How exactly does one find a unique and individual style? Is it as inexplicable as it appears? Do you either have it or not? What happens after the transcription and style stages?
The answer to those questions comes from realizing that many great artists were not prodigies but slow, methodical workers.
Surely there is some talent in great artists from the outset but most important, a burning desire to express him or herself. As the cliché goes, great works of art involve 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.
Certain individuals rise above the pack through their hard work, vision, and other characteristics. We have highlighted some of these characteristics throughout different stages of our own development which had a positive impact on us.
Admit the possibility:
You have to imagine that you can find your voice….that you have something unique to offer and that anything is possible. This is a matter of good old-fashioned positive thinking and looking at the glass as half full rather than half empty. You can find something if you work hard enough.
Be clinical, objective and disciplined:
Finding oneself should not become too much of an emotional challenge, although there are overtones of personality and psychology embedded in this or any deep process. Save the emotion and subjectivity for performance.
When you pursue music, treat it as a business with order and consistency. Be hard on yourself. This is not a “walk in the park.” You must be vigilant and demanding of yourself and the people with whom you play and communicate with.
Strip away and submerge obvious influences:
This is the hard part. At first you must admit that you are playing someone else’s ideas. By concentrating while playing, trying to not letting yourself play the same familiar patterns, you create a space for new material to evolve.
We are all a product of our influences, but the best artists find ways to submerge their influences beyond recognition, except to a few experts. With nothing to replace the old material for the time being, your level of playing may appear to oneself and others to be faltering. Don’t let that throw you…it’s part of the process.
Maybe you should consider taking some time off from playing in order to leave space for the new material to take root. Imagine who you are rather than who you are through others. Surrender has traditionally been the pathway to self-knowledge.
Transcribe yourself :
In order to discover what is different and valuable in your own playing, transcribe yourself playing something recent and listen hard. You are bound to hear something unique even if it appears inconsequential. For example one’s tone on a certain note or a particular nuance, or possibly a rhythmic element. This requires significant analytical skills but by then you are prepared to notice such fine details.
Write exercises and compositions:
Take what you hear and have transcribed from your own playing and write ten exercises or compositional ideas that reflect what you heard in different ways. Be creative and try various permutations so that the seed that you planted will grow, one phrase at a time if need be.
Discover what is missing:
Once you have written some music and have gained a better understanding of your particular process and proclivities, notice what is missing in terms of tension and release, opposites, balance and other important musical elements. Fill in the blanks both in your compositions and your performances.
The instrumental trap:
A skilled musician by this time has a lot of memorized finger patterns that fit the music. But these are not necessarily of the highest musical value or useful when searching for one’s musical identity.
Don’t let a musical element borne out of the fingers replace an original musical idea. The music originates in your mind, not on your instrument. The instrument is meant to be an extension of one’s musical personality at the end of this process.
Look outward:
For inspiration, go outside the immediate box of jazz. Listen to other types of music, observe other arts and sciences, try to “graft” principles from another field to your own. This means taking something that appears unrelated at the outset but changing it to fit one’s artistic needs. Be imaginative and take chances, but most of all be curious.
In the end, no matter what the final product even years later, this process will reveal parts of you that you may never have found otherwise. Treasure this time of musical and life exploration, using it wisely. Please don’t wait too long to do this!!
Don’t fear being different:
Our instincts urge us to follow the pack….the proven and the popular. Following that route feels safe which is what most people do.
The artist, however, must follow their own path regardless of what anyone else thinks. This artist is creating an authentic personal vision of the world. The opinions of others matter little in terms of one’s artistic progress. S(he) must never lose their center and growing artistic identity.
Embrace the work:
Nothing of great value comes easily. As an artist you have chosen a difficult and at times lonely path.
Finding and manifesting your artistic vision through the required virtuosity of playing your instrument requires a dedication that few possess.
This is your opportunity if you are willing to put in the time and sacrifice some of life’s side pleasures.
Your challenge is to discover those aspects of yourself which cries out for the artistic results so intensely, that the work feels like play, while the sacrifices are well worth it and not even considered as part of the process anymore.
