![]() |
It started on this very News Group.
I took up the tenor saxophone six years ago, and
enrolled as a mature student at the local Conservatory of Music. Keith G was then one of the most active contributors to this NG. His lady is a very talented clarinet and saxophone player. He was was tickled pink at my venture, and sent me an mp3 (from vinyl of course:-) of Count Basie Orchestra "Frankie and Johnny" and said, "It would be great if you could play this one day" Soon after, I was offered an audition with Mosabacka Big Band. The band, nineteen players - doctors, policemen, architects, lawyers, graphic designers, teachers etc - has just completed its second commercial CD, and the piece which Keith suggested is the opening title. We are fortunate to have among the band members and associates, people with skills in photography, design, graphic art, copyright, production, recording, mixing, mastering, etc etc, so everything except the physical manufacturing and printing can be done "in house". We recorded at our rehearsal location. The Count Basie version of "Frankie and Johnny" is not published in print, and so each part had to be written down bar by bar. With five saxophones, four trumpets, four trombones, tuba, guitar, piano, drums and bass that's a lot of bars:-) An audio appetizer. http://www.mosabackabigband.com/Music/F+J.wav The CD, which contains two tracks from each of the eight concert projects we are currently playing, is presented in a digi-pack gatefold cover (not a plastic case) and has an eight page booklet. I am sure Keith would have enjoyed it, particularly as we have made a "vinyl" CD. http://www.mosabackabigband.com/atta.../MBB_LABEL.pdf Iain |
It started on this very News Group.
"Iain Churches" wrote in message ... I took up the tenor saxophone six years ago, and enrolled as a mature student at the local Conservatory of Music. Keith G was then one of the most active contributors to this NG. His lady is a very talented clarinet and saxophone player. He was was tickled pink at my venture, and sent me an mp3 (from vinyl of course:-) of Count Basie Orchestra "Frankie and Johnny" and said, "It would be great if you could play this one day" Soon after, I was offered an audition with Mosabacka Big Band. The band, nineteen players - doctors, policemen, architects, lawyers, graphic designers, teachers etc - has just completed its second commercial CD, and the piece which Keith suggested is the opening title. We are fortunate to have among the band members and associates, people with skills in photography, design, graphic art, copyright, production, recording, mixing, mastering, etc etc, so everything except the physical manufacturing and printing can be done "in house". We recorded at our rehearsal location. The Count Basie version of "Frankie and Johnny" is not published in print, and so each part had to be written down bar by bar. With five saxophones, four trumpets, four trombones, tuba, guitar, piano, drums and bass that's a lot of bars:-) An audio appetizer. http://www.mosabackabigband.com/Music/F+J.wav The CD, which contains two tracks from each of the eight concert projects we are currently playing, is presented in a digi-pack gatefold cover (not a plastic case) and has an eight page booklet. I am sure Keith would have enjoyed it, particularly as we have made a "vinyl" CD. http://www.mosabackabigband.com/atta.../MBB_LABEL.pdf Good drummer...... -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
It started on this very News Group.
"Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Iain |
It started on this very News Group.
On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote:
"Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Not hopefully as painful though as what is portrayed in this film ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whiplash_(2014_film) -- Adrian C |
It started on this very News Group.
"Adrian Caspersz" wrote in message ... On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote: "Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Not hopefully as painful though as what is portrayed in this film ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whiplash_(2014_film) -- Whiplash is a great film. Music college reality is tough but not that tough:-) But there is a strong competitive spirit even in non-pro bands. By the way, there was considerable "artistic licence" in the script of Whiplash regarding the Charlie Parker/ Jo Jones cymbal hurling incident. Iain |
It started on this very News Group.
"Adrian Caspersz" wrote in message ... On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote: "Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Think he's as good as Ralph Salmins? (For those who don't know the name he is the drummer of choice for many international stars when they are appearing or (especially) recording in London. There was a prog on TV a few years ago about the remake by celebs of one of (the first?) Beatles albums and for the majority of the tracks he was the drummer. He really showed up the other drummers appearing!) -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
It started on this very News Group.
"Woody" wrote in message ... "Adrian Caspersz" wrote in message ... On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote: "Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Think he's as good as Ralph Salmins? :-) Ralph Salmins is a professor of music, our drummer is a surgeon by profession. So musically, probably no contest, but I know which of the two I would choose if I needed a gall stone removed:-) Iain |
It started on this very News Group.
"Woody" wrote in message ... "Adrian Caspersz" wrote in message ... On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote: "Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Think he's as good as Ralph Salmins? There are probably a lot of drummers who are technically as good, but fall short on reading. That's where studio drummers shine. Our band is not professional, but still we try to keep a high standard, and run it like a pro outfit. Many bands are regarded by the players as "a place to go on Thursday nights" more of a social than a musical get-together. We have a professional leader, and so the band has to have concerts and gigs, to keep the finances going. A band with a chain of concerts in the diary tends to have a different attitude to a band that does not. We play twelve to concerts a year, plus dances and charity gigs. We have a good following, our concerts are usually sold out. Recording too, is a very good way to increase motivation and performance level, and brings in a bob or two as well:-) Iain |
It started on this very News Group.
"Woody" wrote in message ... "Adrian Caspersz" wrote in message ... On 31/05/17 15:32, Iain Churches wrote: "Woody" wrote in message ... Good drummer...... -- Woody Yes indeed. Big band/jazz drummers need to be good readers too. The parts are complex - lots of rhythmic interaction with brass and saxes. Think he's as good as Ralph Salmins? (For those who don't know the name he is the drummer of choice for many international stars when they are appearing or (especially) recording in London. There was a prog on TV a few years ago about the remake by celebs of one of (the first?) Beatles albums and for the majority of the tracks he was the drummer. He really showed up the other drummers appearing!) Click tracks are often sent to foldback when laying down rhythm tracks. This means that the tempo stays constant, and one can edit with rhythmic confidence:-) However, most players feel that a song should "live" and that unwritten changes in tempo take away any mechanical feel. Also these days tracks can quantized, either with software or manually. Working with good drummers, one doesn't need to do this often except perhaps during fills. One can simply lay down eighth note (quaver) markers and time-align to those. This usually sound more natural than "correcting" the complete track. Iain |
All times are GMT. The time now is 10:12 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk