Showing posts with label pat metheny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pat metheny. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Jim Hall | Memorable Quotes

This article is dedicated to the great Jim Hall who left us on December 10th, 2013, at the age of 83.

"If you removed all the limiting factors from music, it would sort of be like tennis without the net, court, and ball -- just two guys standing in a field with rackets."
jim hall
Jim Hall in 2010  (Pic Source: wikipedia)

"Many guys' solos sound the same. They play on the chord changes rather than improvise on the tune itself. The melody gives you just all that much more to play off."

"Lyrics can act as a source of ideas for improvising, too."

"Sometimes it's fun to do that -- play a cliche and maybe make something out of it -- but I try to keep the solo sounding like it was just invented."

"Players should force themselves to hear something and then play it, rather than just do whatever comes under the fingers."

"I try to make my playing sound as fresh as possible by not relying on set patterns. When I practice, I often tie off some of the strings with rubber bands to force myself to look at the fingerboard differently."

"I think that (classical) composers were much more daring and improvisational than their music indicates. People who go to classical concerts would probably run out of the room if the actual composers were there."

"Ornette Coleman's playing had all the good elements of music: time, humor, pathos, and a lot of technique. I've heard people say that he was into free jazz because he couldn't play on a 32-bar framework, but that's not true. I don't care if he can't play 'God Bless America'. I still enjoy his music."

"I guess I sound more reflective because I try to develop a solo compositionally."

"I don't really play fast -- speed has never come easy for me."

"I don't mean to knock bebop, but playing through chord changes one certain way can be a trap. Imitation can be carried too far. That's why you hear so many young sax players who sound like John Coltrane. I'm sure he didn't mean for that to happen."

"Many guys, including some well-known artists, play solos that are too long. They could have gotten it all said in 32 or 64 bars."

"A lot of times, I was the only white musician in a band, but usually I felt privileged to be there."

On the life of a jazz musician: "It does seem difficult at times. The travelling is hard. And I thought that drinking had something to do with being a musician, but when I decided to quit and went to AA meetings, I found the guys there felt the same thing about their jobs."

"The instrument keeps me humble. Sometimes I pick it up and it seems to say, "No, you can't play today." I keep at it anyway, though."

"I've been to hear friends at places that were so noisy I actually got angry. The owners seem more interested in selling drinks than in presenting the music well."

On effects devices: "I've started to use a chorus on a couple of tunes. Pat Metheny is really into that kind of stuff. I played a concert with him and he had so much electronic stuff, the stage looked like Mission Control."

"I got the Les Paul. It felt awfully cold, so about six months later I traded it for the ES175."

On 7-string guitars: "I have enough trouble dealing with the intricacies of the 6-string."

On reading music: "Being able to take music off of a piece of paper is important because that's how music is communicated; however, it isn't everything."

"Sometimes travelling makes me so tired I actually feel crazy. Slow practice usually helps if I have time to be alone with the guitar."

"If you pruned the tree of jazz guitar, Freddie Green would be the only person left."

"I think it's more important to look at paintings than to listen to the way somebody plays bebop lines."

"I have nothing but questions -- and that's the truth."





Thursday, February 24, 2011

An Interview with Jazz Guitarist Bruce Arnold

I recently had the opportunity to catch up with New York-based jazz guitarist Bruce Arnold via this email interview.  Although not quite yet a household name, Bruce has played with musicians as diverse as Stuart Hamm, Peter Erskine, Joe Pass, Joe Lovano, Randy Brecker, Lennie Pickett, Stanley Clarke, and even the Boston Symphony Orchestra. 

As well as being a composer and prolific author -- he has written more than a hundred music instruction books -- Bruce is also the Director of the New York University Summer Guitar Intensive.  He has also taught at prestigious music schools such as the New England Conservatory of Music, Princeton University, Dartmouth College, Berklee College of Music, New School University, and City College of New York.

The Guitar Column:  In addition to performing and recording, you're also deeply devoted to music education.  What is the state of jazz guitar education nowadays? How has YouTube affected things?

