Pip Eastop – Hornplayer

baroque and classical period performance, contemporary, chamber music, symphonic, commercial sessions, jazz improvisation and free improvisation.

First lesson with Martin Shaw – before and after

April 9th, 2004  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Before: I’ve been practising pretty regularly and, I feel, steadily improving but increasingly feeling myself to be in a musical vacuum. What I need now is fresh air, not my own stale stuff to breathe; so with that in mind I’ve arranged to have a lesson with Martin Shaw, who has been enthusiastically recommended by [...]

Giant Steps

April 20th, 2003  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Still practising! I’ve been working on John Coltrane’s essential standard, Giant Steps. It’s a real earbender, but I think I’ve found a way in – an initial way of taking the fear out of it. It’s a colour coded grid of the chord changes. Pretty self explanatory. It shows that the whole piece can be [...]

More help from Valentin

August 29th, 2002  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Valentin Garvie came around this evening. He had phoned up to say he was in London for four days between a tour around Sweden and a pile of work with Ensemble Moderm in Germany, so I invited him around straight away. We played through a few blues pieces and one or two standards, all with [...]

“Trumpet finger pitch”

August 27th, 2002  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Right now I’m well stuck into some “turnaround” exercises. The one I’m currently chopping away at is one of the simplest from Aebersold’s book of turnarounds (Volume 16, Ex. 3). Basically, this is a four chord repeating sequence, for example F#M, A7, D7, G7, which needs transposing into all keys. It’s making me do what [...]

More time with Kenny Wheeler

April 17th, 2002  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Hmmm… It’s been 7 months since I entered anything here. What happened? I think I got a bit bogged down and lost my momentum. I had my third keyboard lesson with Ken, in October, and we decided I would come back for another one when I felt needed to rather than book up the next [...]

2nd jazz lesson

September 5th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

My second lesson with Ken Bartels. Unsurprisingly, we started where we had left off and this felt like me showing him my homework – a strange feeling as it’s some 25 years since I left school. The homework was playing through the Aebersold book, “Blues in all keys”, firstly sticking exclusively to the blues scale [...]

Playing just the thirds

August 10th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

Here’s another useful exercise I just arrived at after some work on Aebersold, Volume 42 – “Blues in all keys”. Having learned what the the chord notes and scale notes are (track 11, Blues in Ab -for trumpet) because Aebersold writes them all in for you, I found it hard to ignore them and that [...]

Using cornet and keyboard

August 5th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

I’ve discovered a useful way forward, for myself involving the use of the Aebersold books and both cornet and keyboard. I arrived at this idea by playing with some of the Aebersold “dominant seventh workout” tracks sitting at the piano, cornet in hand, playing alternately on each instrument and wondering if the constant transpositions from [...]

The sound of the pentatonic scale

July 25th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

I’m on holiday in a quiet cottage in Essex. I did a lot of cornet practice today. Must have been at least three hours. I went from book to book (of which I now have many) fiddling around trying to find useful things to practice. Played through all the major blues in Aebersold Vol (?) [...]

A minor breakthrough

July 20th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

I had a jazz lesson with Ken Bartels of Loughton. I got his name from Bernard O’Neill, the bass player from down the road, who said that Ken would be a very good teacher. He plays flute, single reeds and keyboards. I think Bernard was right. I came away from the lesson with, for the [...]

At the beginning

July 16th, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

This jazz thing has been going on for some time already but I’m still at the beginning so I thought I’d better get writing before it became really too late to do it. So, the background. Back in 1977 I borrowed an alto sax and started learning some scales. I wanted to play jazz but [...]

Learning Clifford Brown’s solos by ear

January 1st, 2001  |  by admin  |  published in jazzlearning

New year’s resolution: to get this diary/journal going again after quite a long period of neglect (look at the date of the previous entry). A large part of what stopped me writing was that every time I thought of doing so I felt the time would be better spent practising the trumpet. Also I lost [...]

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