View Poll Results: What is your experience with this book?
- Voters
- 27. You may not vote on this poll
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Zero, zilch, nada, and don't care
9 33.33% -
I have it but haven't worked much with it
5 18.52% -
I found it helpful but less helpful than (fill in the blank)
6 22.22% -
I love this book and heartily recommend it
7 25.93%
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http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/073...=sr_1_1&sr=8-1
The link is to Volume 1. There are two others, three in all. They run 50-or-so pages each and cost around 10 bucks each. I've had mine but never done much with it. When the thread about Richie Zellon's online bebop course started, I thought, "Hmm, maybe. But you know, it's not like I've worked through all the bebop stuff I have on hand. Maybe it's time to give David Baker some more of my time." So far, I'm getting a lot out of it, mostly technical facility. (The second and third volumes are devoted more to 'jazz language" and learning tunes.)
I know this book has been mentioned here in several places but usually in threads without reference to it in the title---which makes them a chore to track down.
So after voting, please feel free to comment on your experience with the book. I would especially like to hear from teachers who have found it useful with their students.Last edited by MarkRhodes; 11-24-2015 at 10:48 AM.
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11-24-2015 10:39 AM
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I voted choice 3: I found it helpful but less helpful than (fill in the blank).
Personally, I got more out of Jerry Bergonzi's book, Inside Improv Vol. 3 - Jazz Line.
YMMV
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I couldn't vote. I have no experience of it, but do care!
Among wind players it is it is the most-used book, and although that might be a recommendation, it troubles me that so many people use one particular book. It's obviously very influential, though.
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Originally Posted by Dana
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... less helpful than transcribing fewer lines on my own. Not that Dave Baker actually encourages this but having them all in the book allows you to skip all the listening and go straight to playing the lines. You don't get all the context and are less likely to be able to use them in a genuine way.
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I bought vols 1-3 a few years ago and didn't get too much out of them. Now, with a little more experience and a better practice approach, I'm starting to turn back to them. So this is a timely thread. I'm interested to hear how others use the books.
Vol 2, for example, is a gazillion ii-V-I lines, and the like. A few years ago I was a lousy reader, and also didn't know what to do with licks. Now I find a lick I like, analyze it, play it through all keys, over tunes, etc. One lick can give me several days practice.
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
Perhaps nothing. I have most of David Baker's books. He's certainly an established jazz educator. I just think the Bergonzi books fit my learning style better.
This is just my opinion, but for me David Baker's books are a little too much discussion, history, and not enough 'here's how to actually practice this stuff'.
For me it's 'Blah, blah, blah, here are some examples, blah blah blah, here's a few more examples, blah, blah, blah..... The Baker books also seem to be more about memorizing 'licks', an approach that has never worked for me.
With the Bergonzi book it's a more direct, concept based approach. Here's a major bebop scale, here's how it works, and here are some ways for practicing them. Then minor bebop, then dominant. Then scale segments, anticipations, etc. It includes a recording of tunes to practice with.
Again it's just how I learn. Other's might prefer the Baker approach, which definitely gives more background, history, and suggests recordings to check out.
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
JMO and YMMV.Last edited by Dana; 11-24-2015 at 01:13 PM.
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These days I try to stay away from guitar book and when I get books they are either general improv book or sax books. I find that using books written in notation makes me think more about what concept is being presented to digest it. Then the fringe benefit of it is also sightreading practice, and I start thinking about scales in notes and not dots on a grid. Then another benefit playing the exercises which usually cover twelve keys in one position it becomes a fretboard knowledge exercise. Last checking out books for any instrument or for piano or sax you get to look at a topic from a different point of view and that can have many benefits.
So I go back to the Baker book now and then when trying to figure something out and see if he has a different explanation that will help me digest it. But also the Baker books are for me Bebop style sightreading and fretboard knowledge exercises.
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
Another thing: this isn't a book written for the guitar. Not only is there no tab, there's no talk about fingering, period. So you have to work out your own fingerings----running patterns of a measure or two through all 12 keys is going to lead you to discover how many (efficient / playable) ways you can finger a line (-and you won't use the same fingering through all 12 keys because you'll be on different string sets). This is not unusual in itself, but some of the lines have 7-8 half steps in a row and you have to figure out how to handle them at tempo and then switch to the next key on the fly. Really makes you learn the fretboard. (There's knowing it as in being able to name any note your finger happens to fall on, but knowing in the sense of flying through all twelve keys without having to think about it is something else....)Last edited by MarkRhodes; 11-24-2015 at 03:10 PM.
