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Originally Posted by kris
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08-24-2021 12:54 PM
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If we're talking about public jams at a pro or pro/am level, then dozens.
If we're talking about getting together with friends or sitting in with bands, calling tunes on the fly, then hundreds.
But there is a certain type that I haven't enjoyed much. Loud venue, loud house band, a crowd of musicians waiting to play, a rush to plug in (to somebody else's gear) barely time to tune, then call two tunes and hope that the backup players will support what you're trying to do with your solo. Everything loud enough that maybe they can't actually hear you very well. I'm describing a local jam, run by a top pro who is a very considerate host, but it was as I described, at least the times I went.
I've also had some opportunities to jam with pro players (some names you'd know) where they took songs I knew well into dimensions I couldn't follow. Eye/ear opening to be in that, but at times I had to lay out. I thought those were great -- for educational purposes.
Lots of these were head solos head with little creation on the fly. But not all.
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by wzpgsr
I don’t know the names of them but some stuck in my ears when I watched a video on YouTube a while back.
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For some reason the tune has been tricky for me, which is odd because it's not hard. So much is similar, I find it easy to get mixed up. Anyhow, this is a bit too boomy, but I decided instead of recording direct to run the DVMark Micro 50 to the 10" speaker and mic the speaker. Probably why it's boomy, I need to move the mic.
Tried to relax a bit on this, the title screen being my inspiration for a more relaxed... mellow! take.
Feedback is welcome.
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It's an odd tune to play on. I never really felt I cracked it but here's a version recorded a while back.
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Finally had time to listen to all of the efforts posted here and gotta say Wow!
Lots of great playing all around, and transcribing it should provide a semester's worth of quality education.
Keep 'em coming!
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
I played a few hundred jams and it was OK.It also happened that the musicians wanted to play solos and they did not work out.This is the charm of jams - anything can happen.Jam can be good or bad - just like a concert.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Everyone wants to have fun .
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Originally Posted by John A.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Originally Posted by Victor Saumarez
Superb!
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
I like the feel and the fat sound of your L5.
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Originally Posted by Victor Saumarez
Not that you didn't play it well, of course. You did, it's good stuff :-)
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Originally Posted by Victor Saumarez
Each note is played clean and with a very good feeling.
You have a very good sense of rhythm and you build interesting melodies.
Brilliant technique.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
You write so that you don't know what's going on.
You should be a critic.
Here we evaluate the improvisations of individual performances.
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by kris
You rightly also remind us that there is joy in communicating among a group of musicians, and connecting with an audience. I haven't played for audiences in a very long time, and I think my skills have declined, even though I spend a lot of time on the instrument. That year of playing with a "house" band locally brought my skills to a high point, and I spent 3 years playing with a local jazz ensemble that brought my chart reading skills way up, but when those stopped, I think I lost something of the "in the moment" sense of jazz.
I'm trying to think of how to get that back in a community where there are not many opportunities to play for others. It's one reason I post a lot here, it's my only real outlet for playing for others.
Good reflections and reminders about what this is really about: music in connection with other players and the audience.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Both the Basie and Ellington recorded versions on YT come in at about 135, tested with a click track. Unhurried laid back swing. The Basie one is marginally faster, but only just. Victor's has quite a different feel. Play a snippet of them one after the other.
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Here's Duke Ellington, clocking at least 160:
Here's the Basie band, it's about 150-160 (Correction, it looks closer to 140-145, so slower, but this is still not lying on the beach mellow)
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Quite right, I was rushing it, it's 160. But the point about styles still stands. There has to be a reason why he feels he can't crack it. Maybe it's too fast for him. Or, as I'm trying to suggest, it's a style clash. Not that there's anything wrong with trying it in different styles but it might lose the crux of the tune.
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Rag... your definitely in a different works. All the takes are cool... even yours. There are differences between what some say and what they play. Victors take was great, worth listening to. His comments are with a perspective...
Amateurs, which most are, perspective is that the take wasn't the best or what I really was hoping for... I can do better.
pros, myself included...are at a point that.... my worst take is still more than good enough. My level of playing is what I play the 1st time I see something.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
Basie play piano intro at 165...
This is an accurate computer measurement. There is a measurement function in Transcribe.
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Originally Posted by Reg
I don't know why this is ...
For example, this is about my recording of "Red Clay":
"In your recording, I hate to be critical, but, I don't hear the melody and the whole thing sounds like a soupy mix of notes and chords. How can you call it "Red Clay" ? I just don't hear it. I hear a ton of piano though. Sorry my friend."
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