Inspiration

A selection of bits and pieces collected over the years

First, some videos.

Here’s Joe Henderson playing a duo version of “I Loves You Porgy” from a gig in 1998. John Scofield’s guitar complements him perfectly. Sound, time-feel, dynamics from both players are fantastic and the recording is completely unadorned - I love hearing the keys of the saxophone. Plenty of II-V-Is in this one incl applied dominants to all parts of the home key.

 
 

Here is Ben Monder playing Witchita Lineman, a classic Glen Campbell tune. What can I say other than this level of melodicism combined with scary technique is so rare.

Found this pdf of a Ben Monder practice framework on the internet at one point in time. Worth reviewing and seeing how much of this you can do…

Gary Burton’s 2 hr masterclass at Loyola is next. What a pro. He covers a ton of ground, with lucid explanations of the whole process of improvisation. Well worth the 2 hr investment.

One thing he said something that resonated with me (paraphrasing): you need to have a perspective on whatever tune you’re playing, something you want to show the audience.

How often are we just reading changes and going through the motions? Pick your tunes deliberately, and give the audience something new to think about!

 

Whitney Houston, 1991, wartime national anthem, 4/4 time, elegant reharmonizations. This is the GOAT anthem, arranged by John Clayton, himself one of the greats. There’s a very fluent, functional jazz vocabulary driving the harmony, but not one you typically ascribe to this tune, and it’s used to surprising emotional effect.

Some miscellany below for your enjoyment.

(Effusive) video from Charles Cornell breaking down the arrangement.

John C's FB post from early ‘21 on the backstory (copied below).

Chord Etudes

 

The following are etudes based on concepts from Berklee’s Guitarmony class (some may even be my own homework). The idea with these is to play the specified chords above the staff with the specified melody note on top. These are substitutions for the standard chords in the staff. You’re generally supposed to voice these in drop 2.

These are not reharmonizations. You’re using substitute chords to generate nice sounding voicings that you can play in the context of the standard changes. Click for the full PDFs.

Thinking About Music

Transcriptions

It’s important to learn from the masters

Practicing

A small selection of etudes, concepts, and other things I thought worth practicing.

Voicings

How to play all those weird chords on guitar.

Tunes

Some stuff I’ve collected/written/arranged over the years. Includes some transcriptions/compositions by others as noted.

Click for full PDF arrangement.

Click for full PDF arrangement.

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Improvisation