Practice
Practice
Improvising is a verb , improvisation is a noun . Improvising is something we do, not something we have. Improvising is a dynamic process. Improvising , requires skill. Improvising requires deep, practical understanding and facility in executing forms and materials. Improvising may be addressed mechanically, but is best developed with spirit , personality , and a sense of fun and serious application .
IMPROVISATION
IMPROVISING
On
Practising:
summary
advice
regarding
the
day
to
day
practice
for
jazz
improvisors
On
Practicing
(Version
7)
by
Simon
Purcell
Head
of
Jazz
at
Trinity-Laban
Conservatoire
of
Music
and
Dance
Contents:
PART
1
page
Preparation
and
Aims
and
Objectives
The
Body
of
Knowledge,
Language,
Forms,
Concept,
Spirit
How
it
works:
The
Improvisational
Practice
Cycle
Self
Diagnosis
Practicing
Tunes
Learning
Tunes
and
forms
thoroughly
4
5
7
9
11
14
PART
2
Practicing
Improvising:
the
idea
of
3
visits
Complimentary
Activities
Recommended
Reading
Software
and
Internet
Downloads:
Practice
Record
Template
16
20
22
24
25
O N
P R A C T I S I N G
1
Prepare
Jazz
isnt
simply
about
how
many
licks
you
can
play.
Aspiring
musicians
often
enquire
as
to
the
best
book,
the
best
lick
or
best
course
of
study.
There
are
many
answers
to
these
questions,
but
the
first
question
must
be:
It is essential that we utilise practice time effectively, this will only be as effective as the consideration accompanying it. Practising technique or an improvisational skill without awareness of a likely or actual outcome wastes time and effort, and will result in the rehearsal and internalisation of unwanted habits and ultimately low morale and loss of motivation.
In How To Improvise, Hal Crook alerts us to the ready, fire, aim approach to playing or how we only become aware about what were playing after the event. Clearly, thinking can start before we even begin to practice. You are serious enough about music to want to practice, so why not make a plan? first Brainstorm all the things you want to achieve, Artists dont get down anything at all, from appearing at Ronnie Scotts to to work until the pain of learning the mixolydian mode. It is worthwhile doing working is exceeded by this over a few days. Live with it, jotting things down, the pain of not becoming more aware of the different facets of your working relationship with music. If you wish to use your time Stephen DeStaebler well, you must have a sense of where you are going. then Identify Common Themes. Gradually combine ideas you have written down into a manageable collection of general headings. Devise practice methods which combine skills and will save time. If in doubt, ask a teacher or friend. then Identify Tangible Goals (short, medium and long term), begin to work out what is practical for you. Consider the amount of time you might set aside to practice, remember the value of repetitive practice, reinforcing knowledge etc.... (See cycle of knowledge sheet.) finally Plan your practice, become a good diagnostician, visit a teacher who can help you gain perspective on your development.
You may find it helpful to see the process of jazz as drawing on 4 reservoirs of knowledge:
Totally concrete, literally set in CD, immutable, a reproduction of what is possible. CDs as representations of artistic or technical perfection. Note the inherent contradiction that improvised music (music in flux), once recorded may be perceived as absolute. Example: Recording of Oscar Peterson playing On Green Dolphin Street, complete with transcribed improvisation. 2 Forms
Absolute in outline - less absolute in execution or interpretation. (E major having four sharps, the chord sequence of On Green Dolphin Street, or Rumba clav), Example: The form of On Green Dolphin Street, key of C, 32 bars, ABAC, modulations to Eb major and C minor. The manifestation of form is determined by - Concept.... 3 Concept
The how and why of forms and the articulation of personal aesthetic and expressive choices. Example: Why Oscar Peterson and Bill Evans sounds so different when playing On Green Dolphin Street. 4 Spirit, the heart, attraction The fact that anybody plays On Green Dolphin Street and
The motivating force to play, to create and express. Example: we love it! Be vigilant in your practice, reflect regularly and check whether you are attending to all aspects of your musical growth. Where are your strengths? Which weaknesses are you avoiding? Can a friend of teacher assist? What does concept mean to you? Are you aware of the conceptual differences between your mentors? Do you possess sufficient concrete musical fact and technical skill in order to express yourself effectively? 6
7 Stages:
1
Attraction
an
attitude.
