Jonathan Harnum's Blog, page 6

April 25, 2021

Hyper-bass Flute

Yeah, I know it’s the sub-contrabass flute, but Hyper-bass sounds cooler.

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Published on April 25, 2021 21:18

April 23, 2021

Gild the Melody: Dark Eyes Melody Embellishments

This is a lesson from the “Dark Eyes” video course for intermediate and comeback trumpet players. It’s got pages and pages of downloadable sheet music, downloadable backing tracks at multiple tempos and styles, and over 40 videos. Check it out at TrumptJumpstart.com

Find me at
Patreon.com/PlayTrumpet (printable sheet music and backing tracks for patrons)
Essential Trumpet Lessons
JonHarnum.com

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Published on April 23, 2021 12:23

April 20, 2021

Joni Mitchell’s First Recording: House of the Rising Sun (1963)

(by Gus Silber)

One day in the summer of 1963, a young woman wandered into the recording studio of a radio station in Saskatoon, the largest city in the southern prairie-land province of Saskatchewan, Canada.She wore her hair in a flipped bob, the vogue of the times: the Jackie Kennedy cut.In her hand she carried a Harmony baritone ukelele, her preferred instrument, for the earthy timbre of its nylon strings brushing against its solid mahogany body.She was a folk singer, playing now and again in the coffeeshops and clubs of her home city, but her name was otherwise unknown. Roberta Joan Anderson.She sat on a stool in the studio, positioned her fingers on the ukelele, and awaited her cue from the night-shift deejay, Barry Bowman.

She started playing, frisking a curlicue of plaintive notes in open tuning, a habit she had devised to compensate for the weakness in her left hand, the result of a childhood bout of polio.Then she sang, her soprano as clear as a bell ringing to the heavens, sustained by a vibrato that shimmered like a low-burning flame.The song, a traditional ballad dating from the turn of the 20th Century, was a staple of the folk scene, a cautionary tale told by a vagabond, lamenting a life led astray.”There is a house in New Orleans,” she sang, “they call the Rising Sun. It’s been the ruin of many a poor girl, and me, oh God, for one.”

She sang another eight songs after that, and the deejay put the tapes away, and he carried on with his life, and she with hers, performing on the folk circuit with her husband, Chuck Mitchell, using a diminutive of her middle name: Joni.She would go on to become one of the most acclaimed singer-songwriters of her generation, famed as much for her dreamy, painterly lyrics as for the restless inventiveness of her music, and its seductive flirtations with form and structure.

Barry Bowman, the deejay, meanwhile, would long regret misplacing the tapes of that debut recording session by Joni Mitchell, until the day, more than half-a-century later, that his daughter brought him a box of paraphernalia she had discovered in the basement of their old house. And there were the two reel-to-reels, their cartons marked: Joni Anderson Audition.

Now their contents, recorded when the singer was only 19, stand at the centrepoint of “Joni Mitchell Archives Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963-1967)”, a collection of 119 songs spanning almost six hours of studio and live material, and released today on the music-streaming platforms, on the cusp of Joni’s 77th birthday next week.But the most haunting song of them all is the opener, House of the Rising Sun, for the glimpse it gives us of a rising talent in its genesis, and for reminding us that as much as we may think we know a singer and their songs, there is always a revelation awaiting us in the faraway mists of time.

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Published on April 20, 2021 10:12

Major Scales: The DNA of Western Music

The Major Scale is like the DNA of Western music. It’s the scale we use to describe other scales and intervals. Best learn it sooner than later.

From the Basic Music Theory video course: 50% OFF.
Also available in Book Form, or
Audiobook (free for first-timers)

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Published on April 20, 2021 03:18

April 19, 2021

George Benson on Practice

“I don’t call it practice. I call it ‘getting familiar with my instrument.'”

That’s almost exactly what Erin McKeown said in her talk about practice in The Practice of Practice.

https://amzn.to/2EFmILC
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Published on April 19, 2021 21:28

The E Harmonic Minor Scale (how and why)

This is a lesson from the “Dark Eyes” video course for intermediate and comeback trumpet players. It’s got pages and pages of downloadable sheet music, downloadable backing tracks at multiple tempos and styles, and over 40 videos. Check it out at TrumptJumpstart.com

Find me at
Patreon.com/PlayTrumpet (printable sheet music and backing tracks for patrons)
Essential Trumpet Lessons
JonHarnum.com

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Published on April 19, 2021 00:12

April 18, 2021

Improvising for Beginners: Ideas & Suggestions (K.I.S.S.)

This is a lesson from the “Dark Eyes” video course for intermediate and comeback trumpet players. It’s got pages and pages of downloadable sheet music, downloadable backing tracks at multiple tempos and styles, and over 40 videos. Check it out at TrumptJumpstart.com

Find me at
Patreon.com/PlayTrumpet (printable sheet music and backing tracks for patrons)
Essential Trumpet Lessons
JonHarnum.com

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Published on April 18, 2021 19:00

April 17, 2021

April 15, 2021

How Inaccurate is the Real Book? Does it Matter?

Always good jazz-related stuff from the You’ll Hear It podcast.

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Published on April 15, 2021 22:57

April 14, 2021

How to Slow Down a Video’s Sound

This is a lesson from the “Dark Eyes” video course for intermediate and comeback trumpet players.

Or find me at

Patreon.com/PlayTrumpet (printable sheet music and backing tracks for patrons)
Essential Trumpet Lessons
JonHarnum.com

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Published on April 14, 2021 05:07