A jam session is a musical act where musicians play (i.e. "jam") by improvising without extensive preparation or predefined arrangements. Jam sessions are often used by musicians to develop new material, find suitable arrangements, or simply as a social gathering and communal practice session. Jam sessions may be based upon existing songs or forms, may be loosely based on an agreed chord progression or chart suggested by one participant, or may be wholly improvisational. Jam sessions can range from very loose gatherings of amateurs to sophisticated improvised recording sessions intended to be edited and released to the public.

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Jazz [link]

The New York scene during World War II was famous for its after-hours jam sessions. One of the most famous was the regular after-hours jam at Minton's Playhouse in New York City that ran in the 1940s and early 1950s. The jam sessions at Minton's were a fertile meeting place and proving ground for both established soloists like Ben Webster and Lester Young, and the younger jazz musicians who would soon become leading exponents of the bebop movement, including Thelonious Monk (Minton's house pianist), Charlie Parker, and Dizzy Gillespie. The Minton's jams were legendary for their highly competitive "cutting contests", in which soloists would try to keep up with the house band and outdo each other in improvisation skill.

Rock [link]

As the instrumental proficiency of pop and rock musicians improved in the Sixties and early Seventies, onstage jamming also became a regular feature of rock music; bands such as Pink Floyd, Cream, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Deep Purple, the Who, the Grateful Dead, AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, Santana, King Crimson and the Allman Brothers Band would feature live performances that could last anywhere between 10 and 20 minutes. However, they can be shorter. For example when Muse play live, they lead from the final chord of various songs into a short jam.

Some notable recorded jams and jam-inspired performances in the rock idiom:

Jam bands [link]

More recently, the jam band has become a genre unto itself; following in the footsteps of jam band originators the Grateful Dead, performances by groups including Phish, moe., Umphreys Mcgee, and Widespread Panic feature extended improvisational sessions. Other bands, such as the Red Hot Chili Peppers also regularly perform live jam sessions. Progressive rock band Coheed and Cambria often end shows with a jam session to their song "The Final Cut" with different instruments.

Bluegrass [link]

Bluegrass pickin'.

Bluegrass music also features a tradition of jamming. Bluegrass jams happen in the parking lots and campgrounds of bluegrass festivals, in music stores, bars and restaurants and on stages. Bluegrass jams tend to be segregated by the skill level of the players. Slow jams for beginners provide an entry point. Open bluegrass jams are open to all comers, however, the players in an open jam will expect a certain level of proficiency. The abilities to hear chord progressions and keep time are prerequisite; the ability to play improvised leads that contain at least a suggestion of the melody is desired. Jams that require advanced musical proficiency are generally private, by-invitation events.

See also [link]

External links [link]


https://wn.com/Jam_session

Jam Session (software)

Studio Session is a 1986 software program for Macintosh computers, for music creation and playback. It was created by Macintosh and Newton pioneer Steve Capps and musician Ed Bogas. The program was published by Impulse, Inc..
The software differed from other audio creation packages as it used 8-bit audio samples of real instruments rather than sounds generated by the Macintosh sound chip, as did packages such as MusicWorks and Deluxe Music Construction Set (DMCS). It was capable of playing back 8 tracks simultaneously. There were two modes or screens, the authoring screen and the playback-only screen. In the authoring screen, the user entered notes on a staff with treble and bass clef using the mouse, and selecting the duration of the note with on-screen buttons or keyboard shortcuts. In the playback screen, an animated simulation of a VU-meter was displayed for each track.
The package shipped with a selection of several sampled instruments and several add-on packages were later released, such as the Heavy Metal Instrument pack that included more drum and guitar samples. Other packs were Country and Brass.
The music samples provided were created by Gary Clayton working with Ed Bogas' band. The user was not provided with any software for creating their own instruments for use in Studio Session, however it was possible to record new instruments or convert existing samples using commercially available audio-editing software such as SoundWave from Impulse Inc with the MacNifty Audio Digitzer.

