24.2.11

Daily Licking 021: Chorus 3 of Mr. P.C for Bass

What will happen today? Will he play a Bb on the C minor? Will he force some crazy chord substitution over an F min chord that never did anything to anyone to warrant such treatment? Let us see what chord carnage Mr. Coltrane has in store for these poor unsuspecting next 12 measures of his minor blues, Mr. P.C.


No, He Won't Play a Bb on the C min. Ever.
Spoiler! He isn't going to do it. Not at all. I don't know what that Bb ever did to him, but he just isn't gonna play a Bb when the C min chord is going by. Nope.

That means he is treating every C min as C melodic minor, C, D, Eb, F, G, A, B, not natural minor, the kind with an Ab and a Bb. He saves the Bb and Ab for the F min chord (where they are the third and the fourth/eleventh) and that gives him those notes to play with when the chords change. This makes for more ways to outline the fact that the chords have changed - A, B on C min, Ab Bb on F min. If he went with C natural minor, and F natural minor the way to tell the difference between the two chords would be seriously reduced, as in, down to only 1 note difference, Db (the flat 6 for F min)!

C D Eb F G Ab Bb C

F Ab Bb C Db Eb G

Forget that! He wants to do damage, the man needs more different notes! So he went with a choice that gave him more ways to indicate the differences between the two chords. By doing that he gets a lot more choices, on the C now he has Eb to indicate it is minor, and that is also the 7th of F min. But, now he has A, B, to use and give away he is playing over the C, and as soon as the F comes by, BAM, Ab and Bb.

And the man has absolutely no compunctions about slamming that natural seven right up in your grill on a downbeat of a measure. He does it again in this chorus in measure 3, right on "one" - right in the kisser - big ol' B natural, and wait for it...because there it is again two beats later.
Next-door Neighbor Notes
He creates a little theme for this chorus, half steps.

He hangs on a note that is a half-step away from a note in the next upcoming chord, and then goes to that note a half-step away when the chord changes.

He does it three times - in measure 4, where he busts out a C# on the C minor chord!! A C sharp! The humanity. Not just plays it, but hang on it, and then slides into a "C" so when the F comes by, there is a nice smooth, glassy, consonant 5 of the chord sitting there waiting for it on the downbeat of measure 5. Ahhhhh.

Mr. PC C3, mm4&5.png


And just to keep things fair, he throws in a major 7 on the F minor too. As well as a flat 7, with an Eb. Why not. He is John Coltrane! He don't care.

He does the half-step-away trick again, and goes from a G to a Gb when the chords go from C to Ab, so from the 5th of C (G) to the dominant 7 (flat 7, Gb) of Ab, just slides right over and makes the chord change using, thats right, chord tones.

Mr. PC C3, mm9,10.png


And then in the very next measure, he does it again, he holds over the Bb (the 2nd or 9) from the Ab7 and slides to a B natural, (third of G7). The man knows his chord tones for sure.

Mr. PC C3 mm10,11.png
Patterns of Patterns
Yup the digital patterns are back too. In measure 8, on the C minor he does the classic minor pattern - R, b3, 4, 5, he just mixes up the notes, and on the F minor in measure 6, he one too, but spreads it out rhythmically but its in there - R, 2, b3, 4.


Mr. PC C3 mm8.png


This chorus maps to bass really nice. I did a little octave adjustment, but there are no saxophone-isms in this one, so the notes lay on bass very sweetly. Go nuts with it.

90 bpm
bass lick 4/4 tempo 90 | CMin7 r8 g++8~ g4~ g4 r8 f | eb g- a d~ d4~ d8 c8 | b8 g a b g eb r4 | r4 r8 c+#8~ c#4 c4~ | Fmin c4 c8 bb ab eb e g| f g ab f bb4 bb8 ab | Cmin7 g eb d f eb c b d | c+ g eb f g4~ g8 g8 | Ab7 gb8 r8 r8 ab [bb8 c eb] gb bb | G7 r8 bb- r8 b+ g eb c g | Cmin7 d+4~ d8 c d eb~ eb4 | Cmin7 r1 |

Tempo Ridiculoso 260 bpm
bass lick 4/4 tempo 260 | CMin7 r8 g++8~ g4~ g4 r8 f | eb g- a d~ d4~ d8 c8 | b8 g a b g eb r4 | r4 r8 c+#8~ c#4 c4~ | Fmin c4 c8 bb ab eb e g| f g ab f bb4 bb8 ab | Cmin7 g eb d f eb c b d | c+ g eb f g4~ g8 g8 | Ab7 gb8 r8 r8 ab [bb8 c eb] gb bb | G7 r8 bb- r8 b+ g eb c g | Cmin7 d+4~ d8 c d eb~ eb4 | Cmin7 r1 |

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey, does anyone know what is going on here? First he puts out Chorus 3 and 4. Then after I clicked and followed the thing, he says "here is Chorus 3" and it is completely different? Same for Chorus 4, he has two completely different versions of 3 and 4.

Is there a way to just print it all out or do you have to cut copy and paste into word all the different sections for an hour and then find out it isn't right.

Bassist Ridiculoso said...

Not sure what you are talking about...can you post in some links?

There are versions of the Bass line AND versions of the tenor solo, there are two different things being transcribed here. So there are separate "Chorus 3"'s, one for the tenor solo, one for the bass line.

Anonymous said...

can I just click "print" somewhere and get the entire bass part. it's broken up into sections. I guess it doesn't matter. I cut, copied and pasted it into word and it looks nice. I guess the sax part is the one with eighth notes in it, it is in bass clef so I thought it was for bass. Thanks for posting this stuff, it is a lot of work to transcribe this stuff. There are not a lot of transcriptions out there for difficult work like this. when someone puts out a nice transcription like this, thousands of people print it and play it. even if you lost all of this, it will get around like a realbook and find its way back on some other site.

Bassist Ridiculoso said...

Glad you figured it out.

See all those things made out of letters surrounding the musical notes? Those words? Yea, if you read them, it might help you figure out which transcription was the for bass line and which one was the saxaphone solo. Because I usually describe what the transcription consists of. Little tip - if you see the "Coltrane", it's the sax solo.

And there are few reasons that it is separated the way it is, one reason is that the service that generates the MP3's and the notation has an upper limit on the size of the file it can send over the wire, well, it doesn't but most browsers do, so the transcriptions are kept manageable for that reason.

But I am deeply sorry you have to click, like, three times and read words in order to get free transcriptions. If you give me your address, I will drive over to your house and give them to you, just so you will not be vexxed any longer by the complicated internet.

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