Photo:  Bernard Levy
Bruce Arnold:  I think YouTube in general has been good for guitar education.  There are so many categories of students out there and YouTube provides a place for students of all levels, all genres and all degrees of seriousness to join in on the fun of playing the guitar.  YouTube also gives students access to videos of all kinds of guitarists in performance, so they can evaluate what a player brings to the table and check out how certain techniques are executed.

One of its drawbacks though, is that anyone, qualified or not, can get on YouTube and 'teach'. In some cases this generates some misleading, and sometimes damaging information. If students would only approach the guitar like they approach their health they would be much better off in the long run.

I mean, if you broke your leg would you rather go see a doctor or go to YouTube? So I get upset when I see people teaching things the wrong way and I feel sorry for those students who will practice something incorrectly and then have to unlearn it later.

TGC:  Describe the jazz guitar course you teach at New York University.

BA:  During the NYU Summer Guitar Intensive I teach two courses:  Approach Note Theory and Set Theory for Improvisation and Composition.

Approach Note Theory covers the use of chromatic passing tones and the numerous ways this style of playing has manifested itself and the future possibilities of its uses. This covers Bebop and post Bebop applications and includes many advanced concepts commonly used by today's improvisers.

Set Theory for Improvisation and Composition looks at organizing sound in a much more logical way using Pitch Class Theory and the various ways it can be applied.

I've written a book called Sonic Resource Guide which the students use to look at various relationships found in music. For instance this book contains all possible scales and which chords could be used over all those scales. It also contains all possible three and four note chords that can be derived from any scale. There are also lists of all possible hexatonic 3 note divisions possible for any 6 or 7 note scale.

In a nutshell, it's a resource book that allows a musician to see the internal possibilities of any group of notes and then use these possibilities in playing. Students are very excited about this course because it allows them to see at least some of the possibilities of future sound combinations. I also play a lot of my music, demonstrating how to apply this information to jazz standards. This also clarifies things for the students a lot.

TGC:  What is a typical one-to-one lesson like at NYU? What are some of the things you work on with your students?

BA:  I initially put all students through a number of tests to evaluate their skills and the places they need improvement. Then I assign a different practice regimen to each student based on that assessment.

There are things I always stress, though; I work with ear training which is great for connecting what they hear in their head to what they play on their instrument. I also spend time on things like time, rhythm, sight reading and more advanced concepts such as Pitch Class Theory.

TGC:  Most guitar players start getting into jazz after coming from a rock background. Assuming that such a person gets their melodic minor, harmonic minor and diminished scales and arpeggios together pretty quickly, what would you have them do next, to get their jazz sound together?

BA:   I tell students that scales are just one possible way to improvise.  Jazz actually employes many other types of soloing ideas besides scales; for instance arpeggios, approach notes, other non 7-note scales which are organized in unique ways like octatonic scales divided into two groups of four notes, Hexatonic scales divided into 2 groups of three notes...I could go on.

Then there's harmonic and chord tones and available tension reharmonization...and of course, rhythm, learning all your basic rhythms along with rhythms that combine notes, rests and ties. Then there's superimposition of rhythm and rhythmic transformations within a piece of music. Phrasing is also another important issue. And finally there is also ear training, which considering the possible complexities that can be found in jazz requires a student to develop an acute sense of pitch recognition. I've written books covering all of these aspects of playing music.

Overall my teaching method isn't style based, it is musicianship based, so I have all styles of guitarists studying these various topics with me and applying them to all styles of music.

TGC:  What other musical philosophies do you pass on to your students?

BA:   I teach my students to hear music the same way they think of it. It is so common for students of guitar to find shortcuts that in the long run make them less musical.

For instance if you think of an altered scale as playing a jazz minor starting from the 7th. i.e. a B altered scale is a C jazz minor scale, then you are really missing the boat. If you are going to think about playing music you should use your ear to tell you how you are hearing any specific musical situation and then think appropriately. If you had a B7 chord and you were hearing that B7 chord as the key center then you should think of the B Altered scale in B, not C. If you are not in the key of C, why are you thinking of C?  It's very unmusical.  Once we get that straightened out, then it's getting the student to the point that they aren't thinking at all, but just reacting. This gets much easier to do once we fix that first problem.