From
the
heart,
-
beauty.
There
are
2
types
of
beauty
-
jaw- dropping
beauty
and
the
beauty
of
usefulness
-
ie
a
minor
II
V
I
phrase
or
a
particularly
effective
fingering.
2
Reproduction
a
skill.
Manufacturing
the
desired
object
exactly
and
reliably,
literally
becoming
that
thing
in
its
most
basic,
material
form.
Notice
how
this
stage
requires
attraction
to
have
taken
place
alongside
a
commitment
to
accuracy.
There
is
no
improvisation
here
at
all.
3
Application
-
a
skill.
Make
it
useful.
Apply
the
desired
object
to
real
musical
situations,
beginning
with
the
original
context.
This
is
skill
building
or
training,
becoming
adept,
thoroughly
researching
all
possible
applications
of
the
object.
4
Modification
a
skill
and
a
process.
More
flexible
application.
The
object
remains
pretty
much
the
same,
but
may
be
adapted
(modified)
to
suit
different
keys,
tonalities,
rhythmic
contexts
and
tempos.
5
Manipulation
-
a
process.
Freely
and
deliberately
changing
elements
of
the
object
while
still
referring
to
it
in
its
original
form
-
ie
altering
the
ending.
Note
that
curiosity
and
improvisation
are
now
necessary.
Imitate,
assimilate,
6
Transformation
-
a
process.
More
extreme
manipulation
-
the
innovate
object
may
now
remain
as
a
prompt,
a
springboard
or
an
echo.
Gesture
Clark
Terry
may
become
more
important
than
the
detail,
contour
more
useful
than
exact
replication
of
intervals,
feeling
more
important
than
the
spelling
or
the
concept
itself,
forming
new
materials.
The
deeper
meaning
interests
us
now.
7
Readiness
-
an
attitude.
You
will
have
now
absorbed
both
the
beauty
and
the
detail
of
the
original,
desired
object,
thoroughly,
achieving
reliability
and
adaptability
and
moving
towards
use
that
is
informed
yet
personal,
forming
new
material
as
a
result
of
the
improvisational
practice
cycle,
which
now
begins
again...
1
From Simon Purcell Musical Patchwork: Teacher-research within a Conservatoire, London: Guildhall Press, 2002.
Co-relationship of the Improvisational Practice Cycle and the 4 Reservoirs of creative activity:
Attraction Readiness
Reproduction
Transformation
Application
Attraction
Manipulation
Creation
is
only
the
projection
into
form
of
that
which
already
exists.
Shrimad
Bhagavatam.
The
most
fulfilling
musical
moments
can
happen
when
you
are
able
to
reach
beyond
your
technical
limits
of
the
instrument
and
just
let
the
music
flow
out
of
you
Keith
Jarrett
Improvisation,
the
seat
of
jazz,
is
a
remorseless
art
that
demands
of
the
performer
no
less
than
this:
that
night
after
night
he/she
spontaneously
invent
original
music
by
balancing,
with
the
speed
of
light
-
emotion
and
intelligence,
form
and
content
and
tone
and
attack,
all
of
which
must
both
charge
and
entertain
the
spirit
of
the
listener.
Whitney
Balliet
4
Self
Diagnosis
Developmental
stages
as
cycles:
Learning,
creation
and
reflection.
Practice
is
only
as
effective
as
our
awareness
of
its
outcomes.
The
Learning,
creative
and
reflective
cycles
are
diagnostic
tools
(borrowed
from
school-teachers),
useful
when
we
feel
that
our
practice
isnt
productive.
