poweredarticle.com
Search:    Index Page >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Place Your Link >> Add Your Article   

Finance & Investment

Self Help

Hotels & Travel

Fitness & Health

Employment & Careers

Business & Companies

Fashion & Relationships

Estate & Realty

Research & Science

Drink & Food

Vehicles & Automotive

Issues & News

Recreation

Healthcare & Treatment

Computers & Software

Art & Creative

Government & Politics

Academics & Education

Sports & Adventure

Online Shopping

Online & Board Games

Family & Home

Society & Communities

Teens & Children

 

Index Page –› Art & Creative –› Music
 

Exciting Improvising: How to Make Up Music Out Of Your Head As You Play

 

Improvisation (also known as improvising) is the act of making something up as you go along -- an act with which we all have a little experience.

Remember playing House or Doctor as a child, letting the game go wherever your mind would take you? That was improvisation. No rules, no boundaries, just the limitless potential of your imagination.

Similarly, musical improvisation is the act of "writing" (creating it as you play) a song while performing it, a technique found most often in jazz and bluegrass (but can be traced back to renowned classical improvisers like Handel and Bach). Of course, it's a little more complicated than an imaginative children's game. Though improvisation is a highly creative and flexible technique, it requires great skill on the part of the musician. A musician involved in an improvisation must have a detailed knowledge of chord structure and complicated scales and modes. The musician must also have an intuitive ability to structure a song on the fly; great improvisation thrives on its ability to sound not improvised but rather wholly composed. That illusion, the ability of a song to seem anything but spontaneously made up, is part of improvisation's allure.

There are two basic forms of improvisation: structured improvisation and free improvisation. Structured improvisation, though a contradiction in terms, is the most common of the two. In this form, musicians will use a pre-determined series of chord changes, usually held down by the rhythm section, as the song's base. The lead instrument in the improvisation (sometimes also pre-determined) then have the freedom to create new melodies and harmonies from these pre-determined chords. The flexibility of this improvisation form is dependent on the flexibility of the chord changes, and the musicians involved must be able to play exactly what they hear in their heads, as some complicated changes may not allow for large deviations.

If we were to improvise on a song such as "Billy Boy", for example, we would follow the chord progressions of the song, but make up a different melody for it. Some musicians choose to stay fairly close to the melody by using neighboring tones and half-step slides and so on; other musicians feel free to completely abandon the traditional melody and make up a new melody entirely.

In addition to songs, many musicians in the jazz and rhythm & blues tradition improvise endlessly on the 12-bar blues, which has a chord progression using only the I, IV and V chords (also known as the "primary chords" of a given key) of whatever key the musicians are playing in. For example, if a jazz group was playing in the key of Bb, the improvisations would be based on the I, IV and V chords in the key of Bb: namely Bb, Eb, and F.

Of course musicians also add extra notes to chords such as the 7th -- especially in the blues -- and sometimes also change the harmony somewhat from time to time. But the recurring theme always reverts to the I - IV - V formula.

Free improvisation, on the other hand, is far more like a game of House or Doctor -- it has no rules. Instead of focusing on harmony or melody, free improvisation focuses on the feeling and texture of the music and the way the instruments complement each other. This form tends to be far more experimental and rarely adheres to one style or genre or music -- it is, quite simply, what it is.

Author: Duane Shinn
 
Author Bio:

Duane Shinn is the author of the popular free 101-week online e-mail newsletter titled "Amazing Secrets Of Exciting Piano Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions" with over 84,400 current subscribers.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Learn How to Use Commas Properly
 
Writing Made Them Rich #4: Paulo Coelho
 
Best Music download site
 
Can You Still Play Guitar if You are Tone Deaf ?
 
What Bruce Springsteen Taught Me About Writing
 
Writing For Dollars -- A Freelancer's Guide
 
Piano Playing is Easier than You Think When You Understand Musical Form
 
How to Play Guitar ?C Review
 
Healthy Voice Habits
 
Guitar Play-Along CD??s-Get Them and Get Lots of Them
 
 
 

Related Links

 
Fine Arts Emporium
For Artists and Art Lovers.
 
Harringtons Photography
Harringtons Photography for special moments.
 
Ian George Photography
Ian George Photography is a highly creative digital commercial, industrial, architectural, public relations, product, and fashion photography business.
 
Wedding Photographers
Specialising in stylish reportage wedding photojournalism, TV filming, photography & videography throughout the UK.
 
Original Antoine Art -for original spaces
Antoine's original fine art website featuring mainly her nude and abstract oil paintings, drawings as well as photography.
 
Fine Art and Judaica By Rochelle Blumenfeld
Dance Series Paintings, inspired by Alvin Ailey's Ballet "Revelations" re-created as Giclee on canvas, Limited edition hand-signed Judaica Lithographs, and Fine Art contemporary original paintings on canvas in an abstract expressionist style.
 
 
 
 

Why Every Band Needs A Keyboard

The keyboard is a multi dimensional instrument. It can mimic any instrument. That includes guitars, ... - Sandra Stammberger
 

Web Site Copywriting for Search Engines - Keywords

Your goal when copywriting for your web site is to get your site to the top three pages in the SERPs ... - Eve Jackson
 

Exciting Improvising: How to Make Up Music Out Of Your Head As You Play

Improvisation (also known as improvising) is the act of making something up as you go along -- an ac ... - Duane Shinn
 

Why Are Articles Important?

If you have a website to promote how do you do it? - well I would suggest to you that you write an a ... - Ian G Williamson
 

Learn Classical Guitar

A classical guitar has a different anatomy than regular guitars. It has six strings, with the bass s ... - Fame Ahmed
 

Professional Guitar Lessons Ebook

Many guitar ebooks contain songs that a beginner can use to learn how to play the guitar as easily a ... - William McRea
 
 
Index Page >> Privacy >> Terms of Use  
© www.poweredarticle.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide