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#1011340 - 04/16/08 03:13 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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Full Member
Registered: 09/18/07
Posts: 168
Loc: Hong Kong
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I would hit the bass note irregularly. In Autumn Leaves, it would be approximately once every two measures.
But Autumn Leaves changes chords every measure. What is the reason for hitting the bass note on every 2 measures? BTW, did someone do a midi on this so that we can see what they did? Thanks.
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#1011341 - 04/16/08 07:56 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Hi Rosa, I just recorded some modified stride to the A section of Autumn Leaves. I can't do a midi file any more because my digital has been moved to another room (where my hubby and I practice our vibes, piano duo stuff). It's pretty obvious, though, to hear that bass note plunk. http://www.box.net/shared/iqnjjn0o44 I didn't spend any time working this up, so you won't hear any rootless plunks on the + of 2. I just played what came natural to me. Hope this helps.
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011343 - 04/16/08 08:37 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Hey Woody - It's fun jamming together. We do have our work cut out for us before taking the show on the road 
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011344 - 04/16/08 10:01 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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Full Member
Registered: 09/18/07
Posts: 168
Loc: Hong Kong
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Thanks Barb  I hear that you skip chords, that is you play every other measure. So you only did rootless voicings to every other chord -- Am7, Gmaj7, F#m7b5, Em7, Am7, Gmaj7, F#m7b5, Em7. Is the reasoning behind this that these chords have long measures?
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#1011345 - 04/16/08 10:07 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Rosa - I did rootless for EVERY chord. But, for most of the A section, I plunked the bass note once every two measures as Jazzwee had talked about.
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011347 - 04/16/08 10:25 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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All I was doing was playing an example of what Jazzwee was talking about. I could have played it once for each measure, though.
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011349 - 04/17/08 02:29 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/25/07
Posts: 5971
Loc: So. California
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OK I'm back.
The idea is not to duplicate actual stride which will make the tune sound too oompah-oompah, which is not the "modern" sound.
Bass notes are occasionally "plunked" just to restore the tonality to the listener, which becomes vague with rootless voicings. Why every two measures? It's a balance. Hold the bass note too long and you lose the tonality. Do it too often and it sounds rote. So I picked something in the middle that would be typical.
It depends on the tune too. If the tune stays in one place, you won't need the bass note too much. My judgement call here is that, when I play AL, the ii-V sequence becomes obvious enough to my ears by playing one bass note for each ii-V.
To emulate a modern stride, the bass note would be played irregularly, so that pretty much excludes doing it every measure. Should you skip every two measures, three measures, four measures...? It's up to you but note that skipping the bass note raises tension which eventually needs to feel like it should be released. Two measures seems to be a moderate amount and your LH is not jumping around too much like a real stride playing.
Remember too that in ballad playing, the bass note is pedaled so you really don't have time to switch to rootless to bass.
When you hear someone play modern stride, then it all makes sense. A player might skip all bass notes for a chorus then bring it back in. It's all about the effect/atmosphere desired.
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#1011350 - 04/18/08 02:35 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/11/08
Posts: 602
Loc: Coastal Mississippi
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#1011355 - 04/22/08 04:11 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Lucky me - I'm not painting my basement. But - I am swamped. I've been spending a lot of time playing from my jazz fakebook of standards. I need to expand my repertoire, and better my sight reading skills. My main focus these days has been in learning to comp for when my hubby and I play together. Those rootless voicings have been a life saver. I use the LH shell voicing and the rootless in the RH. The left hand needs that root since we won't have a bass player. On the AL thread front, I've been playing Autumn Leaves combo style with LH rootless at my daily gig. (I play at my folks retirement home). Each time I play it, I improvise a chorus. I know, brave me  I'm also playing Satin Doll combo style and eventually I will try improvising over those chords. For that swing, I trade off between the arp exercise and Donna Lee at 3 different speeds.
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011358 - 04/30/08 08:15 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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Full Member
Registered: 06/11/07
Posts: 99
Loc: london
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Sorry to post such an elementary question so late on. I've only just started to play around with Autumn Leaves! Am I right that you don't play the chords with your LH and melody with the right? They cross over don't they ie both hands?
_________________________
Bill Evans spoke of the "universal mind" that exists in all people, if they can learn to think in the language that the universal mind uses -- a musical language that remains alive and well today, still scintillating, still expanding, still showing those who can hear it the depths of ecstasy and pain and life and love.
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#1011360 - 04/30/08 12:39 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/01/07
Posts: 2216
Loc: Bethesda, MD (Washington D.C)
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In solo piano, you typically switch styles a lot ... 2+3 chords are a good way to quickly sound good. In that case, hands don't run into each other. Record yourself because you might find it boring to listen to as you play, but in fact, you are sounding good.
