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Notes_Norton

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Posts posted by Notes_Norton

  1. 22 hours ago, RobertWS said:

    While it's true there are categories of music, in today's world, there is infinite blending of genres.

    In Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, just one song, there is Theater, Jazz, German opera, Italian Opera, Rock, Classical, Ballad...

    And at least a dozen rock/pop songs 'borrowed' melodies from famous classical composers like Bach, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Gliere and others.

    A lot of contemporary country music is so rock n roll that I don't call it country anymore, instead I just call it Nashville. Music.

    A lot of music called jazz today is simply instrumental rock n roll. A lot of rock leans towards jazz.

    Genres are for people who sell music. The lines between the genres are definitely blurred.

    But IMO there is no such thing as a jazz chord.

    Insights and incites by Notes

  2. 22 hours ago, User 905133 said:

    Sounds a little like a cover I heard by The Beach Boys of Hully Gully (originally by the Olympics). (From the YouTube post: This is the record that was copied nearly note-for-note--but with new lyrics--in 1961 by The Marathons (aka The Vibrations) as “Peanut Butter.”)

    Sounds like the same song to me as well, and did when my big sister was controlling the radio.

    "Build Me Up Buttercup" - Foundations

     

     

  3. What Bruno said ^^^

    Those who are arrogant and smug in any genre of music forget that what we are doing is supposed to be fun. We are supposed to be playing, and that's why what we do is called "PLAYing music". When I hire musicians, attitude is more important than technical chops.

    School can teach you technique, but it can't teach you talent (soul, it factor, or whatever you call what turns the notes into music) There are people who have monster theory chops and consistently come up with jazz that moves the listener's soul. I'm thinking Stan Getz, Jimmy Smith, and Stanley Turrentine to name just a few. It's melody, not just scales and arpeggios.

    There are others who can play all the right notes over all the right chords and many technically competent but uninspired music. I won't mention any names here, but I have a couple in mind.

    It's best if you have the soul and the technique, but I'd rather listen to one with the soul and less technique than someone playing a lot of empty notes. And that goes in all genres of music, not only jazz.

    And what makes jazz is not so much what you are playing when you are improvising, but how you are playing.

    Insights and incites by Notes

    • Like 1
  4. 41 minutes ago, emeraldsoul said:

    I think it's a "jazz chord" when it has a second in it, up top somewhere, and you call it a ninth.

    Hmm, I've played ninths in rock, pop and blues and occasionally in a country song. I guess that means there is a lot more jazz out there than I thought. I've played a John Coltrane song that had nothing but triad chords in it. So without a 9th, is 'Trane not jazz anymore?

    People sometimes also call archtop electric guitars "jazz boxes", but one of the most iconic solid body guitars ever made, the Les Paul was made to be a jazz guitar, and I've heard plenty of rock played on an archtop electric.

    Jazz is group improvisation, but so is rock, country, blues, and dozens of other pop music genres.

    To me jazz isn't the chords, jazz isn't the instrument, and jazz isn't anything but the player and his/her method of interpreting the music.

    Insights and incites by Notes

  5. St. Peter in Heaven is checking ID’s. He asks a man, “What did you do on Earth?”

    The man says, “I was a doctor.”

    St. Peter says, “Okay, go right through those pearly gates. Next! What did you do on Earth?”

    “I was a school teacher.”

    “Go right through those pearly gates. Next! And what did you do on Earth?”

    “I was a musician.”

    “Go around the side, up the freight elevator, through the kitchen…..”

    ----------------------------------

    What’s the difference between a rock guitarist and a jazz guitarist?

    The rock guitarist plays 3 chords for 1,000 people, the jazz guitarists plays 1,000 chords for 3 people.

    -----------------------------------


    What do you call someone wearing a "Make Jazz Great Again" hat?

    A Trumpet Supporter

     

    Insights, incites, and a little silliness by Notes

    • Like 4
  6. I like old music (partial sampling): Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Dvorak, Shostakovitch, Ellington, Count Basie, Andrews Sisters, Sinatra, Stan Getz, Stanley Turrentine, Jimmy Smith, Mark Murphy, Bobby Bland, Celia Cruz, King Curtis, Lester Young, Elvis Preslay, Beach Boys, Aretha Franklin, Beatles, Kinks, Zombies, Jethro Tull, Zeppelin, Santana, Queen, Aerosmith, Prince, Springsteen, Diana Krall, Eliane Elias, Alicia Keys, Amy Winehouse,  Eva Cassidy, Emily Remler, Ariana Grande, and some newer ones that will be old in a few years.

    Actually, there are only two kinds of music: (1) Music that I like and (2) Music made for somebody else.

    Insights and incites by Notes

  7. Remember, when improvising, and you play something wrong, next time around do it again. That way people think it's just an outside choice that you meant to play, and not a mistake.

    Also remember, when improvising,  whenever you play a wrong note, you are only a half step away from a right one.

    Insights and incites by Notes

     

     

    • Like 1
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