TGC:   There seems to be a new jazz language developing on the guitar in the hands of players like yourself, Kurt Rosenwinkle, Ben Monder and Mordy Ferber. From your point of view is it an evolution of bebop or is an entirely new language being developed?

BA:   I think it is the latter. I've often said that rock follows jazz and jazz follows classical. Many of the techniques that the aforementioned players are using in their improvisation and composition come from the classical musicians of the 20th century.

For myself, the use of Pitch Class Theory and the idea of making your soloing more connected to the composition have been a main driving force. Having one improvisational language that you then play over everything with no regard for the compositional aspects of the tune strikes me as very dated. When I write a composition and it uses let's say, a half step and a minor 3rd as its organizational factors, when I solo I feel I should also use this same idea in my soloing.

Check out my CD 'Art of the Blues' for a great example of this, or any of my work with the band Spooky Actions, where I use this approach whether I am working with Early Music or Schoenberg.

TGC:   How can a student interested in this modern way of playing get a handle on it? Could you describe some of the approaches involved?

BA:   There are some good books out there covering some of these new developments.  Check out books by Jerry Bergonzi, John O'Gallagher and Tony Moreno.  I have a number of books that explain or show different aspects of these new techniques.  Here's a selected list:

1. New York Guitar Method Volumes One and Two
2. MY MUSIC: Explorations in the Application of 12 Tone Techniques to Jazz Composition and Improvisation.
3. Sonic Resource Guide
4. Time Transformation
5. Big Metronome
6. Ear Training books (too numerous to mention, so check out http://www.muse-eek.com/)

TGC:   Any bright shining sparks amongst your current group of students that we may not yet have heard of?

BA:  I always have a few students that shine. I also get students that aren't shining yet, but as they progress they get more serious and really take off. I think it's important to understand that becoming a renowned and respected musician is more about dedication and drive than talent.

I've been teaching for over 30 years and seen it all. You can be very good at playing at a young age but have no drive. You could be technically proficient but lack soul and creativity. I could give you a hundred other combinations but really it's the whole package that goes into becoming a great musician.

Then there is the difference between an entertainer and an artist and the rare breed that is both. So I don't feel right giving you a particular name of a student. They could play wonderfully but not have the drive to tackle the incredibly competitive world of the music scene. Or they might be a lackluster talent, but work like crazy and have a good business sense that sees them succeed in five years. You just never know.

TGC:   As an aspiring jazz student yourself once, who were some of your early influences, teachers and mentors?

BA:   My earliest influences were blues players like Johnny Winter and Duane Allman.  When I went to Berklee College of Music I got into the straight ahead jazz players like Joe Pass and Wes Montgomery

But at the time, the local Boston scene also included Bill Frissell, Mike Stern and Pat Metheny.  I loved and absorbed their music too. I was blessed to be at Berklee at a time when it attracted the Who's Who of guitar, and this made an immense impact on me.

Besides my Berklee teachers I also studied with Charlie Banacos, Jerry Bergonzi and Mick Goodrick; for my money they are still the three pillars of modern music education.  It was sad to hear of the passing of Charlie Banacos.  He was a truly brilliant and caring teacher and a treasure house of information.

TGC:   What's the jazz scene like in NYC nowadays? Are there more or fewer jazz clubs than say 20 years ago and are there any live venues left for jam sessions?

BA:   The NYC scene varies a lot. Right now there are a lot more clubs opening in Brooklyn than Manhattan. There are very few musicians left actually living in Manhattan due to the exorbitant rents; most are in the outer boroughs, and so Brooklyn has a huge scene.

There has always been a great tradition of sessions, and that continues regardless of venues, so it's not very hard to find absolutely phenomenal musicians that want to do sessions at someone's apartment or studio.

