RE: [Harp-L] Re: Harp-L Digest, Vol 94, Issue 8



I love the way you describe Bird's music !!
It is exactly that.
We are all analyzing and commenting his licks because they are so
incredible, so modern, with an amazing sense of what could happen
harmonically and how it can be transcribed melodically.
And he could play like this at a speed which makes it difficult to clearly
fully hear his genius (personally, I began to realize it when slowing down
his tunes, otherwise it was going too fast for my ear).
Most of his solos look like real themes, and are studied as if they were.
But once you've tried to work Charlie's music, you quickly realize that,
above all, he has been one of the most impressive musicians rhythmically.

> "And when you do hitch along on that ride. even if only for a few fleeting
moments before you fall off,  I can tell you from personal experience,  it's
a joyous thrill that will make you want to try again and again and again!"

Yes !!! Flying like a Bird, even few seconds, is an ultimate experience !

-----Message d'origine-----
De : harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:harp-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] De la part
de dmf 273
Envoyé : samedi 4 juin 2011 01:52
À : harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx
Objet : [Harp-L] Re: Harp-L Digest, Vol 94, Issue 8

>
> JERSIMUSE WROTE:
>
> When you play with our old friend Charlie, you are imposed Charlie 
> Parker?s very particular swing, very precise rhythm.
>
> You are also obliged to respect the exact same articulations on each 
> single note because at this speed, any tiny difference will lead you 
> to be off rhythm.
>
> So being able to play each single note exactly at the same time as him 
> implies a tremendous amount of work.
>
> Playing the licks is not the most difficult. Getting the exact same 
> swing is the real challenge to my opinion.
>

Jersimuse did an amazing job of playing along with Bird, at tempo on a
Richter diatonic.   I doff my virtual cap to him!   And, having attempted to
play along with Bird myself on various chromatic and altered tuned harps,  I
know exactly what he's talking about when he says the hardest part is
mimicking Bird's sense of swing.    Bird's rhythms can be maddeningly
tricky.  They are so perfectly logical and yet, at the same time so
perfectly unpredictable!   Even if you are expecting the unexpected you will
still be surprised.   The timing of when he begins, when he ends, where he
rises, where he falls, where he twists, turns and teases - is all of a
divine cloth different than anything mere mortals can conceive.   Dizzy
Gillespie himself said that Bird's greatest gift was his sense of rhythm.

And yet, as Jersimuse proves, it is possible to mimic and ride along with
the Bird on his rollercoaster at least for a few brief moments, even on a
lowly Richter harp!    And when you do hitch along on that ride. even if
only for a few fleeting moments before you fall off,  I can tell you from
personal experience,  it's a joyous thrill that will make you want to try
again and again and again!

BIRD LIVES!

(And you can listen to the complete works of Charlie Parker in chronological
order every weekday morning at 8:20 AM Eastern Time on WKCR - Columbia
University Internet radio.   I do!)





This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and MHonArc 2.6.8.