0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Very simply put, I think the next step up up from playing all the right notes in the right order, is of course, adding and incorporating some of your own notes. If they don't sound good, it's gibberish, if they do sound good, it's improvisation. What do you think?
Improvisation predates jazz by about 5 centuries.
It stands to reason that all composition begins as improvisation, and always did. If improvisation is the music not yet played or written, yet, Then the Theme, Connection, spark, image, or idea is improvisation, the playing or writing, the development of the idea, is composition. That’s how it works with writing, or any of it worth reading anyway.Best regards,Ed
Quote from: ejacob4 on July 13, 2020, 05:35:39 PMIt stands to reason that all composition begins as improvisation, and always did. If improvisation is the music not yet played or written, yet, Then the Theme, Connection, spark, image, or idea is improvisation, the playing or writing, the development of the idea, is composition. That’s how it works with writing, or any of it worth reading anyway.Best regards,EdSort of, but I think there's a difference between composition and improvising. Improvising is essentially composition in real time. I can compose solos that are much better than my improvised ones because I have the time to think through each phrase. I like the Miriam Webster definition of improvise: "create and perform (music, drama, or verse) spontaneously or without preparation", I think that sums it up nicely.- Slim
Gnarley sez: More? answer? Yes.It was 4241bc. Someone wrote that down.Jo-hotep was sitting by the river Nile playing his new tune: 'See you later alligator' on his snoot flute.He decided to write it down for future posterity. He took a fresh not quite set-up camel chip and using a stylus made from a papyrus reed carved his tune into it. THIS was a composition. On the flip side he wrote his other tune: 'After while crocodile'. Unfortunately a few days later when he wanted to play his tune for friends, he found that a scarab dung beetle had chewed awaysome of his composition. He proceeded to play the tune and when he got to the missing parts, he IMPROVISED. He played notes extemporaneously and spontaneously without knowing if the notes were his original notes. Jo-sir
Yeah. But: Some people work out their improvs on the fly, but then repeat them on subsequent performances, amirite?...
Also: There are certain conventions, or rules, that an improvisors abide by, like following the chord progressions, or playing set riffs. There's mention of pentatonic scales as a template, for instance....
For me, improvisation has something to do with feeling. What do I feel with this music, what do I want to tell. You bring your own personality into what you play. That is why it is fun to do that. You can simply tell freely what you want....
Quote from: Angie on July 14, 2020, 09:33:07 AMFor me, improvisation has something to do with feeling. What do I feel with this music, what do I want to tell. You bring your own personality into what you play. That is why it is fun to do that. You can simply tell freely what you want....Exactly! Having something to say has got to be the most important part of improvisation, otherwise it falls flat (no pun intended). It's an outlet for your emotions combined with musical cleverness. One without the other is plain boring (to me).- Slim
Of course improvisation is something you add to an existing melody. But: how do you get it to sound good? Without knowledge of harmony, it is doomed to failure. My problem is that I have always played only by notes with the flute. I have it so deep inside me that I don't dare to play freely. Apart from the fact that I don't know what sounds good. Just playing in the same key of the melody is probably not enough to improvise.
The problem is, I can't even make it sound good to me. I'm so fixated on knowing how the theory works that it seems impossible for me to just go ahead and play. It's hard to explain....
I'm pretty sure the simple rule is: any note that's part of the particular chord that the music is in will work. (at least that's what I've come to believe) but what do I know; I still can't read music.
Decades ago, my first real writing teacher taught me two things: 1. You cannot learn to have a voice, you are one. 2. Some days you will like you, and some you will not. Sooner or later we slip, stop pretending, and become ourselves. Maybe it’s new, or maybe some forgotten scrap of something we patch into now. Sometimes we just become our own McGuyver, solving the problem the piece presents, and it changes, because it lives that way. That said, sometimes when I slip, I like me. Sometimes I don’t. Either way, it was still me. Improvisation is not the soul preview of an artistic elite. It is the human condition. Best regards,Ed
Quote from: Age on July 26, 2020, 01:41:48 PMI'm pretty sure the simple rule is: any note that's part of the particular chord that the music is in will work. (at least that's what I've come to believe) but what do I know; I still can't read music. Yes and no. Chord tones sound good on downbeats. Non-chord tones do not sound good on downbeats. Not being able to read music is besides the point. Your ear is guiding you.