3

enter image description here

I have a relative pitch and I'm a beginner of jazz improvisation. I have a problem in improvisation.

I used to follow the key when chord progression of key changed. (like 'all the things you are' and other modulation chord progression)

so in your case, how do you recognize notes when key changed or in modulation?

and what should I do to fix this problem?

1
  • 3
    The jazz musicians I've known seem to be able to perceive things with duality -- they can recognize when a passage can be interpreted or perceived two different ways. Commented Dec 6, 2021 at 4:01

3 Answers 3

5

I personally use your second option of thinking of the modulated section in the new key. Modulations happen very frequently in jazz standards and it is much easier to think in the modulated key than to think of the notes and chords as part of the original key. Using the first melody note as an example, thinking of Fa in Ab is much more logical than Te in Eb when you are already in Ab at that point (the ii chord, Bbm7).

Your example of “All the Things You Are” is in Ab, C, Eb, G and E. It’s much easier to just change the key temporarily than think in the original key. Classical music also has many modulations and they are approached and analyzed as such.

3
  • I agree with your position, but OP seems to have the entire sequence from Am7 leading back to EbMaj7 identified with Ab; I would just think of that as a sequence of ii-Vs (with a backdoor dominant thrown in if I was concerned about that F7). I guess the ii-Vs are associated with different keys, but I don't think of those as modulating to new keys here.
    – user39614
    Commented Dec 5, 2021 at 19:38
  • @exnihilo even though the OP bracketed the entire bridge the focus seems to be on the first 4 bars so I responded in kind. I agree that the second 4 bars can be seen as a series of 2-5’s back to the 1 chord minus the oddball F7. However, the harmony in the second 4 bars of the bridge of this chart is completely wrong, a contention I have made for years. It doesn’t match either the Errol Garner version or the Johnny Mathis version, the two most recognized versions of the song. I addressed this in another question several months ago. Commented Dec 5, 2021 at 20:25
  • @exnihilo If you’re curious about the actual changes to bars 5-8 of the bridge here Is the other question with my answer: music.stackexchange.com/questions/110361/… Commented Dec 5, 2021 at 20:30
2

In measure we 16 are in Eb. The whole note is Do. As we modulate to Ab I interchange Do to Sol: So la ti re mi fa fa fa (your 2nd version makes more sense to me: Db after the double barline becomes Fa.

But the greater challenge is the next line when the tune modulates to Gm:

I sing sol la do re mi fe (still in Ab) and here I

reinterpret fe = mi (dominante of Gm) mi mi mi re sol mi re do (Bb = do in Gm becomes sol of Eb).

0
1

The whole of Misty is in key Eb. That's clear from the key signature - it stays at 3♭ all through. What does happen is modulation - as occurs in so many songs, including many classic ones - and indeed, classical music.

By thinking it 'changes' key, you're not going to improvise, or jazz your way through this, or many other standards. It's probably better to consider two or three bars at a time, where you'll inevitably discover ii-V-I going on. With that information, you can play through the changes, making the whole thing sound more cohesive. True, you'll be changing the set of notes (scales, if you like) more often that if yyou just 'changed key', but it's not going to work just 'changing key' for a middle eight, when several of those changes are only vaguely related to that 'change of key' - too many avoid notes are avaiable!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.