T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2695.1 | A topic about MUSIC? | SMURF::BENNETT | Made in Colorado? No Thanks. | Mon Mar 22 1993 15:52 | 46 |
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Great topic, Brian.
Being chained to my guitar for the last few years I've been
getting pretty acclimated to harmony and rhythm, but when I
listen to the likes of Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Diz and
Bird, I realize that I'm pretty weak in the melody department....
So I bought a flute. One of them silver things that won't let
you play any notes unless you *breathe*. Pretty cool. I can't
play anything on this puppy unless I understand what I'm doing -
you see, changing keys from G to Ab requires I stop playing F#'s
and start playing B,E,A, & D flats. On a guitar this is like
falling off a log. On instruments without necks it's a different
story.
Working with simple melodies is a cool approach. That's what I'm
doing with the flute. There's all this stuff that everybody
expects to hear, like "Yankee Doodle"! There's a decent chapter
in Jerry Coker's "Improvising Jazz" that talks about melody (Ch2).
Last.... I'm in this notes file today because I was looking for
Buck's note on Solfege. I'm in the car for 1 1/2 hours a day so
I'm starting spend the time figuring out how to sing my favorite
melodies in DO-RE-MI syllables - mostly for ear training. I hope
to go on to move them into all of the keys using fixed-DO solfege.
Faves?
"The wind began to switch, the house to pitch..." from
the Wizard of Oz
"We are Santa's Elves" from Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer
"Happy Birthday"
"Frere Jacques"
"Till there was you" and anything from "The Music Man"
any of the original Vic Mizzy music from "The Addams
Family"
Lots of popular melodies start on V.
I'll shut up and listen, now.
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2695.2 | | CSC32::B_KNOX | Rock'n'Roll Refugee | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:03 | 9 |
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Other than doing it by ear, the best way, IMHO, is to pick up an
instuctional book on the bass. Study the scales and vary where
you start within the scale (ie. first start on the root, then start on
the 2nd, etc..). Once you've got a handle on the scales, work up to
creating melodic lines within each scale. Then proceed to combining
these melodic lines together...
/Billy_K
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2695.3 | A couple of ideas | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:18 | 14 |
| One technique that one of my old guitar teachers used on me was to have
me think of a melody by singing it instead of playing the guitar.
Helped get me out of the scale boxs and thinking a little more
creatively.
Steve Jensen suggested something similar that he got from the Mick
Goodrick "Advancing Guitarist" book awhile back. He said put down some
chordal vamps on tape in the same key and play solos using the
different modes over them, but only play on one string at a time. So
you have to force your mind to think more about what what notes you're
playing to stay in the mode, but you also have to work harder to get
something that's melodic.
Greg
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2695.4 | Great idea | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Mon Mar 22 1993 16:19 | 31 |
|
This is a bit off the subject, but your opening line ("Hey, how about
a topic that doesn't concern gear!") reminded me of it...
I was reading the liner notes to Christopher Parkening's Segovia
tribute CD last night and found a great quote from the maestro -- some
advice he gave to Parkening. I can't remember the exact wording,
but the general gist was
Your love of music must always exceed your love of the guitar.
If not, the guitar will be destined to just be an instrument that
hangs on the walls of taverns.
More to the subject...
I think the approach of trying to play melodies by ear as a training
task is a great one (I do this too). It's also good to look at the
music (particularly more complicated stuff) to see how it fits together.
In addition to just getting the notes right, concentrate on phrasing.
I've noticed that my note selection for piano is often quite
different than what I do for guitar -- I play "piano stuff" on piano
and "guitar stuff" on guitar ("piano stuff" = things easy to do on
piano; "guitar stuff" = things easy to do on guitar). To try to break
out of a rut, I will sometimes try to replicate the "piano stuff" on
guitar. Another thing I do sometimes is to force myself to play
in an *uncomfortable* key (like Gb) -- sometimes my mistakes are
interesting.
Jim
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2695.5 | $.02 | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, DECtp/East | Tue Mar 23 1993 06:59 | 16 |
| Brian, I have the impression from reading your replies that you like
jazz quite a bit...why not learn some technically feasible but
musically great solos on the bass? I recently learned to play Miles'
trumpet solo from "So What" on my alto recorder; it's fun and very
educational.
Also, why not just pick a key and improvise? If the instrument itself
seems inhibitive, sometimes it helps to sing a line and then play it
(or better yet, sing and play the line at the same time). For some
reason, it seems to help get the imagination engaged.
One specific suggestion I'd make about playing melodies on bass is to
pay lots of attention to smoothly connecting notes. Since bass players
spend so much time punctuating music, bass solos often sound to me like
the players are still poking out separate notes instead playing a
line with some musical continuity.
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2695.6 | from the pages of BP | RICKS::CALCAGNI | L'Angelo Minestronio | Tue Mar 23 1993 08:22 | 26 |
| Since both of these ideas have recently appeared in Bass Player
magazine, Brian already knows about them, but they're worth sharing
with the notes world.
Turn on your TV, turn the sound down, and plug in. Try "scoring" the
show or movie you're watching realtime. Look for cues as to the mood
or feel of what's going on and try to reflect or support it in what you
play. This is a great way to get you out of thinking about scales and
patterns, and more into the emotional aspects of what you're playing.
I've tried this a few times now; it's hard at first, but really fun
once you get into it. You almost *have* to start creating melodies to
get something that really fits the action.
Intentionally detune one or two strings, by a legit interval of course.
Then play your usual stuff, favorite patterns, etc. What happens is
that familiar patterns start to produce different results, and you'll
most likely stumble across things that sound cool but you may not have
thought of otherwise. Okay, now the second part is real important.
Write down or record the things you like that come out of this exercise,
retune your instrument to normal intervals, and then duplicate these
in normal tuning. The effect is a double whammy; not only have you
come up with some new lines, the new lines themselves suggest new
fingerings in standard tuning that in turn may suggest other interesting
lines, andonandonandon....
/rick
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2695.7 | Singing bass lines | ZUOPCS::CHAOT::WIEDLER | Swissophrenic | Tue Mar 23 1993 08:25 | 7 |
| > (or better yet, sing and play the line at the same time).
This reminds me of great jazz bass player Slam Stewart who created a style
of singing and playing his solos simultaneously... very melodic, witty and
expressive - the voice is doubling the bass line an octave (or 2?) higher.
FeliX.
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2695.8 | Works for him | GOES11::G_HOUSE | ThatsWhenIreachedForMyRevolver | Tue Mar 23 1993 11:19 | 3 |
| Yeah, Brian, scat like George Benson does!
Greg
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2695.9 | Listen to what i'm saying... | SALEM::STIG | Look in the eye!! | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:29 | 6 |
| I heard most jazz performers sing there parts while playing there
instrument. I see it with a lot of the jazz gutarists. I also heard
that its a part of the training when playing jazz.
stigwhoknowsnothingab
outjazz
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