How does one learn tone, nuance and develop a true and believable jazz sense of rhythm? Certainly there are exercises and method books which can help a student attain these goals, but there is a built in elusiveness to these concepts since they are virtually impossible to notate in any convincing fashion. The best approach is exact aural and tactile imitation-the first stage of all artistic growth. For jazz, the most valuable form of imitation is a direct master-apprentice relationship in which the live model (master) demonstrates directly to the student demanding immediate and exact repetition until mastered before moving on. Learning in this way becomes a natural outgrowth of constant exposure and reinforcement on the spot. But without that opportunity, I have found transcription is the next best method. Some musicians object to transcribing as stealing other people’s ideas. My contention is that in one way or another, whether it be as detailed as I will describe or as casual as Charlie Parker supposedly standing outside of a club in Kansas City hearing Lester Young and then going home with phrases in his ear and mind to practice and recall, most artists have done something of this sort. And the best players are usually the ones who will tell you immediately that so and so was their main inspiration and they began by copying him. This is a process-a means to an end and to my mind very necessary.
I have a DVD titled “The Improviser’s Guide to Transcription” (Caris Music Services) which describes the process in detail with actual demonstrations. Transcribing involves a three part learning process: body, mind and spirit-in that order. Being an auto didactic system, the process involves a student 100% in their own work with tangible and measurable rewards. If present, the teacher can serve as a guide, but in any case this process can all be accomplished without the aid of an institution. It is exhaustive, complete and very satisfying with results immediately perceived in most cases via an improved time feel and more subtle use of nuance for starters. Transcribing is like learning how to speak a language, similar to the experience of traveling to a foreign country whose language may have been studied in school. Finally a student can hear the way the language is actually used and pronounced rather than written by being immersed in a foreign culture on a day to day basis. The so-called intangibles in jazz, outside of the specific notes and rhythms, cannot be notated exactly. This includes but is not limited to the subtleties of rhythmic feel and how the artist interprets the beat as well as the use of expressive nuance in one’s sound, aspects of which are usually lumped under the word “phrasing.” In transcribing, a musician is forced to hear and duplicate everything. As well, with the notes written out it becomes possible to analyze the thought process of the improviser. This can help the student initiate his or her own ideas and inspire one to go further in their own research.
In my opinion, it is the most efficient and productive technique for learning to improvise in the jazz tradition, or in any tradition for that matter. It is the closest one can come to the age old master apprenticeship system which existed for centuries as the
accepted method for learning the arts and crafts. As mentioned above, transcribing a master is the next best thing to having an accomplished improviser present in real time in front of a student as a model to copy and inspire. Transcription is an unbeatable tool as a means to an end. The end being artistic creation, musical freedom and hopefully, a recognizable style of playing. Knowing what came before is the only way to realize what there is left to do. Imitation as a stage of learning is timeless and inevitable.
THREE PART PROCESS
In general the three part process involves at first saturated listening to the chosen solo with the first goal being to sing along in scat fashion. A student should arrive at the point that with or without the recording playing he can reasonably sing the solo. The
important musical skill acquired and honed in this process is pitch control without the crutch of the instrument at hand, which will come later. This also reinforces a strong sense of rhythm as we expect the student to keep the correct pulse without the aid of a metronome or having the recorded version to reference at all while singing.
Next is the time consuming process of writing out and playing the solo. In some cases, depending upon the proposed solo and individual skills of the student, the exact sequence of events can be changed accordingly, meaning learning the solo first on the
instrument followed by notation. But in any case the goals are exact duplication of every aspect of the solo including all nuances besides the pitches as well as having it written down accurately. It is in this stage of imitating the solo that the acquisition of subtleties such as tone color, nuance, variations of time feel, etc., is subconsciously absorbed, not to mention improved technique. It’s like a reservoir being filled for eventual use by the student in the real world of his own playing. This is the most important stage. There should be little or no difference to one’s ears between the original and the student’s version when this stage is completed.
Vaughn Stoffey plays Dave Liebman solo on “Impressions”
Jessica Lee playing a Joe Lovano on “Passion Dance”
Berklee student Hailey Niswanger playing along with part of my Fancy Free solo from “Live At The Lighthouse ” with Elvin Jones (1972)
Guitarist Chris Guilfoyle (son of Irish bassist/composer Ronan Guilfoyle) playing Coltrane’s “Nite Has 1000 Eyes”
Pianist So Young Park from the Master’s Program at Manhattan School of Music singing AND playing (at the same time) a very hard and uptempo solo…Herbie Hancock on “Milestones” from Live at the Plugged Nickel (Miles Davis seminal live recording).
