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Perhaps I am overlearning from the particularly rough recording session last night, but I feel that I need a different approach to playing these tunes. I keep thinking about the chords, the right notes, the shapes that will get me in the least amount of trouble... It's hard to be free from the constant deliberation, which I feel hurts the musical experience as well as the outcome.
Is this something that you have experienced? How do you internalize a tune?
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03-22-2024 09:33 PM
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There's tremendous variation in how people do it. Here are a few...
- the tune form; the melody and chords' names/types, as notes, and named relationships (scales degrees, intervals)
- the schema of the tune and construction of things to apply (note phrases, chords)
- the harmonic rhythm of the tune and selection/modification from vocabulary to play (note phrases, chord patterns of harmony)
- abstraction of "how it goes" - internal representation of how it sounds, expressed played by ear, unnamed (pitches, phrases, patterns)
I can't speak for the theory perspectives, but some here that have that background and experience mention simplifying strategies (chunking, reference, targets) which I also use, although maybe not quite in the same way. I play by ear and never think about the names of things nor the names of their relationships. I recognize these things in discussion, but my playing/performing mind is clear of any self verbalization; only hearing in my mind's ear how the tune goes.
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Thank you very much for sharing your playing with us, and raising an interesting question. There's bound to be all manner of advice, but let me offer my two cents on a couple points.
When I play solo guitar, which I only do once or twice a year for a one-off show, I often play out of tempo and deviate from the form in places. It's not deliberate, in many cases, it can be the result of not being a very measured player. But I realized when we're on our own we can do things that may not work in another context. What keeps it together, in my very limited experience, is focusing on the melody, which to me is what keeps it together as a tune. I can't improvise a chord solo on the fly, unlike some of the very adept players you'll find in here, nor can I play very fast, but I see my limitations as an opening to creativity so I try to enjoy playing around with the melody, not only in the sense of playing what's written, but playing around, as in messing around with it. In that same dual vein of play, I also find it interesting to take apart a tune and see what might re-emerge from recombining all the different pieces. This is all highly personal, but I think playing solo guitar can be like that.
Softly gets called often at jam sessions where I live, near a small city in Japan, and it's what I would call a "staple tune," or even an "ice-breaker tune," since everyone seems to know it. Your version is very nice, though I've never experienced it here as a solo guitar tune. So, my next comment is on playing that with others. When everyone knows a tune and it gets called all the time, it can sometimes become staid. But at jam sessions the focus is having fun playing jazz with others, in the midst of unexpected twists and turns. So while the tune may not be any more interesting, the people who you play with bring something to it. I had a sax player friend, who actually introduced me to jam sessions, and he referred to this as "blending our colors." Being in that spontaneous situation often can shape your approach to a tune, and you can bring some of that back into the solo version. It's just a small thought.
The sax player I mentioned left Japan for a year to study and play in New Orleans; when he came back he joined some of the usual jam sessions. When someone called Softly, he made a suggestion that I suppose he picked up on his travels, I don't know. But it was to play the last A section a half step down. So, if you're doing it in Cm, the last 8 bars are in Bm, and when you come back to the top in Cm it really pops. Not earth shattering, but it's a simple twist to bring some adventure back into playing a very familiar, even over-played, standard. To me, that's the joy of jazz, it's all the same in many ways, and yet it's all different, too.
Thank you again for posting, and I wish you all the best on your musical adventures!
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I really liked that version! Thanks for sharing your playing. I think that Softly is a difficult song to play as a chord melody which is a difficult skill
Your playing reminds me of how the Martin Taylor would play from the chord shapes visualising the root and 10th of each chord freeing his fingers up to embellish melodies and improvise. Think he has books, online school and videos on his method. Think I’d stick with developing the style you have.
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Originally Posted by MadeulPlaysGuitar
It's not the same as 'thinking about the chords, the right notes, the shapes', that's merely cerebral. It's knowing the tune as a unified whole, a complete entity, so it becomes part of you. It means not being frightened of it.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Emily Remler's version is still my fav, the intro is superb, She opens with a low Em11 (open E) walks up to FM#11 to F#m11 etc, very nice, so it's in a different key than usual, but absolutely superb.
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Originally Posted by MadeulPlaysGuitar
When I was learning my first tune in 7/4, I had to listen to it for many hours.
One suggestion to get out of the chord/scale/math mindset is strum the chords and scat sing a solo. If you like it, put it on the guitar. No Thinking!
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So I might not be a normal player... and many of these concepts will be beyond your skill level... but that being said.... at some point you need to develop the skills needed to play jazz in a jazz style...
Which is simply... being able to play in jazz styles.... not just playing tunes.
It takes a lifetime... maybe even a few to develop these skill by trial and error, or memorizing tunes and playing the shit out of them etc. And most never get there.
It's part of the process obviously, but you also need to put the time into memorizing the Forms, the styles, the chord patterns, the licks etc... and how to use them in different contexts.
How many ways can you play any tune? Like now, without rehearsing.
Most seem to be able to memorize a melody and maybe even play it in a few ways... Rhythm, Harmony and harmonic Rhythm are also just like the melody...
Eventually when you look or play a tune... you should see and hear targets... the most important points of a tune that help define the tune and style the tune is being played in... within a Form, that repeats.
You can still have intros, outros, interludes etc... but that Form is the foundation that holds the tune together.
Sorry way to much BS.... Here's one of a few vids I posted of playing Softly... There is a shit load of information in this video. It needs to be understood and expanded.
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Originally Posted by pauln
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Originally Posted by JazzPadd
Now, if there was a button in front of me that I could press to start playing like Pasquale Grasso, I would press that button instantly, but I don't see it in front of me...
Softly gets called often at jam sessions where I live, near a small city in Japan, and it's what I would call a "staple tune," or even an "ice-breaker tune," since everyone seems to know it. Your version is very nice, though I've never experienced it here as a solo guitar tune. So, my next comment is on playing that with others. When everyone knows a tune and it gets called all the time, it can sometimes become staid. But at jam sessions the focus is having fun playing jazz with others, in the midst of unexpected twists and turns. So while the tune may not be any more interesting, the people who you play with bring something to it. I had a sax player friend, who actually introduced me to jam sessions, and he referred to this as "blending our colors." Being in that spontaneous situation often can shape your approach to a tune, and you can bring some of that back into the solo version. It's just a small thought.
The sax player I mentioned left Japan for a year to study and play in New Orleans; when he came back he joined some of the usual jam sessions. When someone called Softly, he made a suggestion that I suppose he picked up on his travels, I don't know. But it was to play the last A section a half step down. So, if you're doing it in Cm, the last 8 bars are in Bm, and when you come back to the top in Cm it really pops. Not earth shattering, but it's a simple twist to bring some adventure back into playing a very familiar, even over-played, standard. To me, that's the joy of jazz, it's all the same in many ways, and yet it's all different, too.
Thank you again for posting, and I wish you all the best on your musical adventures!
Thank you for sharing your thoughts, which are so eloquently expressed.
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Originally Posted by jazzdod
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
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Originally Posted by MadeulPlaysGuitar
When you can't scat something new that you like, it's time to transcribe and/or think about theory - to build a bigger vocabulary of sounds.
Being able to play what you're thinking is, IMO, a fundamental skill for a jazz musician.
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Originally Posted by sgcim
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Also Jeff Schneiders "I Love You" method could be of help for you... really funny idea he had:
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
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Originally Posted by DonEsteban
Thanks again!
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