Jazz Teaching - 2
Jazz Teaching - 2
Jazz Teaching - 2
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TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM TI':ACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
1\ ()II,II'lal
A. Tertian ( I) SO What voicing
(1) structured in third intervals (major and minor) Cl) kit· band piano voicings (modal)
a) 1-3-5-7-9-11-13 (7 notes) U) chord-type applications;
b) triads, seventh, ete. i. c., -7, maj7, 7, 7sus.4, ete.
1) classical music uses mostly triads, V7, VII07, and secon- ( 'I IIII\.'mporary
dary dominants (V7 of V, V7 of VI, ete.) II~ II~("(J in compositions of Ron Miller, Herbie Hancock, John
2) triads are rare in jazz, leaning more toward extended 111111:111, ete.
chords (9ths, 11ths, 13ths, and altered chord notes)
c) 9 = 2 IIf Chord/Scales
11 = 4
13 = 6 '1IiI,d/Scale Compendium (op. cit.)
9ths, 11ths, and 13ths are used in any combination; that is, 1\ t JII,III.II (modal)
for example, a 13th chord does not necessarily contain a 9th (I) 1H"lll:lconic
scales
or an 11th. (.~) I \"II':I(JS
B. Quartal f.j) I 1 2 intervals
(1) structured in fourth intervals (usually perfect fourth intervals) j) I)III~ 7-note scales
a) generally stacked in groups of 3-5 notes; (;11111 ('IllporalY
common examples: "So What" voicing and modal voicings. ( I) ('x,lIl1plesfrom Ron Miller, John Surman, ete.
b) quartal voicings occur most often in modal tunes. (.\) l,y"tlH;ticscales;
C. Contemporary i. \"" 'i1'cni (Embryo), Ron Miller (Wood Dance), Woody
structured with more seconds (major and minor), clusters, poly- .lll.Iw(l.itdeRed's Fantasy, KatrinaBallerina, and others), David
chords, and chords with special bass tones (often used as pedal I,il·hll1:tn(Lookout Farm and others), ete.
point).
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TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
confusion of one fact with another. And if their test performances are Jazz Piano 1
weak, then the students should be reviewed over the material and
tested again. Unlike many courses, the goal of the Jazz Theory class Text: Jazz Keyboard (Coker), pp. 1-36 and 41-51
needs to be 100% understanding, as opposed to simply achieving a
passing score. Mter all, their later improvisations and arrangements ,ri, I Distribution of syllabus. Discussion of purposes and acnvl
cannot be successful if they are only 60% accurate! Art music is ries of course. Explanation of 1st performance assigntn(;nl,
evaluated primarily on its artistic, aesthetic merit, with theoretical and due at Week 2's meeting (all assignments will be explaillt:d
technical accuracy being merely a prerequisite for creation. in the week prior to their due date). Reading assignmenl:
Finally, because the ear plays such a crucial role in jazz perform- pp. 1-14 of text.
ance, the ear-training aspects of the course are of utmost importance. Perform Exercise 1 (p. 11) in G, Bb, and Db.
Each and every new principle taken up should be heard often, played, ',:k:\ Perform Figure 13 (p. 16) in 12 keys, playing only the 1'1 and
and committed to the ear. Any theoretical principle that is merely V chords (omit the I chords). See Exercise 3, p. 19. Wc will
discussed, even understood (in the mind), but not transferred to the 'xplain and play Progression 1 ("Tune-Up") on p. 21 in
ear, is not really learned and is relatively useless to the student. lass, though you needn't prepare it in advance, but do
Remember, music is sound, and this definition especially affects the prepare Progressions 2 ("Pent-Up House") and 3 ("It's You
creative, spontaneous practitioner of jazz music. r No One") for Week 4.
Perform Figure 24 (p. 25) in 12 keys, including the I chord.
Jlrogressions2 and 3 will be played. Progressions 4 and 5 ror
Week 5.
1!'11 ') Pt:rform Figure 23, p. 24 (II, V; I in minor). Progressions I{
64 65
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM r'I':AClIING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
Week 9 Perform "I Got Rhythm" corn ping and play 2 assigned t'XIIIISivcly.
IKV's. Introduce quartal voicings (pp. 51-52) and suggest ) '" III It' b:lsS and drum tracks from play-alongs, on tape, to be
ways to exercise. Prepare IKV's "What Was" and "Mahjong" Il'wd in class, on the blues, sus. 4 tunes, II-V and II-V-I exercises
for Week 10. I11I wcl vC keys from the Aebersold series, the eleven progressions
Week 10 Practice quartal voicings (with side-slipping) with accom- 1I~I'din the text, and some modal tune tracks.
paniment tapes. Play two assigned IKV's. Prepare other keys I) 1\ kind-out explaining how to arrange the 1-7-3-5 voicings Oazz
for quartal voicings/improvisation, plus IKV's "Maiden 1'1.111() I) so as to be able to perform both chords and melodies on
Voyage" and "Nica's Dream" (on supplementary hand-out) d \(' rlc:vcn tunes in the text.
for Week 11. (1t!l\ddilional Idiomatic Keyboard Vamps (see end of Section 3 of
Week 11 Practice other keys with quartal voicings and play two as- \1 HI),
signed IKV's. Prepare "Reach Out" and "Senor Blues" ) ( lpt jon:t1: expanded uses of the "So What" voicing, "I Got
(IKV's) for next time. Hllylilll1" study/voicings with tri-tone substitutions in bridge,
Week 12 Play 2 assigned IKV's. Discuss "Contemporary Chord Sym- 111111
(' l'ontemporary voicings, and bass lines (walking) for the left
bols" (pp. 52-53). Prepare "Wood Dance" and "Como en 110111(1.
