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Music Theory and Analysis Discuss composition, improvisational ideas, analysis of specific songs, recommended books and concepts, etc.

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Old December 15th, 2012, 01:36 AM   #1
GabrielSaul
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So What on guitar

I know you must get this sort of thread on this website a lot, but I was just trying to learn a few classic jazz songs by ear so I can have a bit more versatility at jazz jams.

I think I've almost got it spot on, can anyone correct me if I'm wrong?

Dm section:
* *
e |--------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
B |--------------------8--6-----------------8--6---------
G .|-------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
D .|-------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
A |-------5-7-5--5----7--5-------5-7-5--5--7--5---------
E |-5-7-8-------8--5--------5-7-8------8-----------------

(*Em11 & Dm11?)

And then half a step up to Eb with the same pattern, of course, there's a variation on the riff that alernates on the fourth time round.

Generally, is that the gyst of it? Any fatal errors?

Thanks,

Gabriel Saul
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Old December 15th, 2012, 06:48 AM   #2
guitarjazz
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GabrielSaul View Post
I know you must get this sort of thread on this website a lot, but I was just trying to learn a few classic jazz songs by ear so I can have a bit more versatility at jazz jams.

I think I've almost got it spot on, can anyone correct me if I'm wrong?

Dm section:
* *
e |--------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
B |--------------------8--6-----------------8--6---------
G .|-------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
D .|-------------------7--5-----------------7--5---------
A |-------5-7-5--5----7--5-------5-7-5--5--7--5---------
E |-5-7-8-------8--5--------5-7-8------8-----------------

(*Em11 & Dm11?)

And then half a step up to Eb with the same pattern, of course, there's a variation on the riff that alernates on the fourth time round.

Generally, is that the gyst of it? Any fatal errors?

Thanks,

Gabriel Saul
Your sixth note (d) doesn't belong nor does your ninth note (a).
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Old December 15th, 2012, 07:23 AM   #3
jazz oud
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The melody note A, which you have as the first note, is preceded by a D a fifth below. You either have to retune your E string or play the whole melody up an octave.
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Old December 15th, 2012, 08:22 AM   #4
guitarjazz
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I've never learned the intro, which I've heard was composed by Gil, but I'd love to learn it someday. There is an album called Reggae Interpretation of Kind of Blue and they play the intro to it. I likes:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvPRzzBc3hw
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Old December 16th, 2012, 02:30 AM   #5
GabrielSaul
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Quote:
Originally Posted by guitarjazz View Post
I've never learned the intro, which I've heard was composed by Gil, but I'd love to learn it someday. There is an album called Reggae Interpretation of Kind of Blue and they play the intro to it. I likes:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvPRzzBc3hw
That sounds really awesome, going to look into that.

I was confused when you mentioned that the ninth note wasn't needed, but I thought that's what the riff ended on first time around.

@jazz_oud I'm not going to worry about that sort of thing at the moment, it's near enough possible to do that on guitar, at least extremely inconvenient. It's played on bass as it is anyway.
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Old December 16th, 2012, 08:30 AM   #6
jazz oud
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GabrielSaul View Post
@jazz_oud I'm not going to worry about that sort of thing at the moment, it's near enough possible to do that on guitar, at least extremely inconvenient. It's played on bass as it is anyway.
What "sort of thing"? Playing the correct melody?
Why not just play the melody as it goes? The melody isn't always played on bass. Just take the whole thing up an octave.
I mean, suit yourself, but you asked if you had it right or not.
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Old December 17th, 2012, 01:58 AM   #7
michaelsorg
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I don't read tab, but in terms of the pick up note, I don't think it's offensive to bump that one note up the octave, especially if the bass is doubling. I'd even go as far to say that if it were a solo guitar setting, you could swap in E instead of D . It is just a ghost note, really, and the meaning of the melody remains the same. I would not leave out the pickup, however. THAT, for me, changes the meaning more. I do think that the melody sounds better down the octave.
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Old December 17th, 2012, 04:04 AM   #8
GabrielSaul
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Quote:
Originally Posted by michaelsorg View Post
I don't read tab, but in terms of the pick up note, I don't think it's offensive to bump that one note up the octave, especially if the bass is doubling. I'd even go as far to say that if it were a solo guitar setting, you could swap in E instead of D . It is just a ghost note, really, and the meaning of the melody remains the same. I would not leave out the pickup, however. THAT, for me, changes the meaning more. I do think that the melody sounds better down the octave.
That's exactly what I meant @jazz_oud
Sorry if I seemed a bit dismissive.