Photo:  Michal Shapiro
TGC:   This interview wouldn't be complete if I didn't ask the obligatory gear questions.  Are you into effects pedals?

BA:   I use a Klon Centaur for distortion, Full Tone Clyde Wah and a Ground Control Midi Foot Controller or XKeys Stick to control patches inside SuperCollider.

TGC:   What is the SuperCollider?

BA:   SuperCollider is an object oriented programming language for real time audio synthesis and algorithmic composition.  It was released in 2002 by its author, James McCartney.  It is commonly used for acoustic research, algorithmic music and interactive programming. 

For a performing guitarist this means you could build any traditional guitar effect like reverb, delay, compression, pitch shift etc… or any synthesis like additive, subtractive, FM to enhance your guitar sound or as an addition to your guitar sound. It can also record, playback and manipulate prerecorded sounds including the traditional "loop" idea used by many guitarists. 

I could go on, but suffice it to say it can do just about anything you could think of when it comes to sound.  With SuperCollider I create personal, unique sounds and the beauty part is that I just carry around a laptop rather than pounds of pedals. 

It also allows me to program new sounds anywhere whether I have a guitar strapped around my neck or not.  So it's highly efficient and I commonly can be found programmming new sounds on a plane or train as I commute to gigs.

TGC:   I watched your Master Guitar Symposium dvd and you performed duets with your guest players entirely on a Fender Stratocaster.  Your choice of a Stratocaster seems to be unusual for a jazz guitarist although you do get a really warm sound out of that instrument. Do you have it setup in a particular way? What pickups and strings do you use and why is there a strip of velcro running along the top of your guitar? Some tone enhancing secret perhaps?

BA:   I usually use the 2nd position between the neck and middle pickup and roll off the tone to about 4 or 5.  I use Kinman pickups because they give you that vintage sound without noise.  Strings are LaBella. 

The Velcro strip is for attaching my XKeys Stick which allows me to run SuperCollider presets from the guitar. I don't always use it, so you only see the strip in some of the photos. I also use midi foot controllers and many other devices.

TGC:   How did the idea for the Master Guitar Symposium dvds on Mel Bay come about?

BA:   Each July I direct the NYU Summer Guitar Intensive. We usually have around 45 clinicians that come to talk to the students and play a bit.

The information they give is fantastic and Bill Bay at Mel Bay and I thought it would be a good idea to let people in on this great event through the DVDs. I had a ball hosting it and playing with all those great players. I highly recommend it to anyone who is serious about guitar.

TGC:    Mel Bay seems very dedicated to jazz guitar education. They seem to have a pretty wide selection of books and dvds on the the subject -- moreso it would seem than any other publisher.

BA:   Yes, Mel Bay is really dedicated to guitar education on all levels.  They are also a great pleasure to work with.  Bill Bay and Colin Bay are great people who sincerely want to provide the best guitar educational products possible.

TGC:   What are some of the current musical projects you're involved in?

BA:   I'm about to release a duet CD with Dave Schroeder aka Woodrow T. Greenwich on harmonica and myself, aka Arnett Brewster on lap slide guitar. The duo is called Great Houdini and is a CD of all original music. We call it Great Houdini because we both get to be "escape artists" from our usual roles as sax player and guitarist.

I'm also currently recording a new Rock/Fusion CD with bassist Jerry DeVore and Kirk Driscoll on drums. This new CD only uses 025 in the compositions and improvisation. (025 being a major second and fourth.) I'm also starting to write new music for my jazz trio with Tony Moreno on drums and Dean Johnson on bass.  Once again, I'm exploring the idea of superimposing time levels in my compositions and improvisation, as I did in "Art of the Blues."

TGC:   Could you talk about your books a bit?

BA:   I've written quite a few books to help musicians learn everything from the basics of music to learning and applying very advanced topics. The subjects include Composition, Music Theory, Scales, Chords, Ear Training, Rhythm and Time.

You can find a complete list at http://muse-eek.com/ but I believe that learning music needs more guidance than just buying a book and working through the exercises. You need some personal guidance to make sure you are dealing with your weaknesses and practicing in a physically and mentally correct way.

