The Unique Jazz Pedagogy of Dennis Sandole
The Unique Jazz Pedagogy of Dennis Sandole
The Unique Jazz Pedagogy of Dennis Sandole
Biographical Information
Born and Died in Philadelphia P.A. (1913-2000) Autodidact-He starts playing the Guitar sometime in his late teens and quickly moves on to Piano, Theory, Composition, and Arranging. Moves from Philadelphia to Hollywood C.A. in the late 1930s. Shortly thereafter he begins playing and recording with Name Bands such as Ray McKinley (1942) Tommy Dorsey (1943-44), Boyd Raeburn (1944), Charlie Barnet (1946). (Moon, T. Oct. 2000, Dennis Sandole, Educator Who Taught Giants of Jazz, Philly.com (online), http://elvispelvis.com/dennissandole.htm.) 2000, Coltranes Mentor Was Legendary Jazz Teacher Jazzhouse.org/The Last Post (online), http://www.jazzhouse.org/gone/lastpost2.php3?edit=971426621.)
Works in Hollywood C.A. as Guitarist/Composer/Arranger for MGM Studios and as a freelance session and live musician. It is here that he works with musical luminaries such as Billie Holliday and Frank Sinatra. Begins teaching and working on an overall concept of his teaching literature.
He returns to South Philly and begins teaching as his primary occupation at The Granoff Studios. It was here that John Coltrane became one of his pupils from 1946 until the early 1950s and they remained close. (Porter, L. 1999. John Coltrane, His Life and Music, Ann Arbor, MA., U.S.A: The University of Michigan Press. pp. 52.) Word spreads about his unique abilities as a teacher and he becomes sough after by many Philadelphian and East Coast based musicians. He conducts workshops in N.Y.C. with names such as Herbie Hancock attending, but remains based in Philadelphia as a teacher permanently. Authors influential guitar method book Guitar Lore first published in 1976. Another book Scale Lore based primarily on his tetrachordal scale principles remains unpublished. His students include Horn players James Moody, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Michael Brecker, Michael Pedicin Jr., Rob Brown, and Bobby Zankel, Pianists Matthew Shipp, and Sumi Tonooka, bassist Stanley Clarke, Jazz Bagpipist Rufus Harley, and Guitarists Jim Hall, Joe Diorio, and Pat Martino. (Ratliff, B. and Moon, T. 2000 http://elvispelvis.com/dennissandole.htm).
1. Compositional Device
2. Ear Training -Singing of exotic or synthetic scales at fixed intervals. (Fixed Do, Moveable Do, Neutral Syllable). 3. Rhythm Studies-2 bar Rhythm Study-largely African or Latin American Rhythms applied to 8 or 9 consecutive notes from A1 harmonised with A1 chords in any order.
1. Compose original melody and chords arrangement based on 8 bars of a standard of your choice + composition based on 8 or 9 consecutive tones from A1, B1, and C1 forwards or in retrograde (a possible total of 27 tones for the melody) harmonised with chords from standard tune All instrumentsMelody in every voice
2. Composed Accompaniment and Solo 3. Exotic and synthetic scales and harmonisations to be used for compositions and to be played on instrument and sung
A Week Lesson
B Week Lesson
C Week Lesson
Similarities with Olivier Messiaen, Post War American Twelve Tone Practice, and Vincent Persichetti
Concept of fixed register of assigned pitches (Canteyodjaya1949 and Mode de Valeures et dIntensites-1949-50) Johnson, J. S. , 1989, Messiaen, London: Omnibus Press pp. 103, 105.) Use of 9, 10, 11, and 12 tone aggregates as modes rather than as a serial unit. (Richard S. Hill, Ernst Krenek, George Perle.)
New scales may be so built with similar or dissimilar tetrachords that the tonic is not repeated at the first octave. When the tonic is missed and the tetrachords are continued, a two octave scale or multi-octave scale may evolve. (Persichetti, V. 1961, Twentieth Century Harmony: Creative Aspects and Practice, New York, N.Y. U.S.A.: W.W. Norton & Company Inc. pp. 48.)
Scale Lore--Tetrachords
D Week Lesson
Substitute Chords
Bitonal Scales
Polychords
Writing for guitar in a role other than full chords and single line soloing only.
Sandole, a legendary figure, and teacher, became a mentor to Coltrane. Sandole remembers Coltrane fondly He used to take two legitimate (classical) lessons per week, not one. He was superbly prepared for each one. He was superlatively gifted, you know. I mostly teach a maturing of concepts, and it involves advanced harmonic techniques you can apply to any instrument. Coltrane went through eight years of my literature in four years. And we became excellent friendswe had dinner together once a week. (In reference to thirds relationships of chords eg. Giant Steps, Countdown, etc.)
Suspecting that Coltranes teacher at the Granoff School, Dennis Sandole, may have been interested in thirds relationships, David Demsey wrote to him and received the written response that Coltrane and I had probed into third relationships also... deceptive resolution, chromatic root movement, (equal) divisions of the octave and other extended harmonic devices. So Sandole had started Coltrane along this road. (Porter, L. 1999. John Coltrane, His Life and Music, Ann Arbor, MA, U.S.A: The University of Michigan Press. pp. 51, 146-147.)
Coltrane was theory-mad. He had studied thirdrelated harmonic relationships with Dennis Sandole at the Granoff School, and, as we have seen, there was a hint of the device in his composition Nita, recorded on Paul Chambers Whims of Chambers three years earlier. Meanwhile, Coltrane was making his lines faster, more complex, drawing more on his early lessons in scales from Dennis Sandole, and possibly from his conversations with the Chicago saxophonist John Gilmore. (Ratliff, B. 2007, Coltrane: The Story of a Sound, London, Faber & Faber pp. 51-52, 129).
Thank you
T. Scott McGill Contact: [email protected]