Song: Dinah Artist: Red Nichols and his five pennies This song is a good example of pure jazz. Linear improvisation is used to make this song unforgettable. The charisma of Jazz enhanced with the substitute chord change construction, and harmonization of established works) at many levels. The rhyme is simple but Trumpet and Saxophone give it a fanatic feelings. 2- I ain’t got nobody (fats Waller) The first solo, “I Ain’t Got Nobody” was a song that Waller give back to closely a decade later at a solo piano sitting. Once he proceeds to the chorus, he shows the melody with tenderness, but zests things up with amusing dotted eighth/sixteenth note asides. He choose the tempo for the second chorus and deals a rhythmic variation on the melody in lieu of a real improvisation. Waller grips the tempo during the course of, but another is a bore and the master only derives to life in the final two choruses. …show more content…
Striking is the use of the penultimate “blue note” (flatted third) at the end of “A,” -simply unused by the amateur or new performer. The harmonic headway appears to be measured by the crusade of the bass line, high and low by step (Ebm -Bb7/D -Ebm7/Db - Ab/C -Db -Ab9/Eb -Db/F -E°7 -Ebm -Ebm7/Db -Cm7(b5)) before repaying to the boost via the circle of fifths, using parallel minor