Best Sheet Music download from our Library.
Jazz Freedom
There is a maxim about free jazz that says, “You can play anything, but you can’t play just anything.” This expresses, in the form of a contradiction, the opposition between freedom and responsibility in jazz improvisation.
The first part of the saying, “You can play anything,” declares the improviser’s negative freedom to not have to play what a composer requires. The second part of the saying, “But you can’t play just any-thing,” means that it is positive freedom and an affirmative purpose that fully realizes the opportunity for which negative freedom sets the foundation.
The saying states, in other words, that one should not do something merely for the sake of doing it, and that there is responsibility associated with one’s freedom. An improviser can meet the responsibility to not play anything just to play it if he or she plays what is authentic and honest as determined by the particulars of the musician’s individual character and personality.
Not playing something just to play it is a higher-level proscription about the purpose of one’s freedom, a proscription about the manner in which one is not proscribed, a statement about the responsibility of one’s freedom.
The improviser can thereby express both freedom and responsibility. As an example, consider the musical technique of banging both hands on the keyboard of a piano. There are times in which such a technique may be responsible, and times in which it may not be appropriate. For instance, Michael Brecker composed a piece called “Nothing Personal” in which one note is notated as an undefined pitch.
One might argue that playing something in an improvisation for no purpose—just to do it—is a purpose itself: a meta-purpose, or a purpose attached to a lack of purpose. This is similar to saying, “Moderation in all things, including moderation.”
This allows for immoderate things, because if moderation is done in moderation, then occasionally some actions will not be moderate. If one always improvises with a purpose, then, sometimes, one’s purpose might be to have no purpose. Sometimes it might be OK to do something just for the heck of it, but we cannot say that doing so was an expression of responsibility, even if it was acceptable in a larger sense. The meta-purpose of having no purpose may be a legitimate part of jazz, but it does not express responsibility.
There is another way in which responsibility coexists with freedom. A choice is always subject to evaluation, and this means that, except for a perfect improviser (who does not exist), some choices will be evaluated as less worthy than others. Therefore, freedom is not always devoid of costs: stated as a contradiction, freedom is not necessarily free.
If one is merely choosing between vanilla and chocolate ice cream, there is no significant cost to that choice, but if we appreciate some improvisations because they are clever, fascinating, humorous, or inspiring, we must also be ready to reject some improvisations because they are plain, uninteresting, or boring.
Unless one suggests absolutely no standards, and even if such standards as cleverness, fascination, humor, or inspiration may be intersubjectively determined by the audience and the musicians, failing those standards is part of the landscape. Even before a choice is made, the risk of making a bad choice is implicit.
There are musical and aesthetic consequences of choices in jazz improvisation, and when improvisers do not make optimal choices, regardless of who decides what is optimal or how they decide, the improviser takes responsibility for his or her failed choices as much as the credit for successful ones.
The improviser’s freedom to make choices and the improviser’s responsibility to face the subsequent evaluation of those choices are in dynamic tension. Freedom is fully present because the improviser has the sovereignty to choose to play anything, and responsibility is fully present because, once the choice is made, a negative (or positive) evaluation of the choice is possible.
The improviser takes implicit responsibility for a choice at the same time that his or her freedom is being exercised through that choice. The tension in the opposition between freedom and responsibility is most apparent when an improviser takes risks. An improviser might approach the responsibility for bad choices by playing it safe, by not making any risky choices.
If an improviser doesn’t play it safe, however, and fully exercises his or her freedom, freedom and responsibility are in dynamic tension: a musical choice is more free when it is not limited by a potential negative evaluation of the choice, yet at the same time the musician must accept responsibility for the cost of a potential negative evaluation of that choice.
The contradiction between playing freely, as if there are no consequences, when there are consequences and responsibility for playing freely, places freedom and responsibility in dynamic tension.
Both are opposed to each other, in contradiction, yet fully expressed. Taking risks in improvisation may or may not be a wise strategy in any particular case, but when such an approach is taken, the improviser negotiates the contradiction between freedom and responsibility.
