Название: The Jazz Theory Book Автор: Mark Levine Издательство: Sher Music Жанр: Музыкальная литература и Теория Год издания: 2016 Страниц: 628 ISBN: 1-883217-04-0 Язык: Английский Формат: EPUB, PDF Размер: 80 Мб
Endorsed by Jamey Aebersold, James Moody, Dave Liebman, and others, The Jazz Theory Book presents all the information any student of jazz needs in an easy-to-understand, yet thorough, manner. For intermediate to advanced players, and written by one of the acknowledged masters of jazz, it is used by universities around the world.
Содержание
Author’s Note Acknowledgements Introduction A Note on Terminology and Chord Symbols Glossary
PART I. Theory: Chords and Scales CHAPTER ONE. Basic Theory Intervals Intervals Inverting Triads CHAPTER TWO. The Major Scale and the II-V-I Progression Modes of the Major Scale The II-V-I Progression Voice Leading The Cycle of Fifths Other Common Chord Progressions The Locrian Mode and the Half-Diminished Chord Modal Jazz CHAPTER THREE. Chord/Scale Theory Why Scales? Major Scale Harmony Melodic Minor Scale Harmony Diminished Scale Harmony Whole-Tone Scale Harmony CHAPTER FOUR. How To Practice Scales CHAPTER FIVE. Slash Chords What are Slash Chords? PART II. Improvisation: Playin’ the Changes CHAPTER SIX. From Scales to Music From Scales to Music Sequences The Continuous Scale Exercise Masters of the Sequence Triadic Improvisation 7th Chord Sequences Common Tones Stretchin’ the Changes CHAPTER SEVEN. The Bebop Scales The Bebop Dominant Scale The Bebop Dorian Scale The Bebop Major Scale The Bebop Melodic Minor Scale Bebop Scale Licks Piano and Arranging Stuff CHAPTER EIGHT. Playing “Outside” Sequences Playing a Half Step Away Playing a Tritone Away Playing Scales to Get Outside Some Piano Stuff The Chromatic Scale Be Brave, Go Ahead and Play Outside CHAPTER NINE. Pentatonic Scales The Pentatonic Scale The Modes and the Minor Pentatonic Scale The I, IV, and V Pentatonic Scales on II-V-I Chords Playing Pentatonic Scales on “Giant Steps” Pentatonic Scales and “Avoid” Notes The II Pentatonic Scale over Major 7th Chords The IV Pentatonic Scale over Melodic Minor Chords The In-sen and Other Five-Note Scales The Minor Pentatonic and the Blues Scale Practicing Pentatonic Scales CHAPTER TEN. The Blues Blues Changes Special Kinds of Blues The Blues Scale The Minor Pentatonic Scale Pentatonic, Minor Pentatonic, and Blues Scale Equivalents CHAPTER ELEVEN. “Rhythm” Changes CHAPTER TWELVE. Practice, Practice, Practice Make Music When Practicing Practice Everything in Every Key Practice to Your Weaknesses Speed Comes from Accuracy The Tactile and Visual Aspect Licks and Patterns Transcribing Play-Along Recordings Play Along with Real Records Keep a Notebook Relax Tap that Foot Cultivate Your Environment Form PART III. Reharmonization CHAPTER THIRTEEN. Basic Reharmonization Reharmonizing V as II-V Tritone Substitution Reharmonizing Minor Chords Reharmonizing V Chords Reharmonizing I Chords Reharmonization During Solos Reharmonizing “I Hear A Rhapsody” CHAPTER FOURTEEN. Advanced Reharmonization Contrary Motion Parallelism Slash Chords Ascending and Descending Bass Lines Build a Chord On Any Root Sus and Sus 9 Chords Deceptive Cadences Chromatic Approach Anticipating a Chord with Its V Chord Using the Diminished Chord Change the Melody Change the Chord Common Tones Pedal Point Combining Techniques CHAPTER FIFTEEN. Coltrane Changes “Giant Steps” Changes A History Lesson “Countdown” and “Tune Up” Coltrane Changes Played on Standards Tonal Centers Moving by Minor 3rds McCoy Tyner’s Locrian V Chord CHAPTER SIXTEEN. Three Reharmonizations John Coltrane’s Reharmonization of “Spring Is Here” Kenny Barron’s Reharmonization of “Spring Is Here” John Coltrane’s Reharmonization of “Body And Soul” PART IV. The Tunes CHAPTER SEVENTEEN. Song Form and Composition Determining a Song’s Form Intros, Interludes, Special Endings, Shout Choruses, and Verses Tunes with Improvised Sections Nothing is Sacred Tunes with the Melody Played by the Bass Jazz Composition and Song Form Billy Strayhorn’s “My Little Brown Book” Sam Rivers’ “Beatrice” CHAPTER EIGHTEEN. Reading a Lead Sheet The Key Signature The Melody The Changes Rhythm and Phrasing Chord Symbols: Right, Wrong, or Optional CHAPTER NINETEEN. Memorizing a Tune The Form The Melody The Changes CHAPTER TWENTY. Heads CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE. The Repertoire
PART V. The Rest of It CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO. Salsa and Latin Jazz What Is “Latin Music”? The Clave The Invisible Bar Line A History Lesson CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE. Loose Ends The Four Myths The Harmonic Minor Scale The Harmonic Major Scale Four-Note Scales The Limitations of Traditional Theory Wrong Notes Criticism Book Review CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR. Listen
Index
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