Berklee Global Jazz Institute student from Palestine playing the NAY with Trane on Bye, Bye Blackbird-incredible!!
Aside from the obvious technical rewards of having to carefully and accurately notate the specifics of rhythm and pitch, I have the student write out the solo so that it can be analyzed and used for further study. This third part of the process is where, depending upon the solo, a certain amount of harmonic and possibly compositional knowledge may be necessary for understanding what was played. Certainly a teacher can be of benefit at this point with their experience. The goal here is to first try and understand the thinking, rationale and concept of the improviser under study as much as can be deduced after the fact about an improvisation. Though there are of course inexplicable events which occur musically, with analysis at least some patterns and repetitive ideas reflecting the thinking process of the artist in question can be discerned.
To digress for a moment, the uninitiated might consider improvisation in jazz as what it appears to be-completely spontaneous and in the moment. But we know that what is actually being played (outside rare moments of fresh inspiration) is a result of habit and experience to a large degree, albeit cast in the moment. Though one’s phrasing may alter from idea to idea or day to day depending upon the player’s temperament and response in relation to the surroundings, audience, venue, accompanists and more, the content itself will be less sensitive to change. Of course content hopefully evolves with time as in the case of great innovators like John Coltrane, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis whose styles changed monumentally in different ways over varied amounts of years. For other artists it may be more gradual and at a slower rate. In any case this analysis procedure is crucial to
understanding the intellectual component of the musical material being played. What are we specifically looking for in the analysis stage? A short list might include specifics of scales and chord types used, melodic motifs and their variations, overall structure of the solo in regards to both content and emotion, rhythmic diversity, uses of patterns and other repetitive devices, passages of lyricism versus harmonic complexity and much more. We are trying to put ourselves into the mind of the improviser who is far removed from present time without any concrete idea of what was on his mind that day. This “second guessing” can have far reaching consequences for the student.
Following this analysis we get more involved with the tools that were discovered. The student isolates melodic lines which belong to certain harmonic progressions, at first those that are most common in jazz like the II-V-1 or I-V1-II-V, etc., and then compose
variations that still retain the integrity and core of that particular chosen line. Also with the aid of a teacher if needed we try to sort out qualitative differences between lines that were played. For example noticing the differences between those lines that used only chord tones or blues notes compared to more complex examples using harmonic substitutions and more. In other words we try to develop within a student an objective way to judge the musical sophistication of a line in order to get his mind and ear up to a level of knowing the difference between merely good lines and great ones. Criteria such as contour, rhythmic variation, varied pitch choices are some elements that are involved in these evaluations. The student should choose some of the better lines to use as models for composing variations as well as transposing them to other keys and tempos. Other extended exercises consist of taking lines from different sections of the solos and cross referencing them, in a sense constructing several alternative versions of the original material. Also I will have the student compose several “perfect” choruses, meaning within the style using the best material that he has developed in the line variation exercises. Then of course the student must play spontaneously with a rhythm track or accompanist (even with drums only) in the style of the original solo but using his own material, which by now should be considerable. By the way, vocalists and percussionists should also be doing some form of this transcription process. All of this work will hopefully result in absorption of the feeling and content of the solo. The student has not only observed what was played but after spending so much time with the solo should naturally feel akin to the spirit and temperament of the soloist him or herself. This in-depth study can be revealing on many levels. There is something very honest and validating about studying the past in this manner. It gives a student a sense of being connected to the tradition and of having earned his or her way.
WHAT SOLOS / WHICH ARTISTS (THE TREE METAPHOR)
For the first solo the student will probably spend a few months involving several hours a day to go through the entire process. This will speed up with each solo. A student can eventually work concurrently on several solos possibly singing one while playing another and analyzing a third. With this much commitment it is important that the correct choices of material and soloist be carefully thought about for the obvious reason of maximizing time.
