Lennie Tristano Transcriptions Pdf Free
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LENNIE TRISTANO- “LINE UP” SOLO TRANSCRIPTION To say that Lennie Tristano was a uniquely talented musician is to some, stating the obvious. But perhaps it isn’t.
His isn’t exactly a household name, even among musicians. And many who do know of him are only familiar with his extra-musical reputation as an enigmatic and reclusive person. His influence on a wide range of musicians, even if unacknowledged, is quite strong. Not only was he an educator with an ever-growing following of talented musicians, most notably, Lee Konitz and Warne Marsh, he ran his own record label (he was one of the first musicians to do so) and was a pioneer in the application of tape splicing, multi-tracking and other editing techniques (gasp!). He was also a forward thinking conceptualist, no doubt planting a few of the seeds that gave birth to the free jazz phenomenon, and of course he was flat out an amazing improviser as evinced by the transcription below.
“Line Up” is 32 bar progression based on the chord progression to “All Of Me”. The song is off of a recording called which is part of a twofer CD with. “Line Up” is comprised of 7 choruses of some really personal and inventive melodic lines. Tristano doesn’t play an opening melody; after resting for 8 bars, letting the rhythm section do its thing (the rhythm track was pre-recorded; rumor has it that Tristano’s lines were recorded at half speed. The piano sound has been altered, nevertheless) he dives headlong into his improvisation. What strikes me most strongly about this solo, aside from his extraordinary technique and clean articulation, is his wide of use rhythmically displaced phrases. For example, in the 9th and 10th bars of his solo, he plays a simple melodic figure.
He then repeats the figure, up a diatonic 4th, but instead of starting it on the 1st beat of the 11th measure as one would expect, he begins it on the 4th beat of the 10th measure. This device creates in the listener a curious, off-balance feeling. He’ll also accent his line on the downbeats from time to time, like he’s tamping the brakes on a car; it works to dissipate some of the forward energy of his line that at times, threatens to spin out of control.
Tristano is always, however, able to resolve the rhythmic aspect of his line in sophisticated and unusual ways. Nowadays, these improvisational devices are more or less meat and potatoes but back in 1955, it was quite innovative and unusual. Throughout his solo, he plays with a really propulsive, aggressive swing and his line is shaped rhythmically by using a wide variety of syncopated accents.
He sounds as if he’s working at a piece of hot metal with a mallet, hammering his line into shape. He also uses a device of playing a melodic shape a half step above the underlying harmony and then shifting it back into key.
For the most part Tristano’s solo is built around 8th note runs but every so often, he’ll turn on a really crispy triplet figure or jab you in the ear with a fat chord cluster. As i listen again to “Line Up”, i think immediately of Herbie Hancock and the way he played with Miles Davis’ band on recordings like “Nefertiti”, “Miles Smiles” and “Live At The Plugged Nickel”. His solo passages are only sparsely accompanied by his left hand. In many instances, he functions rather like a 3rd horn than as a rhythm section player. It’s a great way to keep the harmonic moorings loose and it gives the music a colder, leaner sound. My guess is that Hancock spent some time checking out Tristano. There are many who say Tristano was too clinical and unemotional in his playing.
Special Force 2 Hack Download 2014. I can’t agree with that opinion. I can only say that, when listening to LENNIE TRISTANO, THE NEW TRISTANO, and particularly when seeing his DVD,, an image comes to me of a man who was intensely involved with his music, no doubt to the detriment of his commercial success, who was unconcerned with the mannerisms and poses that many musicians assume, perhaps because they think they have to. As a listener, Tristano’s music demands that you bring something to the table, that you meet him (at least) half way. His music seems to exist in a more rarefied element, outside of the main currents of life. He could arguably be perceived as having a more European (western) attitude vis-a-vis art (although he professed his admiration for Bird and his peers, and had a deep understanding of the history of jazz, as his playing demonstrates); a very different stance from a musician like Max Roach, for example, (a frequent collaborator with Booker Little who, was featured on the previous post) who often used his music as a vehicle to address socio-political concerns. His music, in my opinion seeks to inspire the listener to become more deeply involved in the world.