Perhaps
were
bored
with
scales
and
need
to
be
more
curious
and
playful.
Perhaps
were
full
of
energy
but
unable
to
manage
tricky
corners.
Use
learning
cycles
in
order
to
review,
adjust
and
balance
your
practice.
Dont
be
shy
to
discuss
it
with
a
teacher
or
fellow
musician.
Explore
Fig
1
Learning
cycle
Discover
Reinforce
Construct
Reconstruct Deconstruct Plan Fig 3 Reflective cycle Review Act The creative process is sometimes perceived as in fig 2. Does this assist us in developing our
practice? To what extent do we deconstruct our process? Do we ever reassemble it? What state are we in today? What timescale does this apply to in practice and preparation for performance?
Keep a diary.
Teachers prepare and evaluate their classes, similarly, we must monitor our progress regularly. A diary assists us in observing whether our practice methods are having the intended outcomes. While we intend to express ourselves personally, there is a rigour to practice, whatever our individual artistic intentions. There is no hiding place from the tape recorder (a diary of our playing) or the diary that records and reviews our practice routines and records our perceptions.
The thing that makes jazz so interesting is that each man is his own academy. Cecil Taylor
The tape/hard-disk recorder doesnt lie! In the same way that mirrors show us how we look, the tape recorder is an invaluable aid in making our practice effective. With it we have the benefit of hindsight and time to hear the good bits we didnt hear, those ideas that were only granted fleeting attention as well as those corners that we didnt know we needed to address. Here are some ideas to get you started. 1. Decide what you want to achieve - this is the most important decision. 2. Select a context - a tune (or part of a tune) that needs some work, a manageable II V or modal bit. 3. Play and record for a while. Stop, listen. 4. What do you notice 5. What do you like? 6. What dont you like - be specific. Rest a while and decide what steps to make. 7. Play and record again.... This time decide to focus on one point alone - feature it your improvisation - whether reinforcing a good point, developing a good idea that had slipped through your net, or focussing on the change that gets away.... 8. Repeat 4. 9. Do this as often as possible for at least a month. Are there any developments in your practice?
10
5
Practising
Tunes
This
is
a
common
sense
approach
to
internalising
songs
and
forms,
based
on
approaches
to
practice
employed
by
Lennie
Tristano,
Bill
Evans,
Sonny
Rollins
(apparently!)
and
many
other
players.
Significantly,
this
approach
emphasises
the
use
of
melody.
Objectives:
A
thorough
understanding
and
awareness
of
the
harmonic
and
structural
detail
within
the
form.
Awareness
and
utilisation
of
the
fundamental
properties
of
improvisation
information/content
and
use.
Principles:
Always
reduce
learning
objectives
to
bite-size
bits.
Know
the
form
(absolute)
then
embellish
and
manipulate
(process).
Drill
the
skill
then
manipulate
Approach
all
improvising
as
manipulation
of
melody.
Always
learn
by
ear.
Practice
very
slowly.
Be
aware
of
cognitive
overload
work
with
a
manageable
amount
of
information
and
reinforce
until
it
becomes
automatic.
How
and
where
you
practice
affects
the
outcome
-
so
apply
the
skills
learnt
in
practice
to
realistic
situations:
a. practice
routine
b. play-along
context,
c. practice
with
friends
d. rehearsal/play-through.
e. Always
approach
exercises
with
commitment
and
feeling.
Memorise/transcribe
examples
(solos)
that
model
your
objectives.
Reinforce,
reinforce,
reinforce.
11
The
first
time
we
hear
music
we
hear
the
tune
and
feel
the
beat,
so
as
improvisers
we
must
begin
with
these
most
tangible
and
audible
parts
of
the
form.
Tip:
Lennie
Tristano
advised
that
we
improvise
with
total
commitment
and
expression.
Make
the
melody
a
convincing
statement,
without
embellishment.
Step 1 Memorise and improvise with the melody. 1.1 Know the tune first dont skimp on this stage then, improvise with the melody - melody notes alone. The discipline of focussing exclusively on the melody notes causes you to develop powers of concentration 1.2 Manipulate - stretch the rhythm of the melody accelerate, delay, alter the rhythm. 1.3 Embellish the melody, a) Rhythmically repeat notes, b) melodically sing neighbour notes Tip: Learn the lyric, then sing the song with the lyric and simply manipulate the rhythm. Step 2 Memorise the root movement. 2.1 Learn the root movement as a melody 2.2 Improvise rhythmically with roots only (as in 1.2) 2.3 Embellish the roots with neighbour notes (as in 1.3 above). Tip: Think of the root movement as a tune! Step 3 Improvise with - roots and 3rds. 3.1 Learn the roots and 3rds as a melody 3.2 Improvise rhythmically with roots and 3rds only (as in 1.2) 3.3 Embellish the roots and 3rds with neighbour notes (as in 1.3 above). Step 4 Improvise with roots, 3rds and 5ths (triadic improvisation). 4.1 Learn triads as a melody 4.2 Improvise rhythmically with triads only (as in 1.2) 4.3 Embellish triads with neighbour notes (as in 1.3 above). Tip: Enclose the first note of each phrase.
12
Step 5 Improvise with roots, 3rds and 5ths and 7ths the chord tones. 4.1 Learn triads as a melody 4.2 Improvise rhythmically with triads only (as in 1.2) 4.3 Embellish triads with neighbour notes (as in 1.3 above). Tip: You dont have to sing/play all notes in the triad. Dont attempt more than you can manage! Step 6 Establish resolutions with guide-tones (advanced). 6.1 Learn guide-tone lines as melodies. 6.2 Improvise rhythmically with guide-tone lines. 6.3 Embellish guide-tone lines with neighbour notes (as in 1.3 above). 6.4 Embellish guide-tone lines with chord tones. Tip: Target the guide tone at the beginning and end of each bar - make the join. Step 7 Join the dots. Chord-tone improvisation again, this time joined-up with parent scales. Maintain the chord frame by emphasising/featuring the chord tones. Tip: Be sure to start and end each phrase on a chord-tone (1,3,5,7). Step 8 Comprehensive guide-tone improvisation. 8.1 Charting 3rds and 7ths 8.2 Locate 5th and 9ths, 9ths and 13ths. 8.3 Chromaticise guide tone lines: 5 9 5 becomes b5 b9 5 Step 9 Improvise in the general spirit of the work above. Tip: Have a short break then return to the song. Improvise with the echo of the exercises you practiced earlier sensing instead of thinking.
13
Shock horror jazz genius recorded Nardis 41 times (as far as we know)
I wonder why? Perhaps he wanted to go deeper! I have heard many famous jazz musicians advocating the necessity to learn a lot of repertoire. Esteemed artist "number one" recently encouraged students to know at least 100 tunes, while esteemed artist number two advocated just 20 and stated that some musicians are just tune nerds (not very helpful). "Number two" misses the deeper and more useful point which is about memory and the need to be sufficiently thorough in our practice that song-forms present as few problems as necessary while we deal with the principal issues of improvising and expression. Many aspiring jazz musicians struggle with the repetition necessary for internalisation, often losing focus and moving their attention to another new tune, the next good idea or something they have heard at a gig or on Spotify. It is worth noting that Bill Evans recorded Nardis at least 40 times, and quite possibly played it on most gigs. Welcome boredom with a form, and see it instead as indication of the right time to go deeper.
14
5. Utilise these tunes (or parts of them) as contexts for your improvisational practice. 6. Next month select another 4 6 tunes. It is essential that you work on the tunes for at least a month in order to allow our brain sufficient time to learn in depth, to engage in the higher levels of improvisational activity, and for skills to become embedded in the deeper levels of our memory (there is a different technique for speed leaning repertoire in terms of familiarisation). After a while you will notice the material becoming very familiar. At this point dont be distracted and fall into the trap of trying out a new tune. Instead, this is the critical point at which you can go deeper, applying and developing improvisational skills and approaches without having to worry about memorising the material. This is a highly effective way in which to practice/learn because it combines depth (repetition) with context (the song), if you are prepared to learn deeply rather than approximately! It is also just one hour. 15
16
3
Visits
Examples:_________________________________
1st
Visit:
Technique.
1
Warm
Up:
1.1
1.2 1.3
2
Scales:
(crotchet
=
70
100),
one
scale
exercise
per
semitone,
12
keys.
2.1
2
x
8ves
8th
notes.
Up
a
semitone:
3
x
8ves
triplets.
Up
a
semitone:
4
x
8ves
16th
notes.
Up
a
semitone:
5
x
8ves
quintuplets.
Up
a
semitone:
3
x
8ves
sextuplets.
This
covers
5
semitones.
Pianists:
hands
separately,
horns,
tongued
etc
2.2 2.3 As
above
on
next
5
semitones.
Vary
articulation.
Remaining
2
semitones:
mixed
metre,
23,
3s,
4s,
5s.
Physical
stretching,
setting
mind,
focusing
in.
A
couple
of
very
slow
scales,
out
of
tempo:
Motto:
Minimum
tension,
quick
release,
body-check/relax.
Objective
is
alignment
of
mind
and
body,
the
rehearsal
of
relaxed
physical
state
alongside
an
alert
mind.
Good
use.
Consider practicing scales, grouping 8th notes in 3s, 5s, or 7s for a month or two. Between each and every scale, return to the relaxed physical state. 3 Arpeggios and/or wider shapes: 3.1 Arpeggios or 4ths: 4 semitones: 2 x 8ves 8th notes, up a semitone: 3 x 8ves triplets, up a semitone: 4 x 8ves, 16th notes. 3.2 3.3 4 Chord-scales: 4.1 Select a scale system for 2 weeks (ie melodic minor). 4.2 4.3 Arpeggiate chord-types in conjunction with chord scales. Run chord-scales as various melodic patterns. Jazz pattern #1, 4 semitones. Jazz pattern #2, 4 semitones. Be sure to return to the relaxed physical state between each and every exercise, utilising repetitive practice to rehearse and internalise good posture and relaxed alertness.
Between each and every arpeggio/pattern, return to the relaxed physical state
[Note: Stages 2 and 3 cover 12 semitones, twice. Start a semitone higher each day.] 17
Personal set-list: By selecting a set of 4 to 6 tunes for up to 6 weeks, you will create a musical context in which to place improvisational learning points, achieving continuity in practice as well as learning repertoire.
18
Improvise within repertoire using a number of process-based/play-rest and design techniques3. As above, within progressive contexts.
Employ the play-rest idea in order to return to the relaxed physical state at regular intervals. 4 All improvisers should work on the memorisation and presentation of melody; harmony instruments, chord-voicings and arrangements within repertoire.
19
Complimentary
Activities
Many
activities
enhance
our
improvisation,
perhaps
research
through
transcription,
or
further
musical
investigation
through
active
listening,
or
the
delight
of
free
improvisation
or
musical
sketching.
Transcription
is
perhaps
the
most
often
employed,
although
students
and
aspiring
musicians
frequently
under-utilise
this
activity,
generally
because
they
are
in
too
much
of
a
hurry.
It
is
critical
that
you
engage
with
the
process
in
the
right
order.
Dave
Liebman
has
written
extensively
on
the
subject
(see
the
essays
"My
Philosophy
of
Education"
and
the
shorter
"Summary
of
the
Transcription
Process").