It is beneficial to have the student transcribe material that can be of practical use in the future. For example, transcribing a blues, rhythm changes and well known standards will be of more benefit at this stage than an original tune played only by a particular artist. At the least what will be gleaned from the process will be of use in the real playing world on these types of tunes which are so common in the repertoire. Concerning which artists to transcribe I have found that the metaphor of a tree is an effective tool in trying to organize the prodigious amount of recorded history available for a student to discover. Where does a student begin?
A tree has six parts: root, trunk, limb, branches, twigs and leaves. As we progress up a tree we get further away from the source which are the actual roots in the ground. In any field of endeavor there is a similar historical architecture. Simply put, without the roots (originators) there would be no further story; the trunk symbolizes the main sources of discovery and stylization; the limbs are people who created their own direction stemming from the sources and spawning a whole other area; whereas the branches go off in their own singular direction. Twigs are less dramatic developments while leaves fall to the ground each season to be forgotten. If we trace the history of jazz or even just the saxophone or piano for example we could have some very interesting discussions filling in parts of this metaphorical tree. Suffice to say, if we had unlimited time it would be best to transcribe from the root up but this is not realistic. So I urge my students to begin with the bebop tree and work their way through hard bop into modal and free jazz meaning the music of the 1950s and 1960s for the most part, a period rich in recordings and innovations. What we are after at the beginning stages of transcription is a solo with good eighth note lines and a great rhythmic feel. There are abundant examples on blues, rhythm changes and standards to choose from during the recommended historical period. The student should choose a solo that he loves and if he could, would play tomorrow. This is important in order to keep inspiration fresh. I don’t choose a solo for my students but I direct them to the group of artists who would fit under the guidelines described. The solo need not be complex or fast. It should be something challenging but not so much above the student that it will frustrate him. Early Miles Davis through “Kind of Blue” is a great place to start as is Chet Baker, Dexter Gordon, Wynton Kelly, Wes Montgomery and others of that ilk. Beginning on the student’s home own instrument at first is advisable because at least pitch recognition will be more directly related to this familiar sound and sonority of his instrument. Eventually other instruments are important to transcribe because the technical aspects of transferring material to one’s own instrument will challenge the student to come up with different responses, fingerings and techniques hopefully all aimed at trying to be free of cliches.
HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH
With any massive study project it is important to see a light at the end of the tunnel. After a few transcriptions most students feel really great about the undertaking and certainly sound better at least on the tunes they transcribed and probably on a lot of similar material. A tremendous sense of reinforcement and accomplishment is felt. But there is a danger of using transcription as a source of ideas rather as a means to an end. After all, the goal as an artist is to find an individual voice. There is a point where it isn’t artistically honest to keep using other people’s material, even with the transformation process described in detail below. My recommendation is that students transcribe a blues, rhythm changes, a standard, a modal and free tune with possibly a few more of particular interest. But in any case two years is the maximum amount of time one should transcribe, assuming it is done as described. As stated, when the process speeds up and becomes routine the student will be able to devote less hours to transcription and return to other studies. Selective transcription on the other hand goes on forever. That is taking off a few bars or chorus of something that intrigues you. The same goes for all the transcription books available in that they should be used like an encyclopedia for reference, sight reading and to satisfy one’s curiosity.
In summary, transcription involves three basic areas of our musical faculties:
1. Notation through saturated listening to the selected solo, the student internalizes (by singing at first) the notes and undertakes the painstaking, necessary craft of notating the rhythms and pitches of the solo.
2. Playing – with repeated instrumental practice, the solo is exactly imitated in every way, including dynamics, articulation, nuance, time feel, tone coloring and of course, the rhythms and pitches.
3. Analysis – using the classic methods of theme and variation study, motivic analysis and form structure concepts, etc., the student deduces to the best of his ability the thought processes represented in the work. By isolating passages and phrases, learning them in different keys and tempos, creating variations and using them in other comparable harmonic situations, the student begins to transform the transcription process from imitation to creation.
Specific Tools For Practicing Transcriptions
Playing and duplicating the solo
1. Use half speed for practicing synchronization with the original as well as for study of nuance and expressive techniques used. For symbols used in the transcriptions, refer to the “Definition of Symbols”.
2. Eventually, try to play the solo along with the original at regular speed.
3. After playing with the original, play without using a metronome, with an accompanist, or a play-along of the same track to check how well you know it. You can even make your own play-along on a cassette.