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David Baker, Jerry Bergonzi, and Barry Harris all pretty much cover the same material.
it's really not "How to Play Bebop" as it is "How to Play Eighth Note Lines Where the Chord Tones Fall On The Beats"
i think the real value of these exercises is as an ear training exercise. it's not so important to play these examples verbatim -- there's aren't exactly tons of examples of someone playing a major scale with a half note up or down one octave -- but so that you get your ears used to hearing chord tones fall on downbeats
here's an example of a line that Barry said used his "half-step rules." in eighth notes:
it's a chromatic scale with a minor third thrown in between the E-F and B-C. clearly, the added notes aren't half-steps, but i don't think Barry really cares. what he cares about is making sure the chord tones land on strong beats
the rules are a good starting point, but as long as you adjust your lines accordingly, you can add as many half steps as you want
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for learning bebop, i think the best way is to go to the source:
- learn a bunch of heads. many classic bebop tunes are really contrafacts of earlier standards (Ornithology is How High the Moon, Donna Lee is Indiana, etc) so you actually start to get an idea of how they're thinking about chord changes
- start transcribing: Bird, Dizzy, Bud Powell, Fats Navarro, even some guys like Don Byas.
it's always important to transcribe, but especially so for that first wave of bebop players. the rhythmic feel of their lines (accents, syncopations, etc) are so specific that there's no way to learn it except through careful listening
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Originally Posted by dasein
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Good to see so many responses the first day. The spread is interesting too, though I now wish there had been a fifth choice: No experience with it but I'm open to the possibility... (I think this would have served Rob MacKillop well, and perhaps others too.)
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Where is the option marked 'I open it every so often, get inspired for 20 minutes, then realise how much more there is in this the book and close it with a sense of massive insecurity.'
I've personally got more out of Barry Harris's stuff, which is related...
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They're good books. I think a lot of guitarists just don't know how to practice his bebop scales (which I think is a different usage than Barry Harris). Or at least I didn't, until I learned from some Steve Neff lessons to play them through the cycle, using resolution licks at the changes (he calls them "Bebop Links"). Basically you use the scale to keep the eighth notes flowing while you develop vocabulary.
I think Volumes 2 & 3 are the real meat of his method. Vol 2 is just a collection of licks- hundreds of ii-V's, turnarounds, etc. Volume 3 is actually how to practice bebop. How to learn the heads, what to do with the transcriptions. e.g. play rhythm changes alternating between 3 different heads: first 8 bars of Dexterity, next 8 Moose, next 8 Anthropology, next 8 dexterity, and so on. Or, practice Parker transcriptions by playing 4 bars of his solo, improvising the next 4, etc.
His method is basically about learning the tunes and vocabulary from transcription, and assimilating them into your playing. The books are also good for a reference; he has lists of contrafacts, blues and rhythm heads.Last edited by RyanM; 11-24-2015 at 08:58 PM.
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Originally Posted by RyanM
That's the "inside" version . Altered dominants with chromatic upper structures ? Move the entire thing up a minor 3rd (eg, G7 to Bb7) (System #2) or a tritone (G7 to Db7). ( System #3).
Mix and match #1 with either 2 or 3. Play #1 over the ii chord snd either #2 or #3 over the V chord.
The interesting thing is that everything moves up in minor thirds . Like Barry Harris' M or m 6 harmonized scale using diminished chords.
Like Jack Zucker's system of chord substitution, where a chord moves up a minor third . Basically treating major and minor and dominant seventh chords as if they were diminished patterns.Last edited by NSJ; 11-24-2015 at 09:35 PM.
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Originally Posted by NSJ
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I had a good look at everything from all 3 books. In fact, I converted from notation to midi, every single musical example from them (thousands!) and even put backing tracks to them in BIAB! This helped me get a better overview, and I could then easily concentrate on the lines I liked, which were surprisingly few! Maybe just a dozen or so. But so many of the lines are simply variations of each other,
As I've also done the same thing for many other "lines" books, I just found lines out of each that I liked and then started to "roll my own" once I got a feel for "speaking in Bop"...
Man, I spent literally hundreds of hours mapping notation to midi - just so I could hear everything up to speed before deciding to learn any of it. It wasn't a waste of time (I hope), and one day I'd like to see if I can get permission from various publishers to release a BIAB version of all the Jazz Lines books I've stored as BIAB files. Ideal way to learn them- you pick the ones you like complete with backing, you can loop it, change tempo, change keys etc...
If anyone has ideas about how to release these commercially, I'd love some advice!
Some that I've done:
D Baker vol 1, 2, 3
Aebersold Vol 1, other volumes (i forget the numbers) Dom Lines. Maj and Min Lines, ii - V lines , RC lines. Turnaround lines
Valdez
Tim Price
Les Wise
Sal Salvador
Don Mock
1001Jazz Lines (my fave)
Goodrick Modal lines
Wes Essential lines (*as well as several complete solos)Last edited by princeplanet; 11-25-2015 at 12:43 AM.
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
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Originally Posted by docbop
You can't say "but it's all the same language", every one speaks Bop with a different accent, or inflection. Writers of Method books, through their own tastes, reflect this. That's why Baker has his acolytes, as does Bergonzi, Coker, Barry Harris, Sheryl Bailey etc.
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
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Originally Posted by docbop
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
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Originally Posted by dingusmingus
But yeah, a lot of time that could have been spent on being a monster reader, this is true.....
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
Heritage Mahogany
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