My
own
(very
short)
advice
is
as
follows:
1
Transcription:
If
approached
in
a
complete
with
regularity
and
in
the
4
stages
outlined
below,
this
is
probably
your
most
useful
tool
at
this
stage
in
your
development.
1.1
Select
a
solo
for
its
usefulness.
Transcribe
in
3
stages:
a. Memorise
a
segment
and
sing
along
with
recording.
Gradually
increase
up
to
8
bars,
16
bars,
a
chorus.
Dont
move
on
until
you
have
memorized
and
can
sing
a
whole
chorus
with
and
without
the
CD.
This
will
measure
your
retention.
b. As
(a)
on
your
instrument
with
and
without
the
CD.
c. Now
transcribe
the
first
chorus,
select
and
write
out
at
least
4
favourite/useful
licks.
Write
at
least
4
variations
on
each
one.
d. Memorise
the
4
licks
and
your
variations
and
apply
to
you
daily
practice
as
described
in
the
2nd
visit.
1.2
2
Listening:
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
4
Attune - listen wisely, as this attunes your ears. Reinforce your practice by listening to recordings that model your improvisational targets. Research - check out players who influenced your favourite musicians. Listen for fun and inspiration.
20
3 Complete the picture - Harmony: 3.1 Learn simple complete voicings (includes bass note) for chosen repertoire. Check voice leading from chord to chord. Memorise. 3.2 3.3 4 Complete the picture - Rhythm: 4.1 4.2 4.3 5 Complete the picture - Free Play: 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 6 Most important of all be sure to monitor your practice. Are you balancing the various elements? Are you achieving and maintaining continuity? Are you able to retain skills, content, processes? Share your practice with a friend or teacher. Play whatever you want! Be free. Contrasts Complete performance ie three minutes with a beginning, middle and end. Combine a time-no-changes approach with melodies from a standard song. Or use conceptual/thematic frameworks: I guess it comes from getting into this... trance-like state. Its like youre tapping into something thats going by... Kenny Wheeler Play air-drums with recorded chosen transcription, good examples of repertoire and great grooves. Purchase some brushes and hand-percussion and play along with recordings. Practice rhythmic placements/displacements along with a CD. Join a samba-school or African Dance group. Go jive-dancing. Apply comping rhythms to voicings. Play freely in the general sound-world generated by the voicings.
21
Recommended
Reading_____________________________________
Paul
Berliner.
Thinking
in
jazz:
the
infinite
art
of
improvisation
University
of
Chicago
Press,
Ltd.,
London
1994.
Academic
treatise
on
improvisation
containing
numerous
of
personal
accounts,
highly
detailed
musical
examples
and
references.
Thorough,
but
heavy
going
if
youre
not
used
to
academic
style.
David
Buswell.
Performance
Strategies
for
Musicians
MX
Publishing
2006.
Practical
advice
regarding
performance,
informed
by
strategies
drawn
from
Neuro-Lingusitic
Programming
and
Sports
Psycholgy.
Jerry
Coker.
How
To
Practice
Jazz
publ.
Aebersold.
Concise
and
practical
book
about
practicing
jazz.
Jerry
Coker.
The
Teaching
of
Jazz
Rottenburg:
Advance
1989.
Concise
and
practical
book
about
teaching
jazz.
Hal
Crook.
How
To
Improvise
-
A
Guide
to
Practising
Improvisation.
Rottenburg:
Advance,
1991
The
best
book
available,
a
book
about
improvising
rather
than
the
more
common
compendium
of
information.
Hal
Crook
stresses
the
importance
of
design
and
control.
Information
serves
process
here,
with
dozens
of
practice
routines.
Suitable
for
all
improvisors
-
including
drummers
and
singers.
Hal
Crook.
Ready,
Aim
Improvise!
Exploring
the
Basics
of
Improvisation.
Rottenburg:
Advance,
1999.
Excellent,
practical
and
comprehensive,
essentially
a
summary
of
a
2
or
3- year
undergraduate
course.
