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By normal people I meant people not involved in "the business", sorry. This case, improvisation.
Originally Posted by lawson-stone
They look and notice completely different things than the ones we worry about the most.
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01-04-2024 03:21 PM
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01-07-2024, 10:51 AM #277joelf GuestI suppose the undercarriage to you broaching this is as a parallel to music and the way it's taught?
Originally Posted by RLetson
If so I find that transcribing---1st by ear, then notation---and postmortem analysis works well for even my beginner students once I glean that they're ready.
When I started this teaching gig for Music and Arts (an arm of Guitar Center) I sort of waltzed through it, Wasn't up for it somehow. But recently as my mood, desire to help these people and my teaching approach/skill set improved I began having students listen to easy to learn songs on YouTube (where else?) and fumble around on guitar to find 1st the melody notes, 2nd bass notes, 3rd chord quality (which they can get when melodies outline changes, as they often do). If the fumbling is too pronounced I ask if they can sing that 1st phrase. (And they've taught me that you can slow the speed down in settings---frickin' amazing!! Hell, I'll use that myself, taking solos off.)
Fast forward to where they have gotten it together, then notated it, That's when I can help with analysis, having already taught them that chords come from scales and the Roman numeral system. It seems to work, and is an important adjunct to just doing books, which can be one-dimensional and also bore them.
So listening to YouTube songs is the auditory equivalent to reading poetry for our students...
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Not to mention - you've got a great name!
Originally Posted by RLetson
I really should get my will (as in last will & testament) together, so if I pass into the great beyond first, I can be sure you will own my domain name!
Russ LetsonLast edited by Spirit59; 02-13-2024 at 07:23 PM. Reason: forgot something
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Originally Posted by PatrickJazzGuitar
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Google has failed me. Can you provide a link to this article?
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Also, regarding the classical performers and their academic navel gazing.... I am a glutton for punishment. Feed me please
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Not really - It’s in a book called ‘A New Guide to Harmony with Lego Bricks’ if that helps. I googled it and some potential pdfs came up. Although I think the book may be in print. Not quite sure.
Originally Posted by Ahz
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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The Books – Insights In Jazz
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Thanks! I saw that book in my googling, I'll keep looking
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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The original book was by Conrad Cork, I have it somewhere.
Originally Posted by Bop Head

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It's Cork's book that his student John Elliot is selling as a PDF from his site for 16.99 GBP
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Harmony with LEGO Bricks – Insights In Jazz
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Originally Posted by Bop Head
I have both books. I prefer the updated Elliot book.
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That's a lot of scratch for the convenience of printing and binding it myself. I didn't expect to get behind the times so quickly.
Originally Posted by Bop Head
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Guys, why do you comment on links without reading them or at least looking at them?
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
"There is also a limited number of copies of the print-edition of NGHLB remaining for sale on a first-come-first-served basis from Jazzhouse Records."
I once borrowed a printed copy from the Bavarian State Library for free. (And liked Elliot's own book better which I have as a PDF on my Tolino ebook reader.)
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The paper copies are gone, they were printed 3 years ago.
Originally Posted by Bop Head
As for eReaders. After replacing my kindle the third time, I looked around at all my paper books that cost the same, if not less used, and don't rely on a device to work and gave up on readers.
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I bought a used Android tablet recently for 15 EUR incl. cover to use it with iReal Pro and Drumgenius. (The Tolino cost 150 IIRC and has a smaller display which is "e-ink" which some might prefer.)
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Three years ago I decided I should stop noodling and get serious about pursuing jazz guitar. I started arranging a chord melody tune every week and posting the video. After a while it got tedious and I gave up... only to resume about a month ago. Now I can't be bothered working things out in advance, so I just improvise.
What I notice when I force myself to improvise:
- I play less cool stuff (because skills)
- I have more fun playing
- It actually takes me fewer takes to get a publishable version
- I connect just as much with the outcome, but in a slightly different way
Now, obviously I've been practicing in the interim, so some of those observations might not necessarily be attributable to improvising vs. playing an arrangement.



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