(1) Titles and melodies to the eleven tune progressions contained Id •• ';Uod' Voicings For The Contemporary Keyboard Player
ill text. (I ',Ill 1llltde)
(2) Preferred inversions for the blues in each of the five assigned 'fIdllll'I'/I1i'11 Piano Voicings (JameyAebersold)
keys. 1111111 1I M'II; Approach Tb Jazz Improvisation, Vo!. 1
(3) A few known progressions which use the suspended fourth chord
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TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 11·1\(:111NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
Be prepared for the student who is intimidated by the piano. 'Icxt: Complete Method For Improvisation (Coker)
Perhaps it is better that a non-pianist teaches the course, to alleviate (Chapters 1-3)
some of the fear shared by many non-pianists in the course. Don't lose
too much time teaching posture, fingerings, tone, reading (notation), II~I Distribution of syllabus. Bring instruments/amps to all
finget speed, and other topics that serve pianists more than non- future meetings. Distribution of hand-outs (5). Deter-
pianists. Make it seem easy. Be patient. Don't be surprised if, at first, mine instrument keys for all class members to facilitate
they can only perform the exercises by working out a system of rune hand-outs for second meeting, and take orders for
watching their hands and "moving this finger here and that finger ~IIplay-alongs needed for course. Begin playing scales
there", instead of actually being aware of the identity of each chord, (pp. 9-10) and digital patterns (hand-out) at second
key, note-of-chord, etc. That will come later, when their minds catch meeting. Begin preparing "Essential Patterns and Licks"
up with their fingers, but first they need to be able to play and build (hand-out) for Week 2. Read pp. 3-10 in text.
some confidence. Apply digital patterns and "Essential Patterns" (1-4) to
Though the course is primarily designed for non-pianists, it will xercise tracks of play-alongs, "Giant Steps" and other
be found that the course will probably fill gaps and help the freshmen tunes. This procedure will continue for several weeks,
jazz pianists to a considerable degree. And the pianists who are not jazz LIntil patterns 1-17 are covered.
majors certainly won't be getting the information contained in this ontinuance of pattern practice and application. Per-
course from their classical piano teachers, so don't expect them to form melodies and improvise on all assigned Bebop and
become bored or cause the non-pianists to feel foolish. Standard vehicles (on handouts and practice tape).
When writing voicings on the chalkboard, get in the habit of Learn and apply 7th-3rd resolution on II-V progression
using letters instead of conventional notation. It gets the job done and (pp. 29-33). Read pp. 11-46 in text.
doesn't intimidate the students who read notation poorly, or have H Playing examination on bebop tune, plus awritten mid-
difficulty with reading both clefs. term examination.
Example: I i I.~ I) 1 I Modal tunes, ''Aural Familiarization With All Scale
(E-7) (E-7) 'Iones" (pp. 56-57). Pentatonic scales and fourth inter-
B vals (pp. 49-50, 62, and hand-out), Intensity-building
G devices (pp. 60-61), Melodic development (pp. 57-60).
instead of Side-Slipping/Outside Playing (pp. 62-64). Perform
D melodies and improvise on all assigned modal tunes
)
E (hand-outs and tape). Read Chapter 2 (pp. 47-65),
Ilh~ 12·ltl The Blues. Read Chapter 3 (pp. 66-74). Perform all
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1'11\( ;111NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURlUCULUM
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
71
70
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRlCULUM II'AClIING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURJUCULUM
to be placed on the book's suitability for day-to-day sequencing, 'i1lhli\'l~iIlIOIl cl:lss' pianists and guitarists are not comping, the
Otherwise, even a vety fine book (such as Baker's Jazz Improvisation it I~LI'1L IU'IIII1 pl:1yingwalkinglines, and drummers should play piano
and Advanced Improvisation, Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept, I ,1111 'I d 1111
It'li,
Aebersold's A New Approach toJazz Improvisation, and Coker's Im- 1'1.111
1111,'j(,:1(hstudent play each tune twice, perhaps on different
provisingJazzor Patternsfor Jazz) are really more suitable as 'roll up I wtlllll' discovered that everyone tends to improvise about
your sleeves and play' methods, rather than texts. dlllll tilL:second try. Also, while the tune is in its first 'round'
ill ItI;Iy i 11g), it might be advisable to keep the solos short, to
11111
Additional Teaching Suggestions Ii ~I"'IIIIIJ', ,lllll recuperation time between efforts, lengthening the
Id 1111111 choruses as they seem ready for them. Along the same
Don't succumb to making this course a course heavily-loaden I I111,,1'1
d to ,he students, when playing fast-moving, difficult
with lectures. The students have a text, copies of all the tunes, and play- llll~, 10 h:lvc; them alternate in two, four, or eight-measure
alongs for all of the tunes. They've taken a course in Jazz Theory, so 11i111'yc:tn focus on smaller units for awhile.
