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Originally Posted by Vladan
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03-12-2017 09:39 AM
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Originally Posted by Vladan
it probably wasn't that funny :-)Last edited by ragman1; 03-12-2017 at 01:31 PM.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
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I found this. Quite nice. The pianist is Freddie Johnson
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Originally Posted by ragman1
wiz
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Coleman Hawkins and Django did a nice version together (and Stephane Grappelli played the piano).
See where you're going wrong guys, it should be a foxtrot!
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Stephane Grappelli's a nice piano player!
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Spent two weeks hangin with Coltrane on this. Has been a beautiful experience but I can't get past the 30 second mark. Going to visit Wynton Marsalis tonight to hear if I can get this head down and post something! Might drop by Coleman Hawkins or Lester Young on the way man the month is halfway over.
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I often find the "Anthologie des Grilles de Jazz" comes closest to the way I hear the harmony on many standards. That seems to be the case for Stardust. Here's an excerpt, in Db. I'll probably load these changes in iReal, then tweak them to make them my own (while respecting the original melody). Once they're in iReal, transposing to any key is trivially easy. I have a bit more work ahead before I can post a recording.
Note that B9 without the root is Gbm6, so you can play either in bars 3, 4 & 26 of the chorus.Last edited by KirkP; 03-18-2017 at 01:45 PM.
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Well, inspired by a lot of thumbing these days...here's a Wes inspired-via Emily take on our tune.
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Originally Posted by KirkP
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Originally Posted by christianm77
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Originally Posted by ragman1
I like the grilles "blocks" though, makes tunes very easy to subdivide into 4 and 8 bar phrases visually. Fun for situations where im jamming on tunes you don't really know.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
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Originally Posted by destinytot
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
For many years, I made a point of never, ever using a chord chart or printed lyrics - and I have a friend here whom I wouldn't gig with for precisely this 'crutch'. As she's a friend, and she hasn't gigged since having here second child, she gets a 'pass' from me on her return next month.
But I regret extending that pass to players who - despite having often played the same old standards in the same old keys from the same chord charts - are lost without them.
Written arrangements obviously warrant reading - but I believe even these ought to be memorised PDQ (unless the player simply has too many musical projects on the go for this to be a reasonable proposition).
If 'we are what we repeatedly do', symbols like 'M7' (sic) - a sign, perhaps, of inevitable first-language interference in the context of cross-cultural exchange and cooperation - are benign.
Not so the chord charts themselves - which I see as an obstacle to the above, and to the proliferation of which I have contributed. No more.... no más... (Cue humorous song)
Last edited by destinytot; 03-19-2017 at 11:26 AM.
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Originally Posted by destinytot
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Originally Posted by destinytot
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Man this song is too much for me. I learnt some Lester, some Trane, some Clifford and Wynton. I learnt at a pretty deep level with so much intense listening that their expression and tone are so wonderful. I also learnt I need to get back to being me mor, writing and playing stuff not so beyond my ability. Has been an intense 3 weeks those guys above are so amazing, the feel and original ideas they bring to the melody every note has a wow factor.
Hats off to you guys that are getting something down and putting it out there. Maybe I missed the boat as month 1 and 2 were more achievable and next month I will be without guitar for two weeks, hoping in May I can at least get the head down.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Originally Posted by gggomez
Listen to it as a song, okay? The lyrics break it up into phrases and tell you where the break-points are - and you just connect the phrases. That's all you have to do.
Maybe the hardest bit (from the score) are the run-downs that begin with a eighth-note rest because the notes don't hit the chord tones the way you'd expect -
so ignore it and just play something you can manage. Really. It doesn't matter! It's only a bit of fun!
(edit)
Hell, if Bob Dylan can do it so can you! :-)Last edited by ragman1; 03-21-2017 at 09:17 AM.
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Funny coincidence, i just did this the other day without even realizing it was this month's tune here!
Stardust 2017
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dogletnoir -
That was good, nice and dreamy... the hardest bit is playing the tune, the soloing's easy, just follow the chords. Tell gggomez!
Looking for a "jazz box"
Yesterday, 09:57 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos