More calligraphic: Lee Morgan
Search found 51 matches
- 20 Feb 2022, 18:44
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
- 20 Feb 2022, 18:43
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
- 20 Feb 2022, 18:42
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
Another Trane example
- 20 Feb 2022, 18:36
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
Here Coltrane's a little childish handwriting featuring an early example of the "TRIAngle" (for a major TRIAd) lady bird trane001.jpg (I read a discussion recently stating the triangle stands for the major triad which can be interpreted as sixth or major seventh chord. So a major seventh c...
- 20 Feb 2022, 18:18
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
@ John Ruggero: The slashes in Monk's lead sheet don't show "something over something", (bass note or polychord) but rhythm shorthand: one slash stands for one quarter beat – same thing as in Fred G. Unn’s Lee Morgan example above. In the first bar of "Monk's Mood" the Fm7 (notat...
- 20 Feb 2022, 17:50
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
@ Fred G. Unn: I have no other context than it was mentioned somewhere in a blog or forum that there were Monk manuscripts on eBay IIRC so I downloaded the images. Until you mentioned it I had not even realized that it was written for a transposing instrument :-D D11 i s Am7 over D (third omitted) o...
- 20 Feb 2022, 04:56
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
If you do not have much space use two colors
Lead sheet handwritten by Thelonious Monk with melody on staff in blue and chords squeezed in between in black with slashed quarter rhythm for orientation as there is not much alignment at all:
Lead sheet handwritten by Thelonious Monk with melody on staff in blue and chords squeezed in between in black with slashed quarter rhythm for orientation as there is not much alignment at all:
- 19 Feb 2022, 23:21
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
Chord name positioning seems to really be an interesting topic with different possibilities. Dorico seems to default centering for example. But look at this example from Dave Brubecks "Time Out & Time Further Out" (Songbook for 2 albums, 1962) – left-alignment with alignment to acciden...
- 19 Feb 2022, 22:54
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
Here positioning is based on left-aligned Uke grids. Chord names are centered to uke grids. Interestingly two chord names here for either alt tuning or capo use. The Very Thought Of You_02.jpg So different possibilities exist – maybe a question of publisher's standards. By the way: I looks to me lik...
- 19 Feb 2022, 19:28
- Forum: Notation Rules and Standards
- Topic: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
- Replies: 52
- Views: 26736
Re: Positioning Chord Symbols and Rehearsal Marks for Jazz
Regarding chord symbol positioning: I have taken a look into my (digitized and gathered from American library and university sites) collection of what jazzers call "original sheet music" – hand-engraved vocal/piano scores from the original song puplishers (20ies to 50ies). As far as I have...