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Was invited to put together a live set in January for a fundraiser at a venue I frequent, so have been looking at some possible tunes to do as solo, in a duo, or with a trio and/or possibly a quartet. Jobim’s “Look to the Sky” came to mind as a candidate. It’s one of my favorite bossa tunes. Beautiful theme and interesting changes, though not as well known as Jobim’s other tunes. My work flow to learn a new tune is to pick ten versions and listen through to get a feel for how others approach it. Below is the somewhat random list I put together. Once I internalize the theme and changes, I’ll try calling it at some jam sessions around town and maybe try it at an open mic, and then take it from there. It takes me quite a while to pull a new tune together, so if this one works out I might add it to other tunes that I already know for the set. For now, I just thought I’d share various versions for your listening pleasure.
The first is from the Jobim record, with trombone taking the head, and then two other choruses of the head with different sonorities; no ad-lib, just different timbral takes on the theme. There’s several guitar versions of different flavors, including one for solo guitar. It seems to be popular for horn players, so there’s a couple with trumpet(s) and one with clarinet. To round out the list, I added a couple of vocal renditions. But my favorite version at this point is by Emily Remler from “Firefly.”
Antonio Carlos Jobim
Hiro Kawashima, trumpet
Emily Remler, guitar (with transcription)
John McNeil and Tom Harrell, trumpet
Tatiana Ladymay Mayfield, voice
Anna Caram, voice
Allan Vache, clarinet
Maurizio Piraino, guitar
Victor Biglione, guitar
Gamela, solo guitar
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10-31-2023 08:04 AM
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Nice. You've got to have that just-strolling-along-the-seashore feel or it's nothing
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11-05-2023, 09:48 PM #3joelf Guest
Originally Posted by JazzPadd
But I'd go with your first choice myself, Mr. Jobim himself. Always best to go to the source when learning a tune.
Good luck with your project!Last edited by joelf; 11-05-2023 at 11:27 PM.
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Originally Posted by joelf
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Originally Posted by ragman1
I haven't listened to all of the OPs vids but the Jobim and Gamela versions bear that out.
IME both playing bass and guitar, half note bass is a key for classic bossa nova strolling-along-the-seashore feel. Not always -- use the dotted-quarter & eighth push as needed -- but feel how the piece breathes easy when you let it.
Raney and Abersold, great interview.
Yesterday, 11:21 PM in Improvisation