Gangels
Member
Does anyone know of a Bass/Barritone jazz piece i could use for my HSC performance. All the pieces that fit my range i've done or are really gay.
PLEASE HELP ME!
PLEASE HELP ME!
We've done 3 perfomances of his. Hes really good. I might actually look into him a bit more though. Thanks.borny said:have you listened to any stan getz? he made heaps of great recordings playing bari sax... it will give you an idea as to what can and can't be achieved musically.
IMO, it really just takes lots and lots of practice. Perhaps try playing through a whole bunch of pieces that you know, with some sort of backing track or metronome or drum beat? And keep doing this a little bit every day until you get it.NEED HELP!!!
I'm having trouble with timing as I have not done much ensembles.
The topic for our elective 2 was an 'ensemble', so I tried to play with my class mates, however, they just kept saying: "your half a beat too slow/fast" etc.
So I was wondering, does any1 know how to improve it (besides just practising with backing trak etc). Like, should I listen to drum beating (coz I have a pedal) etc????
Please help
IMO, it really just takes lots and lots of practice. Perhaps try playing through a whole bunch of pieces that you know, with some sort of backing track or metronome or drum beat? And keep doing this a little bit every day until you get it.
If you don't realise when you're out of time, try asking someone to sit with you (classmate? music teacher?) and listen while you're playing along to the backing/metronome so they can tell you when you start slipping out of time. This way you can gradually train yourself to a) recognise when you're not keeping up with the beat, and b) how to fix it.
I hope that helps; I personally can't think of any other good strategies besides practice, practice, practice - maybe other people will have some better ideas?
What instrument do you play by the way?
EDIT: Oh, just remembered a little exercise we did in our music class so we could practice timing, it might work for you: put on a CD or whatever, and as you listen to it, tap your foot or something (we hit a pen on a desk, lol) in time to the beat. Then turn the volume right down so you can't hear it, and try to keep tapping to the exact same beat. (If you know the song, try to keep humming along even when you can't hear it). Then after a bit, turn the volume back up again and see if you're still in time with what's playing. This is also good because you'll soon learn to realise if you have a tendency to slow down or speed up.
If it's an ensemble where you're the only one being marked, then it's actually their job to keep in time with you. They're there to make you sound good (ro give you someone to blame when you screw up ), and they should therefore be following you.NEED HELP!!!
I'm having trouble with timing as I have not done much ensembles.
The topic for our elective 2 was an 'ensemble', so I tried to play with my class mates, however, they just kept saying: "your half a beat too slow/fast" etc.
So I was wondering, does any1 know how to improve it (besides just practising with backing trak etc). Like, should I listen to drum beating (coz I have a pedal) etc????
Please help
If it's an ensemble where you're the only one being marked, then it's actually their job to keep in time with you. They're there to make you sound good (ro give you someone to blame when you screw up ), and they should therefore be following you.
If you're all being marked, then the best thing to do is to find someone in the ensemble who is good at keeping time (a drummer or bass player should theoretically be the best, since they're the rhythm section, but it doesn't always work that way), and listen to them. It's sometimes easier to keep time if you're only listening to one part, instead of a whole bunch of them. This is why metronomes are good, assuming you can actually tell when you're out of time (don't feel bad if you can't - there are bands with recording contracts and drummers who are constantly out of time with the rest of the band).
Missanonymous7's suggestion also sounds like a good idea.