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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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06-27-2023 12:07 PM
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
start on a G note..in the dark..nothing to see here..sound becomes light
Coltrane smiles..and glows in heat red..wait..the augmented scale..three majors and three minors
which minors though dorian phrigian melodic perhaps a 6/9 wait now..it could be a dominant 13
as the waves crash against each other its warm and cool and strong and fast and relaxed
oh yeah..breath..the Bb says hello..a lion looks at you and understands why
the sound-turning pages..the word mystery is comfort warm a friend
breath flows through my neck..the feel of wood and metal in my hands
its morning again
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Originally Posted by wolflen
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Quote from Adler's Philosophical Dictionary, entry on Poetry...
(He might as well have been describing musical spontaneity?)
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The spontaneity happens in your mind (we’re talking about improvising, right?) not in your hands. You just have to (after doing all your practicing, all your listening to jazz masters, etc) be fortunate enough to have good musical ideas in “real time,” then have worked on your ears and fingers so that the ideas get transmitted via ears to fingers on frets. Practice musical imagination by soloing in your head all the time.
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Originally Posted by Rsilver
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
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Originally Posted by Mark Kleinhaut
What I learned through out my various endeavors, is that humans can never really be random.
In my mind, there are different levels of clarity. Some things are super known. For example the sound of a scale. Others sounds in my mind are barely understandably. They live just beyond an edge.
There is a gradation. Depending on how comfortable I am, or what is needed, I get to choose what to do.
Sometimes when I reach for the less clear ideas/sounds, amazing things happen… other times the light end of tunnel is a train, and I did not realize I was tied onto the tracks.
I do trust my mind.. it is trying to tell me cool things. There will always be some sort of logic or structure. I might not be able to make it happen, but that is because I asking myself to do something different.
However, I am still a small fish… maybe a clown fish.
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The first time I discover a new song or I have writed a composition, after learning the harmonic and rhythmic analysis of the tune,I write on a score 2,3 or more variations of the same length of the main theme.
It forces me to understand the rhythmic and harmonic connections of the different parts.
I begin to play those written variations, making rhythmic and harmonic corrections trusting my ears.
When I feel confident,I throw it away all this work and stay only with the main chart.
Then,I try to improvise,very slowly on the beginning and after on the real tempo of the song.
I learned that ,years ago from a French woman who played the lute professionally
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Originally Posted by Hyppolyte Bergamotte
Absolutely. The soloing process is the improvisational process without the luxury of editing. Writing out a solo reveals the weaknesses in organizing, in concept, in phrasing, in the self reflective aspect of one's playing.
With writing down (composing) a solo, it's easier to create an inventory of your own shaping forces and just how and when to employ them.
Great recommendation Hyppolyte Bergamotte!
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I don't really believe there is actual spontaneous playing. Everyone at a gig is going off muscle memory and previously practiced things to some degree. Yes, there are times you can go beyond your normal routine with some new moves that come out of left field but I find it is mostly about organizing musical thoughts you already have some grip on into an order that makes good musical sense in the context of the song, at the spur of the moment.
So to me, spontaneity is off-the-cuff organization more than just coming up with random stuff you never have tread over before. That would be something you do in a practice room, not on stage. Soloing can be on impulse, but there is always premeditation involved. If you know scales/arps and work from that general background that isn't spontaneous in the truest sense. Anyone claiming they are transcending the decades of practice they have put in is probably trying to sell you lesson material.
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Oh I definitely play stuff I haven’t practiced increasingly on gigs. I get bored with my own licks so it’s nice to surprised by what comes out sometimes, I wasn’t aiming for that. You can’t force it.
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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How do you play spontaneously?
One can certainly play something spontaneously, it just happens. One hits a sweet note or a line that really works. But when you ask how to make it happen, I don't think that's possible.
Surely one can't conjure spontaneity, by definition. Although it would be rather nice if one could :-)
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
There are only a handful of chords showing up in jazz tunes and (forgive the cliche) only twelve notes to play over them. So it’s all kind of reorganizing the stuff that’s already there. Someone like Sonny Rollins who just has endless freedom with a relatively small number of rhythmic figures and melodic patterns and stuff seems very very spontaneous to me. Is any of it truly truly new? I guess probably not, but I also don’t think you can necessarily account for the difference purely with amount or quality of practice.
Maybe we’re using the wrong word. Is it “spontaneity?” Don’t know.
I like the word “invention.” That seems to fit better what we’re talking about.
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Originally Posted by Rsilver
Art Tatum always struck me as very spontaneous but maybe in Art's head a lot of it was business as usual. Coltrane's "Interstellar Space" struck me as spontaneous but I found it to be not very listenable and again, I can't be in his head to know what his musical thoughts at the time are. Anyways, it is an interesting topic. Best-dawgbone.
From google:
"performed or occurring as a result of a sudden inner impulse or inclination and without premeditation or external stimulus."
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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I can’t always explain it, but I can play it with no effort. Here’s this morning’s bit:
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It would be interesting to have a thread where we first post an improvised solo over a tune, then we post a "worked out" solo over the same tune. We can have a preparation time limit on the worked out solo. Say you have one week to compose the second solo. Then the members decide which solo they like more.
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a la John Cage...tune the strings in different intervals..start there
now play well practiced chord movements..scales..melodic patterns in a random manner
record the results if possible
listen to the playback
now..
can you play the same thing again..would you want to
while the mechanical aspects will be present..the harmonic/melodic results will be new
and..is there a reason for wanting to be a performer of such creation...or a listener of same
to the untrained ear..will this inspire or retire wanting to hear more in this soundscapeLast edited by wolflen; 07-18-2023 at 12:18 AM.
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Originally Posted by James W
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Originally Posted by James W
It's not that I dislike Interstellar Space, it just requires a lot more focus and attention from the listener than the usual jazz album. It's very demanding. I once tried to rebuild a motorcycle engine listening to Eric Dolphy's Out To Lunch,....wouldn't attempt that again. It was really messing with my ability to concentrate on what I was doing and I had to shut it off unless I wanted my buddy's bike to explode when he started it, lol. But I enjoy that album otherwise. I just don't consider those casual listening records.
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Originally Posted by DawgBone
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Anyway … I’m always for derailing a conversation with Coltrane Chat, but for the sake of the others I’ll try to bring it back around.
A Love Supreme might be a good demonstration of what I’m talking about. Particularly on the opening track, you can hear that really beautiful development and free invention using the pre-determined theme. Whether it’s a predetermined theme, or a pre-practiced idea or something, it’s the agility and creativity with that initial kernel of music that I love to hear and that strikes me as “spontaneous.” So I’m not super bothered if someone has a different definition of “spontaneous” that puts it on another side of the line. It’s still beautiful, creative improvisation and I’d listen to it all day if I could.
no click pick: any suggestion?
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