there is no need to lecture excessively, especially about theoretical II~r, I till' ,dollg exercise tracks while the class warms up on
substance. Plan to have them play as much of the time as possible, only 111111" H'f',inning of class, so that they are constantly given the
72 73
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 'I'EACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
opportunity to make the aural association between a pattern and the I '1111 (', 11 Y for awhile, however, they won't accept wrong notes either.
chord that accompanies it. Warm up to the tunes by playing the 1111\' will try to justifY their mistakes, saying that it was a deliberate
patterns wherever possible, also. Patterns have to be ingrained if they Id III III play 'outside' or 'be more chromatic'. In time they'll get their
are to occur to the player as an option during his/her solo. Even if the II,!II' (' lil do things like that, even be urged by the instructor to do so,
pattern is not used during the solo, at least the student will be hearing HII by 111l'n they'll have a better idea as to how to execute it effectively,
(mentally) something that could work. illilwll('I'(, :lnd when it would be most effective.
Don't be alarmed if some of the students lose or gain beats and
measures here and there. It's a common problem at first, but fades away
quickly without making an issue of it. Just be ready to pointto the right
place, in case the problem arises, without interrupting the proceed-
mgs.
In rendering feedback to individuals, with regard to their solos, be
gentle and kind, always offer solutions, remember to compliment
them when they solve the problem, expect more of the better players,
and when a better player plays something especially choice, clever, or
resourceful, share it with the rest of the class by explaining it to them.
For the first few weeks of the course (at least), focus on any and all
inaccuracies and correct them quickly, so that each student quicldy
comes to know that wrong notes are audible, that you hear them
(precisely), and that they are ultimately unacceptable. After a few
weeks, they will come to know that there is no point in trying to bluff
their way through something they haven't practiced. The problem
stems from the fact that they can't yet hear the difference beetween
right and wrong notes, and so they naturally presume that it is unlikely
that anyone else hears or cares. Of course this sort of feedback has to
continue indefinitely, though less pronounced, as each new harmonic
or scalar sound will tempt them to try to bluff their way through again,
for the same reasons. Often a new chord or scale quality (such as
diminished, augmented, whole-tone, phrygian, or synthetic scales)
will simply sound strange or wierd to the uninitiated ear, and so they
may get the notion that anything they choose to play that is 'strange
or wierd' will suffice, and no one will be the wiser. After they've played
74 75
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRlCULUM I'I'I\CIII NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRlCULUM
point, perhaps even from the outset, the desire to improvise well Illl'nLal unterstanding
1111' must be transferred and/or extended to
should be obsessive! 1111'(',II'S:1nd hands.
(5) Method.
You must have a plan, if you are to reach your goals. The plan
should be reasonable, efficient, and thorough.
76 77
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRiCULUM 'II':ACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRiCULUM
Essential Patterns And Licks ( 1lIIIIProvise against the exercise track, but lean toward rather
IH'qll(;l'lt use of the patternllick;
It has often been the case that students of improvisation will learn ) 1'101\1
icc the pattern/lick against a play-along tune that is har-
the theoretical aspects of the subject, but are prone to sounding IIIOflic:t1lyappropriate for many applications of that phrase (i.e"
simplistic, academic, sometimes aimless, with a noticeable absence of 1I,t1<l'I'\"Le Miroir Noir" in JA-lO, for applying diminished
what David Baker has termed 'the language of jazz' ... those patterns ',1A'), using only the pattern/lick whenever possible; and
and licks which are continually shared by virtually all the great lllllprovise against a play-along tune, but exaggerate your use of
improvisers, as a part of the content of their solos. In other words, a till' Iick (you can moderate its use, once it is sufficiently in-
reasonable percentage of most solos will and should contain familiar 1',1 ,d flcd). Look for other play-along tunes to which the pattern/
jazz phrases, as they are an essential means of musical communication. 1111<
11I:1Y
be applied. If you have an adjustable speed on your tape
All of the patterns and licks shown in this study are extremely 111011
hinc, play the tune(s) in other keys, to maximize your
commonplace, yet effective and needed by all. I ~p\'ricnce with playing the phrase.
