The trombone chord at the beginning of Pennsylvania
6-5000 ...
I think it's Eb, F, Ab, Bb over a Db in the bass.
Cheers,
Tobias
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Sound advice - I've wasted lots of rehearsal time forgetting *that* one!
--- On Mon 05/20, Wiz-of-Oz wrote:
When you start numbering from the first full measure
(which seems the most logical, a pickup is just an upbeat to a full
measure after all, isn't it?)
just make double sure that
I can usually see the need for standards and consistency, but in the
case of measure numbers, I favor practicality. I agree with David
Bailey that the details don't much matter as long as the score and
all of the parts agree.
Please note that sometimes a pickup occurs in the middle of a
I've always used the basic added 6th chord, close scored. Works well. Keith
in OZ
- Original Message -
From: Tobias Giesen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 7:59 PM
Subject: RE: [Finale] Plea for help TAN
The trombone chord at the beginning of
- Original Message -
From: Tobias Giesen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 7:59 PM
Subject: RE: [Finale] Plea for help TAN
The trombone chord at the beginning of Pennsylvania
6-5000 ...
I think it's Eb, F, Ab, Bb over a Db in the bass.
Looks to me more like a Bbm7add4 in first inversion.
Doug Auwarter wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Tobias Giesen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 7:59 PM
Subject: RE: [Finale] Plea for help TAN
The trombone chord at the beginning of Pennsylvania
At 8:34 PM -0400 5/21/02, David H. Bailey wrote:
Looks to me more like a Bbm7add4 in first inversion.
Dear David,
It may look like that to you; I don't dispute that. But to musicians
who are conversant with mid to late 20th Century American popular
music and jazz conventions, this is
The 6/9 chord was very common for this style of music. I believe this
to be Db69.
Harold
On Tuesday, May 21, 2002, at 08:36 PM, Chuck Israels wrote:
At 8:34 PM -0400 5/21/02, David H. Bailey wrote:
Looks to me more like a Bbm7add4 in first inversion.
Dear David,
It may look like that