Voicings for Jazz Keyboard
G**R
Quick, easy, dirty means to 3-6/9 chord voicing
Review Voicing for Jazz Keyboard by Frank MantoothNOTE: THIS BOOK IS NOT A HEAVY TEXT ON MUSIC THEORY. THIS BOOK IS THE PRESENTATION OF A MEANS OF RAPIDLY CONSTRUCTING CHORD VOICINGS AT THE KEYBOARD.“Voicings for Jazz Keyboard” is an excellent, clear, concise presentation of fourth voicings for jazz keyboard. Frank Mantooth lays out basic rules, simply followed, for Major, Dominant, Minor chords. This is followed by “miracle” voicings which give simple variations on the voicings from Mantooth's rules. These rules and miracle variations are within the reach of every pupil who understands the basic chords. If the student stops at this point in the book, the student will greatly enhance his/her comping.There are also chapters on blues voicings, and diminished and half diminished chords, which are easy enough for pupils of all levels, although the second half of the blues chapter does go into the polychord material. Frank Mantooth does, in other chapters, go into altered and polychord functions, melodic soprano voice, and tritone substitution. His explanations are good, but for the more advanced pupil.For the jazz pupil who understands the basic chords, the discussion on the fourth voicings is excellent. Frank Mantooth gives the fastest and easiest approach to the 3-6/9 voicings I have seen anywhere. The C chord in Frank Mantooths voicing becomes E-A-D-G-C, voiced from the top down in fourths. This section alone is well worth the price of the book many times over.For the more advanced student who is into polychord harmonies and altered dominant chords, that material is well explained.The chapter on tritone substitutions and half step preparation is well done, and would benefit students of all levels who are working on progressions. Once the student understands II-V-I, it is only a short step to II-IIb-I.Frank writes clearly and cuts through the complex to make fourth voicings, which give 3-6/9 , applicable at the keyboard. He does not just give lots of chords and their variations, but explains the use of the various chords in easily understandable terms. Frank Mantooth gives a simple approach to constructing the 3-6/9 chords at the keyboard.Excellent book recommended for all students who want to move past learning just C-E-G-Bb for a C7 chord.
U**T
Good Jazz Keyboard Supplement
My jazz professor and a trumpet player recommended this book to me as a way to expand my knowledge on voicings and comping. As a classical pianist, I have been learning a lot from this book about how to play for jazz! Every few chapters or so there’s an activity to help you see if you understand the concept. It’s in pretty typical music-theory book style with writing in chords. I got the spiral-bound which is bigger than most copy pages, so just beware if looking to do something with that. There is plenty of space to take notes and I know this book will get me through the end of the semester. It even has a potential lesson plan divider for a 16-week semester in there!Overall, I think it’s been a great book for learning more about jazz piano. Haven’t read all of it yet, but I’m taking my time to soak it all in. Great for independent study.
S**N
This Book Will Change Your Life (as a keyboard player, that includes vibraphone and marimba)
This is the best book I ever bought about jazz keyboard voicings. I'm just starting to understand the importance of thinking in fourths. For years I tried to figure out jazz standards and how the masters would voice chords. I couldn't figure it out. I was stuck in "thirds city." A very bad city to be in. There is little color in "third city", and it just doesn't fit nice in comping. Frank writes down what great players do. They add a lot of color using fourths. One problem I had today that was easily solved when I thought about it was the minor 7 b5. Let me give you this because I didn't find it in Frank's book. If you are looking for a voicing for the minor 7 flat 5, just take what Frank gives as the minor 7 generic voicing and flat the 5. With that, you can use Frank's Polychord section to come up with a bad ass ii V i in a minor key. For example, Ami7(b5) to D7(#5) <- an alt chord and resovle to Gmi7. To bad Amazon doesn't make a sounds section so I can upload what voicings I did today. In short, Frank's book should change your world. Are you an arranger? If you are, this book is a must to write any jazz, and pop, with a lot of color. Hell, if you are looking to arrange for strings, brass or maybe even woodwinds, the knowledge you'll get from this book will most likely work in those instruments as well. I can't say enough good things about Frank's book. I love you Frank, God Bless.
B**Y
Great Book!
Very cool book whose main premise is avoiding voicing chords based on the traditional tertiary way (chords built up of thirds); instead, the interval of a fourth is stressed here. This book is simple yet advanced at the same time. There are exercises included and of course the suggestion is to work the chords out in all twelve keys. The exercises cover a few common chord progressions and the author discusses the actual function of the given voicings, too. What I really love, though, is that at the end the author gives you a suggested semester-long syllabus you might use in learning this stuff. An interesting suggestion (and one I've followed) is to use Bela Bartok's "Microcosmos" as a reading exercise to help develop hand independence - so this book is aimed at non-pianists looking to get hip to jazz piano voicings, which is cool. At the same time as this book is aimed largely at non-pianists, the book never condescends, never seems to hold your hand TOO much, if you know what I mean. Although the harmonies discussed are advanced as compared to your vanilla root-third-fifth-seventh chords, it never seems too obscure to understand. Excellent book and one I'd recommend in a heartbeat to anyone interested in jazz. As another reviewer noted, this would make a great supplement to Mark Levine's "The Jazz Piano Book".
O**E
Excellent book. Probably a lifelong study !
Wow. This is some book, extremely thorough and detailed.It's a bit above my ability level at the moment, but thats no fault of the book. I was hoping for a clear and concise guide to the A and B voicings for the ii V I progressions but thats not in there unfortunately. If anybody does know a good book with these in then please let me know .You'd have to be a strong intermediate level player to get the most from it.
S**N
Very poor, don’t buy
Very poor quality paper: the sheets of paper do not detach from the spine. Not worth buying unless as a scrap pad.
E**T
A rare gem
Brilliant for voicings on piano
I**S
Five Stars
very good thank you
M**D
Five Stars
Play like a pro!
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