![]() My wife always asks me why I have to practice so much? Well, it’s because of young guys like Sam who remind us all that we need to practice! Thanks for the great solo and inspiration! Feel free to leave any thoughts or comments you might have in the comments section below this post after you pick yourself up off the floor!. He also has a great CD recently released called “Force Field” and an older CD of standards called “Out in the Open” that you can check out! Also, do yourself a favor and go to this page from his website with a Slow Blues on it! You can definitely tell Sam has studied the lines of John Coltrane right? I also have a few other transcriptions of Sam Dillon’s solo here. If you want to check out more from Sam Dillon you can read Sam’s bio here on his website. ![]() Well done guys! This pandemic better end soon or all these great jazz players in isolation will convert every tune from the great American songbook to 400+ tempos and random odd meters just to keep themselves entertained! I had to really hone in on Yosuke’s bass notes and actually work backward for the last 12 bars of the solo. I think I came pretty close in transcribing it. The second page of this solo was especially hard to transcribe because Sam was laying so far behind the beat on some of these lines that it was difficult sometime to tell what note was “supposed” to be on one. I will warn you now that if high speeds scare you, you might want to put on your seatbelt before pushing the play button on the video below (some motion sickness pills might help also….). For some unknown reason, Sam Dillon and the bass player Yosuke have decided that their purpose in life while in isolation is to play Cherokee as fast as humanly possible. It’s just a fact of life that if you lock a jazz musician in a room in isolation or quarantine, they will not survive without a clear unfathomable goal and musical purpose. Believe it or not, this is Cherokee at 400 beats per minute. Special thanks, as always, to Chris Potter for all of his contributions to jazz music and the saxophone.Here is another insane tenor sax solo by Sam Dillon. You can also find him on his facebook page as well as hear samples of his sax playing on his soundcloud page. If you wish, feel free to make a donation if. was my response.Transcriptions are always available for free on my website. This page contains jazz saxophone and flute solo transcriptions by numerous jazz masters.I was asked by a member of the Phil Woods website about my transcription methods. Please support Dimitrii so that he is encouraged to keep transcribing these great sax solos!!! You can find him at Dimtrii Sergheev’s Youtube where you can “like” and “follow” his page to keep up to date with his latest transcriptions. Welcome to Scooby-Sax The Website of Jeff Rzepiela. This Chris Potter tenor saxophone solo on Impressions is relatively short compared to some of Chris Potter’s other live solos but there is a lot of cool lines and ideas throughout the solo to learn from. If you want to know how hard a saxophone can swing then this is the. Here’s the video:Ĭhris Potter at Ground Up Music Fest 2019-Impressions Tenor Sax Solo He’s so melodic and at the same time so lyrical. This is Chris Potter’s burning tenor sax solo on “Impressions” from a Youtube video of Chris playing for a masterclass at the GroundUp Music Fest 2019, Miami Beach. This is the sixth transcription by Dimitrii Sergheev that I am sharing with his permission. I reached out to Dimitrii on Facebook and he happily sent me a bunch of his transcription and gave me permission to post them here on my site. ![]() Dimitrii caught my attention because we seem to have the exact same tastes in great tenor sax solos that need to be transcribed. Last summer, I discovered Dimitrii Sergheev on Facebook when he was posting killer transcriptions on Youtube. ![]() Chris Potter is at the 2019 Groundup Music Fest when people could still hang out together and listen to music. Here is another great tenor sax solo transcription by Dimitrii Sergheev of Chris Potter soloing on Impressions by John Coltrane.
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