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Berklee Basic Hard Rock Tenor Sax

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FREE music lessons from Berklee College of Music Berklee Practice Method Tenor Sax Get Your Band Together Jim Odgren Bill Pierce and the Berklee Faculty Chapter 6 Playing Hard Rock Click CD icons to listen to CD tracks from book. Press ESC to cancel sound. Check out Berkleeshares.com for more lessons just like this one. © 2005 Berklee College of Music licensed to the public under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd-nc/1.0/ verify at http://berkleeshares.com/legal-notice Berklee is offering free music lessons online designed to expand educational opportunities for musicians around the globe. The music lessons are available for free download from the Berkleeshares.com Web site and via a growing network of partner Web sites. These free music lessons are also available on digital file sharing networks. We encourage people to share our lessons with other musicians. While Berklee strongly disapproves of stealing copyrighted music online, we believe that file sharing offers new opportunities for musicians to learn, and to promote and distribute their work. PLAYING HARD ROCK “Don’t Look Down” is a hard rock tune. Hard rock first appeared in the late 1960s. It has characteristic heavy bass, long, drawn-out chords, and amplified instruments. To hear more hard rock, listen to artists such as Aerosmith, Metallica, Powerman 5000, the Allman Brothers Band, Rob Zombie, Godsmack, 311, Stone Temple Pilots, Black Crowes, Steve Vai, and Smashing Pumpkins. LESSON 21 TECHNIQUE/THEORY LISTEN 29 CHAPTER VI ,,d ,t on’ look ,, down “ P L AY Listen to “Don’t Look Down,” and then play the melody along with the recording. The saxes sometimes play in harmony, and the melody is doubled by the guitar. This tune has two different parts. The first part has these four phrases. The second part has a riff that repeats four times. It ends with the bass riff, played twice. 96 HIGH REGISTER The high register can lend a great deal of energy and intensity to music, especially when it is played loudly. For hard rock, you may want to transpose part or all of the melody up an octave, and use some high notes in your solo. Practice “Don’t Look Down” with some of the phrases transposed to the higher octave, and notice their increased intensity. Focus on playing in tune. LISTEN 29 P L AY PRACTICE TIP Develop the ability to transpose up or down an octave by sight. Lead sheets are often written in the middle register so that they can be read by many different instruments, but that may not be the best register for where you play it. LESSON 21: TECHNIQUE/THEORY 97 LESSON 22 LEARNING THE GROOVE HOOKING UP TO HARD ROCK Listen to “Don’t Look Down.” This tune has a standard rock/metal groove. It is a heavy feel, with very simple drum and bass parts. These parts must be simple because they are intended to be played in large arenas, where echoes would make busier parts sound muddy. It’s a case of “less is more.” During the solos, the guitar doubles the bass, playing power chords in the second part. The keyboard plays sustained chords with an organ sound. LISTEN 30 P L AY Listen to the first part of “Don’t Look Down.” Click the right-hand keys along with the quarter-note pulse and the left-hand keys along with the backbeat. Left Click (Backbeat) Right Click (Pulse) Count 1 2 3 4 Try the same thing again. This time count the sixteenth notes out loud: 1e+a, 2e+a, 3e+a, 4e+a. Left Click (Backbeat) Right Click (Pulse) Count (16ths) 98 1 e + a 2 e + a 3 e + a 4 e + a LEARNING “DON’T LOOK DOWN” In the first part of this tune, the bass guitar plays a syncopated sixteenth-note riff. You hook up with that riff while you play the melody, and then you actually play the riff at the ending. First, practice clicking the rhythms. LISTEN 30 P L AY Left Click Right Click Count (16ths) 1 e + a 2 e + a 3 e + a 4 e + a Next, play the actual notes. Hook up with the rhythm section. If you like, you can play this riff instead of the melody along with the A section of the full-band track. LISTEN 30 P L AY The second part of this tune also has a syncopated sixteenth-note figure. Practice clicking the rhythms to this lick (also used at the Intro). LISTEN 31 P L AY Click (Rhythms) Foot (Pulse) Count (16ths) 1 e + a 2 e + a 3 e + a 4 e + a Practice the notes. LISTEN 31 P L AY Practice the whole tune along with the recording, and hook up with the rhythm section. LISTEN 29 P L AY LESSON 22: LEARNING THE GROOVE 99 LESSON 23 IMPROVISATION FORM AND ARRANGEMENT LISTEN 29 P L AY Listen to the recording, and try to figure out the form and arrangement by ear. How long does each section of the form last? Is there an introduction or ending? For how many measures or beats does each chord last? Write down as much information as you can. Check your answers against the summary at the end of this chapter. This tune has a 20-bar AB form. Part A has an active riff that builds a lot of tension. It lasts for sixteen measures. Part B is less active than the first part. It lasts for four measures. There is a 4-measure introduction at the beginning of the tune. It comes from the B section. A G D A G D A G D A G D A B D A D A D A D A SCALES: A MAJOR AND MINOR PENTATONIC The A major pentatonic scale will work well for improvising on this tune’s A section. The A minor pentatonic scale will work well for improvising on this tune’s B section. Practice both these scales. You can use both of them when you improvise, depending upon the chord. 100 LEAD SHEET Play your own part to “Don’t Look Down,” and follow along with the lead sheet. LISTEN 33 P L AY , Don t Look Down B b Sax "Hard Rock" Intro D By Matt Marvuglio = 88 A D A G A D D D A G D A BD Ending D A D D A A D A D Play unison with bass, keys & guitar PERFORMANCE TIP When you practice from a lead sheet, use it to help you keep your place. Even when you solo, follow the music as you play. This will help you to keep track of the form, so you can memorize it. 104 A A G G A A Fine