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Old 03-31-2009, 01:19 PM
Martin Sheridan Martin Sheridan is offline
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Default charts and chords

Paul and others:
Would you like to expand a little on charts and chords?
Recently I ran off three versions of Hoagy Carmichael's GEORGIA.
That a song I've played many times and it seems like everyone does the bridge a little differently. One was just plain wrong. I think the guy who wrote it out had had one too many or had been at it too long. The chords started out right but were asigned the wrong number of beats. The second and third were nearly identical, but their bridges were different. Upon closer look I realized that both bridges were very similar and some of the chords were just different voicings. I don't have them before me know, but I think one of them had a Dm7b5 going to a G-7 and other had an Abdim before the G.
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Old 03-31-2009, 04:50 PM
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Paul Warburton Paul Warburton is offline
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Any particular key?
Bottom line.....back to your ears AND your taste. Do they sound good to you? Do they move in a graceful and flowing way to you? To they help or hinder the melody to you? Do they work for you in your improvisations?
Sorry to answer your questions with more questions. If you want to take more time and sketch out a very basic view of the bridge changes that you're talking about, I'll be more than happy to respond with the one's that I've settled on after about 50 years of playing the tune.
The lyrics are cool too. Is "Georgia" a lady or a city down South? I prefer the lady.
Might be easier to leave out the b5's and #9's. I can fancy some of that up if you'd like. Beats are just ////'s.
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Old 03-07-2010, 12:24 PM
Charles A Thomas Charles A Thomas is offline
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Many old tunes had standard changes, as these tunes became jazz tunes you see more use of the tri-tone. This is basiclly changing a cycle of fifths movement of the bass note into a chromatic movement, it's like you said, after ****yzing the chords they were the same just different voicings
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Old 04-09-2010, 02:16 AM
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Tomas Bouda Tomas Bouda is offline
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i'm working out of a book called 'the ears have walls' which has a LOT to do with recognition, sight singing, memorizing and the like. its actually a required text at humber college (toronto) for their jazz program!
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