As I'm trying to get the general tune of it on a guitar alone, I think when it comes to differences in octave, it's not worth the effort to correct something that becomes quite unnecessary.
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Old December 17th, 2012, 08:15 AM   #9
GabrielSaul
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Quote:
Originally Posted by motherlode View Post
The music that I sent you isn't playable?
Tis much appreciated but I'm afraid I'm useless when it comes to sheet music. Probably about time I sat down and worked it out.
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Old December 17th, 2012, 02:03 PM   #10
Mariotte
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Here is how i played, tried it.

Code:
e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-----------------7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-------------7---7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-----------------7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-3h5-3h5-3h5---------8-6-
G |--------------5-7----7-5-
D |------------------7--7-5-
A |---------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------
This is Section "A", it's played two times, then section "B" half tone sharp, then A again, so the form is A A B A

(In a deeper analysis of section A its divided in four, firts time the melodie end with d, seccond time it end with a a added, third time is like the firts, and in the last part you center the melodie around e)

(NOTE: in part B, the last phrase is like the seccond)

Also sometimes I use other digitation

Code:
e |---------------------7-5-
B |------------5--------8-6-
G |--------5-7---5-7----7-5-
D |---7-9---------------7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------
(In the firts you use the scale that start in the fight string, seccond finger, in the latter, the one that start with the firts finger, index).

Hope its usefull
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Old December 17th, 2012, 03:20 PM   #11
guitarjazz
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I play it in different octaves but my 'primary' way doesn't include the 'b' string, so as to try to mimic the articulation an upright bass player would use.
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Old December 18th, 2012, 08:04 AM   #12
GabrielSaul
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mariotte View Post
Here is how i played, tried it.

Code:
e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-------------7---7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-----------------7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-----------5---------8-6-
G |-----4-5-7---5-7-----7-5-
D |---7-------------7---7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------

e |---------------------7-5-
B |-3h5-3h5-3h5---------8-6-
G |--------------5-7----7-5-
D |------------------7--7-5-
A |---------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------
This is Section "A", it's played two times, then section "B" half tone sharp, then A again, so the form is A A B A

(In a deeper analysis of section A its divided in four, firts time the melodie end with d-a, seccond it end earlier with d, third time is like the firts, and in the last part you center the melodie around e)

Also sometimes I use other digitation

Code:
e |---------------------7-5-
B |------------5--------8-6-
G |--------5-7---5-7----7-5-
D |---7-9------------7--7-5-
A |-5-------------------7-5-
E |-------------------------
(In the firts you use the scale that start in the fight string, seccond finger, in the latter, the one that start with the firts finger, index).

Hope its usefull
Brilliant, thanks so much!

That solves the low note problem then, certainly more appropriate for guitar, I was being lazy before. :P
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Old December 18th, 2012, 09:02 AM   #13
Mariotte
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I'm glad it was usefull.

I was thinking that, as the lower note in the melodie is a d, it can be played in a lower octave just lowering the sixth string, drop d tunning, so it sounds more like the bass in the song (the chords played in other octave). This lower d is also usefull for the bass in sections A's.
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Old December 20th, 2012, 10:21 AM   #14
Mariotte
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Hi, I edited a detail I messed up in the tab. I was listening to So What and I realise I have mess up the order in which every phrase entered, now there are correct (the order was swapped). Also in section B, in the last phrase of it, the last part its equal to the seccond.

Another (good) thing is that I payed attention to the articulation of the melodie (someone there brought it up), there are some slides I didn't payed attention to, and little rhythm nuances I simplified in my memory.
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Old December 20th, 2012, 12:57 PM   #15
guitarjazz
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I've played SW on the bandstand a gillion times and it's rare that the head gets played correctly. Nine times out of ten the 'B' section ends up being played just like the 'A' section. There are worse crimes but it's kinda neat when it's right.
I also enjoy playing Blue in Green like the album, with each measures eventually turning into one beat.
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