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WOODY SHAW My Approach To Jazz PDF

Woody Shaw discusses his approach to jazz as a trumpet player. He practices diligently for 2-3 hours per day to stay consistent, working on chromatic scales, exercises he developed, and hopes to write a book about his techniques. He believes the middle and lower registers are most beautiful on the trumpet. He wants to have a custom trumpet made with an extra valve to access even lower notes. Overall, he strives to have one of the newest approaches to the trumpet through extensive study and practice.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
440 views3 pages

WOODY SHAW My Approach To Jazz PDF

Woody Shaw discusses his approach to jazz as a trumpet player. He practices diligently for 2-3 hours per day to stay consistent, working on chromatic scales, exercises he developed, and hopes to write a book about his techniques. He believes the middle and lower registers are most beautiful on the trumpet. He wants to have a custom trumpet made with an extra valve to access even lower notes. Overall, he strives to have one of the newest approaches to the trumpet through extensive study and practice.

Uploaded by

Simbinewind
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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WOODY SHAW

My approach to jazz

In order for me to be consistent as a trumpet player, I try to practise every day, for at least two
or three hours. Oh, Ive been in certain grooves when I said: Well, I dont need to practise,
and I rely on certain professional tricks, that I can get by with. But my creative mind tells me
that getting by isnt enough. So I do my chromatic scales and the little exercises. Then I have
some symmetrical exercises of my own that Ive developed. Im hoping to write a
fundamental book on some of the exercises that I use to attain the concept that I have. A lot of
trumpet players have been asking me to put out a book; so Im working on it.

Definitely, every register is important. As for when they get hung up with the upper register
that turns me off. Because the beauty of the trumpet is in the middle and lower register, you
know; I use the high register for excitement, and for effect.

For fingering, the difficulty is in middle register, from middle C on downthats why they
play so high! Im going to see if I can have a trumpet designed where I can go even an octave
lower than the concert E that it goes to right now. I hear something else; to do what I want to
do, the conventional trumpet is not enough now. I need another registerwhere am I going to
get it from? I think itll have a fourth valve; Ive seen a German flugelhorn like thatit goes
down to four octaves.

I have played the flugelhorn at times, but I like the trumpet. The flugelhorn is purely
incidental to me; its effective and pretty in certain thingsbut I can get just about the same
sound on the trumpet. I have a very welldeveloped low register, with a very big, dark sound;
so I dont worry about the flugel. ButIm going to get a flugelhorn ! Now, that instrument
fits Art Farmer perfectly; you could have no better choice to play the flugel. It fits his style,
his whole musical personalityhes a very lyrical player. I heard him recently; he sounds
beautiful.

Talking of trumpet players like Art Farmerits so refreshing to hear him. I mean, I dont
want to hear Freddie Hubbard play rock, man, but thats what hes doinghes too good a
player for that. But I heard Benny Bailey not long agohe just knocked me out. Where are all
the good improvisers that I grew up on? I look around, and it seems like Im the only one out
here. I still get an occasional chance to hear Blue Mitchell. But I dont hear any young guys
that impress me at all. I was twenty when I was with Horace, and it took me a while to get
where 1 amIm thirtyone now. You always look for a young demon on the horizonI
havent heard him yet.

I think I can claim to have one of the newest approaches on the trumpet. I know some very
good trumpet players out there, but theyre just not playing what I want to hear. Its
something that comes with a lot of study and practice. See, to be a good improviser, youve
got to know about music, to know what youre doing.
You have to know a certain amount about the keyboard harmony, and playing in all the keys.
I think thats another point, why all the free musicians shy away from learning bebop things
it goes through all the keys. And to play all the keys is very difficultto get your technique
in D flat equal to your technique in C, D equal to E flat, and so on.

By no means is jazz deadthats essentially why Louis Hayes and I formed this band. We
really enjoy playing. Ronnie Scotts is a nice club, but the only drag about playing there is
that we only have fortyfive minutes for each set. Were used to playing an hour, or an hour
andahalfmaybe even two hours. So were getting our showtime technique together.

You do a record date, you have to take shorter solosI think of this gig like a record date. We
did pretty good towards the end of our engagement last August: we were getting in three tunes
per set. If it became a little more expressive, we went back to two again. Which is all right; if
we can get two good tunes into a fortyfive minute set, I dont think anythings lost.

The thing I like about New York: I can go all over town, and hear some good music. When I
used to be in San Francisco, guys would say: Ah, nothings happening in New York. I said :
Nothing? I cant believe that. I came back, and sure enough, it was happening. Jazz went
through its little down trend, but its better now.