Jam session (disambiguation)

Jam session is musicians' informal group playing.

Jam session may also refer to:

  • Jam Session (film), 1942 short film featuring Duke Ellington
  • Jam Session, a 1944 American film directed by Charles Barton
  • Jam Sessions, video game
  • Jam Session (software)
  • Jam Session, Japanese documentary about the making of Kikujiro
  • See also:

  • Jamming (dance)
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Jam Session

    by: Heavy D

    [Intro]
    Ah you hear this?
    Ada big belly guy I telling be talking
    By my side is my version Biggie Smalls Ya? (no question, no question)
    From Brooklyn Ya! (Representing', uhh)
    Comfortable calling in NBA stars,
    wiggity wiggity wiggity wiggle wiggity why
    Come in Biggie and let them understand
    [Verse One: Notorious B.I.G. & Heavy D]
    [Biggie Smalls]
    Not even Stan the man could withstand the lyrical punch
    You nibble on my double dribble or alley-oop and monster dunk. (Ah hah, ya heard this?)
    Dig in the trunk Mark Jackson even Bill Paxton
    Give me my props at the lyrical waxin (ya heard)
    [Heavy D]
    Ya heard, kill the beam cause the heavy one's coming
    Shot are being blocked and the funky drum is drumming
    That's one of those set's where ya gotta get wreck or get wrecked
    No time flex, Heavy D is on the set, so what's next?
    [Biggie Smalls]
    I'm stripping like Scottie Pippen giving the serious butt kicking
    Breaking bones like Karl Malone yeah I'm flippin'
    Or Isaiah, say ya prayer when I step inta your layer
    Leave the lane clear; I'm welfare like Lambier
    [Heavy D]
    Now in case you didn't know it's a funk flow slide show
    Hip hop here we go, how did ya know the big belly pro
    Doing his thing Ting-a-ling-a-ling ting-a-ling-aling
    I'm the man, yes I am, now watch me jam, who I am?
    [Chorus x4]
    Ohh jam, here comes the man hot dam, jam
    [Verse Two: Notorious B.I.G. & Heavy D]
    [Heavy D]
    This time it ain't the shoes, it ain't the shoes, I swear it's me
    (Who that?) The H to the E to the A or Y Vesty
    I slam a dunk bunk I make a funky feel the funk
    I don't know what it is but I got blue funk inside my dunk
    [Biggie Smalls]
    One in the chamber like Chambers,
    Getting' that close range like Danny ainge nobody is stranger
    Than the Biggie Smalls, the Brooklyn thumper
    With the wicked jumper you like the way I freak the double jumper
    [Heavy D]
    Jump shots, jump shots, I got them for days
    Call me radar; I'm a star I don't miss them far
    A funky dribbler ball handler rough for a verangular
    Giving props there you want cocks and I'm slamming them
    [Biggie Smalls]
    Rebounding, Outstanding, no one surrounding
    I'm screwing and doing like I was Ewing
    The only one soaring and scoring is Jordan (Ah heh ah heh)
    He must of had his wheaties this morning
    [Chorus x4]
    Ohh jam, here comes the man hot dam, jam
    [Verse Three: Tru Kula]
    (Yeah)
    Hey maa! Pass my kicks with the ill grip, quick
    Watch it wreck, use the number one draft pick
    In my district I'm slick with the b-ball
    Your curious ask the Heavy or the Notorious
    Biggie, who can check me, can he see me?
    I'm ghost like the board slave, five coast to coast
    Cause I'm the dread not the baldhead
    With the ill vertical, like my man Spud Webb (uh hahaha)
    Don't push your luck I won't spear chuck a 20-footer
    Gripping the archive for great sky hook
    Look, who's that? You never heard of me
    Ever seen a structure that fits in a jersey
    Could you flow like the general on the hard wood?
    To black top courts in ya neighborhood
    Yo, Biggie's on the low post, heavens to swing man
    Eh yo, check out the jam
    [Chorus Fades Out]
    Ohh jam, here comes the man hot dam, jam




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