Trane 4 Trumpet
Trane 4 Trumpet
Trane 4 Trumpet
com
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Your donations guarantee that the website will go on to function the way it always has. This not only means that you will
have continual access to the site but also that new music will keep on being added to the catalog, giving you plenty of
reasons to return for more. My short term goal is to post 100 items (compositions and books) by midsummer, but I have
long term projections which easily surpass 300 items. Thats a whole lot of web space and I know I cant pay for that
myself. Thats why I need your help.
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The Music
The music in these files is top quality engraving. Not only do I use the industrys leading music engraving software
(Finale), but I spend the time and effort to make the parts exactly right. Many people use computerized musical notation
as a short cut but I dont. I rarely accept the defaults in each individual part and I labor over them literally for hours to
make sure that the music is easy to read. This is the same engraving quality you would get from any of the major
publishers, if not better!
Why downloads?
I ran my own publishing business for over a decade before I decided to post all of my books and compositions on my
website. Having done it both ways, I can tell you that this way is better for everyone. I want people to use my music and
my books. Doing it the old way, via mail order sales, I had to limit the numbers of books and reduce the quality of the
print in order to keep up with the demand. This way, you will eventually have access to everything Ive ever written and
it will always be of the highest quality work.
The downloads also allow me to spend my time practicing and writing more music instead of trying to fill book orders.
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to say that this is better for everyone.
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in my mail order business. For example, my Daily Routines book was selling for $30. The recommended donation for
that book is $5. Can it get any better than that? You get the music now and you get it for far less.
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Eddie Lewis
Tiger Music
PO Box 34027
Houston, TX
77234
My efforts on this project began almost a decade ago with a few frustrated scribbles jotted down on a clean
white piece of manuscript paper. I knew early on that the problem in playing the so called "Trane Cycles" was
not in getting from the "V7" to the "I", but in getting from the "I" to the next "V7" - a minor third up from
the previous I chord. The number of possibilities was seemingly limited. So I began collecting new ideas and
new possibilities. But it was a slow process, and now, after so many years, that clean white piece of paper
looks withered, dirty and abused.
As I've also done in other quests, I turned to previously existing literature for inspiration and ideas. I've
studied out of about five different books, all written by sax players, which had transcriptions, exercises and
etudes which were intended to help SAX players play these changes. I learned a whole bunch from reading,
studying and practicing out of those books, but they weren't very idiomatic to trumpet playing.
I've always liked practicing out of sax books. Typically I view its awkwardness as being a welcomed challenge.
But I also believe that a person grows faster and learns more from such challenges when they are taken
individually, not collectively. Just being able to play these Coltrane chord changes is a formidable challenge in
its own right. But to add the difficulties of playing sax oriented materials to that becomes too much at one
time. At that point, the efficiency of the effort is lost and the learning process is retarded.
That's why I began making up my own material for this purpose. Most of it is rooted in what I learned from
other sources, but it's altered in a way which makes it more trumpetty.
Already, before the book is even completed, I've encountered people who oppose the idea of practicing a
tune like Giant Steps. In his essay titled "The Wyntonization of Jazz", Bobby Brookmeyer says:
"Somebody running "Giant Steps" doesn't tell me shi--. A pass on "Stella" and I have a very good idea what's up after 16
bars."
In his essay, Brookmeyer states that music is "song based", writing that:
"We wallow in decades of beautiful songs, giving us so much linear and harmonic instruction that to ignore it is criminal."
And this is most certainly the main theme behind the opposition I was referring to. There is an outspoken
minority of players and teachers who are solely dedicated to melodic jazz improvisation. And to be certain, I
do tend to agree (to some extent) with this minority when they say that there are far too many jazz players
who are all about technique and nothing else of musical substance. Jazz improvisation should not just be a
bunch of notes and patterns. I do agree.
However, I don't agree that this is a reason NOT to practice a tune like "Giant Steps". I do not believe that
having greater technique automatically means that you have less musicality. Either you are musical or you are
not. How much technique you have has nothing to do with it. The problem occurs only when a player's
technique advances while his/her musical maturity lags behind (but this is a very subjective matter and I really
doubt that many players ever think of themselves as being completely unmusical).