Be sure to practive each patternllick in every possible way, as such 1', 1111
IIlht'r that you're trying to achieve a balance between the familiar
practice will ingrain the phrase into the fingers, ears, mind, and i 111111 IIIN/licks) and the unfamiliar (new and/or original ideas). Learn-
memory. Play the lick in all keys, using different modulation patterns iql illd illgraining these licks will not stifle your creativity. It will lend
(chromatic, cycle, etc.). Can it be altered slightly to enable it to fit I III1I1II1I"ic:ltion to your solos, and serve as springboards to original
different harmonic situations? Does it sound well when played from .I, I~ VIII'" creativity will only be stifled if you never play anything
a different note of the chord? Is it effective when played backwards "111',11,,11,
','IIC one thing you cannot afford to do is to operate in a
(retrograde)? If it is an ascending contour, is there a descending 1\ II~III V,ICllum.
possibility (and vice versa)? Can it be connected smoothly to another
pattern? Can it become a double-time pattern, if need be? Does it have
potential for sequences or side-slips?
The process of ingraining is extremely important. An insuffi-
ciently-ingrained lick will not occur to you in the 'heat of battle', and
even if it did, you'd probably be afraid to try it, because of the high risk
of errors. Therefore it would be wise to follow the format given here
....
to msure mgrammg:
(1) practice pattern/lick, alone, without accompaniment (all keys,
sequences, permutations, etc.);
(2) play patternllick (only) against an appropriate play-along exercise
(i.e., a track from Aebersold's Volume 1, 3, 16, 21, etc., not a
tune);
78 79
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 11''.1\( :111 NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
=-1
12 211 211 5765
11. ~lhll' Licks
~r
B. II-V Licks (I )//,,7)
~ . .-/
llilllllllshcd Patterns
D-7 C7 (CL'1)
(8)
D-7 1'111
(9)
~.
(10)
~
C. V7 -I Licks
"I'.III1'lIlcd Patterns
C7 CL'1 CL'1 (or C-L'1)
1111
(12)
~ ~
80 81
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 1'I1i\C!IING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
82 83
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM ,"':i\<:IIING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
An interesting phenomenon takes place as the course progresses I >"/lices Commonly Found In Improvised Solos
into listening to solos from the text and citing all occurrences of the
common devices. At first the students tend to glean all their informa- Analysis of Jazz Styles
tion by reading their copies of the solos (even that is difficult for some),
but after awhile, they're hardly reading at all, because their ears begin lll'hop Scale - the adding of a chromatic step to an otherwise 7-
to perceive the devices before their eyes and mind can decipher the lIill' 'H .dl'. in order to align metric accents. In major scales the
written version! '\IIIlIII.111l Slep occurs berween the 5th and 6th degrees, in dorian
Also, as the course progresses, the commonly-used devices are so , d, ~ 11 VIII'Sbetween the 3 and 4, and between the 7th and root of
CH
prevalent that there is very little left unmarked in each of the solos, 1111'11\t1LIIIscales.
which convinces the students that the list of devices is indeed a 1I.·hop Lick - very closely related to the bebop scale (see above), in
capsulization of what is commonly referred to as 'the language of jazz' 11111111
IIIVDlvl:sthe same added chromatic step. However, the bebop lick
At the end of the course, they should be urged to examine the list again li~1I d vny specific melody. The bebop lick on a C7 chord, for
to determine how many of those devices have, as yet, become a part of IIilllll' (.dso a G-7 chord), would be 'c-b-bb-d-a-g'. Less frequently
their own improvisational style. Ii Id'lIl.IPIll':irs with a 'c' or an if' in place of the id'.
hH tosllrc (also referred to as Surrounding Tones) - an 'object
111111(,"I1S011;1ntmember of a chord or scale) approached first from a
I lid 11111('
.dlOve, then a semi-tone below, then the object tone (similar
III Iq'l'c I 1IIId lower 'neighboring tones'). Example: an object tone of
I q '1"'111
j 111\ ill an enclosure would result in a 3-tone series of'& -b-c'.
1I11i1'N Scale - (structure: 1, b3, 4, #4, 5, b7) though specifically
11" 111I11I'd11)1'use in the conventionalll-bar blues, some players will
li'l IlIlIy ,~p()r:tdically in the blues (plus the fact that some blues
1"111',11 '~~IOIIS:1re less than wholly traditional), and players will fre-
'1"1 IItI" W.\' 1he blues scale in a non-blues tune. It is one of the scales
1111.1"111I1y
chosen for harmonic generalization (see below).
11.11111011 ic Generalization - the practice oflumping together sev-
i I d I hi 1111.\(cspecially closely-related chords, like I1-V-I) with one
I d, I 'IH' III:ljor scale and the blues scale are most commonly used for
till" 1"1'I'D,~t·,hut scales like harmonic minor and diminished can be
1't'L1I'd.ISwcll, along with still other possibilities.
Clhllll\c-RlInning - the practice of arpeggiating the individual
111"II~Id .c progression in improvisation, so that little else is occuring
84 85
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM IIIADIING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
(such as definable melodies). A fast harmonic rhythm is usually the l'II"i11 (Contrapuntal Elaboration of Static Harmony) - a har-
reason for such practice, and one can generally expect to find a 1'"'111,III vi,'\, in which a chord of long duration has one moving voice
consistent rhythmic level of 8th notes. Scales can also be a part of .10 III IIlln\:$t, such as a long-running minor chord in which the
I'" d, 'ill'llds in half steps, but the other parts of the chord remain in
change- running.
