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      • Yes, a classically-trained musician can certainly learn how to play jazz music. Think about it as more of an expansion rather than a transition. If you have already learned how to play your scales and arpeggios, and if you can read music and sight read, there’s nothing stopping you from learning jazz.
  1. Jan 21, 2022 · Yes, a classically-trained musician can certainly learn how to play jazz music. Think about it as more of an expansion rather than a transition. If you have already learned how to play your scales and arpeggios, and if you can read music and sight read, there’s nothing stopping you from learning jazz.

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    • Keith Jarrett. In the 20th Century, not many musicians turned down a chance to study with music teacher and conductor Nadia Boulanger in Paris. Not many people, that is, except pianist Keith Jarrett, who made that decision in 1962 when he was 17, and (almost) never looked back.
    • John(ny) Williams. In 1959, a young jazz pianist joined Henry Mancini’s band to record the theme for the TV show Peter Gunn. Johnny Williams, also billed as “John Towner Williams,” already had a trio of albums under his belt and would go on to play piano for the films West Side Story and Breakfast at Tiffany’s.
    • John McLaughlin. It might be easier to talk about the genres that John McLaughlin hasn’t tried out. He started out as a guitarist in London’s burgeoning jazz scene, but frequently dipped his toes into rock, blues, and R&B.
    • Hazel Scott. Having started at Juilliard at the tender age of 8, pianist Hazel Scott had made a name for herself by the time she was a teenager in the mid-1930s, playing on national radio and alongside Count Basie’s famous orchestra.
  3. Oct 12, 2022 · In my opinion, it is easier for a jazz musician to play classical music, since jazz allows the musician to acquire a vast knowledge of harmony in general. An essential element that distinguishes jazz from classical music is improvisation.

  4. Yes, a classically-trained musician can certainly learn how to play jazz music. Think about it as more of an expansion rather than a transition. If you have already learned how to play your scales and arpeggios, and if you can read music and sight read, there’s nothing stopping you from learning jazz.

  5. May 4, 2019 · Rhythmic feel plays a vital part in both classical and jazz music. Where jazz plots a distinctive course is with the idea of ‘swing’. Classical music does have compound time signatures like 6, 9, and 12/8, but the feel of these is not an exact representation of what happens with swing in jazz.

  6. Where classical meets jazz: pianist Bill Laurance selects five timeless albums where iconic jazz musicians crossed over into classical.

  7. Jan 20, 2021 · Classical Music is deeply rooted in the religious tradition of Europe starting in the Medieval Era, evolving through the Renaissance, eventually manifesting into the Common Practice Period starting in 1600. Jazz Music, on the other hand, is rooted in the fusion of African and European musical sensibilities.

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