Re: Kind of an Embarassment for Slate
by
pianissimo
08/18/2009, 10:35 AM #
@timezoned:
I assume you hear the Bb's in the melody, so I'm guessing you're
taking issue with me calling the chord a G minor instead of C7. The bass stays
on G. At those same hacky jam sessions where you're hearing the horns resolve
that Bb to an A on the D7 chord, you'll hear the bass player move the bass
figure up a fourth because he read in some fake book to play a C7 chord there.
Sure, you could call it C7/G if you wanted, but with the bass playing an F on a strong beat in the second half of the figure, I think Gmin is
more appropriate. Rumor has it that Miles conceived it as G Mixolydian going to
G Dorian, which strengthens my argument. But, whatever -- as long as you know
what it should sound like.
Re: "everyone makes mistakes". True, but yours and mine were found in
quickly composed responses to an article by readers who aren't writers (at
least I'm not), not in an editor-approved article on a highly-respected web site by a man
promoting a book which apparently includes the said topic.
I could do some
research on building jet engines and write an article about it and possibly no
one except jet engine mechanics would know I was full of sh**. But no matter
how much I thought I knew from my research, I would have no business writing
that article from a technical perspective.
This is exactly what Kaplan has done here. He probably plays a little guitar
or some other instrument, has read about jazz theory somewhere and thinks he
gets it. Jazz theory can't be learned from a book and people who only know it
that way quickly expose themselves. Undoubtedly, he has fooled the editors, but
he comes off as a Cliff Clavin blowhard to anyone who knows jazz. Virtually
every theoretical statement in the article falls within the range of
"dude's not getting it" to "huh?".
I like reading articles about music written by non-musicians. I
sometimes wish I could hear music the way I heard it before I understood what
was happening. What I don't like is bullsh**ers. People who pretend to be
something they aren't.
Re: "begs the question" whatever, dude. Where's that rolling eyes
smiley when you need it? ;)