Listen instead of read; try Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Glen Miller; Thelonius Monk, Sonny Rollins, John Coltrane, Miles. Listen to anything Rudy Van Gelder produced as he was a master at getting the sound right. Don't forget Horace Silver, Lee Morgan and all the great Blue Note recordings of the 50's; I think its the 1500 series that had some of the greatest jazz ever recorded. Vocals, Ella Fitzgerald, Shirley Horne, Frank, Tony Bennett, and on and on...in fact, just listen to all the dead jazz guys except Sonny Rollins because they made the best music ever; very few today even come close.
which book to get?
I am wishing to learn how to listen Jazz and at a deeper level as well, though I dont play instruments, but still keen to discover what i like, what i dont like, actually have limited knowledge of Jazz, so you could say Im a novice.
I'm keen to develop an ability to discern styles and epochs in the jazz history, and so now I am debating on which of the 2 books of which i narrowed down from several choices, I have to choose 1, i can't make up my mind, which shall I get?
The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine
Jazz Styles: History & Analysis by Mark C. Gridley
I can only pick one, so which one would you choose?
Many thanks
I'm keen to develop an ability to discern styles and epochs in the jazz history, and so now I am debating on which of the 2 books of which i narrowed down from several choices, I have to choose 1, i can't make up my mind, which shall I get?
The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine
Jazz Styles: History & Analysis by Mark C. Gridley
I can only pick one, so which one would you choose?
Many thanks
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- 9 posts total
- 9 posts total