i'm sure plenty of "the greats" didn't learn swing from somewhere like Berkely College. Dizzy Gillespie learned trumpet on his own at an early age.Ubiety wrote:I didn't spout a music history lesson. I gave examples of how well known talented and accomplished musicians went about learning swing. The message should be that the greats should be referred to when trying to understand the reason swing sounds good, and not a fractured written definition of swing.dirty oscillators wrote:what's your point???Ubiety wrote:I provided the example of how and where Miles Davis got his information; listening to records, trying to get time playing with other musicians, learning theory with Dizzy Gillespie. Maybe I should have also mentioned that Miles studied at Juilliard just to ram the message home. I gave the example of how Alan Dawson educated his students. Maybe I should have also mentioned that Alan Dawson taught at Berklee College of Music and that Tony Williams was a student of his while there.
you're not explaining why "swing sounds so good" and in fact, you sound like some stuffy professor type and not so much like an artist.
spouting off a bunch of music history lessons doesn't prove that you had already said, "It's a type of rhythm where the second of each pair of eighth notes (the off beats) is delayed by an amount at your discretion" so i don't get where you're coming from. are you trying to garner self esteem for yourself by thinking that you are impressing everyone?
As for my reference to nuffink's comment, I responded to the meaning of his complete statement, unlike you who are reacting to a portion of his words.
it's like you keep repeating the same thing, that swing is a convoluted and complicated skill that can only be learned from studying at a college and i disagree with you on this. i do agree that a simple definition might not completely explain what swing means, but isn't this true with music in general?
i understand Nuffink's point of view much better than yours and i say that meaning no offense to you.
