The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Ralph G
Date: 2005-03-21 14:42
I play in a woodwind quartet, and two members of the group also run a local swing/big band combo that plays at dances, assisted-living centers, and whatnot. A few weeks ago they asked me to join them for a gig this past Saturday at a USO-style show at a barbecue joint at a nearby town. I told them I've never played a lick of jazz-swing-big band stuff in my life, and although I have a good ear and can follow along well without music, I've never done actual jazz improv. No problem, they said, we've got music, so come to rehearsal on such-and-such date and we'll get it worked out.
So I went to a couple of rehearsals, which only involved me, the two people from my quartet (to my surprise, our oboist is a pretty darn good sax player) a trumpet player, and a drummer. We ran through a few standards on which that they wanted me to take the lead -- Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy, Sing Sing Sing, Chattanooga, One O'clock Jump, and a few others -- and worked out a pretty good road map of what to do.
So I get to the gig Saturday night, and the group had expanded to about nine people, including a singer, guitarist and bassist (all of whom were pretty darn good). Turns out we're filling 4 hours over 3 sets. Wow. They hand me my newly-prepared book (they kept it after rehearsal so they could string together parts where I was switching between tenor sax and trumpet), and it's chock full of lead sheets. I've never played from a lead sheet before. So I realize I'll have to rely pretty much completely on my ear the whole evening.
I'd say during the whole evening we played maybe 3 songs we'd rehearsed. Everything else was stuff I'd never played before. And it wasn't just swing and big band. Since this was a Texas barbecue joint in a small town, we played a whole bunch of country stuff too. Ever tried to follow along on clarinet to stuff like "Amarillo by Morning" and "Waltz Across Texas" and "Silver Wings" and "Pass Me By?" It's one thing to know how the songs go, but another to wedge a clarinet into it without sounding silly. I was finally grateful for a bizarre portion of my childhood where my parents had weekend jobs at a local country honky-tonk in the 70's and they used to drag me to work with them -- all those nights of seeing Ronnie Milsap and Johnny Rodriguez and Charley Pride perform paid off!
It was bizarre, but kinda fun. Since I was so new, I told them I wasn't really comfortable with taking solos on anything I hadn't prepared. But in the last set, during "Kansas City" (another I'd never rehearsed), the sax and trumpet players traded solos, then the singer announced, "Here's Ralph on clarinet!" Yikes! I missed a couple of bars because I wasn't ready, but I hung it out there for about 8 bars or so and lived to tell about it.
Anyway, I've got an open invitation to join them in any future gigs, and they're pretty much booked every weekend through April. Maybe I'll work on my pentatonics and give it another go. Hey, fifty bucks is fifty bucks.
________________
Artistic talent is a gift from God and whoever discovers it in himself has a certain obligation: to know that he cannot waste this talent, but must develop it.
- Pope John Paul II
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Author: BobD
Date: 2005-03-21 18:48
I can appreciate the feeling.....good for you...
Bob Draznik
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Author: sfalexi
Date: 2005-03-22 04:01
That's AWESOME! Keep on playing! As far as I know, jazz gets easier the more you actually DO it (theory is good only to a certain point, and the practice is what makes you better).
Man. Wish I was in YOUR shoes right now! (having a band to play in, a woodwind quartet too! You lucky SOB!!!!)
Alexi
US Army Japan Band
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Author: Dano
Date: 2005-03-22 04:27
I remember thinking, "hey, this isn't as difficult as I thought it would be" when I first played a jazz gig. The best thing about jazz is that it is very forgiving. It gives you alot of room to improvise without going over the top and when you do go over the top, it is easy to recover. All the music lessons in the world won't make a better clarinetist as playing jazz. As sfalexi said, it gets easier the more you do it. Welcome to the club! Have fun.
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Author: Steve Epstein
Date: 2005-03-22 04:50
I'm going to be playing in a blues jam this week. Now, I keep telling myself all blues is not the same... well, it is in different keys, now and then.
Steve Epstein
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Author: Ralph G
Date: 2005-03-22 12:51
sfalexi,
AND my local chamber orchestra! Plus municipal band in the summer! Though I sorta gave up on the local wind symphony -- too hard to make the rehearsals held in an outlying town, especially since my wife and I recently bought a new house that puts me even farther away from the rehearsal site.
Always a place to for a decent clarinetist to play here in sunny Corpus Christi.
Here's one odd thing about having a wife and friends and family who aren't into music -- when I tell them about the gig Saturday, they all ask, "Was the barbecue good?"
________________
Artistic talent is a gift from God and whoever discovers it in himself has a certain obligation: to know that he cannot waste this talent, but must develop it.
- Pope John Paul II
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Author: Ralph G
Date: 2005-03-22 15:20
Wish I knew. We took our first break, which I thought was only gonna be 15 minutes or so, so I got out my cell phone and checked in with my wife (who was at a family function for which I'm sure I took some heat from others for not attending). After that, I noticed the rest of the band sitting at a table chawing away on chow. The break turned out to be about half an hour. I just never bothered to grab some food -- didn't want to be picking brisket out of my teeth while trying to play. Looked pretty tasty, though.
________________
Artistic talent is a gift from God and whoever discovers it in himself has a certain obligation: to know that he cannot waste this talent, but must develop it.
- Pope John Paul II
Post Edited (2005-03-22 15:21)
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Author: GBK
Date: 2005-03-22 16:30
Ralph G wrote:
> here in sunny Corpus Christi.
> when I tell them about the gig Saturday, they all ask,
> "Was the barbecue good
As opposed to a gig in the Hamptons, where they ask: "How were the lobsters?" ...GBK
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Author: rc_clarinetlady
Date: 2005-03-23 03:19
Good for you Ralph!!!!!!!!
I could never do what you did. Years ago I tried to play tenor sax in high school in our jazz band and really did okay until the director pointed to me and said, "Take it, Becky!" I froze and looked at him like he'd spoken a foreign language. I gave my brother his tenor sax back and kept playing Mozart, Beethoven and Weber on the clarinet but....in my secret dreams I'm a great swing band clarinetist. Ha!
Keep playing, Ralph. It sounds like you're on your way to some great gigs in the future.
Rebecca
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