DISCIPLINE IS THE FOUNDATION OF FREEDOM
There is an opposition between the responsibility of discipline and the freedom that discipline enables. To be able to speak a language, for instance, one must have enough competency to be able to use the language effectively, and this implies standards to which one is responsible. It is through discipline that one achieves such competency and meets those standards, which enable the freedom to say anything in that language.
It is genetics that gives us the ability as babies to attempt, through trial and error, to imitate the language of parents and thereby gain competency as a native speaker.
For jazz improvisation, it is the self-imposed discipline of practice on an instrument that creates the technical facility and familiarity with the idiom that allows the improviser to use freedom to be creative.
Even though creativity and innovation are a part of jazz, jazz is also an idiom with certain competencies. The discipline that is required to become proficient in the language of jazz is the foundation on which creative efforts rest. It is when one is in the process of acquiring competency in jazz as a student that the contradiction between discipline and freedom is most evident. A jazz student who doesn’t wonder, “Why are parts of my study of improvisation so unimprovised?” isn’t paying attention.
Perhaps a closer analogy between language and jazz is poetry. In general, one must be competent with the grammar of English to write English poetry. Even in free poetry, poets generally know the rules of the language in which their free poetry is written. They know when they are breaking the rules of grammar and so understand the effect of what they write.
Free jazz and bebop are two styles from jazz history that illustrate this approach to some extent. In every area—repertoire, relation to the audience, rewards, and musical goals—free jazz and bebop musicians tended to place art over the audience.
Wynton Marsalis has articulated a variation on that approach:
“I’m going to do everything in my power to get the public to understand the real significance and beauty of the music, not by watering it down, but by get-ting to such a place in my art that it will be obvious to all who listen that I’m coming from a great tradition.”
Rock musician Frank Zappa has also adopted this model: “If [people in the audience] like [my music], fine. If they don’t, they can go out and buy another record.”
This approach holds that, by being authentic and hon-est with oneself, the artist has the best chance of creating valuable art that may then be recognized by an audience, or at least recognized by the audience that values sincere and authentic art.
Please, subscribe to our Library.
If you are already a subscriber, please, check our NEW SCORES’ page every month for new sheet music. THANK YOU!
“[The jazz man] must subordinate and integrate his musical personality, as ex-pressed through his instrument, into the general group, and he must do this with no score or conductor to guide him. On the other hand, as a soloist, he must produce startlingly distinctive sound patterns which are better, if possible, than those played by any other member of the group. How is this to be done? . . .
The soloist must be unique, personal, and “progressive,” but in order to meet the other criterion of the esthetic, he must be understood by others who know the idiom. This means, of course, a continual advance into abstraction and esotery, so that contemporary jazz is always musical casuistry, forever seeking new ways to rationalize the impossible.1
The jazz esthetic is basically a paradox, tragic in that it is ultimately unrealizable. The comprehensibility of traditionalism and radical originality are irreconcilable.”
William Bruce Cameron, “Sociological Notes on the Jam Session,” Social Forces 33 (1954): 179.
Learning Jazz
It should not be unexpected that students of jazz, once they have progressed sufficiently, begin to question the tradition of jazz by improvising music that runs counter to that tradition and that might therefore risk censure from their teacher. The creativity and personal expression that jazz promises, when carried to its logical conclusion, can lead to a rejection of the boundaries and definition of the tradition of jazz that the student initially must absorb.
This situation is similar to that of separation or individuation of adolescents, in which they forge their own identity that is separate from that of their parents or family (their tradition).
Especially at the initial stages of developing one’s own identity as a jazz improviser, one is faced with the question of how to achieve two contradictory goals: faithfulness to the tradition, as might be required by a teacher or mentor, and creatively transforming that tradition into something that expresses the uniqueness of one’s own musical personality. The student must learn how to keep tradition and creativity in dynamic tension.
That growth as a jazz musician is not necessarily a straight line from simple to complex illustrates how the opposition between tradition and creativity can be negotiated.
Advanced jazz students are sometimes eager to master the most dissonant forms of harmony.