I also disagree with the assertion that ALL (good) music is melodic. This is not exactly accurate. I believe that
there are two types of melody in this context. There is "Vocal Style" and there is "Instrumental Style". In his
book titled "Jazz Composition and Orchestration", Bill Russo writes:
"Instrumental style is evolved from manual rather than vocal capability. A keyboard player can as easily execute a
three-octave skip as a singer can execute the skip of a minor third. In addition to wide skips, instrumental style is
further characterized by wide range, freer treatment of dissonance than vocal style, rapid repeated notes, rapid scales,
sharp accents, and strong rhythms."
Fortunately for us trumpet players, our instrument falls somewhere in the gray area between vocal style and
instrumental style. Although we have more flexibility, greater range and more facile technique than a singer,
we are not quite in league with pianists, violinists or even sax players in those areas. I believe that this is our
strength, not our weakness. We live in both worlds. Our music can be as beautiful as that of a human voice,
then in the next moment we can play more instrumentally, with more technique and greater flexibility.
A player may choose to devote all of his or her musical efforts to vocal style. It's an honorable and respectable
choice. Some of my favorite players have been players who are completely committed to playing in a "vocal
style". But I don't think that all of us should be held to that as if it's some sort of standard. And as much as I
admire those players, I admire even more those players who are able to find a balance between the two
contrasting styles.
There is no shame in playing something that cannot be sung by the human voice. Some instrumental music is
very beautiful, even though it's not singable. Often, that has to do, not necessarily with what notes you play,
but with how you play them. I'm reminded of times when I was practicing modern music with my first college
trumpet professor, Sam Trimble. He told me, time and time again (paraphrase):
"The challenge of playing this kind of music is in MAKING it sound musical. Some music sounds musical without
any effort while other music requires more work on our part."
I learned from studying modern music with him that you can make music out of any sequence of notes. It's
all a matter of what you do with those notes and how you play them. And I think jazz can be like that. It's not
so much what notes you play as it is how you play those notes. Certainly, the note choices are a big part of
our musical personalities as jazz players. All I'm saying is that, if your playing isn't musical, then it's not going
to matter what notes you're playing or what tune you practice. It's still not going to sound convincing, whether
your notes are singable or not. If you play "Stella" without playing musically, it can sound a lot worse than if
you play "Giant Steps" musically.
To me, the most appealing thing about a person's style is contrast and balance. I like when a solo has a
balance of dense and sparse passages. I like a solo that has contrasting dynamics and articulations. To me, it's
the balance that I find most pleasing. Lyrical and melodic playing looses some of it's beauty when there's
nothing to compare it to, nothing to contrast it with, when there's no balance between that and playing which
is more instrumental.
A book which I highly recommend mainly because it actually addresses these issues, specifically discussing the
subject of balance, is Hal Crook's "How To Improvise". He actually has exercises you can practice which can
help you construct more balanced solos. Like I said, I highly recommend it as a contrast to the more
technically oriented books most of us already own.
There are three reasons why I practice tunes. I categorize tunes into groups based on those three reasons.
What good is it to practice only music that you have to? I believe that we should all practice at least a little bit
of what we like to play. Some tunes I practice just because I like them include tunes like; Breakfast Wine,
Eighty One, Four Brothers, Joshua, Unit Seven, Hoe Down and Confirmation. These are some of the tunes
which I enjoy playing but really never get called on a gig. But I work on them because I like them.
Then there are the tunes I have to work on because I know I'll be expected to play them on a gig, at the drop
of a hat. Most of the tunes I practice actually fit into this category. It's interesting. Several different clinicians
over the years have handed out lists of the top tunes that they thought every player needed to know. One of
my favorites of these was a list of three hundred tunes that Bill May compiled. There are SO many tunes that
we need to know, as jazz players, that it's unreasonable to expect anyone person to know all of them. I think I
know at least a thousand tunes and it's still not unusual for me to be "stumped" on a gig. On the last gig I did
with David Caceres, he called at least five tunes that I didn't know. So, it's really an on-going effort and
should be for all of us.