Digital Patterns - closely related to change-running, digital pat- II.~l ~lIII1H'I'OUSmelodies and patterns have been based on this
terns are small (usually 4-8 notes), well-organized notegroups such as 11tHlilllllll device, and frequently a player will superimpose a CESH
1-2-3-1, 1-2-3-5, 1-3-5-3, which are used to realize fast-moving chord lIi.l"d \ III p.lIl'\:rn over a non-CESH harmony, especially II-V progres-
lilil 1Ilillllllic (I) minor chords.
progressions by transposing the patterns to fit each passing chord.
h L' nll'c Substitution - a harmonic substitution of a chord or
Such patterns are usually practiced aside from and before actual
llilid~ lViii, h :lre a tri-tone (3 whole steps, or an augmented 4th, or a
performance.
Pentatonic Scales - (structure: 1,2,3,5,6 of a major scale) most liltlilllNIH'd ')1 h) away from the given chord, such as substituting Db 7
commonly found in modal and blues tunes, but also found with less IHI [I I :'/. Ill' (;vcn Ab_7 Db7 for D-7 G7. An Improviser does not
frequency in other situations. Uncommonly long phrases are often Ihll'_~"1 dy W:\il for the subsitution to be present in the accompani-
generated by the use of a single pentatonic scale. Side-slips (see below) lih III 111/1111'
Ilsing it.
are often based on pentatonics. 11'lIp,~ from the 3rd to a b9th - melodically, it is extremely
Side-Slipping (or Outside Playing) - the practice of deliberately !,l1ll1lilli IIlI' :\n improvisor to play the 3rd of a dominant seventh
lilllll, tlll:11IlIove directly or indirectly (by including the 5th and/or
leaving the given key, momentarily, and returning. Often the side-slip
is to a key or chord that is a half-step higher than the given one, and !I1llll 111111
\') t () the lowered 9th. Such motion permeates much of the
11111,11
.~ldl'''.IIlCCof a solo, especially on VI7 chords, and one will find
pentatonic scales are often present. The device is used to create tension
and avoid monotony. dH11I1ll~ III,IIIYinstances of the 3rd moving down (3 half steps down)
Unusual or Substitute Scales - under the heading of unusual scales It I till' I11IVI'I ,·d 9th as the instances in which an upward motion is used.
might be synthetic scales (originally-devised). Less-common modal
". ',y Mc" River" Lick - a phrase which derives from a standard
scales (i.e. phrygian or locrian), harmonic major, gypsy minor, hindu 11111"
11111
H'Sail)\: name. In its original context, the melody descended
scales, and all symmetrical scales (chromatic, whole-tone, diminished, I IIIIIIIIV\:I), 8(1), 5, b3,2, 1 (over a tonic minor chord). Although
III'IilIIVI~'I'"SlIse the phrase in this same setting sometimes, it is even
augmented). Sometimes a player will substitute one of these scales (or
another equally unusual one) for a much simpler, more traditional illlllll tlllllll\()n to find them using the same melodic intervals in a
one. liiL:ICIII 1I.II'I1lonic setting, as follows: +9, b9, +5, 3, +9, b9 (still
Resolution of 7th to 3rd - refers to the common resolution of di'~lCIIIIIIII',)over a dominant seventh chord with an augmented 5th
the seventh of a -7 chord (like II) to the 3rd of a 7 chord (like V) whose 1111/11111'.1111'111<:<.1
9th added.
root is a fourth higher (or a fifth lower). For example, the resolution !'( ;1I11t· nil t Not Forgotten" Lick -like the "Cry me a River" lick,
of 'c' to 'b' in a 0-7 to G7 progression. Frequently this resolution is I It11t' 1'<1wl, kh derives from a standard tune of the same name ("Gone
1\11111111111l1'~Olten").ltis nearly always used over a minor chord, using
present in the melodies and patterns of an improviser.
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TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 11'1\( :111NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
the digital formula, 9 (or 2) - b 3 - #7 - 9 - 1 - 5. Example: against C-, !HI~~i1dljlj('8/11'$t, such as substitute chords, bar-line shifts, or 'blue
the phrase would be 'd-eb -b-d-c-g'. Il!il[_' (I,.\,1,), orb 7),forexample. It could even be aside-slip (or outside
Angularity - the use of uncommonly wide intervals in improvi- I'lill'llil',), II1 :IIlY event, be cautious about labelling a suspected error,
sation, very pronounced in players like John Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, i IWil IlIllk 1;)1' possible causes, such as split notes, hitting wrong
Thelonious Monk, Woody Shaw, Benny Wallace, ete. Ii 11111111111 \ Oil :1 brass instrument, memory lapses, getting finger-tied,
Sequences - re-use of same or similar pattern or melody over illl(:,U 1IIIf', 10 rcpeat a section, ete., all of which can happen to anyone,
several successive changes of harmony. ItiLl1 jlllt.~l:lrisalessontotheanalyzer.