Charlie Parker’s harmonic style, while controversial during his career in the 1940s and 1950s, is only the starting point for today’s jazz students. Some students, in my experience, mistake topics such as advanced harmony, or harmonic styles that occur later in jazz history, as the only ones appropriate for advanced study.
An advanced study of jazz, however, might ask the jazz student to imitate the style of Louis Armstrong, which is not as harmonically complex when compared to Charlie Parker or later musicians. To be able to be creative within the more restricted boundaries of Armstrong’s traditional harmony requires the student to negotiate the opposition between the closely drawn boundaries and the creativity that is a part of jazz.
There is a dynamic tension between tradition and creativity for jazz educators.
Even jazz teachers are not immune to the authoritarianism that teaching encourages. One example of the authoritarian aspects of jazz education is the prominence of the big band in jazz education, which is out of proportion to its place in jazz history.
There are several reasons why the big band is so prominent in jazz education. Not only does the greater size of the big band (sixteen to twenty) increase student enrollments compared to combos and thus help fund jazz programs, but the big band requires more standardization and exercise of authority than jazz combos.
It is usual for educational big bands to have a director (the authority) in front of the band, directing rehearsals as well as performances, while it is rare for a teacher to be onstage with a student combo.
Most importantly, be-cause the horns in a big band—the trumpets, trombones, and saxophones—are often playing the same rhythms, many details of their performance that might be decided individually and spontaneously in a combo, such as articulation, intonation, rhythm, and swing, are usually predetermined authoritatively by the director.
Some necessities of education—standardization, definitions, and clear rules—are in opposition to the openness and creativity in jazz. These necessities can be risked by teaching creativity as part of jazz. Dacey and Lennon note that “the creative teacher is involved in discovery, risking, pushing the limits, and taking a step into the unknown. This is serious business—dangerous business.
“When you challenge students to be creative, you lose control.” Such loss of control is sometimes not a congenial fit with the demands of the educational bureaucracy.
Standardization in education is not, however, in any sort of conflict with tradition in jazz; in fact, the two realms are well suited for each other. They both depend on rules, definitions, and standards.
So the authoritarian aspect of education is itself in dynamic tension when applied to jazz: authoritarianism, on one hand, is well suited to teaching the jazz tradition, but, on the other hand, is ill-suited for encouraging students to be creative, certainly for stimulus of freedom (thinking outside the box), and perhaps for stimulus-bound freedom as well.
Competent jazz educators will manage this dynamic tension successfully, especially if they are jazz musicians themselves and have some sense of the contradiction.
Browse in the Library:
Artist or Composer / Score name | Cover | List of Contents |
---|---|---|
Barber Violin Concerto (Violin and Piano sheet music) | ||
Barber Violin Concerto (Violin part sheet music) | ||
Barber_Violin_Concerto.mscz.mscz | ||
Barber, Samuel Cello Concerto (Cello Part) | ||
Barber, Samuel Sonata For Piano, Op.26 | ||
Barber, Samuel – Sure On This Shining Night for Piano and SATB | ||
Barber, Samuel – Adagio for Strings Op. 11 Agnus Dei (solo piano arr.) | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs – Nocturne | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs – A Nun takes the Veil | ||
Barber, Samuel – Four Songs The Secrets of the Old | ||
Barber, Samuel – Summer Music | ||
Barber, Samuel Adagio for Strings full score | Samuel Barber-Adagio for Strings full score | |
