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What about this one? I like it very much.
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08-25-2021 12:47 PM
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I already told Victor I thought his playing was good. Of course it is, it's quite skilled gypsy jazz type guitar. But I still think it's not quite right for this tune. At least, not to my ear. And I'm sure as hell not going to tell him any different. Holding peoples' hand isn't my style. Sorry about that.
I think if he laid back a bit he'd do it better. But it's up to him. Poor chap, we're all discussing him like he's not here.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Anyhow, that picture is special to me.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
Anyway, think it sounds great. I also think one's own internal sense of comfort with a tune and whether one has really "got" it and an audience's perception of one's command of it are often two different things.
Regarding tempos, some people play this quite fast and make it work ...
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Nicely played, especially the chord stabs. And, yes, I really mean it. And there's nothing like a lovely animal when it bonds with you. I'll never understand cruelty, they're too like us in so many ways.
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I love my dog.
Attachment 84189
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I’ve taken the advice to play it “mello” and I feel I have better results. It’s actually hard for me to play mello so I now know I really need to practice it.
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Originally Posted by kris
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I apologize for yet another posting on this. I continue to try to work out how to play the changes and not just do arpeggios... not sure I succeeded here but I think I'm more comfortable with the song's structure at least.
The picture... it was a HAWT Day in Israel. We'd been excavating on our site since 4:30 AM. The sun was high, it was about 11:30 AM and we had still maybe 2 hours left to dig... it was dry, choking-dusty work. I looked up and saw this van tootling up the tel toward us. They stopped, and opened up their van into a SMOOTHIE BAR. Seriously, ice-cold fruit smoothies... FREE. We all slurped up smoothies with a generous portion of dust and dirt from the tel on our faces, hands, shirts, hair, and in the smoothies, but wow, it was relief! They then just drove off. We had no idea where they came from, who they were, or where they went.
Curious business model...
Your feedback, if you aren't tired of my clips, is welcome.
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Originally Posted by kris
People have their preferences. Some like the embellished melody style; others want the freedom to create within the tunes harmonic structure. But it's all wonderful and genuinely jazz.
I would hope anyone commenting on a clip on this forum would realize that both of those approaches exist and are equally important. The comment on your clip evidently did not understand that, or simply decided the more independent improvisation was not legitimate. That's too bad for him, he missed a chance to learn something about the music.
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This is about 160 although it won't sound like it. And it's almost the witching hour here so this might be my last blast... although, technically, tomorrow is another day. Have fun
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Originally Posted by wzpgsr
To be fair please read posts carefully.I wrote on the forum, not on the JGBE.
Besides, it is about criticism that I do not understand.
There is no criticism at JGBE, only positive comments and that was agreed in advance.
Hope you understand.
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I think there's value in identifying both positive and negative features of one's playing.
But, in an Internet forum, negativity can be problematic, so I think it's best to stay on the positive features, unless the player specifically requests more, which some do.
In the right context, identifying negatives can be a gift. Most people won't do it. And, some people who will do it, can get excessive. My experience has been that some very negative comments have made a positive impact on my playing (after I was able to see the validity), but also can be hard to take.
I can't say that I got a lot of detailed positive commentary over the years. I mean, people have sometimes been positive, but have rarely broken it down to fine grained details, to the point where I thought, "I'll do more of that, or work to develop that further".
More common is "sounds good" -- and then the phone will either ring or not. The ring, or lack thereof, is the overall rating if you're trying to be a combo musician.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
We musicians are very sensitive and this often leads to misunderstandings.
Lawson-stone-you are a great person.
Thanks A lot
Jazzingly
Kris
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Originally Posted by Victor Saumarez
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
After the lecture there was a short jam with the master.
Jam young participants played at different levels.
All of Mike's comments about the playing of others was very positive..."it was great!"...
It gave Mike the impression that he wanted to encourage everyone to play jazz in the future.
Great Mike, always smiling and positive towards everyone.
Attachment 84194
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
The band consisted of outstanding musicians and any of them could be a leader.
Everyone was arguing and criticizing each other.
They played for several years together at various international jazz festivals.
In the end, the band broke up.
Playing with a regular group is a serious challenge.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
Good stuff.
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Originally Posted by lawson-stone
I think that scatting a solo with syllables like "hey bop a re bop" might be helpful. Or, if scatting doesn't work, trying to phrase with clave like Jeff suggested. I tried that tonight and I thought it was a great idea. I'd never thought about doing it before, but it worked. My rhythms became sharper and different than usual.
The benefit to scatting, when I do it, is that is connects my fingers to my musical brain a little better. The notes come out with higher consciousness <g>. Meaning, more like a vocal line, better time, rhythms my fingers don't drift to on their own and the sense that I'm playing every note with intention as I try to make melody. This is aspirational, of course. But, when all the planets line up, it's better.Last edited by rpjazzguitar; 08-26-2021 at 02:01 PM.
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Originally Posted by Victor Saumarez
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Well, it's the last day so here's the last blast. Nice, sweet, just a little vignette, no blood on the floor :-)
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Got used to it :-)
4 Micro Lessons, all under a minute, no talking.
Today, 05:16 PM in Theory