Jazz Trombone F.A.Q.

                        

3) You suggest learning to solo by ear. That seems really difficult! How can

I ever possibly learn to do that?

 

Jeff Adams: Listen, listen, listen, and listen some more to good jazz.  This is

the only way to learn the language and eventually be able to speak it.  Then when

you are listening to just a rhythm section play through the changes of a song

like they would on an Aebersold CD or in Band in a Box, force yourself to

hear ideas and either scat-sing or whistle those ideas over the changes.

 

Sam Burtis: Start. Start simple. Be patient. Use your horn. Use a piano.

A journey of a thousand miles begins w/one step...and THIS journey is

MUCH longer than that. Endless, really.

 

Alex Iles: After you learn some simple songs and things you can sing..."Mary 
Had a Little Lamb", patriotic songs, "Happy Birthday" [you BETTER know that one!!], 
you may want to move on to improvised solos.
Start with the simplest sounding recorded improvised solos you enjoy.
Sing along. Try to sing the solo without the recording. Then try playing along. Sometimes, 
your patience will be tested. Go back to singing along. Then come back to your horn. 
Once you can play most of it, you might want to write it out. I like writing solos out to see 
what I went through in the process and to share with other people.

 

Chris Smith: We all have the ability to memorize performances. How many of us

can recite or re-enact whole scenes from our favorite movies? Relating this idea

to music- nearly everyone knows the pop tunes that have become the “musical

wallpaper” of our modern existence (i.e., anything by the Beatles, Whitney

Houston, Phil Collins, etc....). We hear this same music in stores and shopping

malls everywhere we go. You can probably sing along with the instrumental solos

that occur in many of these tunes. That's not because you made any conscious

effort to do so, but because you have heard the music many times and have

internalized it.

 

     If you spend a LOT of time listening to jazz solos, you will find yourself

memorizing them. At a certain point, you will even be able to recall them away

from the recordings. When you pick up your horn knowing the solos internally,

then you will be able to start playing them on your horn by recalling the

rhythms, pitches, etc. It is slow going at first, but after a while (this could

be months or years) you can hear a musical phrase and instantly play it back on

your horn, as easily as if you were repeating a sentence someone had spoken to

you.

 

When I was "getting it together", I spent a LOT of time learning jazz solos by

ear.

 

I feel that this, more than any other practicing activity, trains your "whole

being" as a musician.

 

By learning other people's solos, one can:

 

1)      Develop an understanding of the feel of jazz music;

 

2)      Gain a good sense of relative pitch;

 

3)      Develop the ability to store musical ideas and recall them;

 

4) Slowly gain insight into the conscious and unconscious processes

behind improvising;

 

5) Learn the "tendencies" of harmony, form, etc.;

 

6) Gain a feel for what is known as, and believed by some people, to be

the "Jazz Tradition". The *way* of jazz, if you will.

 

7) learn lots of other valuable stuff which I can't put my finger on at the

moment.

 

To condense what could be a year-long academic course on the subject,

I’ll suggest taking a very methodical approach to learning a solo off a record:

 

A)   Listen to the solo until you find you can sing along with it note for note;

B)   Begin trying to determine what the key of the tune is, what notes the various

phrases start on, etc. by using a reference instrument- be it piano or keyboard,

your horn, whatever;

C)   Start playing along with these sections where you’ve figured out the starting

points and use them to “anchor” you in figuring out what happens after them.

D)   When you feel you have the notes right, start paying attention to inflections,

alternate positions (listen to whether someone played a 1st or 4th position “D”,

for example), volume levels, differences in attacks, breathing points, sections that

are “sequenced” (meaning patterns), etc. This will open your mind to what the artist

playing that solo may have been thinking or feeling or trying to say when they played

that solo.

Good luck, and remember to perservere. The best jazz artists are/were all very

determined, disciplined musicians!

 

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