Barber, Samuel Adagio For Strings Samuel Barber (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Barber, Samuel Agnus Dei Adagio for strings op. 11 for mixed chorus | ||
Barber, Samuel Nocturne Op. 33 | ||
Barber, Samuel Op 26 Piano Sonata | ||
Barbra Streisand The way we were (piano) | Barbra Streisand The way we were piano | |
Barbra Streisand – Not While Im Around | ||
Barbra Streisand – Evergreen | ||
Barbra Streisand – Send In The Clowns | ||
Barbra Streisand – The Broadway album (Piano and voice) | Streisand, Barbra – The Broadway album (Piano and voice) | |
Barbra Streisand – The Way We Were | ||
Barbra Streisand Collection | Book Barbra Streisand Collection | |
Barbra Streisand Evergreen | Barbra Streisand Evergreen | |
Barbra Streisand Guilty – songbook | Barbra Streisand Guilty – songbook | |
Barbra Streisand Memories Songbook | Barbra Streisand Memories Songbook | |
Barbra Streisand My Name Is Barbra (Barbra Streisand) (Book) | ||
Barbra Streisand Somewhere From West Side Story | Barbra Streisand Somewhere From West Side Story | |
Barcarolle (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (14 original Guitar Solos) | Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (14 original Guitar Solos) | |
Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (Vol. 2 original Guitar Solos) | Barney Kessel – The Jazz Guitar Artistry Of Barney Kessel (Vol. 2 original Guitar Solos) | |
Barney Kessel Danny Boy Guitar with Tablature | ||
Barney Kessel Minor Mode | ||
Baroque Expressions Martha Mier from Bravo Book One (Piano Solos).mscz | ||
Baroque Guitar Sheet Music arr. by Frederick Noad Guitar Anthology,The Classical Guitar | Baroque Guitar Sheet Music arr. by Frederick Noad Guitar Anthology,The Classical Guitar | |
Baroque Keyboard Anthology Book 1 24 Works For Piano Or Keyboard by Robin Bigwood | Baroque Keyboard Anthology Book 1 24 Works For Piano Or Keyboard by Robin Bigwood | |
Barrelhouse And Boogie Piano by Eric Kriss | Barrelhouse And Boogie Piano by Eric Kriss | |
Barry Hanks – Rhythm Changes Solo Transcription | Barry Hanks – Rhythm Changes Solo Transcription | |
Barry Harris Approach to improvised lines & harmony | ||
Barry Harris Basics Summary Of Class Exploring the Diminished | ||
Barry Harris Donna Lee sheet music transcription | ||
Barry Harris Harmonic Method For Guitar, The | ||
Barry Harris Jazz Workshop Part 1 | ||
Barry Harris Jazz Workshop Part 2 | ||
Barry Harris Method Método IMPROVISACIÓN (Español-Spanish) | ||
Barry Harris On Green Dolphin Street sheet music transcription | ||
Barry Harris’ solo on “Woody n’You | Barry Harris Woody n’You | |
Barry Manilow – Can’t Smile Without You | ||
Barry Manilow – Copacabana (At the Copa) | ||
Barry Manilow – Copacabana | ||
Barry Manilow – Mandy | ||
Barry Manilow – Sheet Music Anthology | Barry Manilow – Sheet Music Anthology | |
BARRY WHITE – (THE COLLECTION) | BARRY WHITE – (THE COLLECTION) | |
Barry White – Loves Theme | ||
Bart Howard – Fly Me To The Moon Guitar and TABs (Jazz Standard) | Bart Howard – Fly Me To The Moon Guitar and TABs (Jazz Standard) | |
Bartok – For Children, Sz. 42 Complete 1 to 43 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Improvisations op 20 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos (Books 1 to 6) Bela Bartok | Bartok – Mikrokosmos (1-6) sheet music | |
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol. 2 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol. 4 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Mikrokosmos Vol.1 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok – Sonate For Piano Solo Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok 6 Danses populaires roumaines Bela Bartok | Bartok.-.6.Danses.populaires.roumaines | |
Bartok For Children Book 1 Based On Hungarian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | ||
Bartok For Children Book 2 after Slovakian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | Bartok For Children Book 2 after Slovakian Folk Tunes Piano Solo | |
