Alternate positions trombone slide chart
Try using a pentatonic scale or blues scale instead of a major scale.Start your free trial and get access to hundreds of pages of jazz patterns and jazz etudes – all written especially for trombone. You can try those phrases if you like, but the real exercise is to make your own melodies, starting super simple before pushing yourself. In the sheet music below there are some samples of how to approach this. I have even experienced that using the wrong slide position made me sing the wrong note! I have done this a lot, and now my slide hand starts moving as soon as I sing a melody, with or without the trombone. How does the b13 sound in relation to the major scale? The #11?ĭid it match? Make sure that you keep it simple enough so that you can sing in tune with the correct slide positions, and increase the difficulty gradually. Start incorporating notes that are not in the F major scale (or whatever scale you picked).Repeat the exercise and slowly push yourself to sing longer and more melodically challenging lines.Play the same melody on the trombone with the same slide positions you used when you sang it.No playing, just singing and moving the slide! Sing a simple melody of 2-4 tones from the scale while moving the trombone slide accordingly.Now play the note F so that you have a reference point. Pick a scale that you are familiar with, for example F major.Thinking versus feeling & hearing.ĭoes that mean that you don’t have to learn music theory, get great chops and be able to play as fast as the lightning (well, you don’t need to play fast to play good music…)? No, you should work on your scales, arpeggios, chord progressions, and music theory but if you don’t make sure that your ears can keep up with what you play your solos will not sound good. King solo? No fancy rhythm and just blues scale up and down most of the time… But it sounds amazing! Because he can hear what he plays and plays with his heart.ĭo you get my point? Computer versus man. That is because the computer is not listening in advance! I think… Have you ever heard the computer program Band In A Box play an improvised solo over a chord progression you typed in? The program sort of does everything right, both rhythmically and melodically, but it still sounds terrible. The most important factor as a jazz improviser is the ability to hear what you want to play – before you play it! You can learn all the greatest jazz licks in the world, all the fancy notes in every fancy chord, and play faster and louder than a supersonic stealth bomber and still sound like crap when you improvise.
(I didn’t hang him out or tell him this, and I don’t think he realized it himself.) Lesson learned here? Theory and technique alone do not cut it.
But his trombone playing, as impressive as it was, didn’t touch my heart, so I had him play a slow blues, and he completely fell through. His solo playing was advanced, both melodically and technically, and my first thought was “what the heck am I going to be able to learn this cat?”.
Don’t remember what song it was, something medium up with some interesting harmony I think. At our very first lesson, he played a jazz standard with me on the piano. I once had an advanced jazz trombone student.