If you play with bass + drums, then your LH will typically play LH chords, simulating a guitarist or horn section. The hands don't run into each other than much, and it's ok to play very light left hand voicings. 1 note is just fine. It's also ok to move the melody up an octave. Don't feel you have to always play A or B types of voicings. Voice leading is what's most important, find the common tones. As far as block chords, they don't have to be seen as 2 hand chords. The RH plays chords while the left hand has a few options, such as doubling the melody an octave below (shearing / theatre), playing walking bass, playing stride, playing rootless chords (a la Garland) or full blocks.
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#1011361 - 04/30/08 08:39 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/25/07
Posts: 5971
Loc: So. California
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Originally posted by simon288:  Sorry to post such an elementary question so late on. I've only just started to play around with Autumn Leaves! Am I right that you don't play the chords with your LH and melody with the right? They cross over don't they ie both hands? [/b] Simon288, specifically as described in this thread, you can think of the entire orchestra as the bass, the middle voices and the melody. As discussed in the section on 2+3 voicings, the bass is handled by the LH pinky. The thumbs of both hands play the inner voices (and some of the other nearby fingers will contribute as needed). The melody line is played by the RH pinky. So that's the way we explain it here. As you focus on doing a solo, the LH takes on the chordal function by itself and the RH takes on single note lines to create melodies. Now in practice, for variation, this could change as LH and RH change roles for variation but what I'm describing here is the base. There are more complex examples than this of course where Brad Melhdau plays the solo in the inner voicings (thumbs) while the outer part of the hands ground the harmony but we won't go into that.
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#1011362 - 05/01/08 08:26 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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Full Member
Registered: 06/11/07
Posts: 99
Loc: london
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Aah ok thanks for that! I got a bit confused as I was playing an AM7 to start (LH and all 4 notes) and noticed the first notes of the melody where in the same place. Think I need some quiet time to sit and read through the beginning of the thread more thoroughly. I have only just been learning chord progressions, but I've yet to get used to playing shell voicings....time for some study.
Thanks Jazzwee
_________________________
Bill Evans spoke of the "universal mind" that exists in all people, if they can learn to think in the language that the universal mind uses -- a musical language that remains alive and well today, still scintillating, still expanding, still showing those who can hear it the depths of ecstasy and pain and life and love.
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#1011364 - 05/21/08 07:44 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Hi Everyone, I've been working on my AL Ballad for a while. I finally conquered the Red Dot syndrome for this piece and have a decent version to share. http://www.box.net/shared/hh5i8pygwo What has everyone else been up to? Jazzwee - how are your lessons going? Barb
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011366 - 05/21/08 08:31 AM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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Thank you, Woody. Yes, "busy" is a good way to describe it. "Severely addicted" is another way to describe it. 
_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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#1011367 - 05/21/08 12:25 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 04/25/07
Posts: 5971
Loc: So. California
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Very nice Barb! Love those voicings.
I've been busy too, though not on AL.
Last week, I played Dolphin Dance (Herbie Hancock) with my teacher playing bass and I played eight or so choruses of solos. This was a milestone for me, first because Dolphin Dance is a very difficult tune. Maybe the most difficult one I've ever done. I always messed it up because it has a complex form, super-frequent modulations, difficult voicings, difficult keys, and not easy to solo over.
At the beginning of the year, he told me to drop Dolphin Dance since I wasn't ready for it. My teacher had very high standards though. I had to clearly state the harmony in both voicings and solos with making mistakes.
So last week, I told him that I ignored his instruction and that I was ready to play Dolphin Dance. Playing this live with my teacher, like a combo, has always been worse for me than the Red Dot Syndrome. There's not too many opportunities to play in a combo and there's the critical ear of the teacher watching my every move and solo line.
Well I did it without mistakes, was relaxed, had good solid groove, and had enough ideas to go eight choruses without my teacher getting bored. And a thumbs up from him at the end. My teacher is a world class jazz player so playing together with him is an experience in itself.
His only advice at the end was that I play more quarter notes.
I think I just graduated to the next level. Somehow nothing seems so difficult anymore.
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#1011368 - 05/21/08 12:59 PM
Re: Jazz Study Group: Autumn Leaves, ATTYA, etc.
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/06
Posts: 889
Loc: North Carolina
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_________________________
A Sudnow Method Fanatic "Color tones, can't live without them" To hear how I have progressed since 2006, check out: http://b.kane.home.mindspring.com
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