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Originally Posted by ecj
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09-30-2013 10:05 PM
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Man, I love listening to Barry play and ruminate. I was playing along with the video, the lovely diminished chords and colors flying about. You learn more just hanging with that guy than in school. The only problem is we have only fewer fingers to sound the notes, though we can get there, just not all at once. Never a dull or wasted moment with Barry.
Reminds me how I rue not learning to play piano when I was a kid. I play today, but not near his level.
Jay
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
Again, I'll reiterate in case anyone is confusing my position: Barry Harris knows what he's talking about. Far better than I. I was just remarking that, in general, I'm kind of confused about the advice to drop the ii that comes from Harris, Pass, etc., because I don't really hear it happening that much. That being said, I have a lot of studying to do and will keep it in mind.
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I'm with you ecj. He definitely knows more than I about this stuff. As I said earlier, I do this on fast moving changes, complex changes, sometimes for variation, but the movement of the ii - V has a specific sound that I love and that is endemic to the style. To advocate eliminating it just leaves me scratching my head. And to say you don't have to NOT play the notes of the ii, just don't think about it, doesn't make a lot of sense to me either. If I play the notes of the ii I'm thinking about it, aren't I?
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As I understood it, they are not droping anything. It's when ii V I is in backing, the ii V part they treat as one whole. ii V is still there, but treated as either, or another.
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Originally Posted by Vladan
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Originally Posted by ecj
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Originally Posted by ecj
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
A lot of things "work" over other things, but that's mostly a matter of subjective taste. I've been trying to learn more about composition and the development of theory over the last year, and have benefited tremendously for approaching this stuff as a system rather than just a grab bag set of techniques. If you try to play a chord/mel version of all the standards, just the melody and harmony, I think it sounds awfully weird to drop out all of the ii's. For example, play Autumn Leaves in Em and drop out all of the two chords. It sounds weird to me, and not like anything I've actually ever heard Joe Pass play in a solo setting.
I could see it working if it's just a question of soloing over quick changes, and I'll have to dig in more on that one to see what Harris is describing in practice. Again, I have a lot to learn about the bebop language.
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I always find IV (maj7) interesting in that, in my view of the Jazz landscape divided into V and I, it can be in either camp, depending on the surrounding context. If you're curious, try Autumn Leaves and play either a Tonic or Dom line over the IV chord. Just saying that IV in jazz is not strong enough to be the "3rd" group in terms of harmonic quality (Subdominant). It can be treated as though it belongs to the Tonic or Dom family.
In my classical training I always remember 3 distinct harmonic "qualities" in the music, I was either at "home" (tonic), moving away from home (subdominant), or needing to return home (Dominant).
Seems that it may be over simplifying it to some, but I honestly hear most Jazz having only the 2 strong harmonic "gears", home and away. Can someone point me to an example where this type of thinking is inadequate?
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Originally Posted by ecj
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
FYI 99% of my harmony knowledge is from Jazz schools or teachers only studied basics of traditional harmony.
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Originally Posted by docbop
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Just Friends? It begins with a IV. Good progression all around.
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Originally Posted by ecj
I understand his point being that in today's modern study of jazz too many people focus on ii-V7. Barry is just emphasizing not to for the sake of not boxing yourself in to only thinking ii-V. By "ignoring" the ii and focusing on his other ways of creating movement between the I and V we can open ourselves up to other possibilities. I don't believe he's trying to get rid of the ii just to look at the other possibilities of movement between the tonic and dominant.Last edited by TheGrandWazoo; 10-02-2013 at 08:35 AM. Reason: I are not an English mayor
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I always find it hard to explain some of Barry's teachings without being in-person with instrument in hand. I want to try to clear something up about thinking V7-I instead of ii-V-I. If I was playing a short ii V in C. Maybe I start on the 9th of G7 which is A and descend A,Ab,G,Gb,F through the dm7 with F landing on the downbeat of 3(G7). I was thinking G7 but to my ears I hear dm7 because the A and F fall on downbeats. The thinking is simplified. Another example would be descending in 8th notes A,G,F,E, with D landing on the 3rd beat. I'm still thinking descending down from the 9th of G7 but I think most would agree it emphasizes the ii chord. Very simplistic examples but I hope it shows that simplifying the thinking doesn't eliminate the ii sound.
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Originally Posted by dasein
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Yes:
Originally Posted by Vladan
Originally Posted by A. Kingstone
Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
Originally Posted by garyob
Originally Posted by AmundLauritzen
Originally Posted by princeplanet
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
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Right...but of course, a lot of what's cool about having more chords is what it does to a relatively simple line...
Take a four bar V I cadence, and craft a line--two bars of each.
Then play the same line over ii V I (ii V first bar, then I)
Then try another chord, like ii V bII7 I
Play the same line over each...hear it?
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THis idea can work when comping plays original change ii-v-i and you play over v-v-i
That makes some sence...
But I would suggest a general approach to it...
improvizer in jazz always work with two harmonic layers - one is that is given in comping (even if there is no comping he still keeps in mind original change more or less), the other one that he creates in soloing - how these two relate make to me the whole idea of harmonic subs..
Subs do not substitute chord but I would say they give reference to original chord, communicate with it, and show some other side of it...
And I also consider another important point - some subs became idiomatic in some styles - that is they are subs no more, they make new original progression... we should keep it in mind if with play with reference to some style of music.
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Originally Posted by Jonah
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Did you ever heard Joe Pass live, he would be re-harmonizing and re-harmonizing to point you better have the original melody running in your head or you wouldn't know where he was at. Wasn't just Joe many of the greats would be re-harmonizing on the spot, that why you need great ears to accompany them.
Co-playing in jazz is both co-ears, co- feel, com-passion... lots of co's )))
And the success of this depends either on good common feel, on common approach that players have, or just on previous agreements.
I just do not get how it is related to my comment.
Can someone help me identify this song?
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