Listening to jazz, and
learning to play from the recordings
Don't listen to a piece once, and think that is sufficient for
you to play it, you may well have to listen very carefully to the same piece
many times to get a real feel for it!
After listening carefully here are
some tips that might be useful.
Take a simple piect to start of with and
then find out key that the performer is playing in, (go the end of the piece and
see what chord it finishes on may help) . You would need to know if its a major
or minor key.
Here it would be good if you have a knowledge of all the 12
major keys as scales (see previous posts) and by using the mode starting on the
6th note of the scale, would gie you the relative minor key (as a natural minor
scale).
A useful thing to know, the relative minor (the minor key with
the same number of sharps or flats as the major) is always the same as the mode
starting on the 6th note of the major scale. Determine whether the piece is in a
major or minor key. (Some jazz, especially more 'modern' might not be in a key
at all), so maybe stick in the first instance to jazz standards.
Find, by
playing along with the recording, the melody or improvisation that you hear, and
try to memorise it. If you read and write music you can write it down, but its
much better anyway to try and get it into your head!
You might well
notice that the notes don't always follow the major or minor scale that the
piece is in, that may be because the tune might 'visit' other keys during the
piece, to give it interest.
(A process called modulation) This is all part of
the understanding of thispiece of music.
Hopefully, with due diligence,
this will give you a basic idea of the piece, but to get to the heart, you will
need to undersatnd the chords that support the melody, or improvisation, and
this can be quite a challenge, and will be the subject of later
posts.
All this work may be made easier by going on a
jazz workshop and
interacting with other players as they learn.
Good luck!
Peter Willson