney trio you mentioned. I think Lage Lund is also really good at that.
Another thing to check out is cross rhythms so rhythmical patterns that move across the barline and sound like another meter on top of the one in the song. Ben Monder does that really a lot and very well!
I have some Monder and some Rosenwinkel transcriptions on my website if you want to check it out: http://jenslarsen.nl/TranscriptionsEng.html
JensLast edited by JensL; 10-29-2011 at 12:03 PM.
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Originally Posted by JensL
That's a great Mick Goodrick solo! I wish I had more stuff from him.
I love these sessions, so raw. i think they might be my favorite jazz guitar recordings in my collection. What Mick does with these tunes is out of this world.
Also, a recent clip I saw, sound quality is pretty bad but the playing is just tops as far as I'm concerned:
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A little off topic but when I was about 14 I was really into progressive/composed instrumental rock. I liked Steve Vai, Dixie Dregs, you guys know Jon Finn?
I went to a clinic/performance at Berklee at that time where Jon Finn played a set and talked a bit, then Mick Goodrick did the same.
I remember being so aggravated at Mick Goodrick's playing - it didn't make any sense! It just sounded like disconnected noodling and I didn't understand how he expected to connect to the listener. There were some kids my age sitting next to me with their jaws agape and I remember being so pissed off that people were actually applauding and supporting this "music."
Of course I enjoyed all of Jon Finn's very accessible rock set.
Now I can't stand listening to Jon Finn (feels like I'm being hit over the head with a blunt object,) but I want as much Mick as I can get!
Funny how tastes change - our tolerance and interest in things that are more "obscure..."
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Originally Posted by JensL
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It's not that simple, but that would be one of the ideas.
For me one of the things I do/did when I find something I like and want to learn is that I listen a lot and try to figure out what makes the line/solo etc great to me, f.ex phrasing/range/harmonic idea/melodic idea/what and how the rhythm section is playing/rhtyhmic idea and then I transcribe it and try
generalize it into something I can use when I am playing. I also try to find other examples of the same type of lick/idea.
Jens
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Originally Posted by JakeAcci
Basically, what happens when you start using triads melodically without thinking that you "must" play chord tones here and now. What freedom can you have to create melodic harmony; harmonic melody... and how would you do that. His new book co-authored with Tim Miller gives a very comprehensive treatment of this. Modern harmony is in a very exciting place, and it does require an open mind and attitude to fly with it.
Exactly the point of what must have been going on when Bird and Diz started playing bebop.
David
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One thing I noticed with the modern players is that there is little or no reference to blues.
So very little reference to bop and blues.
We need a new name.
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11-03-2011, 02:59 PM #48Nuff Said Guest
Originally Posted by JakeAcci
I think this Youtube clip has some top, top notch playing from Mick Goodrick, I don't know who the other player is:
Thanks
Nuff
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The Advancing Guitarist is one of the best books ever. Who is the guy in that video with the funny hair? Lol ;-)
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Originally Posted by Philco
Survived a MuseScore attack tonight
Today, 12:56 AM in Recording & Music Software