Teaching Big Band Articulation
Teaching Big Band Articulation
Teaching Big Band Articulation
Band Rehearsal
Presented at the 2005 Illinois Music Educator’s Convention, Peoria, IL
January 28, 2005
8:00 – 9:15 am
CC 212-213
This session will cover techniques used to tighten the jazz ensemble through a consistent
approach to jazz articulation. Topics discussed will include historical precedents for jazz
articulation, note lengths, releases, back accent articulation, ghost notes, points of accent
in jazz lines, reasons for sketchy articulations in published arrangements, and the use of
singing in the big band rehearsal. A published jazz arrangement (Bill Potts’ Big Swing
Face) will be studied and demonstrated with a live saxophone section.
• Introduction
o If your kids are listening to jazz constantly, then all of this is much easier.
Without listening, there is no context!
• Why aren’t parts marked correctly?
o Jazz is music that is aural in tradition, so there is more than one way to
interpret lines. Different styles are celebrated
o Publishers leave this to the director to interpret – you can bring your own
ideas to your band, and “personalize” your sound
o Normally you will see nothing marked or long slurs
o Back accent – tongue the offbeats and slur into the beats
o Ghosting – mark an “x” over the note head or put in parentheses
o Tongue stopping (Daht) – no marking
o Doodle tongue – no marking
o Notes that are always articulated – first note of a phrase, last note of a
phrase, and high points (especially those approached upward by leap
Example One
o Short notes (eighth notes, tent accent quarter notes) are tongue-stopped
(“daht”) Why? This is the way that Louis Armstrong played quarter notes!
Example Two
o First and foremost, have the students sing everything before they play it!
o Back accent
• At first, you can have the students put spaces before the
articulated notes when playing, so you know they’re doing
it right. Then, play it with legato style.
Example 3.3
Example 4, 4.1
o Ghost notes
Sometimes, lines will dictate that a note on the beat is accented. In
these cases, the previous note is ghosted
Slur into ghost notes
Saxes don’t need to ghost as much as brass. They can help to fill in
the sound if the brass are ghosting too much for technical reasons.
Singing ghosted notes – dah-dn-doo-dot.
Example 5
o Tongue stop
Sing “daht” – the t at the end is the tongue stop
Students should understand that the end of the note is articulated.
This really helps to lock time.
Lower instruments will need to play slightly shorter to make the
note ending sound uniform – low sounds tend to ring more
You can play simple exercises to make students aware of uniform
note lengths
Example 6
• The speed at which your students learn to articulate well is governed by two
things:
• The results:
o A band that sounds better – improved swing, time, and pitch
o A large pay raise (OK, maybe not)
o Happy students who know that they sound good!
Demonstration – sax soli from “Big Swing Face,” by Bill Potts (published by Sierra
Music)
Questions?
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (309) 677-2597
Musical Examples - Jazz Articulation
Example 1
Example 2
Daht Daht doo - daht dah daht daht doo - daht dah daht daht doo - daht dah doo - daht dah
Example 3.1 - Singing and playing the major scale - step one
doo doo doo doo doo doo doo doo etc
Example 3.2 - Singing and playing the major scale - step two
doo DAH - oo DAH - oo DAH - oo DAH - etc
Example 3.3 - Playing the Major Scale with spaces
3
3 3 3 3
3
3 3 3 3