Betty
Edwards.
Drawing
On
The
Right
Side
Of
The
Brain.
London:
Harper
Collins
1979,
1993.
A
stunning
revelation
of
how
left/right
brain
(hemispherical)
theory
transforms
drawing
and
painting.
While
written
for
artists,
this
is
well
worth
a
read.
22
Gallowey and Green The Inner Game of Music New York: Pan 1986, 1987. Sequel to the Inner Game of Tennis, straightforward psychology of performance, widely used by sports professionals and musicians. Carl Gustav Jung. The Undiscovered Self London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1958. Jungs distinctions and perspective on dogma and doctrine a lateral and useful angle on stylistic adherences and artistic development. Mark Levine. The Jazz Theory Book, Sher Music. Compendium of jazz information, mainly bebop and modern. Excellent presentation, but lacks guidance on improvisation. Stephanie Judy. Making Music for the Joy of It. New York, Tarcher 1990. Self-help book designed for amateurs, yet full of important reminders of the principles and purpose of practice. Stephen Nachmanovitch. Free Play - Improvisation in Life and Art. New York: Tarcher/Putnam 1990. Beautiful, readable and highly insightful treatise about improvising, drawing upon, amongst others William Blake, Einstein, Martha Graham, Stravinsky. A must! George Odam. The Sounding Symbol. Cheltenham: Stanley Thornes 1995. Teaching and learning music, by one of the UKs leading educators with deep insight into how we learn. Joe Riposo. Jazz Improvisation: A Whole Brain Approach. Aebersold. 1989. An approach to practicing improvisation that utilises left/right brain theory. The material is orthodox but the approach is useful. Mark Steinel. Building A Jazz Vocabulary, A Resource for Learning Improvisation Milwaukee, Hal Leonard Corp, 1995. 23
Thorough
guidance
on
assembling
and
developing
jazz
vocabulary
-
mainly
for
playing
changes.
Philip
Sudo.
Zen
Guitar.
A
beautiful
collection
of
lessons
aligning
musical
practice
with
the
philosophy
and
psychology
of
Eastern
spiritual/martial
arts.
Philip
Sudo
was
a
graduate
of
Berklee
College.
Kenny
Werner.
Effortless
Mastery
New
Albany:
Jamey
Aebersold,
circa
1998.
Yoga/meditation
meets
jazz
improvisation,
by
leading
jazz
pianist
Kenny
Werner.
Video:
The
Universal
Mind
of
Bill
Evans.
Rhapsody
Films.
American
Public
Services
TV
documentary.
Bill
Evans
explains
his
personal
philosophy
about
music,
demonstrating
at
the
piano.
SOFTWARE
Transcribe!
from
www.seventhstring.demon.co.uk.
Excellent
transcription
tool
available
from
This
really
is
essential
tackle.
INTERNET
DOWNLOADS:
Emusic.com
at
www.emusic.com.
An
inexpensive
and
legal
download
site
($10
per
month
for
40
tracks),
great
for
searching
out
numerous
versions
of
standards
or
new
music
from
dozens
of
jazz
labels
(as
well
as
classical,
pop,
world,
soundtracks
etc).
Emusic
currently
offers
the
entire
Prestiege
and
Fantasy
catalogues,
all
the
Coltrane
on
Pablo,
the
entire
Bill
Evans
catalogue
(minus
Verve).
24
PRACTICE
RECORD
Week
Starting..
begin
end
at
the
instrument
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
Language
Key
competence
Repertoire
Improv
techniques
Free
creative
work
yes/no
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how
complimentary
work
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
Transcription
Active
listening
Repertoire
research
Composition
Other
yes/no
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how
Mon
Tues
Wed
Thurs
Fri
Sat
Sun
Total
hours
Feedback
1. Am I achieving any routine this week? 2. Am I reinforcing skills and processes? 3. Ideas for development
YES/NO YES/NO
25