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The 22-bar head features odd progressions, intervalic leaps, and rhythmic displacement: the first motif recurs 4 times, each starting on a different beat. I wasn`t thinking in terms of specific scales. For improvisational ease the solo form was later simplified to 24 bars and more conventional changes.
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A 12-bar piece in two meters, 4/4 going to 5/4 and back. Bail is written around several scales: Lydian dominant and altered modes of the melodic minor, the symmetrical dominant (1/2 W 1/2 W 1/2 W 1/2 W intervals), and the whole tone scale.
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An earlier piece, I was playing around with adjacent arpeggios which create similar geometric patterns on the fretboard of a guitar. Visual patterns have always fascinated me and sometimes are the origin of motifs in my playing. Except for the bridge, it`s written around the harmonic minor scale.
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I wanted to recapture the sense of wonder young kids feel toward life. The piece is based on a blues form, but in bars 5 - 6, instead of going to the IV7, it goes to a harmonic minor tonal center, evoking a sense of mystery and reverence.
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A polytonal piece built around the Eb whole tone scale and the Ab blues scale.
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The simplest explanation for this piece is that it alternates between
C and Db altered dominant modes, with a few harmonic diversions for interest.
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By Thelonious Monk, who is one of my favorite jazz composers. His music is proof-positive that musicians and composers should be true to themselves. Without originality we`d all be stuck in some weird time loop.
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This has nothing to do with God or trombones. I named the already finished piece in honor of trombone virtuoso George Lewis after seeing him play one night. The melody has a Japanese feel. I was toying with intervalic variations. It goes from standard ii V Is to sections with altered dominant 7ths.
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Named for George Russell, whom I consider a big influence. I wrote it after beginning to implement some of the harmonic ideas he wrote about in "The Lydian Chromatic Concept." Russell`s influence on post-bop harmony is profound.
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Frankenstein is born and finds life good. When, in spite of his cheerful mood the birds are scared out of the trees, he gets mad and begins his wrathful march. Inspired by the thought-provoking movie "Gods and Monsters."
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