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Lesson time: (4min 15sec)
Ollie Weston enseigne trois licks ii-V-I dans les styles de Charlie Parker, John Coltrane et Cannonball Adderley, joués sur un playback en Do.
This lesson is part of the course Explorer le saxophone jazz : Partie 2 - Solos sur des chansons et des séquences d'accords
Watch this lesson for free below.
Lesson transcript:
So, when you're happy with these chord tones, you'll want to start building some vocabulary and phrases based on these two-five-ones (251). I've written out three licks that I came up with to demonstrate a 251.
I've tried to write in the style of famous saxophone players:
I will play each of those over a 251 in C with the track.
1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4.
I've basically arpeggiated the chords. Rather than starting on the root of the G7 chord, I've chosen to start my line on the third, then follow up the chord tones. By going up above the root to the A, I've captured a little bit of a Parker staple trick by seeking higher notes from the Mixolydian mode. So, that's a kind of Parker sounding line.
2, 1, 2, 3, 4.
Again, Coltrane would have stuck quite closely to the chord tones. If you look at each section, the D minor, the G7, and the C, he is focusing quite clearly on the chord tones of the line. Here it is again, with notes a little bit closer together on the G7. Whereas Parker played straight up the chord tones, Coltrane keeps the notes a bit closer together.
Our third 251 idea is inspired by the great Cannonball Adderley, and this is a little bit more rhythmic. It focuses with a bit more detail on the C major chord at the end of the phrase.
1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4.
The rhythmic offbeats on the D chord are quite demonstrative of Adderley's style. Again, I think he follows the chord tones closely through the 251.
You've got three sample ideas there to get you started, along with a backing track that plays a 251 in all 12 keys.
Like the major seventh chord, the minor seventh chord, and the seventh chord workouts, it's really up to you to figure out how to approach practicing in 12 keys. Ideally, we all want to be fluent in all 12, but take your time.
It's much better to play a lick comfortably and confidently in a few keys rather than sketching and bluffing your way through all 12. Hopefully, these phrases will become starting points for you to hear how the great players approached these chord progressions. You'll be able to take bits you like, twist things, and fit them to your own conception and ideas to create your own 251 ideas.

Depuis l'obtention de son diplôme au Leeds College of Music (BA Hons) et à la Guildhall School of Music (Post Graduate Diploma in Performance), Ollie a bâti une carrière riche et variée dans la musique. En tant que saxophoniste, il s'est produit en concert et en studio avec des artistes aussi divers qu'Amy Winehouse, Tim Minchin, Bonobo, Frank Turner, le London Jazz Orchestra, le Hackney Colliery Band, l'Ambient Jazz Ensemble et le Nelson Riddle Orchestra. Il est également coleader du quartet de jazz 'Time Is Of The Essence', et compose et arrange du matériel pour cette formation et d'autres ensembles. Ollie est actif dans l'éducation musicale, actuellement comme responsable de cours du département jazz de la Guildhall School of Music and Drama (école junior), où il dirige des ensembles de jazz, un big band et des cours de théorie. Il a écrit une série de livres 'Exploring Jazz' pour Schott Music, publiés dans le monde entier et inscrits aux programmes d'examen au Royaume-Uni. Ollie a également animé des ateliers pour l'Oxford University, Pro Corda Strings et BABSWE, ainsi que pour les écoles d'été de la Guildhall School of Music. Dans ses cours Exploring Jazz Saxophone, Ollie te mène des tout premiers pas jusqu'à improviser en toute confiance sur des morceaux et des grilles d'accords, en développant les compétences d'improvisation qui mettent le vocabulaire d'un véritable jazzman à portée de tes doigts. read more