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    • #8336
      Daniel
      Participant

        One of the cool things about France is myriad public organizations that give people so many outlets for hobbies and activities.  My kids and I are deeply ensconced in the local conservatory of music, dance, and theatre.  But we have explored running, archery, aviation, and scrabble as well!

        Last night I decided to take more advantage of the offerings at the Conservatory.  I joined a Jazz Improvizatio and Theory class.  I spent 90 minutes comping along with the instructor (on drums) and my classmates (soprano sax, clarinet, piano, piano, bass, and ukulele) and taking my turns doing solos.  Between pieces (St. Louis Blues by WC Handy and Recordame by Joe Henderson), I tried to follow the French and learn the lesson.

        My French is still bound up in less than about 6 subjects, and music theory isn’t one of them!  They name the notes (Do Ré Mi Fa Sol Là Si Do rather than C D E F G A B C).  So it takes me an extra couple seconds to grasp that “mi mineur ” is E minor and that “bey beymole” (bé bémole) is Bb.

        Amazingly, our instructor, Chistoph, can sing examples of what he wants to think about doing in your solos.  So I was reasonably able to follow him.  But there were significant bits of info that disappeared into the air.

        Still, I had a great time and I’ll be returning.

        Finally addressing what I consider to be a gaping hole in my musical capabilities.  So, yeah.  Fall is a good time to turn over a new leaf.

        What are you guys up to?

        Daniel

      • #8337
        indexless
        Keymaster

          Hey Daniel,

          Sounds great, Im learning to read and playing a whole bunch of scales, learning keeps us young I think, keep us posted

        • #8338
          dwarfrat
          Participant

            I play most every day going back and forth between Standard and Altered tunings. Scales covering three octaves up and down the neck, complicated changes, bluegrass, jazz, rock, blues, surf music.

            Fun stuff.

          • #8339
            Daniel
            Participant

              See now that’s why you’re a better guitar player than I am, Matt!

              Richard, I can read for voice (one note at a time), but reading for guitar or mandolin is still beyond me.  I hope the improve class will help.  (We use scores to learn the melodies.)

              Good on you both!

              Anyone else?

              Daniel
              (singing in the men’s choir tonight)

            • #8341
              Daniel
              Participant

                Class number 2 tonight…

                We continued working on Recordame by Joe Henderson.  There’s a particularly tricky passage that runs
                |Cm7 F7b9|Bbmaj7  |Bbm7  Eb7b9|Abmaj7 |Abm7 Db7b9|Gbmaj7 |Gbm7 C7| Fmaj | E7b9.

                The magic in this progression is the change from a maj7 to a min7.  It’s like walking down stairs, but I’d NEVER think of having a Bbmin7 follow a Bbmaj7.  It’s nuts!

                We had to run scales over the descending passage.

                Christoph ran us through each section one at a time taking turns working with one scale, then the next and so on until we played through.  That took us more than an hour, and I loved every monute of it.

                This passage was kicking my ass, but now I can play through the passage both by chording and using a simple little improv.

                Before class I had a quick chat with our choir director, Eric.  I had suggested covering Sting’s “Fragile” and he liked the idea.

                (Go have a look on YouTube for choral versions of it.  Some of them are pretty cool, especially the German choirs.)

                Except tonight he asked me if he could arrange a part for me to play on 5 string emando to introduce the piece and if I would be happy to take a solo. (!!)  I said, “Well, it’s a good thing I’m taking a Jazz improv class.”

                I have known Eric for 5 years and I have never seen him so animated.  His wife told me he spent the whole day with staff paper under headphones except to trim the quince tree in their garden for 30 minutes.

                It feels good to be so engaged with both music and a community.

                I hope you are all doing well,

                Daniel

              • #8342
                indexless
                Keymaster

                  Sounds great Daniel….can you tab that out😎 Sounds like you’re having a blast

                • #8344
                  dwarfrat
                  Participant

                    Almost 2 years ago, I had a 30 minute NYE gig in the works.  After I wrote out 30 minutes of music, a mix of my own and early Frank Zappa, in Standard changes, I realized the sax was in B Flat.

                    After struggling through one rewrite, I gave it to the sax player to transpose the music.

                  • #8346
                    Daniel
                    Participant

                      Matt,  🙂   Yeah.  When I see Ab and Gb on the sheet music, I know I’m in for a challenge!

                      [Interstingly -or perhaps not- the French word for “sheet music” is “partition”. I almost wrote that sentence of above using the French word.  Then I realized it would make no sense to you!  I had to stop and think of the English term!]

                      Fortunately Christoph, a sax player, is cognizant of the fact that horn players are weird and gives us standard notation rather than Bb.  😉

                      And Happily for me the things you need to do with your left hand don’t change because the chords are all closed.  You just need to remember where to put it!

                      We have a uke player who is trying to learn all these chords as open chords in the moment!  She’s often lost.  There have to be closed chords for uke as well.  I’ll try to find something to help her…

                       

                      Richard,
                      I’ve scanned the music and sized the PDF for 8.5″ x 11″ (us standard letter).  WordPress isn’t allowing me to upload PDFs, so I’ve emailed them to you.

                      [if anyone else wants a copy, just ask!]

                      I can’t tab it for you, but I have wrtten in the starting notes on the scale studies where I could.  You can assume that if the scale is Cm7, that the scale starts at the bottom with a C.

                      And, as mentioned above, all the music assumes a standard instrument, not a Bb horn.

                      I forgot to mention that Christoph asked me to learn the melody as well.  He wants me to play it with Thierry our soprano sax player.  I said, “OK.”  I have no idea why!  🙂

                      Hope all is well with you two in Cali,

                      Daniel

                       

                    • #8347
                      indexless
                      Keymaster

                        Go forth and slaw the melody Daniel, it will be great!

                      • #8353
                        Daniel
                        Participant

                          Just in case you all are interested I found a video on YouTube that shows the head of Recordame played on guitar with onscreen guitar tab accompanying the staff notation.

                          I’m using it to read the staff notation I have.  It’s a bear transposing/transcribing guitar to 5 string enamdo.  No one has done it yet for mandolin, let alone 5 string mandolin, as far as I know.

                          Daniel

                        • #8357
                          Matt Hayden
                          Participant

                            For Recordame, just think about the third…that’s the change from maj7 to -7.  And going from the -7 to the 7b9, a fourth up,  the G to Gb is the important bit.

                            It’s one of my favorite tunes – why didn’t we ever play it?

                          • #8364
                            Daniel
                            Participant

                              Oh my Matt.  Because I wasn’t up to it.  That’s why we didn’t play it.  Thanks for the hints!

                            • #8389
                              Daniel
                              Participant

                                New tune in class these days, though we’re still working on Recordame.  The new one is McCoy Tyner’s Contemplation.  It’s MUCH easier than Recordame: three scales to use instead of seven.    There’s a subtley and smoothness to it too.

                                 

                              • #8390
                                indexless
                                Keymaster

                                  Big fun Daniel, one of my favorites

                                • #8540
                                  pto
                                  Participant

                                    of all the jazz greats that Tony Rice loved, Mr. Tyner is my favorite.

                                    • This reply was modified 2 years, 2 months ago by pto.
                                  • #8538
                                    Daniel
                                    Participant

                                      New tune: Midnight Blue by Kenny Burrell.

                                      With this one, I think it would be easier to play on guitar.  The riffs are all about guitar fingering.  It’s not impossible to do on mandolin, but because the mandolin is tuned in 5ths, the hammer-ons and pulls-offs are done on the middle and ring fingers rather than the index and middle.  I’m seriously considering dropping string gauge quite a bit to make them easier!

                                      Found a good lguitar esson on YT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vEVM_Ey3rU&t=1015s
                                      I’m watching it for the tonal similarity and because the woman teaching the tune is really good at playing slowly.

                                      Last night I went to class.  I’ve missed a few because Claudine is recovering from hip replacement surgery.
                                      Despite practicing, I was utter rubbish. stumbling all over the fret board, trying to remember which scale to be soloing over at a given point in the song, trying knit together something listenable if not a coherent statement…

                                      It’s truly humbling to consider yourself a musician and then run into a genre that kicks your ass everyday and twice on Sundays.

                                      The dedication required to play this stuff well is impressive.  Not sure I have it.  But I have not given up yet…

                                      Daniel

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