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10 Apr

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

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To learn what Miles Davis thought of his music from his modal amount of time (circa 1958-63), the best source is Davis’ autobiography, Miles: The Autobiography, in which he states that he was prompted into this style of improvising on less chords by Gil Evans’ arrangements of George Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess. He also states that George Russell commended pianist Bill Evans (no relation) to Davis around the same time amount of time (1958) for his LP Kind of Blue on the strength of Evans’ noesis of the music of French Impressionist composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel. Davis subsequently became infatuated with Revel’s Concerto for the Left Hand, and expended roughly the next 13 years incorporating the latter composer’s gadgets from that peculiar piece into a distinctive Davis style of what a heap of historians (Winthrop Sargeant, for example) termed Impressionist Jazz: unsolved melodic tensions, quartal harmony, non-functional chord successions (as opposed to progressions), extended pedal points, bi-tonality, and other salient early Twentieth century characteristics.

Having said all of this, however, I ought to point out that jazz is not modal, including Davis’ music of the amount of time in question. Jazz scholar Barry Kernfeld, for example, calls this music Davis’ Vamp Style, explaining that this style does not fulfill the musical characteristics which scholars attribute to modal music. Check out the New Groves Dictionary of Music and the New Groves Dictionary of Jazz. In brief, modality is a medieval style based on melody–not chords, not similar to Mozart’s music, whose melodies are guided by and outline chord progressions which move forward through the circle of fifths towards cadences in tonal keys. True modal music is a melodic rather than a harmonic concept. Even when concordance is introduced to modality, it does not guide it is behavior. Moreover, the mere absence of chord progressions–or the presence of pedal points–does not constitute modality.

Since Davis’ music was gorgeous by most standards, it is besides the point that he misunderstood the term modal. While it has no affect upon the success of his musical affirmations that he thought of it as such, it nevertheless may be asserted that irrespective of the fact that he thought of his music as modal, it doesn’t make it so.

This misunderstanding of modality has had a unfathomed effect on jazz improvisation pedagogy. The prevailing approach in innovative times is to arbitrarily assign modes to each chord in a tonal progression that was designed to accompany a tonal melody. The more spectacular problem with this approach, however, is that it fails to address the primary stuff of the composition on which one will have to improvise: melody, guide tone lines, root progression, and melodic rhythms. Moreover, to assign three dissimilar Greek mode names to a tonal ii7 V7 IMA7 (D Dorian, G Mixolydian, C Ionian) cadence, for example, is tedious and misleading. That progression is in the key of C Major, and if you combine the three modes, you come up with the obvious: a C Major scale; and in this context it is likewise less restricting to think globally through the key, rather than locally from chord to chord.

From 1958 on, Davis was searching for a way to play more motivically and to be less constricted to running chord changes while improvising. In the process, he became captivated by Ravel’s respective devices. While he thought that this constituted modality, he was in reality incorporating early Twentieth century Impressionist appliances into jazz. Frankly, in all of my lifetime in African American music I have never heard a single modal jazz performance.

Typically, in these modal (vamp–or pedal point) pieces, the piano share will specify a chord symbol such as Dm7, or Dm7/G, etc. and it will specify for how galore measures: —-PLAY 8—-. Or it may just specify the mode: D Dorian —-Play 8—-. There likewise may or may not be a specific, written ostinato bass line supplied, as in Maiden Voyage or Equinox. Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea prefer such symbols as CMA7/D, which is how Herbie notated the D13sus4 for the basi eight measures of Maiden Voyage. In this way they may specify a type of voicing as well as a chord.

While Berklee College does also instruct guide tone line and root progression technique–and a great galore other things (I taught there for over three years–full time), their primary focus is on modes and translating chords into scales as a primary means of improvisational technique. Now–even at Berklee itself–there is a gigantic philosophical battle raging over this very issue. The question is does this mindset serve your best interests?

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

In this modified edition of his acclaimed and award-winning study, Stephen Bourne takes a personal look at the history of black persons in popular British film and television. He documents, from initial exploration and interviews, the experiences and representations which have been ignored in former media books when it comes to persons of African descent. There are chapters when it comes to Paul Robeson, Newton I. Aduaka, soap operas and much more – as well as assorted utile appendices and suggestions for further reading.

About the AuthorStephen Bourne is one of Britain’s leading authorities on Black history. He has programmed a number of events for the National Film Theatre, including a centenary tribute to Paul Robeson.

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin Pic

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin Pic

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin Photo

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin

American Piano Concertos George Gershwin Image

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