Quotes - melodic fragments of other tunes or solos, woven into
an improvisation, sometimes as a humorous touch, sometimes sim-
ply because the improviser hears that the quote is based on the same
harmonic setting as what he presently faces. In a few instances, players
have used quotes to be programmatic or to make a socio-political
comment.
Shifting of Bar Line - The delaying or anticipating of the har-
monic or rhythm progress (especially the former) so that it is occuring
(seemingly) in the wrong place. It is a deliberate (usually) and tempo-
rary distortion of the meter and/or bar structure.
Inadvertent Repetition - the unintentional reiteration of a phrase
within the same solo, often occuring at the same spot within a
successive chorus or repeated section (and nearly always on the same
chord root and chord-type), therefore separated from its first occur-
rence by a considerable length of time. If the phrase is reiterated
immediately after the first occurrence, then it is probably deliberate
rather than accidental. Inadvertent repetition usually indicates that
the phrase is a personal cliche; or simply reinforces the notion that all
players are prone to hearing the same phrase at certain points within
the tune's progression (a natural aural phenomenon).
Error - an obvious mistake on the part of the improviser, yet
dangerous for the inexperienced student analyzer to cite. If the given
chord, for example, is C-, and the player plays an e-natural, or the
chord is a C 7 and the player plays a b-natural, it is relatively safe to
assume an error. However, the analyzer must also consider other
88 89
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURlUCULUM II'A<:I liNG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
Text: Jazz Arranging and Composing (Dobbins) 11\111lk'111s are to learn to tap their creativity and write attractive
I, dll Y11I1Istfirstbe taughtto
11111', learn more tunes, be exposed to great
Weeks 1-2 Rhythmic rewriting of various types of melodies. it.1I!iI dll/vc never heard and/or analyzed and be shown what made
Weeks 3-4 Study of and listening to "46 Great Tunes" (instructor's "I(.' 111111"~
,~llccessful, learn how to write effective progressions and
collection). Notation and calligraphy. IIldlll III~•. 1I1d practice composing different kinds of tunes (standard,
Weeks 5-6 Re-harmonization techniques and techniques of chord hd'''II, lilOtLd, blues, contemporaty, etc.). In addition to studying the
substitution. Common aspects of chord progressions I!!~i IIIIII'~provided by the instructor, each student should be asked to
(drawn from Appendix D ofCoker's Improvising]azz). pii.dwl~.1 I:lpe of some of their currently favorite tunes and state why
Begin composing tunes. i1wl' 1;'\·1 tklL each is a good tune, being careful not to confuse
Weeks 7-8 Composing and in-class performances of original tunes liI ""11'11'1'or arrangement with the tune itself (a great tune can be
(graded). ji, """'II'd hadly and a mediocre or weak tune, with a good arrange-
Weeks 9-11 (approx.) Study of small ensemble arranging (Dob- till,III dllll/or performance can sound deceptively good).
bins), with short arranging assignments for various in- 'II It rt'spect to arranging a tune, the student should be made
strumentation. I,W ",' (01' Iltt' options they have, with regard to writing for 2-5 voices
Weeks 12-15 Original compositions/ arrangements by students, to be (,,"h,,"' .. OCl:lveS,thirds, sixths, fourths, stacked, open, drop 2, etc.),
played in class. "Il \Ill 1I1.~ I<.:xturespossible (homophonic, contrapuntal, harmoniza-
i i!ill,l.11.). ,Ine!ways to accomodatechromaticism in the melody. Keep
Hand-outs/Supplements I hI' ·1\~jl',IIIil(.'n
ts short at first, so that the students have more time to
I" I III 11"1'job with it, so that their assignments won't require as much
Lead lines (melodies) of standard tunes which are in need of '1i1H 1.1 pl.IYand tape, and so they won't risk the possibility oflaboring
rhythmic rewriting, for the purpose of adding syncopations and a '" " I I," I", :Issignment only to discover that it was all done incorrectly.
more spontaneous sort of rhythmic phrasing. 11111~~i/',IiIll(.:ntscan be lengthened later, when the students are more
"11 11111 It'.
Copies of choice tunes to be studied and analyzed for attributes.
Hand-outs pertaining to reharmonization and chord substitution 11lit\' sludents are knowledgeable about MIDI and the university
methods. IIII dll I.Il'ilil ics, much class time can be saved if the students prepared
Hand-out listing harmonic and melodic aspects of tunes that 111111
d~"j",nmcnts on MIDI rather than having to read, rehearse, and
cause them to be attractive to the listener. 1'111 dll'lll in class.