4. Play the solo in different keys and tempos.
5. Use the solo as a point of departure to improvise on your own within the chord progression. Stay close to the style and feel of the original but initiate your own thoughts.
Creating your own ideas
1. Extract a line, pattern, motif and transpose it to other keys and tempos.
2. Categorizing, transposing and composing original lines. Put all the lines that are from the same progression or chord change type on one page. This is to see the similarities and differences when a soloist encounters a specific chord or progression. With the help of an experienced musician choose the “best” lines using criteria of choice of notes, rhythmic interest and overall shape. See “John Coltrane’s I-VI-ii-V Sequences….as well as “Coltrane ii-V Lines…(below)
3. Use a graph of the solo written out horizontally with all the same bars lined up vertically from the top of the page down. In this manner, you can see what was played on each chorus in a particular bar. By skipping around between choruses, you can create new and unique combinations from what the soloist did. See”Transcription Graph” below.
Example A #1-6 – This represents Charlie Parkers first 4 bars from his original solo on confirmation (6 choruses).
Example B – These are possible lines made up of a bar of different choruses with original bars interjected by the student.
Example B #1 – Bar 1 from Charlie Parkers (Birds) chorus. Bar 2 is taken from bar 2 of Bird’s 3rd chorus (B.C.3 = Bird Chorus 3). Bar 3 is also taken from Birds 3rd chorus, while the 4th bar is an original idea from the student.
Example B #2 – This time there are no original ideas from the student, but bars 1 and 2 are taken from Bird’s 5th chorus, and bars 3 and 4 are taken from Bird’s 4th chorus.
Example B #3 – Here bars 1 and 3 are taken from Bird’s 4th chorus, while bars 2 and 4 are original ideas from the student.
Example B #4 – Bar 1 is taken from Bird’s 2nd chorus and bar 4 is taken from Bird’s 5th chorus. Bars 2 and 3 are original ideas from the student.
4. Compose an original solo.
By the time you are done with all of the above, not only will everything be naturally memorized, but the process of internalizing will have begun. This means that what you practice today find its way into your playing without having to think about it in the near future. Depending upon the material, its difficulty and your ability to absorb the information, this process can take anywhere from a few weeks to a few months, but you can be sure that eventually it will occur if you have done the work.
Suggested Solos (from the 60s/late 50s-some of my personal favorites):
Adderley, Cannonball: Milestones (Milestones-Miles Davis)
Coleman, George: Autumn Leaves (Miles In Europe) Stella By Starlight (My Funny Valentine)
Coltrane: Softly As In A Morning (Live at the Village Vanguard); So What (Kind of Blue-Miles Davis); Oleo (Cookin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet); Blue Trane (Blue Trane-J.Coltrane); Impressions (Impressions J.Coltrane); Resolution (A Love Supreme- J.Coltrane)
Corea, Chick – Matrix (Now He Sings, Now He Sobs-C.Corea)
Davis, Miles – Bye Bye Blackbird (Round Midnight-M.Davis); So What and Freddie Freeloader (Kind of Blue-M.Davis)
Hancock, Herbie – Autumn Leaves (Miles in Europe-M.Davis)
Mobley, Hank: Pfrancing (Someday My Prince Will Come-Miles Davis); No Blues (Miles Live at Carnegie Hall)
Powell, Bud: Cherokee (Genius of Bud Powell)
Rollins, Sonny: It Could Happen To You (Sound of Sonny-S.Rollins); Sonny Moon For Two (Night at the Village Vanguard-S.Rollins) Surrey With the Fringe On the Top (Newk’s Time-S.Rollins) Tenor Madness(Tenor Madness-S.Rollins)
Shorter, Wayne: Speak No Evil (Speak No Evil-W.Shorter); 81 (ESP-Miles Davis)
Stitt, Sonny: No Greater Love (Boss Tenors-G.Ammons and S.Stitt); Eternal Triangle (Eternal Triangle-Gillespie, Rollins, Stitt)
Tristano, Lennie: Line Up (Lennie Tristano); East 32nd St (The Complete Lennie Tristano)
Tyner, McCoy: Night and Day(Inner Urge-Joe Henderson);Passion Dance(The Real McCoy M.Tyner); Speak Low (Inception-M.Tyner); Pursuance(Love Supreme- J.Coltrane)
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