Finally, there are tunes I practice just because I know that being able to play those tunes will make me a better
player. To me, "Giant Steps" fits in this category. I wish I could say that I like to play "Giant Steps". But it's
really not my favorite kind of song to play. I'm not saying that I don't enjoy playing it. I enjoy playing jazz any
chance I get and any tune that's called. But if someone asks me what my favorite tune is, I'm not going to say
"Giant Steps". And as far as needing to know it for a gig goes, there are times when I've played it on real gigs.
But those times are rareand usually it was after all the wedding guests had left the hall.if you know what
I mean. So I really don't see "Giant Steps" as being much of a gig tune. But I definitely do consider it to be an
important tune in terms of the effects it has on a person's playing.
I believe that people should find the weaknesses in their playing and work on those weaknesses. For me,
"Giant Steps" addresses my weaknesses very specifically. It's an extremely confining, restricting tune. That's
why so few people can play it well. It's not just that the chords change every two beats. Other tunes have fast
harmonic rhythms like that. But this tune actually changes keys or changes tonal centers every four beats. And
if that weren't enough, those tonal centers initially seem to be fairly distant from each other, making for
awkward improvisation.
In his book titled, "The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization for Jazz Improvisation", George
Russell outlines four different types of playing; in-going vertical (chord based playing), in-going horizontal
(scale or key based playing), out-going vertical (outside playing based on chords and/or intervals) and outgoing horizontal (outside playing based on scales and/or keys). He says that the best players, from Charlie
Parker to Ornette Coleman, use a balance of those four different kinds of playing. For me, my strongest types
of playing are the two horizontal types. My second weakest type of playing is in-going vertical and my weakest
type of playing is the out-going vertical. "Giant Steps" is my first step in solving that problem.
The first step is learning how to play those changes over the top of the rhythm section. When I can do this, I
will then begin trying to play those changes, the "Coltrane Substitutions" over rhythm sections which are
NOT playing those same changes. That is my interpretation of "out-going vertical" and it is actually a very
common kind of playing for sax players. But not many trumpet players have ever done much of this, not to
my knowledge.
So, there it is. I practice "Giant Steps" because I know that it's the first step in that direction. I practice it
because I know it will help me become a better player. And that (having taken the scenic route to get there) is
my answer to the question, "Why Giant Steps?".
Trane for Trumpet starts off with simple patterns and progresses slowly and gradually towards solo like jazz
etudes, based on the chord changes for "Giant Steps". I wanted the reader to know that there is a sort of
structure behind the way the book progresses, but I didn't want to explain that structure for fear of having it
influence the way you play it. But I will say this, the way the book progresses is not directly related to
difficulty. There is a variety of different technique levels throughout the book. My recommendation is to pick
and choose those which suite your purposes best.
What this book is not......it's not a collection of "licks" for you to memorize and use in your solos. I don't
think anyone would really do that because it's not like I'm some big name player that people want to emulate.
But I think it's important to point out that I won't even be using this material in that way, and it's MY
material! So please understand that that's not what this book is for. If you come to a performance and hear me
play "Giant Steps", chances are you won't hear anything that I've written for this book.
I've been writing "Jazz Etudes" based on chord changes as part of my method for learning tunes for as long
as I can remember. Basically, these are just written out solos. I practice them to help familiarize myself with
the chords enough so that later, when I do improvise on that song, I will be able to play the changes with
confidence. The main thing I'm trying to learn, in this context, is how to use good voice leading to get from
one chord to the next. That's exactly what this book is all about, getting from here to there, so to speak. And
I've learned that you can't get that kind of learning from regular "practice patterns". Arpeggiating a chord
progression does not give you a feel for which notes lead where.
When I actually improvise, I use the voice leading I learned from practicing these etudes, but I try to not play
the actual "licks" that I practiced. It's a matter of learning it then forgetting it. If, after I've successfully
forgotten the exercises and etudes, something just slips out in one of my solos, then that's okay. What I want
to avoid is that concerted effort to force "licks" into my solo. That kind of deliberation has never had
favorable results for me and I avoid thinking that way at all costs.
When you use this book, you'll notice that there is a lot of repetition in the first half of the book. Only the last
one third of the book is "through composed" and there's a reason for that. Just as rhyming helps us remember
text, repetition of patterns helps us remember chord changes. This is a powerful combination, when you add
repetition to voice leading.
I know I'm going to have fun with this stuff and I hope you do, too. Thanks for letting me share my ideas
with you.