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#386994 - 03/26/14 03:44 PM
For Thelonious Monk lovers - all one of you.
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
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I was looking through some of my old REAPER backup files and found this tune and I thought of Boo always complaining about "not enough chords". Okay, I know I'm not much of a piano player (but then neither was Monk), the organ is waaayyy too percusive, and it's full of bloopers, but what the hell. The 'piano' is the Roland Fantom G7, the drums are my Alesis DM10 kit, the organ is either my C1 or my C2D (can't remember). One day I'll try to do a proper rendition on my KeyB which sounds much more authentic. My problem is, everything I play sounds like a blues. I'm sure it has something to do with limited technique . Anyhoo, bad or not, I love the chord progressions in this tune (although they tend to change depending on who's playing it). BTW, I play this tune at nearly every gig so you'd think I'd know it by now.....I'll just chalk it up to old fingers. For the non-jazzers among you, the tune is called 'round midnight. chas https://app.box.com/s/oxgg13zsfazfxechtj18
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
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#387047 - 03/27/14 03:15 PM
Re: For Thelonious Monk lovers - all one of you.
[Re: cgiles]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
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Thanks guys, sincerely. Personally, I'm not crazy about it, mainly 'cause it's got too many rusty ol' blues licks in it. IMO, the melody and changes are so pretty that it doesn't need much 'enhancement' . You listen to Oscar Peterson do it and you hear those first five notes and you want to go burn your piano. I won't defend the drums except to say that it was probably a bad choice of kits more than bad playing. Boo, when you say 'Darn that Dream', I'm guessing you're thinking the Dexter Gordon version with Kenny Drew et al. I love Kenny's simplified comping style and even try to copy it. I'll give it a shot, any excuse to bang on that KeyB organ (the percussion is much less exaggerated on the KeyB and can be dialed in at whatever level you like). For years I had an old C2, so when I finally could afford a B3, I went a little nuts with percussion - obviously I haven't completely gotten over it . The kicks in the DM10 kinda suck so I may just use the kit to trigger the drums in the Fantom or the BK7m (which are really very good). Way back when, Diki and I were supposed to collaborate on 'Feeling Good' (Anthony Newley) but never got around to it. I'm hoping we can still do that - maybe when he comes up for the races. Maybe we'll get to hear his trombone. Anyhoo, gotta go doublecheck the changes for 'Darn that Dream'. chas
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
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#387407 - 04/02/14 04:27 PM
Re: For Thelonious Monk lovers - all one of you.
[Re: Dnj]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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Boo, I certainly understand. At best, my rendition would be different. Chas is "my man" when it comes to extremely sensitive, "feeling dripping" interpretations of world class compositions.
And Donny, I posted 10 minutes of guitar only, and 9 minutes of a film score rough. I thought it was AWFUL!
I start a 26 hour session for a national manufacturer in Louisville at 3:00 AM in the morning. Final production is 14 minutes and change.
In the last 20 years, the only thing I ever recorded of myself other than long, boring national projects was the 10 minute guitar piece I did to see how much damage to my arm was evident. Man, were there some clinkers in that one. It was one take, straight into a Zoom. I record our family trio and HATED to listen to the playback. It 's hard to realize I'm not in the studio working on a national project.
I'm too much of a perfectionist to record ANYTHING just for myself. I don't enjoy it. My pleasure is in taking the final step and recording a track to complement a film which I have shot, scripted AND scored.
Frankly, because of the nature of the recordings I do, I can't think anyone would be interested. Most are proprietary; I can't share final production anyway.
Remember, I don't particularly enjoy playing live at all. And the projects are so specialized that they rarely stand alone as outstanding music (lots of sound effects, "heads and tails" and such).
I don't need to prove anything to anyone but myself and the companies who pay the bills.
I work 110 hours a week and wish I could do music for pure enjoyment. But, this is what I do.
I'd take "Round Midnight" and hire 5 players from out of town. then, I'd want to mix it elsewhere.
Just go back and review what I posted in the past to get an idea about what I do and the level of ability. Even then, it was not done for fun. The deadlines too tight, the stakes to big. I LIKE THAT!
Gotta run for the gig.
Be well, all,
Russ
Edited by captain Russ (04/02/14 05:01 PM)
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#387620 - 04/05/14 04:51 PM
Re: For Thelonious Monk lovers - all one of you.
[Re: spalding1968]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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WOW!My takeaway is the PURE JOY on the players faces as they reach that sublime level of unspoken communications.
GREAT KIDS (to me), who deserve all the recognition they get.
Chick is unparalleled on a slightly different level. I've told you before, the last performance of Return to Forever was Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington in the late fall of 1976.
After the gig, the group came to the Sportsman Restaurant, where I played 1 to 4:00 AM after hours.
I like Al so much, I had a guitar built up using the same electronics. And, I bought an Alymbic bass.
Stanley Clark is a MONSTER.
Recent performances by Return to forever have included violinist Zachary Brock, the son of a friend of mine.
Hey, see the YouTube of Snarky Puppy with Lala Hathaway...Donny's daughter? She's GREAT...in good company.
Thanks, Chas...didn't know these kids before.
A real joy to see, AND WATCH!
They'll never make much money, and, for even top jazzers, that's reality.
And that's a damn shame.
Russ
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#387628 - 04/05/14 07:33 PM
Re: For Thelonious Monk lovers - all one of you.
[Re: cgiles]
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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I played music for a living ever since I was around 15 years old...I've done very few other type jobs, and if I did, they were related to playing music or working with keyboards.
Now at 65, and restructuring things before I start gigging again, I can say I have no regrets.
Playing music has always been the central theme and never a sideline. Sometimes i had to make hard choices, but they were worth it.
Ian
_________________________
Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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