by Neal on July 1, 2010
I’m in Sri Lanka right now. Before leaving, I had studied a little bit of the language. But now I find that certain parts helped and other parts were completely useless.
Similar to ‘Spanglish’, Sinhala has a few elements of English. In the material I studied, ‘Good Morning’ is ’subha udasanak’ They just say ‘Good Morning’ though. In music, you’ll practice things- scales, exercises, patterns, etc. You’ll have to apply them in a real musical situation on your saxophone.
Sometimes they work well, other times they’ll seem outdated. For example, your Rubank Method book might teach you all the trill fingerings. In a contemporary jazz situation, however, you won’t be using these too often. It wouldn’t quite fit in the same way it does in classical music.
A lick from a reggae song could be modified and used in a completely different style of music.So things you learn from studying music will help you musically, but to be a great saxophone player you need to figure out which pieces to apply and where.
By the way, Sri Lanka’s a sweet place to travel. Went in the Indian Ocean and then saw wild elephants today.
http://www.saxstation.com/dialects-music.htm
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Dialects & Music
Posted by jazzofilo at Saturday, July 03, 2010
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