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jhatpro Heavyweight Member

Joined: 17 Mar 2002 Posts: 10175 Location: The Land Beyond O'Hare
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Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2023 9:33 am Post subject: Maximizing Jazz Warmup |
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I've been trying to make my warmups more interesting and beneficial. Instead of just doing long tones I'm working my way through the keys by slowly arpeggiating chords: maj, min, aug, dim and sus.
Anyone doing something similar? I'm always looking for ideas. _________________ Jim Hatfield
"The notes are there - find them.” Mingus
2021 Martinus Geelan Custom
2005 Bach 180-72R
1965 Getzen Eterna Severinsen
1946 Conn Victor
1998 Scodwell flugel
1986 Bach 181 cornet
1954 Conn 80A cornet
2002 Getzen bugle |
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TrumpetMD Heavyweight Member

Joined: 22 Oct 2008 Posts: 2377 Location: Maryland
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Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2023 4:24 pm Post subject: |
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I don't call it a "warm-up". But I have a daily routine for jazz. I pick one key a day, so I cycle through all keys every 12 days. It takes about 15-20 minutes to complete. I run through scales, arpeggios, and patterns in that key. And then I improvise over a couple choruses of major blues, minor blues, and rhythm changes in that key.
Mike _________________ Bach Stradivarius 43* Trumpet (1974), Bach 6C Mouthpiece.
Bach Stradivarius 184 Cornet (1988), Yamaha 13E4 Mouthpiece
Olds L-12 Flugelhorn (1969), Yamaha 13F4 Mouthpiece.
Plus a few other Bach, Getzen, Olds, Carol, HN White, and Besson horns. |
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loil Veteran Member

Joined: 14 Apr 2005 Posts: 333 Location: Marseille - France
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2023 1:45 pm Post subject: |
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I once talked about that with Godwin Louis.
His 'sound warmup' :
Choose a ballad from the great repertoire, play the melody and explore the chords invarious keys. The slower the better. _________________ C. LeLoiL
http://christopheleloil.com/
1969 Connstellation 38B
1977 Martin Committee
197* Couesnon Flugel
DONAT mpcs exclusively |
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kehaulani Heavyweight Member

Joined: 23 Mar 2003 Posts: 8661 Location: Hawai`i - Texas
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2023 1:58 pm Post subject: |
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I would take slow-moving melodies, like Cherokee, and play them like flow studies.
Then, to get the fingers moving, play bebop heads but connecting all the notes and reducing the rhythms all to eighth notes. I would pick the tunes for good interval flexibility studies. Don't play them any faster than you can in a very relaxed, controlled manner.
Then, pick a tune or fragment of one and play it in various keys. _________________ "If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn." Bird
YTR-8310Z II Bobby Shew
Getzen Capri Cornet
Adams F-1 Flghn
Last edited by kehaulani on Tue Oct 03, 2023 10:31 am; edited 1 time in total |
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jhatpro Heavyweight Member

Joined: 17 Mar 2002 Posts: 10175 Location: The Land Beyond O'Hare
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Posted: Mon Sep 18, 2023 3:58 pm Post subject: |
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All good ideas! BTW, there are some really good suggestions in the HipBone Music video series hosted by Michael Davis. _________________ Jim Hatfield
"The notes are there - find them.” Mingus
2021 Martinus Geelan Custom
2005 Bach 180-72R
1965 Getzen Eterna Severinsen
1946 Conn Victor
1998 Scodwell flugel
1986 Bach 181 cornet
1954 Conn 80A cornet
2002 Getzen bugle |
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Blancolate Heavyweight Member
Joined: 18 Sep 2004 Posts: 649 Location: new jersey
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Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2023 10:15 am Post subject: |
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Jazz ballads played along with the I real Pro........they have two great settings(a long tone setting and a ballad setting). You can also practice voice leading. Use a jazz tune you are working on and practice just enclosure patterns leading to the first, third or 7th of the following chord.......very slow. This will definately get your ear fine tuned to the tune you are studying and practice your long tone settings as well! |
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GizB Veteran Member

Joined: 11 Jan 2005 Posts: 188
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Posted: Thu Oct 05, 2023 6:57 am Post subject: |
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If you're bored with major/minor scale work, try this: Take some of the Gekker articulation exercises and convert them to the jazz melodic minor scale (natural 6th & 7th up and down).
Using a starting note, such as G, I do the Gekker exercises in the jazz melodic minor . I'll then run the exercise on each degree of a melodic minor, with G always as the starting note. So:
G - 1st degree - G melodic minor
G - 2nd - F melmin
G - 3rd - E melmin
G - 4th - D melmin
G - 5th - C melmin
G - 6th - Bb melmin
G - 7th - Ab melmin
I do all these conversions mentally, so it's a brain-twister, but has the benefit of working on articulation and jazz scales at the same time. Plus, depending on the exercise, you can keep to a relatively narrow (say, 1 octave) tessitura. |
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