Any parts or solos in a recording you listen to over & o
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Any parts or solos in a recording you listen to over & o
I have a few - Whenever I listen to the recording of "Milenburg Joys" by Tommy Dorsey, I always play the sax section choris a few times. Same thing with the sax section chorus in his version of "I Don't Know Why".
Same thing with whatever the trumpet section is doing on the Harry James recording of "Avalon" - unison triple tonguing?
On the Dizzy Gillespie big band recording of "Hey Pete! Let's Eat Mo' Meat" - There is an instrumetal chorus right before the final 'vocal' that is tremendous.
On Gene Krupa's "There'll Be Some Changes Made" - right between the 2 vocal chorus, there is fantastic section writing which defines the song. Great arrangement.
I was about to name two more, but they were also sectio choruses and I wanted to name some solos, too. Next time.
Same thing with whatever the trumpet section is doing on the Harry James recording of "Avalon" - unison triple tonguing?
On the Dizzy Gillespie big band recording of "Hey Pete! Let's Eat Mo' Meat" - There is an instrumetal chorus right before the final 'vocal' that is tremendous.
On Gene Krupa's "There'll Be Some Changes Made" - right between the 2 vocal chorus, there is fantastic section writing which defines the song. Great arrangement.
I was about to name two more, but they were also sectio choruses and I wanted to name some solos, too. Next time.
Re: Any parts or solos in a recording you listen to over &am
You mean the part that starts 45 seconds in? Yes, it's goodEyeball wrote:Whenever I listen to the recording of "Milenburg Joys" by Tommy Dorsey, I always play the sax section choris a few times
Interesting observation.Haydn wrote:A pattern I've noticed is that a recording really takes off on the second 32-bar section - the first 32 often feels like an introduction. An example is Stealin' Apples by Fletcher Henderson. The third 32-bar section in that song introduces a great new riff in the harmony section as well.
Those older 3 minute recordings are like a story - the have an introduction, a beginning, a middle and an end, sometimes a coda.
They need to establish the 'story' before they take off.
Not always...
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To my ear, it's more that the whole rhythm section starts motoring in the second 32.Albert System wrote:In a lot of those older records, the band will be playing 2 beat for the first chorus- the bass only playing 2 beast per bar, and then start into 4 beat on the second chorus. That would give you the reaction of thing getting going in the second 32 bars.
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caab wrote:The saxophone in Billie Holiday's recording of "Them There Eyes" always gets me. Definitely on repeat, it's great from start to finish.
Albert System wrote: Isn't that Lester Young? (Or maybe Ben Webster... gotta look it up).
I figured that was Lester Young too, but I did some Googling and it turns out it's Tab Smith.