1\1 1.11
h<.:rstrict about the mechanics of arranging, especially at
Alternate Text Possibilities: 11, I. ~IIl It .ISthe quality of the calligraphy, accuracy of transposition for
Arranging And Composing For The Small Jazz Ensemble (Baker) 1\1 lilt! 1.:1, inSLruments (including the correct octave), numbers of beats
90 91
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM l'I':i\C1IING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
in measures, and other basic skills that pertain to the mechanical lId ~,dlll ions that were used by well-known composers/arrangers on
preparation of scores and parts. As it was mentioned about beginning 1IIIIIdilll;'~ they've heard. By merely triggering their innate creativity
improvisers who need to understand that wrong notes are unaccept- Jill~\ 1I1,IY come back with yet another solution, one that is equal or
able, and jazz theory students who need to think in terms of 100% 1011111 dun what you might have done, better than anyone of the
accuracy instead of a passing score, it is also true that young arrangers "111 it 111\ you mentioned, even better than what the well-known person
11 I 11111,,( I.
need to understand the gravity of accuracy in the score and parts.
Many good, even great arrangements have been refused by pro- 1'111 Il':lch ing melodic form, this author uses excerpts from Jazz
fessional ensembles simply because the parts were inaccurate, unnec- ';"/'u//I/II/lion (David Baker), or Arranging And Composing For The
essarily complicated (i.e., the inflated use of repeat signs, repeated ,,It/II /,/\,~\ h'nsemble (Baker), and ImprovisingJazz (Coker), all of which
measures, multiple D.S. and D,e. markings, 3rd and 4th endings, and IIll1d'" "l'gments on melodic development.
which, by the composer's own testimony, was some of his finest worl\, !l1I1I.!till III Ill' Ihcir many options.
So it was only natural that this material be placed in the hands OfYOllIIP, III 11 II j,~ time to have their arrangements played by an en-
arrangers who could benefit from the many revelatory aspects 01 1I!1,I\. 1IIIdlld 111(; students not to judge themselves too harshly if
Fischer's mastery of the idiom. However, as these scores are not ill .1 ti dl. Ijljlllilll<.;dby what they hear. When you add the perform-
published form, the reader may have to substitute other scores that li I1 ,I1Ill' 11) what you were hearing as you wrote it, there is often
merit careful investigation. III I,ll It. I' 111.1
t is not necessarily the arranger's fault. This author has
III 1""11 ,11 I,11l1',(;mentsbeing sight-read by an ensemble in which
Alternate Text Possibilities: 1111111111',,',nulld was deplorable. The student has to learn to
The Contemporary Arranger (Don Sebesky) "',111,I i 111'1 W\TO performance problems and compositional prob-
94 95
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM 11 '1\( :111 NG THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
dies selected by instructor). "Y pl:ly-along which has a number of good, but difficult
Weeks 2-4 Demonstration of In-Class Performance by instructor, IlIltllll'lIl.lry tunes, such as Aebersold's Volume 4 (Movin' On),
followed by discussion of problems to be solved in such HillllIl I) (Woody Shaw) , Volume 10 (David Baker), Volume 19
a project. Continuance ofInterval Patterns and various I i,l\1 I 11·IIIII:1n),or Volume 35 (Cedar Walton).
melodies in 12 keys. Study and performance of tunes 1/11' IIllIsic OfRon Miller would be very appropriate, if it was not
using the Coltrane Matrix ("Giant Steps," "Counl- "'I,d, IlIvl'rcd in the sophomore course, and the new Liebman-
down," etc.). lit 11,lt 11pl.ly-:t1ongs (Quest-Standards) from Advance Music are fine
Weeks 5-6 Improvisation in 12 keys (Blues, "Stella by Starlight," in! "iI~ pllrpose. Some instructors may want to put together a
"Ladybird," etc.). Ear training with improvisation (on Ii'illlt,·,ill' lape for Advanced Improvisation, similar to what this
tapes). Begin work on In-Class Performance tape. IIdll iI dlll',~ ror the sophomore improvisation courses.
Weeks 7-9 Study of "I Got Rhythm" progression, in 12 keys, :11 \llllIlIlgh no text book was specified for this course, a good
various tempos, and with common devices used on that II!i~~11
tlllly I()I'that purpose would be Advanced Improvisation (David
11·i1II'I)
progression. Begin tempo study (ca. 180-320).
Weeks 10-12 Perform tunes from Wayne Shorter play-along.
Weeks 13-14 (approx.) In-Class Performances by each member of' Additional Teaching Suggestions
class, plus 'post-mortem' discussion after each.
Week 15 Final examination (written). \~ 11was described in Chapter 2, the Advanced Improvisation
1"llIld 1111 ilS on topics which would have been too difficult for
Hand-outs/Supplements ita /,.111111111', j IIIprovisers, such as playing melodies and improvising in all
i·II,~,I.I~i 1('I11POstudy, improvising at sight on 'new tunes', learning to
Interval Studies. illl'l ,llIlId ,~llbstitutions and special devices over blues and "I Got
Tempo Study (see following pages). 1111""1111" 1\l11CS,interval studies, working with the Coltrane matrix,
Instructions For In-Class Performances, Preparing A Tune For Per it! 1\ 1111'. IIVI'" drones, more contemporary vehicles, and an emphasis on
formance, And In-Class Performance Evaluation (see following pages. H 'id 11 I1I V." IICS.The course also affords some time to quickly review
96 97
11AI llIlli ' Ill' ' "\ IIUII!i IH 1111',
JAZZ CURlUCULUM
TEACHING THE COURSES IN THE JAZZ CURRICULUM
/I'/II/lfl Study
some aspects of the sop homo re course which were difficult enouglllll
require considerable self-application during the ensuing year.
