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And I should say, I'm coming from a place of where I think you should have some fundamentals together...There is a time and place for learning and practicing scales...
A lot can be taught in context, but you gotta have your shit together too...
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02-27-2024 10:33 AM
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Chord Tone Soloing for Jazz Guitar: Master Arpeggio-Based Jazz Bebop Soloing for Guitar (Learn How to Play Jazz Guitar) : Alexander, Mr Joseph, Pettingale, Mr Tim: Amazon.co.uk: Books
Which is full of good info, even though I would be more inclined to practice things in the context of an actual tune rather than isolated common chord progressions... It can be good to break things down though rather than attempting a whole tune at first though? Especially if there's lots of changes in that tune.
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
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Originally Posted by James W
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Last edited by John A.; 02-28-2024 at 05:19 PM.
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Probably better to teach tunes and point out "this is an enclosure" or "that is an approach note" as the come up. None of these things are complicated in context.
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Do people really not teach like that? I think every jazz guitar lesson I’ve had over the years has centred on a tune, we play something and then work on it. Barry would ground everything on a tune.
It’s how I teach as a result, and I tend to think of it as the norm in jazz circles although maybe that’s my perception.
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
Back to the original thread.
Maybe, the problem is that in Jazz we are taught to practice many things in isolation of the actual songs.
Examples:
Chord Tones.
Arpeggios.
Approach Notes.
Enclosures.
ii-V-I and other progressions."
............................
First of all .... practice should be divided into at least two groups...
1) Technical skills, which include all of the above.... and a lot more.
2) Performance technical skills... how to incorporate technical skills into performance and performance skills.
* 3rd) Formal structural organization of Music... I personally enjoy and needed these, but not really required for performance. Memorization and understanding how to just plug and play some basics work just fine.
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I made these for a student recently ... patterns derived from A Train and Just Friends
Dropbox - a train patterns.pdf - Simplify your life
Dropbox - just friends patterns.pdf - Simplify your life
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
The ii-V-I and its minor being the notable exceptions, but I think that’s probably worth the digression. Being so common.
I also do teach blues forms outside the context of a particular tune. In large part because giving someone Now’s the Time can get them hung up on hitting the sharp four diminished or something, and there are some simpler ways of navigating those changes before starting to introduce the reharmonizations.
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Interesting conversation, especially for someone who has taught a non-musical skillset with the practical goal of a "performance" that is actually a fixed-form product--a piece of writing. (I suppose a more exact fit would be a response from a speech/debate teacher, whose aim is thinking/talking in real time.) Teaching writing is mostly about doing writing, with modeling (based on extensive reading) being the primary guide and theoretical or abstract matters (grammar and rhetoric) feeding in from the side, as it were: "This is what's going on in those sentences and paragraphs you're framing." And in an ideal teaching situation, the students have been instructed in very basic skills (parts of speech, subject-verb agreement, simple/compound/complex constructions, punctuation) in K-6 classrooms.
So it's interesting that the original question here (chords vs melody as basis for a solo) has become one about pedagogy and how-one-learns-to-play, with the goal of how to play improvisationally. There it's pretty clear to me that the divide is between ears/hands technical skills and ears/mind musical awareness/application skills. The various kinds of technique training are aimed at control of the instrument--a kind of physical understanding of how to produce given notes on demand. Most of this is covered by the term "fretboard knowledge"--where are the notes, how are they usually put together, how do the fingers navigate the fretboard most effectively. The means to this kind of mastery in most pedagogical systems is flat-out technical practice, eventually reinforced by etudes that embed the skills in musically-interesting compositions.
But musical understanding of the kind involved in improvisatory playing seems to me to be rooted in a sense of the work being (re)created. And by "sense" I mean hearing the basis (the melody and sometimes the words), understanding how it's constructed (whether or not that understanding can be expressed in the technical language of compostion/theory), and seeing the possibilities for varying or extending or reinventing that basis. And since soloing is a real-time process, I suspect that one is not so much thinking about it as drawing on previously-built-up technical resources (you know where the notes are, you know how to connect phrases) to express an in-the-moment musical recognition or insight.
I think that's what I do when I sing. Ella I ain't*, but I do have a strong sense of how to play with phrasing while still making sense of the words--in fact, I suspect that I'm guided as much by different ways of performing the words as by any concious abstract-musical notion of what I'm doing. (Though I might, on hearing a recording, be able to name some of the devices being employed.)
* And I know that there are vocal-technique pedagogies aimed at giving the same degree of control of the voice that well-trained instrumentalists aspire to. I got as far as "stand up straight and breathe from the diaphragm," along with a set of exercises I should practice but don't.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
The next teacher used the song-a-week method with the focus on my weaknesses.
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Originally Posted by jameslovestal
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Not all lessons were explicitly tune based for me. There was still a musical goal but these were more about building technical skills.
Off the top of my head:
1. Voice leading triads or 7ths through various cycles or a random progression as determined by a die roll.
2. Had to jam modes in 4 keys min3rds apart to test out of them
3. Playing up the octave of one key on two strings 3NPS in 6 note patterns and then descending the next key in the cycle.
4. 12 Leavitt fingerings, focused on 7 but this was another fretboard awareness exercise
This was back in the days prior to and during school when I had 8hr a day to practice.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
If you only have one lesson, usually tunes will be involved bc that's the common language.
Working on a specific technical deficiency over multiple lessons can happily exist outside of a specific musical piece.
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Originally Posted by John A.
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I've heard that from a lot of students. If you want a decent degree don't bother being creative, just give them what they want. It works, too.
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Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
The GIT guy was my first jazz guitar teacher, and this was when I was in my 20s when I decided I wanted to get back into music via jazz guitar.
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Originally Posted by bediles
But I was talking about jazz guitar lessons which I believe is what Guy was talking about?
Noted re technical issues. I personally would teach that separately, because asking a student to concentrate on technique as well as music is too many things. This is true regardless of whether I’d be teaching beginner or advanced students in fact. And is true for all instruments of course.
For more advanced students we might come across a tricky bit in a bebop head for example and build an exercise out of it, but again - rooted in repertoire. If someone’s technique is not working for them, I’d be focussing time on that. But that’s teaching guitar, not jazz, at that point. I suppose in terms of working on changes playing a ii V I for example is a fragment of a tune abstracted into an exercise. I don’t personally see why one wouldn’t ground that in an actual tune as quickly as possible, such as Honeysuckle. But as I say, maybe others have had other experiences.
The same is actually true of say, classical guitar. The reason why we practice scales and arpeggios is because we will come across these things in pieces of music. Classical guitar students and so on focus on major, minor and chromatic scales because that’s what we find in Bach and Guiliani etc and don’t tend to practice jazz scales, and so on. (One could argue with the narrowness of that of course.)
Of course in an established didactic tradition like that one that’s a long term goal and that connection to rep is probably not obvious to a beginner.
But also - that’s not really what Guy was talking about was it?
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It does pose a bit of challenge when rock students come for ‘jazz’ lessons and we are not working in the context of standard jazz repertoire. That does tend to become technique and theory centred. We also work on transcriptions.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by John A.
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