For one thing, I blame the musicians for nearly killing the music. I mean, some of the rubbish
that they call jazz in the States is not jazz.

George Wein puts on what he calls the Cool Jazz Festivalwith Harold Melvin and the Blue
Notes, Aretha Franklin, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Ramsey Lewis. Thats not jazz! We were
thinking about suing this cat for degrading the name of jazz! And we had a whole nest of
noisemakers misusing the word also. We said : Wait a minutewe gotta change this a little
bit ! It was time for us to get together. We used to watch Cedar Waltons band, with George
Coleman, Sam Jones and Billy Higgins: they seemed so happy up there when they were
playingand they work all the time. They stay busy. We said: Theyve got a quartet. Lets
get a dynamite quintet, with trumpet and tenor. Well, I was complaining before because I
wasnt working that much: Im complaining because Im working too much now.

People whove never even heard jazz can really enjoy it, if theyre given a chance to. The
presentation of it is very important. There are a few of us; I can name Cedars band, McCoy
Tyner. the Heath brothers. Art Blakey.

Horace Silver, Bobby Hutchersonhes still playing. I learned a lot from him when I was in
school. Were the ones out here who still believe in the music.

Mentioning McCoy reminds me: I used to play with him, and he was a very strong influence
on me. He used to tell me: Woody, youre going to be the next great trumpet player out here.
Just keep going straight ahead. Do what you have to do, and believe in the music.

I watched him, and now the same things are happening for me. This was a few years ago
when he said this; I was with him in the late sixties. I talked to him again recently; he said:
HeyI told you. Now, Im just starting to gain some of the rewards of playing the music, I
think. That reward is to just let me playmake a decent living, and be happy. I really dont
think a creative musician belongs with a lot of moneyit stunts his growth. They do deserve
their full rewards for their contribution. But a musicianonce he starts earning a lot of
money, man, his music gets corny; I dont see why that has to be the case, but it usually is.
Some kind of line has to be drawn, thats all.

Mind you, now1 want as much as I can get! But I really cant complain. Specially when I
remember that around two years ago I was sitting depressed in San Francisco. Nobody
seemed to be paying me any attention; I couldnt get a decent gig anywhere. I even started
considering : Man, I cant even play this thing any more. I felt in myself that I wasnt
playing anything. I changed my environment and now the ideas are just brimming over in my
brain. I think environment has a lot to do with it. Me, Im from the citythat stimulates me.

This group is going to stay together, keeping working and making records. We have one out
on Wim Wicks Timeless label, which is based in Holland. And I myself have exclusively
signed with Muse Records. When my record The Moontrane, came out in 75, it was pretty
controversialI think because they were surprised that somebody came out with a hard,
smashing, swinging jazz record. I believe I kinda restored the faith in a few people, with that;
I got a lot of very nice reviews on it. I have a more recent one that had the same effect; its
called Love Dance. Now, Im finally starting to record some personal ideas that I want to
put down; Im going to show different aspects of my playing. One of these ideas is a brass
record date, with three trumpets, four trombones, one reed and a rhythm sectionmaybe
some miscellaneous things here and there. Im very wrapped up in writing something for
brass.

I stay fresh by doing different things now that Im finallv getting a chance to record my
own materialI made a lot of records as a sideman, and I used to ask myself: How come I
cant get a record date? I know nowit wasnt time. Very simple. To my record now I have
four albums out: Blackstone Legacy is a double record set on the Contemporary label; I
have another one called Song Of Songs, which is out of print right now, also on
Contemporary, and the two Muse records. So I hope to be recording some interesting things.

Something else I must mention is that we have very good management. Maxine Gregg is
doing a very good job; she really loves the musicwe need more people like her in the
business. She knows what the musicians go through, what we have to do to get where we are.
I think if we had some more sympathetic management out here, you would see a lot more
groups.

The beautiful thing about this group is : everywhere we go, they love U.S. The worst gig we
did was in Italy; we played on this concert that had a lot of the free music on it. Before we
went on, Sam Rivers had the people in an uproar, really roused; he plays the flute for a
minute, goes into his whooping and hollering sounds with his voice, sits at the piano and
bangs on that for a while, then runs over and grabs the saxophonea frenzy of activity. The
people were banging chairs and everything. When we played, we had a completely calming
effect on them; we turned them right back into conservatives. So that was an experience. I
mean, we go out there, too, sometimesbut we know how to get back, though. Ive got my
feet on the groundor at least Ive got my parachute on!

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