Since this course is possibly the last formal course the} Stlld~'1I1
OS\('"~I\lh llii_ tlllll)' j~ 1111'.1111
to facilitate the playing of espe-
will take in improvisation, the instructor needs to use it as .111 cially faSI \l 1I11'1Ie,.
I \1 iWCVfl'j 1I1~1111 rinsically tied to several other facets
opportunity to fill gaps, eliminate weaknesses, re-check their theol ('11 of playin\" ,11'IIIY 1[11,\111 \'111'pl:\yer must learn to identify his/her
cal understanding, set their attitudes toward improvisation for Ilfl , pwblem 1'''' "d y. it ,t., I" "1>1.-,,, is to b, solv<d with any dell'oe of
teach them how to troubleshoot their own problems provide t1l('11I efflCiency. ""1111'111111~' \111'Ilhll'\ :Iuses for experiencing difficulty with
with alist of still more things to be accomplished aftergraduation (1111 playing tCIl'1111~111;l
author's list is entitled, "Where Do We Go From Here?"). (l) a bdt III 11l~III1I\1f'"lj" Il'chnique, in terms of fmger speed.
AClll:\lIy. d\l, \11 rdlitivl Iy 1.11'<':,
as evidenced by the ability of most
I,\plllll ills, glissandi, and fall-offs with reason-
plaYl'I" 1111'1('11111'
ab\<.:t'.I~I·.\1 I~,1111111
dll·Ir~S, one possibility;
(2) difrtCllllY wldl IIIl 11,,11'1',
I.:I10ugh attention on the pulse that is
provided hy dll dlllllllller and bassist, due (usually) to getting
caugh I 11 pili d 11 11111
il :\Cics of improvising;
(3) inapprOpll.ll1 1,11/ ph,·:\sing, such as over-articulating or having
probkllH' wi d I I'l.lyill\\ swingy eighth-notes (i.e., playing dotted-
eighlhhixll'I'"lh, ills\(;ad of something closer to a 12/8 feel). No
onc call ,Ill \I.llly Idl you how to swing, though you might come
close hy lI~jlll', ,hI: \ 2/8 feel, accenting upbeats, and tongueing
upb,"" ,,,,,I sl""'i,,~ into downbeats. But even mo" applied
interprctations will only simulate the real thing. Listening to
players who arc unanimously felt to swing especially hard is
problably the best way to discover the swing feel.
I:.ven if the player experiences no difficulty with any of the foregoing,
II1\)SIplayers have a breaking point, with respect to good pulse relation.
I'\1.11is, although they have the technique, phrasing, and ability to
li~i\'l\ \0 their musical surroundings (the latter possibly still part of the
1''',h""") ,rtC< a ce"ain point in the tempO spread, ca"ful l~"ning
11\\I'vl.;\1 that the player is no longer coinciding with the provided
that slowly climb the tempo scale, and listening carefully to detect the I,) I 11',1"
111111'(;
non-terminal patterns, diatonic substance, more chro-
i.~rn,'machine licks', and in general, less angularity;
111.111\
first signs of a breakdown in pulse relation. The following list is a
[ \11",111111IOrecarefully to accompaniment than usual, thinking a
possibility for such a play-along sequence, focusing on tunes which
Illtll' k-,~sabout solo content;
require very little effort, harmonically, so that the concentration may
1I Iflll hl' tempo in 2, instead of 4, so as to minimize tension;
be placed on time-feel:
\', I dill ((11'look) ahead more, concentrate harder, and don't wilt or
Title Source I ill illto lOO many short, choppy phrases;
Tempo
It" I1 1ll',ilit'l1phrase units;
190 In Case You Haven't Heard JA-9 I 1,/11:'/11111(;
chotuses before playing them, so you won't be dis-
200 What Is This Thing Called Love JA -15 11111\ 'd hy the problems of playing the instrument;
224 Impressions (slower version) JA-28 1111~IIIVI' 101'all emphatic feeling of swing and phrasing, for building
232 Tenor Madness JA-8 I ~111'1l'
11('conviction and commitment;
When the breaking point has been determined, note the tempo.
Then, using a copy of a tempo legend (ask me for one), back up aboul
10-15 'notches' on the tempo (selecting any tune you wish at that
tempo), and slowly work your way back up to, and hopefully past, th'"
tempo that first gave you problems. Remember, if you have a tape
player with variable speed, you can play the tune in a different key (and
tempo), if the tune is not too difficult, giving you some tempo
flexibility that can fill gaps where you don't own a listed play-along.
Each half-step change in pitch alters the tempo by about 1~
notches.
Finally, the following list is provided as a helpful set of guidelines,
100 101