Guided Listening: "Jumpin' In" & Dave Holland

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • #jandjonjazz #jazzrhythm #daveholland #Jazzsolo #jazzpracticing #practicemethods #jumpinin#freejazz #freeplaying
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    FOR ALL INSTRUMENTS - Dave Holland . . . on the list of “important bandleaders” that includes Horace Silver, Art Blakey and Miles Davis, we definitely need to add English bassist Dave Holland. Today’s Guided Listening is a trip through his rollicking and wild composition “Jumpin’ In.” This one is a blast, so don’t pass it by!
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Комментарии • 12

  • @richardolson8651
    @richardolson8651 10 дней назад +1

    That was fun to listen to. Great tune. Thanks Dick

  • @terryparham3913
    @terryparham3913 10 дней назад +1

    Ok. So Jeff. If you were given a lead sheet for this tune what in blazes would it look like? Would it be primarily a drum/rhythm sheet, or would it just say “you have the license to BS”. A “free will” format! Glad this has never been called during a jam session…😂 Thanks for explaining. I too would not be drawn to playing jazz after hearing this. Free will! 😅

    • @JeffAntoniukEducator
      @JeffAntoniukEducator  10 дней назад

      12 measures long, and very simple. Tag me inside www.JazzWire.net and I'll share it. I'll put it there right now actually. As I said in the video, this is a GREAT and quite important way to play, from a developmental and pedagogical standpoint. I hope we'll have a chance to do some of this together!

  • @frankmallows5548
    @frankmallows5548 10 дней назад +1

    Thank you Jeff. Your positive enthusiasm just makes everything seem so "right". I love Dave Holland's music and how he and the group explores diffent composistional ideas, rhythm, melody and harmonic canvas. Hard to do for us lesser mortals! But satisfying nonetheless. Thank you for the inspiration.

    • @JeffAntoniukEducator
      @JeffAntoniukEducator  10 дней назад

      Thanks for the kind words Frank. So happy you are hip to Dave Holland and some of his amazing work.

  • @robstevens9590
    @robstevens9590 10 дней назад +1

    Thanks for posting this! "Back in the day" (in my late teens), I listened to a lot of Archie Shepp, Ornette Coleman, Coltrane's later recordings, Joseph Jarmen, Anthony Braxton ... and didn't get turned on to "traditional" jazz until much later.

    • @JeffAntoniukEducator
      @JeffAntoniukEducator  10 дней назад +1

      That is a cool progression. "History in reverse" is definitely the way many of us get there.

  • @M.T.504
    @M.T.504 10 дней назад +1

    Great choice for introduction to the genre. Thank you. It is a joy to listen and understand. This is not only for musicians but also music lovers.

    • @JeffAntoniukEducator
      @JeffAntoniukEducator  7 дней назад

      FOR SURE! I love working with musicians and students of course, but this music is for LISTENING!!! Thanks for being with us on this trip. Please subscribe if you haven't already.

  • @WizopIndy
    @WizopIndy 10 дней назад +1

    Changeless is actually a style? Takes me back to my teenage days when I would play a whole set with just a drummer. there were no changes because I didn't know how to play chords. I'd just tell the drummer a tempo and style and off we'd go for 5 or 10 minutes and then we'd stop and make another call. No changes. Not even a key.

    • @JeffAntoniukEducator
      @JeffAntoniukEducator  10 дней назад

      Absolutely. It's an HUGE subset of jazz. Many hundreds of thousands of recordings, bands and performances, since the late 50's. Sounds like you were a part of it back in the day!

    • @WizopIndy
      @WizopIndy 10 дней назад

      @@JeffAntoniukEducator If I was a part of it, it was not because I was doing something consciously but because I didn't have a clue about playing any other way. I was totally ignorant never having been exposed to any music theory at all.