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1. Do people ever play this in Ab like the original 1954 recording?
2. In that same recording, Errol Garner seems to play vi-9 (Fmin9) and II13 (B13) in both bars 21-22 of the B section, which sounds kinda simple and nice to my ears. Is it ok to play these changes instead of the #iv-7, VII7, vi-7, II7 in later versions of this tune?
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10-24-2024 04:56 AM
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Is it ok
Presumably you mean this version. It's in Ab and, compared to the Real Book and Ralph Patt's Vanilla Book site, he's doing a lot more than just the bars you're talking about.
It does look like he's playing Fm-Bb7 instead of Dm7 - G7/Bb7 (or rather the others are playing something different to him) but whether you think it sounds better is completely up to you. It's a free world :-)
Another version of those two bars is Dm7/G7 - Fm7/Bb7. And you don't have to do that start-stop thing he does either, that's also up to you.
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Originally Posted by brent.h
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Originally Posted by brent.h
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It's been my experience that people generally play things in the Real Book keys, unless there is a singer, playing things in all keys helps build your ear and also prepare for a singer who calls Autumn Leaves in Dminor.
Bar 22 seems like a turnaround, and turnarounds are fluid, you can swap those changes in the B section and the song should get along just fine. Especially after the head.
That's what I would do anyway.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
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Originally Posted by ragman1
So that G7 Bb7 has a turnaround sound to me when I play it. You know me, I'm not educated on all the right terms for this.
Like, I knew D- and F- could be interchanged, but I couldn't remember why, luckily Tal_175 came in with the backdoor dominant analysis.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
This one I know :-)
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o.k., I see now which measures you're referring to.... mystery solved.
The last bar before the 2 bar turn-around is VIm7 > II7, which leads > V7, etc., so all that Garner has done is repeat those chords for two bars - that bar (which you called #22) and the previous one (#21).
There is a repeating melodic phrase in the two bars, so most musicians (not named Erroll Garner) like to harmonize the two differently, that is: (a) Hope-less-ly I'm (Lost), and (b) That's Why I'm (Fol-low-ing).
Actually, at the end of the tune (last time through the B section) those two measures are: VIm7 / II7-V7) so he's really just playing the same chords both time around - what a lazy fellow!
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Originally Posted by Mick-7
I prefer that repetition and not having more chords like the one in the Real Book or Johnny Matthis' version. It simplifies things and leaves more space for a soloist, I think.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
Ragman would you mind writing
these bars like this ?
|Gm7b5 C7 | Fm7b5. Bb7| EbM7
I think it would be clearer
because the slash /
and the -
have other uses already
thanks man
Angel Eyes
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