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This is one of those things people say when they want to sound in-the-know, but it really bears no resemblance to how the music is actually performed in the wild.
Originally Posted by ragman1
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08-07-2024 09:57 PM
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Ok. Thanks for the clarification. But at a certain level it’s ALL hard until years later you start getting the hang of the various elements. And there are so many. But once you get the hang of it it all becomes kind of easy where over thinking is the devil. Taste is always easier said than achieved.
Originally Posted by ragman1
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Nothing to do with performance, Pete, only about practice.
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Of course it is. Jazz isn't easy, we all know that.
Originally Posted by henryrobinett
I think that's more or less what I said. Over-thinking, i.e. complicating things, is part of the learning process. And, if one gets past that stage, it's still not easy!once you get the hang of it it all becomes kind of easy where over thinking is the devil.
Of course, but there's the question of how much taste can be 'achieved', as you put it, and how much is natural to the performer.Taste is always easier said than achieved.
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Oh you sweet summer child.
Originally Posted by ragman1
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I know, sickening, isn't it?
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Has anyone looked Bret Wilmot's chord voicings book? It's basically just all variations of drop 2 seventh chords substituted for other chords over a bass note which determines the name of the chord. So he thinks of almost every chord with upper extensions as a substitution of one of these more basic voicings.
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I haven’t, although I’ve heard of it. There’s a similar list in the Ben Monder pdf too.
I was find with those sorts of books you can summarise it very easily but to internalise any of it I kind of need to crunch through the possibilities on the instrument… one way or another
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