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I like to follow the changes. To play in one key center while a bunch of dominants move chromatically sounds cheesy to me. But yes, arpeggiating everything also can sound cheesy. You're missing some steps or concepts between scales and arpeggios. I think if you spend more time working through some melodic patterns, ii-V and the like it can help.
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05-10-2015 08:59 PM
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Plot a graph of deteriorating jazz sales and jazz venues against the academic 'progress' of jazz. We all know the shape of that graph!
There is nothing 'superior' about playing to empty rooms..... but then you could become a jazz academic instead!
Roll on PUNK JAZZ.
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Originally Posted by pushkar000
If you stop playing the tune....... you're no longer playing the tune. You are playing something else. No wonder Joe Public don't get it. However your complex concepts might impress a jazz student or your Mum perhaps.
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Originally Posted by gggomez
Theoretically and musically
You can break a turnaround down to :
in, out, in, out =
l Vl7 ii V7
Then what is happening in a turnaround, is that you go to the 2m by means of a (secondairy) dominant chord (6) in the second half of the 1st mesure, landing on 2 (subdominant) in the second mesure (down beat) you then play the 5 as tension leading you back to 1
That's a basic turnaround
l = in / release
Vl = out / tension
ii = in / release
V = out / tension
If you consider that there are only 7 diatonic chords in major
you can narrow that number down, as 4 and 2m are parallel major/minor
So you can go to 2m or 4, same functionality
and back to 1 wich can be sub'ed by 3m
So, In a major turnaround,
l = iii and Vl = ii ,
And is treatet as only 2 functional consonant sounds
Then that leaves you V Vl and VII that you can treat and hear, as dissonant/dominant sounds, leading to the konsonant sounds
V7 is obviusly the dominant of ĺ and so is the Vii m7b5
(9 chord with M3 as lowest note)
VI7 leads to ii
And that covers the 'diatonic' chords of a major tonality, cooking it down to
2 consonant sounds/functionalities, and
2 contrasting dissonant/dominant sounds/functionalities
The minor/major subs gives you more options of how to play the main consonant sounds,
Tonic :
l (iii), vi
Subdominant :
ii, IV
And you then treat dissonance using all the all the dominant sounds and subs leading to one of these functions/sounds
You can apply the same concept to a minor turnaround
The concept, though it probably sounds a bit complicated at first glance, is actually a simplification giving you more options for variation
....
To your specific Dm solo example, you can chose only to treat Bb7 and A7 and
And then treat A7 as Eb7
"Oh yeah that was cool" effect guaranteed
Theoretically, you can think of B7 Bb7 A7 as :
F7 Bb7 Eb7 Dm (sequence of 5ths)
So when on B7 you can play F7 stuff (vsub)
Or Cminor blues, if you will
Cmaj7 downbeat
F7(sub) upbeat wierd
Bb7 downbeat
Eb7 (sub) upbeat wierd
Dm downbeat
the 2 downbeat chords of the turnaround are
Bb7 and Dm
If you go back to the concept I described before and play Bbmaj7 over Bb7 (yes it works)
Then Bb is the subdominant sound, (being the major parallel of Gm)
and Dm is temporarily "tonic"
Feel free to ask if something doesn't make sense to youLast edited by vhollund; 05-11-2015 at 08:24 AM.
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Originally Posted by vhollund
I rest my case.
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Different people different approaches
Last edited by vhollund; 05-11-2015 at 06:52 AM.
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Originally Posted by md54
Originally Posted by md54
Ultimately everything is a possibility. Everything is a concept. It's our job to decide which one of the possibilities is appropriate at any given time. Its upto you whether you want to have more options or less. Goes without saying - it would be to your benefit to have more options.
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What I just explained is not really a complex concept, but just the application of basic harmony, with parallel minor/major chords and subs
But I respect and understand that some people have a "simpler" approach, and probably does it very well that way
...just please (!) stop being an ass about it for craps sake, folks !
I like Dizzy Gillespie, you prefer Armstrong, others Coltrane = different approaches to harmony, and that's perfectly fineLast edited by vhollund; 05-11-2015 at 08:17 AM.
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Lets say a turn around to ii (Dm) like a Cmaj7, Bb7, B7, A7.
The root motion is down. Counter motion is an option.
Create ascending skeletal lines that address the chords,
one note per chord, chromatic, scale steps
or some combination of both. Use these skeletal chord lines
to organize melodies.
Just one more possibility.
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^^ Good advice
Easier done with subs
Like : Cmaj F7 Bb7 BbmMaj13 Dm
Or you can also chose to play Em7b5 Eb7 over the whole thing if it's fast enough
Or just Eb7Last edited by vhollund; 05-12-2015 at 05:29 AM.
Can someone help me identify this song?
Yesterday, 11:21 PM in The Songs