To help musicians in this area I do quite a bit of email correspondance, Skype lessons, along with some new projects coming out soon. I will be doing online lessons with Truefire's Guitar Sherpa starting in a few months as well as a more robust interface at http://muse-eek.com as soon as the new website is finished. I also have a music blog on my artist website http://brucearnold.com/ where I discuss many of the topics mentioned in this interview.

TGC:   How about leaving us with a memorable road/gig story from your experience as a jazz musician.

BA:   Living in NYC you can get recommended for some unusual gigs.

About 10 years ago I was called on to work with a very serious classical group called the Absolute Ensemble.  They were performing a piece called "Blood on the Floor" by Mark Anthony Turnage that called for a jazz section. Peter Epstien was on saxophone, Peter Erskine was on drums and yours truly on electric guitar.  I was just in the middle of my SuperCollider explorations, and one night when it was my turn to solo, I just had this "aha" moment, and created an atmospheric sound collage, along with the notes.  Maybe I was channelling Cage or Stockhousen. 

Afterwards, Erskine said it gave him goosebumps, and as it turned out, the composer was in the audience and he wrote to me singling out that solo as something he really liked. You might not think of that as a great jazz story, but really, the use of sounds as music has its own precedent in jazz as well as other kinds of music. I also felt this great clarity while I was playing, that I usually associate with a good solo. And I remember that solo more than the millions I've played, for those reasons.
The complete home study jazz guitar course

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Pat Metheny's Orchestrion Project



For his latest recording project Orchestrion, jazz guitarist Pat Metheny teams up with an unlikely combination of pneumatics, solenoids and mechanically played instruments, instead of his usual Pat Metheny Group. 

Metheny is one of the few jazz guitarists who has always experimented with technology -- he was a keen user of the Roland guitar synthesizer, which he made as much a part of his musical voice as his warm toned jazz guitar, and was also an ardent supporter of the Synclavier digital composing and recording system back in the day.

But the Orchestrion is a different machine. Quite literally, it is a machine. 


Metheny recalls visiting his grandfather's home as a child and heading straight for the basement where he would tinker with an ancient player piano and boxes of piano rolls -- no doubt the awakening of his infatuation with music technology.  At the turn of the 20th century, the player piano idea was taken further with the Orchestrion except that the piano rolls now controlled percussion and calliope wind instruments like a pseudo-orchestra -- an early music sequencer if you will. 

For his Orchestrion project, Metheny sought out inventors and engineers to create an array of acoustic instruments that could be controlled from a central source -- he uses the technology from the Yamaha Disklavier piano, the modern electronic version of the player piano, for his central controller.  Pivotal also was an invention that used MIDI to trigger mechanical solenoids by way of control voltage which allowed for a wider dynamic range than was ever possible.  
 
Pat Metheny has really stepped out of the box with this one.  What is remarkable is that he makes a convincing statement out of what could easily have turned out to be a musical and mechanical disaster.   
 
(http://www.patmetheny.com/) The complete home study jazz guitar course

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Jim Hall | Birthday Tribute

Born December 4th 1930, Jim Hall is known for his impeccable phrasing and deep harmonic sensibilities. Regardless of tempo, his melodic lines always demonstrate economy and remarkable restraint, so much so that one jazz critic even described Hall's playing as akin to 'walking on eggshells'.

After graduating with a Bachelor's degree from the Cleveland Institute of Music, Hall ventured to Los Angeles in 1955 where he landed his first major gig, replacing Howard Roberts (and inheriting Roberts' Gibson ES175) in Chico Hamilton's band. Stints with clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre, saxophonist Ben Webster and jazz diva Ella Fitzgerald soon followed. In 1959, Hall recorded Undercurrent with jazz piano genius Bill Evans, the first of two such piano and guitar only recordings.

Moving to New York in 1960, Hall joined saxophonist Sonny Rollins' group and eventually trumpetist Art Farmer's quartet, seen here in this video.



