If you have a Facebook account would you open it please then click on the tiny Facebook icon at the foot of this post, then "Like" it.
IF YOU SIGN UP AS A "FOLLOWER" YOU'LL GET ALL THE POSTS. Go bottom right of the blog and you'll find it there.
Would you SHARE this with your musician friends please?
In this blog We will produce tips for jazz piano, and jazz guitar together with jazz saxophone. We will cover jazz chords, jazz guitar chords, and we will deal with jazz scales. We will cover jazz songs. This site is all about jazz improvisation.
We met at the Snowdrop in Lewes. Monday nights are terrific there.
I asked Terry how he would rate
Harmony versus Rhythm versus the tune in his playing. He would not separate
them, all equally important. But, he added that harmony is particularly
important for the piano and for writing. He also says he is influenced by being
a 50% writer and 50% player. Music is a cohesive entity and you can’t separate
it into a collection of elements like rhythm, melody and harmony. We can do
this in order to learn, develop and theorise but you always have all the
elements present when you create actual real music. It’s like driving a car –
the brakes, throttle, gears etc. are all necessary components to the totality
of a car and we have to learn about their roles but then we master driving when
we put them together into the whole. When you get good at it driving becomes
intuitive and then you can even listen to some music while you drive (although
I don’t think I have a reputation as a natural driver)
"Melody gets the interest
of the listener," he said. Rhythm for him also encompasses the
groove the time feel. He had just seen Larry Goldings trio at Ronnie
Scotts the previous night. He said they were tremendous, "Part of the
reason is that they are totally locked in together, they've been playing
together for over 20 years. That makes a big difference."
He sometimes plays references
to the tune usually in the last chorus. I asked him about what Alan
Barnes calls "shapes". He said that playing shapes help the
continuity in the music. "When everyone knows the song and harmonies
inside out then can play more intuitively. "When we are not sure, then we
tend to concentrate on ourselves and what we are doing and we play less
together.
He thinks that as well as being
an art form jazz can be seen as a sport, as a game to be played with rules.
This side of it it is more about having tremendous fun in the moment with
other musicians rather than being focussed on being especially innovative,
although there is always some chance that this might happen too.
Terry studied at Eastman School of Music, New York. Toured world wide with Joe Lee Wilson (US jazz singer). Performed in Brighton & London with his own groups & leading frontliners - Chet Baker, Jimmy Witherspoon, Sonny Stitt, Harry Eddison, Archie Shepp, Jim Mullen, Bobby Wellins. Leader of Cubana Bop and creator of Milestone's the Miles Davis tribute.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Keep it helpful please - and clean.