Bartok Improvisations op. 20 Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok Piano Sonata Bela Bartok | ||
Bartok Ten Easy Pieces | ||
Basic Piano Library Piano Recital Book Level 1B | Basic Piano Library Piano Recital Book Level 1B | |
Bass Guitar For Dummies (eBook) | ||
Bass Standards (Classic Jazz Masters) Note for note transcriptions of jazz Bass classic performances | Bass Standards (Classic Jazz Masters) Note for note transcriptions of jazz Bass classic performances | |
Bastien – Piano Basics Level 1 Piano | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Piano for the Young Beginner Primer A | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Piano for the Young Beginner Primer B | ||
Bastien Piano Basics – Theory Level 2 | Bastien Piano Basics – Theory Level 2 | |
Bastien Piano Basics Level 3 | ||
Bastien Piano Basics Technic Primer Level for children | ||
Batman – Flowers Of The Past – Danny Elfman | Batman-Flowers-Of-The-Past-Danny-Elfman 1st page | |
Batman – Sonata In Darkness Michael Giacchino | Batman – Sonata In Darkness Michael Giacchino | |
Batman Begins – Hans Zimmer James Newton Howard Ramin Djawadi – Molossus | ||
Batman Returns – Birth Of A Penguin – Danny Elfman | Batman Returns – Birth Of A Penguin – Danny Elfman | |
Battlefield 1 – Homing Pigeon | Battlefield 1 – Homing Pigeon | |
Baywatch – Main Theme | ||
Be My Love (Nicholas Brodszky & Sammy Cahn) Jazz Piano Solo arr. sheet music | ||
Beach Boys Good Vibrations sheet music | ||
Beach Boys The Best Of Book | ||
Beach Boys, The – Guitar Anthology Series | Beach Boys, The – Guitar Anthology Series | |
Beato Book 4.0, The – A Creative Approach to Music Theory and Improvisation for Guitar and Other Instruments | ||
Beautiful (Christina Aguilera) | ||
Beautiful rain Soredemo Sekay | Beautiful rain Soredemo Sekay | |
Beauty And The Beast – Alan Menken from 1991 Disney film Piano Solo | ||
Beauty And The Beast – Main Theme – Alan Menken | ||
Beauty And The Beast (Disney) Piano Score | Beauty And The Beast (Disney) Piano Score | |
Bebo Valdes – El Manisero – Piano solo | El Manisero – Bebo Valdes | |
BEBOP – The Music and its Players (Thomas Owens) Book | ||
Bebop Exercise.mscz | ||
BeBop Jazz Piano – John Valerio – Book + MP3 audio tracks | Bebop piano sheet music book | |
Bebop Piano Legends Artist Transciptions For Piano | Bebop Piano Legends Artist Transciptions For Piano | |
Bebop Third Ear The Essential Listening Companion (Scott Yanow) Book | ||
Because – The Beatles (For String Quartet) (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beck – Everybodys gotta learn sometime – with lyrics | ||
Bee Gees It’s Easy To Play Bee Gees | Bee Gees It’s Easy To Play Bee Gees | |
Bee Gees – How Deep Is Your Love | ||
Bee Gees – Stayin Alive | ||
Bee Gees Anthology – complete songbook | The Bee Gees Guitar Songbook | |
Beegie Adair Fly Me To The Moon Jazz Standard Piano Solo | ||
Beegie Adair It Never Entered My Mind (Jazz Standard Transcription) | ||
Beethoven Ode To Joy (Jazz Version) | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 1st Movement Arr. For 2 Pianos | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 4 3rd Movement Arr. For 2 Pianos | ||
Beethoven Variations In E Flat Major Eroica Op. 35 Piano Solo arr. | ||
Beethoven L.V. – Piano Sonata 15 | ||
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 In E-Flat Major Emperor Op. 73 – Piano Solo (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – 6 Sonatinas | ||
Beethoven – A First Book of Beethoven Easy Piano arr. favorite pieces by David Dutkanicz | Beethoven – A First Book of Beethoven Easy Piano arr. favorite pieces by David Dutkanicz | |
Beethoven – Choral Fantasy For Piano Choir And Orchestra Op. 80 (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – Fantasia In G Minor. Op.77 (Musescore File).mscz | ||
Beethoven – Fur Elise | Beethoven – Fur Elise | |
Beethoven – Moonlight Sonata | ||
Beethoven – Moonlight Sonata 1st Mov. Guitar arr. with TABs |