Jim Hall has been a major influence on countless jazz guitarists including Pat Metheny, John Scofield, Mike Stern and Bill Frissell. In many ways, Hall's stylistic legato approach, wide intervallic jazz lines and 'outside' harmonic ideas have contributed greatly to the development of the vocabulary that is so much a part of post-bop modern jazz guitar.

Happy belated Birthday Jim!



See More Jim Hall CDs and DVDs Here! The complete home study jazz guitar course

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Hal Leonard's 'The Pat Metheny Interviews'


In 2007 the BBC produced a 3-part series entitled Pat Metheny - Bright Size Life.

Written and hosted by composer and jazz historian Richard Niles, the series covered Metheny's highly successful career and gave some very deep insights into Pat's musical vision, both as a guitarist and as a composer and performer.

Based on this documentary, Hal Leonard has published the interviews from the series in their entirety in their recent book release The Pat Metheny Interviews -- The Inner Workings Of His Creativity Revealed.

Of particular interest to guitarists are Pat's playing concepts and guitar methodologies, transcribed and shared extensively for the first time.

A must-read for any budding guitar virtuoso interested in carving out a career in instrumental music of any genre.

The complete home study jazz guitar course

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Pat Metheny's Phase Dance -- A Harmonic Analysis



This is a clip of the Pat Metheny Group playing Phase Dance, a particular favorite of mine. A tune off the first Pat Metheny Group album, Phase Dance was from a period when Pat was still writing tunes based on more standard song forms -- very different from the cinematic epics of his later years.

And here's the chord progression. Interestingly it is based on a repetitive 12- bar sequence:


Bm7 Bm7 Bbmaj7 Bbmaj7
Bm7 Bm7 Bbmaj7 Bbmaj7
G/A G/A Gmaj7 Gmaj7

Notice how the Bm7 and Bbmaj7 toggle between two key centers -- Bm and Bb, or Bm and Gm as how I like to see it. Pat plays off F (or Dm) for the Bbmaj7 for a Bb lydian sound which gives a soaring effect to his melody line and solo.

Taking the lydian idea further, for the G/A and Gmaj7 in bars 9-12 Metheny sticks to the Bm (or D) tonality for a G lydian sound.



Check Out Pat Metheny CDs And DVDs Here!

The complete home study jazz guitar course

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Famous Guitar Cameos

Here's a song-by-song listing of famous (and not so famous) guitar cameos. I've always been interested to see the kind of musical fingerprints my favorite guitar players leave on the work of other musicians.

Sometimes these collaborations work, sometimes not. Usually they do.

It's by no means a complete list so do drop me a comment if you know of any more I might have left out -- there must be dozens, if not hundreds more:


Let's Dance (David Bowie) -- Stevie Ray Vaughan

This Is Not America (David Bowie) -- Pat Metheny

Western Vacation (Western Vacation) -- Steve Vai (using the moniker Reckless Fable for legal reasons)

Stories To Tell (Stanley Clarke) -- Allan Holdsworth

Ellipsis (Pat Martino) -- Joe Satriani

Clowns On Velvet (Frank Zappa) -- Al Di Meola (only bootlegs of this live recording exist)

Chinese Fire Alarm (Kittyhawk) -- Robben Ford (from a rare out-of-print album -- great solo with extremely cool phrasing!)

Monmouth College Fight Song (The Yellowjackets) -- Robben Ford

Attack Of The 20lb. Pizza (Vinnie Colaiuta) -- Mike Landau

Beat It (Michael Jackson) -- Eddie Van Halen

Eyesight To The Blind (from the soundtrack for 'Tommy') -- Eric Clapton

While My Guitar Gently Weeps (The Beatles) -- Eric Clapton (Clapton is uncredited on the song due to legal reasons)

Peg (Steely Dan) -- Jay Graydon (this is actually more of a session job by Graydon than a guest cameo, but what the heck, it's still a classic)

All Along The Watchtower (Jimi Hendrix) -- Dave Mason (on 12-string rhythm guitar)

Mediterranean Sundance (Al Di Meola) -- Paco De Lucia

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...