Posts Tagged ‘piano’
Research: Jazz and the Brain
Jazz Improvisation Transports the Human Brain to a Different Realtiy
New research by John Hopkins University and National Institute of Health scientists found that the brains of improvising jazz musicians operate in a fundamentally different way than those of musicians playing a memorized, composed melody. .
The study was under the direction of Charles Limb, a hearing specialist at Johns Hopkins Hospital and teacher at the University, lecturer on the neuroscience of music and music perception at Peabody Conservatory of Music, is also a jazz saxophonist.
Jazz and the Brain Research Methods
Designing effective equipment for watching the brain at work is difficult. Limb and Allen Braun, who co-authored the paper published in the journal PLoS One, used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to look into their subject brains. The device emits a strong magnetic field, which creates images based on the movement of blood through the brain. Interpreting the images is based on the idea that blood flows in larger amounts to active areas of the brain.
A Jazz Instrument that would Work inside a Scanner
The researchers created a keyboard with no magnetic parts that could be linked to a computer outside the scanner. It plays like a piano, but when someone presses a key, it actually sends a signal to a computer, which then sends a sound sample from a real piano into a set of headphones worn by the musician in the scanner. Read the rest of this entry »
Live at Carnegie Hall
Clint Eastwood and Jazz Go Hand in Hand
Jazz – that true American form of music that can be sultry, soulful, swingy, or smooth. Clint Eastwood – director and star of films like Dirty Harry and The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly. Add the two together and you get Eastwood After Hours.
Jazz Concert for Clint Eastwood
Eastwood After Hours is a jazz concert recorded live at Carnegie Hall, celebrating the actor and his contribution to the jazz music industry. This is a disk both jazz and Eastwood fans will enjoy listening to as well as watching.
There are over twenty-five songs performed by some of the top jazz musicians in the country and the Carnegie Hall Jazz Band. Most of the songs are from Eastwood’s movies, including Play Misty for Me, Honkytonk Man, Unforgiven, The Bridges of Madison County, White Hunter, Black Heart, Bird, and more. Because of his love of the music, Eastwood purposely includes a lot of jazz in his films. How about the training, I guess he practice it on his apartment, how about you? you could start it with kharkov apartments for rent.
Using Jazz in Eastwood Movies
During much of the concert images from the films as well as pictures of musicians past and present are shown on the screen. Between songs Mr. Eastwood explains a little about his love of jazz and recounts stories like the time he heard Roberta Flack singing “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face.” He instantly knew he wanted that song in the movie Play Misty for Me, so he contacted the record company and made a deal.
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Nat King Cole’s Family
Singer Nat King Cole (“Nat King Cole Biography,” bio.com) died in 1965. Many fans feared his death was ending an era of smooth pop songs. Others regretted that Cole had tended to desert his jazz roots in favor of popular tunes that sold well, often backed by bland string orchestras.
Vocalist Nat King Cole Finds a Niche in Pop Tunes
Born in Montgomery, AL, in 1919, Nat King Cole soon moved with his family to Chicago, where his father became a church pastor. Cole’s mother, the church organist, taught him to play the organ. Soon he was learning classical and jazz piano. By 1937 Nat King Cole was playing Los Angeles club dates. he eventually organized a trio. Read the rest of this entry »
Jazz roots
Jazz roots run so deep in American Culture that further attempts to define the elements of jazz become murky at best. Yet there are a few other facts that need mentioning.
Jazz pulls from the blues
Jazz is partly built on the blues, and some jazz pulls straight from the blues, utilizing the song structures of the traditional blues song structure known as 12 – bar blues. See the article “What is Jazz” where the 12 – bar blues is in action as explained in the improvisation part.
In good blues, jazz, and gospel, players listen intently to each other’s playing, and have an almost intuitive connection to each other – an uncanny sixth sense felt between musicians. In the gospel church, the preacher sings out a line of sermon, and his congregation tosses it back to him. In blues and jazz, one musician plays or sings something, and another player throws it back in slightly new, altered form, adding a new variation to the theme and exploring a song further. Still another player may take a swing at the musical phrase, even adding a new melodic run. This tradition of call and response, and more simply improvisation, is a big part of jazz.
Jazz pulls from European traditions
European musical traditions are also a vital part of jazz. Elements like swing and improvisation found their way into jazz from Africa, but jazz’s major instruments, including piano, saxophone (invented in Belgium about 1840 by Adolphe Sax), and assorted horns, came to jazz by way of Europe. Note that is you talk to a musicologist – someone who studies origin of music and instruments – you may hear that many European instruments are modified versions of instruments from the Middle East and Africa.
Jazz’s basic system of notes is also derived from the European musical tradition. You can think of these notes as all the notes on a piano – together known as the western chromatic scale. This is in contrast to many systems of notes from other traditions in Africa and the Middle East which use quarter tone – notes that, if they were on a piano, would appear between keys – and gaps in scales where western ears would expect to hear a note. Within the western chromatic scale are all the various scale (major, minor, the various modes, and so on) that jazz players use to create melodies and improvise.
Jazz musicians added their own twist to the European scales, or group of notes. For example, blues is distinguished by blue notes, and the sound of these note combinations is popular in jazz as well. To understand this, take a piano and find middle C, the note at the center of the keyboard. Now find B – flat. The fifth note up from C. play these two at the same time – what you are playing is called a flat seventh interval. B-flat is the seventh in relation to C, and adds that blues sound to it. Blue, or seventh notes, exist for every note on the piano – not just middle C. Read the rest of this entry »