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#471284 - 06/17/19 10:35 AM Female Jazz Band
Dnj Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703






Edited by Dnj (06/17/19 10:37 AM)

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#471287 - 06/17/19 01:51 PM Re: Female Jazz Band [Re: Dnj]
bruno123 Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 06/04/02
Posts: 4912
Loc: West Palm Beach, FL 33417
What’s with the music stands?
John C.

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#471288 - 06/17/19 02:25 PM Re: Female Jazz Band [Re: bruno123]
Jerryghr Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 1497
Loc: Buffalo, NY
Originally Posted By bruno123
What’s with the music stands?
John C.


For jazz musicians it's to remind them what song they are supposed to be playing during their solo. grin

Jerryghr


Edited by Jerryghr (06/17/19 02:26 PM)

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#471297 - 06/18/19 12:59 AM Re: Female Jazz Band [Re: Jerryghr]
bruno123 Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 06/04/02
Posts: 4912
Loc: West Palm Beach, FL 33417
Jerry, I had that happen to my sax player. In the middle of the song Witchcraft; he asked me what song are we playing.

Jazz was born by a musician getting a feeling and then expressing the feeling. No music, or charts as they call them were needed, because they knew the song. The age of different kinds of scales replaced feeling their way around the song; their solo was based on the chords and how they progressed. Those who knew used scales and arpeggios around the melody of the song; you still knew what song was being played.

Can you imagine listening to drum solos that used the same feel. I still remember trading fours, we were four men. When the drummer took a solo, we would leave the bandstand and return 15 minutes later. His solo included the drums, the bar stools, the glasses on the bar, the side of the entrance door -- he was a show all by himself. He never played his solo the same twice; he just expressed what he was feeling that night.

Big Band Jazz has to use charts, their solo, improv, never impressed me. Scales, arps. and modes are substituted in place of --- I hear it in my head, and then play it. That is the reason a musician can lose what song he is playing. I could listen to Errol Gardner (spelling) all day; each song has its own flavor.

Only my opinion, John C.

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