Martha Mier's jazz Raggs and Blues book

johand

Well-known member
Hello,

I registered here to ask some question, before buying the app.
My piano teachers said that there are some app that create a band to play along with your piano practise. I found this app.
Currentky, i am learning some Martha Mier's jazz Raggs and Blues song from book 1. http://www.alfred.com/Products/A--00-6642.aspx

Are these song already in the library to download? If yes, where can i find them. If no, would anyone be so kind to put in the "Just Struttin Along" and "Ragtime Do Si Do"
if you pm me your email, i can send you the piano score (very short)

many thanks, Johan
 
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You can search the thousands of user generated charts in the forums by title, keyword, composer etc.
Just select the magnifying glass icon at the top of any page.
The iReal pro app is needed to download charts.
The app does indeed have an excellent player feature.
:))BOB
 
If I search on composers name "Martha Mier" no result, neither on song name. is there a way to get it in the list by request?
 
ok Thx,

Is there a free Time limited trying period or a version with less functions, before buying the app?
Do you create new songs also on the smartphone or tablet, or is there a web based GUI to make&edit songs (easier on big screen)?
 
ok Thx,

Is there a free Time limited trying period or a version with less functions, before buying the app?
Do you create new songs also on the smartphone or tablet, or is there a web based GUI to make&edit songs (easier on big screen)?


No free trial or iReal pro "lite" version
Full info:
http://irealpro.com
:))BOB
 
to help me started, can anyone help me to define the chord scheme of this little piece?
 
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Wow, this is great. i bought the app and tried this song and it WORKED :)

Many thanks, Johan
 
Ragtime Do Si Do

I tried to do my next piece myself, but not sure if it is OK. It has more to with knowing about music theory than working with the app.
Ragtime Do Si Do - Mier
Could anybody have a look and correct me if I am wrong or give further advice? Following pieces i will try to solve with my piano teacher.
Many Thanks, Johan
 
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Some quick observations (I'll leave it to you to make any edits you want)

The first arpeggiated chord is a diminished: Co, same as a Co7, C dim, C dim7
https://forums.irealpro.com/threads/GLOSSARY-iReal-Pro&p=16025.188/#post-16025

The "splotch" (blank chord) is used to add specific bass notes (slash chords) without re-writing the chord's root over and over. The first slash chord's root must be entered, otherwise the player will use the previous chord (which may not be what you intend)

I think you may prefer your first Bb (bar 6) as a G or G7 chord.

Can you hear the difference between a major chord (triad) 1,3,5. (C,E,G or F,A,C) and a minor chord 1,3b,5. (C,Eb,G or F,Ab,C)? You might like the second F (C-section bar 5) better as an F- (Fmin, F minor)

Listening is the key!

Are you are missing a bar-line between the Eb and D? Without one, the player will treat the two together as a single measure.

For a first chart without any chord theory background,
(you'll find that very helpful as you approach jazz,
"It's all about the *changes*, man!")
your chart is a really good start.

Keep after it! iReal pro will change your life. (It did for me)

As you work-up the Mier book charts with your instructor's help, please share your work in this thread to help other students.
We're all in this together.

:))BOB
 
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Hello, First of all, Thanks for helping me out.

I started almost 2 yrs ago without any music knowledge. I have since then classical piano training, so I know something about chords (not that much). I do know and hear the difference between majorand minor triads. I also know that 7th chords have that last (7th) note attached to the major and minor chord. But that's about it. Don't know exactly what augmented and diminished is, but that's stuff for later I guess...

1 - Can you clarify this a little, Do you mean "/" by "splotch" You are talking about bar 3 and 4 no? What should it be in those bars?
"The "splotch" (blank chord) is used to add specific bass notes (slash chords) without re-writing the chord's root over and over. The first slash chord's root must be entered, otherwise the player will use the previous chord (which may not be what you intend)"

2 - I think you may prefer your first Bb (bar 6) as a G or G7 chord.
I changed it but I don't know exactly why. There is no G note in that 6th bar?

Ragtime Do Si Do - Mier

I will post all future Martha Mier's pieces I tackle with my teacher in this thread.
Should I edit posts with earlier versions of this piece (and delete it there) to keep the forums clean, and only have 1 correct version in the thread?

BR, Johan

PS: I saw someone entered Tim Richards book "Improvising Blues Piano" in here. That's also great! I just began in that book.
https://forums.irealpro.com/threads/Improvising-blues-piano-chpt-1.6477/
 
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Hello, First of all, Thanks for helping me out.

Can you clarify this a little, Do you mean "/" by "splotch" You are talking about bar 3 and 4 no? What should it be in those bars?

The slash "/” is used in two ways.
1. Chords should be entered on the first space in a measure. If they are to start later in the measure, enter a slash (/) on each beat where the chord from the preceding measure is to be continued.
|C |//D |G |

2. As part of a chord to designate a specific bass note as part of the chord.
eg. C7/Bb (a C7 chord with a Bb bass note)

When there is a specific bass sequence under a chord, you can use the invisible "splotch" or blob (which only shows in the editor) instead of writing the chord name each time when the only note changing is the bass note.
The first slash chord's name must be entered, otherwise the player will use the previous chord (which may not be what you intend)


bass notes
also known as inversions, bass notes only, hidden chords, invisible chords
To hide the chord symbol but provide a bass note, use the invisible character. It looks like a blue (pink in android) blob in Song edit, and is used as a blank for the chord letter. In Song edit, tap on/click the invisible character (it only shows in Song Edit) then insert a Slash, then enter the bass note. In the Mac version, you can also type w.

Here is an example:

Invisible - Test

:))BOB
 
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2 - I think you may prefer your first Bb (bar 6) as a G or G7 chord.
I changed it but I don't know exactly why. There is no G note in that 6th bar?
.
Should I edit posts with earlier versions of this piece (and delete it there) to keep the forums clean, and only have 1 correct version in the thread?

2- Listen to it both ways as you play along with the player and choose the one that sounds better.

When all the Mier-book charts are posted, we'll combine them into a single playlist.

Since our posted discussion applies to the initially posted version, it makes sense (and may be instructive to others) to leave the first chart up.
If you post a chart, then notice an error, it would make sense to edit the chart and just replace the first one with the corrected one.
:))BOB
 
Test - Unknown Composer
I tied to find some differences, but not hearing them. Maybe don't know what to listen for...? I muted the piano
Maybe you can link me to a simple chart,w here i can hear clearly the differences when working with "/", "%", NC or just leave it blank?
 
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Johand,

It's a pretty good chart, with just a couple of chords that I would change.

Here's a revision using some of the the bass lines that are in the printed music, as well as the chord changes I recommend.

Notice that what you have as C - Bb - A - Ab is actually C - C7/Bb - F/A - Ab7, a common ragtime cliché.

Ragtime Do Si Do Rev - Mier

Cheers,
Jer

P.S. The confusion over the Bb chord is probably because a G7 chord is what one might normally expect there in that harmonic progression. However, as the printed music shows, the composer intended what you correctly wrote, C alternating with Bb.
 
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As I understand Bob's last post, this is a quite difficult/advanced version? I do want the most simple chart as derived from the original score. I appreciate your help, but as a beginner, I must first learn how to put chord chart together in it's most simple form.
 
That's why it's good to look at multiple versions of the same song. Ask yourself what's different, why it's different, and which do YOU like? It's not right or wrong, correct or incorrect, better or worse. It's jazz. It's expressive. It evolves.
Enjoy your journey.

LISTEN

:))BOB
 
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