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Friedman Etude #8

This one took me three takes because at the end on the Bb chord, I kept hitting a C in my top mallet instead of a high D. That's one of the harder chords for me to reach in this book. I also strayed a little from the Gregorian chant-like quality it's supposed to have, which is funny because I was actually really into Gregorian chants as a middle schooler. Anyway, all of the etudes I'm doing are on my YouTube channel if anyone wants to listen to them!

Bud Powell Study #3: Webb City

This is my last of the three Bud Powell solo arrangements I worked on. I really leaned into the big band vibe for this one -- there's a shout-like intro over a pedal and big hits during the melody (like that one classic jazz rhythmic cadence in the 5th/6th bar of the bridge). I also imitated walking bass during the bridge for a second, dampening each note with the pedal down to get the legato sound. There is also of course a shout chorus after my solo.

Bud Powell Study #2: Bouncin' with Bud

I think this is probably his most famous tune, and it's great so that makes sense. This might be one of my more elaborate arrangements of a head I've done. I really tried to make the head itself have an interesting arc where every A section is different. During the bridge, I used George Shearing voicings a lot. In traditional Shearing voicings, the pianist plays a 4-part closed block chord with the right hand and doubles the melody an octave below the top voice with the left hand. This means there are often 2nds in between the bottom two voices, and that's what makes the voicing crunchy.

"Blue Bossa" from practice session

Clip from a practice session playing the classic Joe Henderson song. Playing with a "stream of consciousness" approach. Seeing what develops and working with motives, varied sounds (articulation, dynamics, accents, ghost notes, deadstrokes) and techniques as they come into play. This is one of the ways that I practice. I always enjoy playing songs this way and seeing where the music leads me along with taking some chances. For me, it's not about perfection but more about the process that's important.