QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

QUOTE(Violinia @ Jan 17 2009, 07:44 PM)

QUOTE
I would feel very unsettled at the thought of going into an exam and doing an unprepared impro on the day of the exam
but surely this is the whole point of jazz exams - to be assessed on your ability to improvise in the jazz idiom under exam conditions?
So are you saying you should learn the head in preparation but not look at the solos in advance - at all?! If that's what it's all about, then the current format is surely all wrong?! Perhaps the whole exam should be based on pieces the candidate hasn't seen before? I think if that was what was intended the ABRSM would have structured them like that, surely?
Of course I'm not saying you shouldn't look at the solos in advance! I suggest to my jazz students what scales to utilise and where, and teach them various licks that sound good in certain contexts. I encourage them to play rhythmically, bring out certain chord tones, create 'inner melodies', use a different style in each chorus, how to create tension and release, and how to build a good, interesting if not exciting solo. But in the end I'm giving them the tools to create something spontaneous and as new as possible on the day - I want them to fly! They certainly get marked down for sounding too careful, and if the examiners pick up that they've pre-prepared a solo they'd lose an awful lot of marks! Really what I'm trying to do with my jazz students once they've learnt the basics is to express something of
themselves, to develop their own unique voice and create their own unique style. Otherwise what are we really teaching?
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

I'm now studying with a 'proper' jazzer and we've looked at the solo sections for grade 3 together - we've talked about playing around with different licks, tried out different lines. Now I've gone off to see what I can come up with by myself. I'm still playing around with different ideas at the moment, but eventually I'll settle on the ideas I like the best (probably a week or so before the exam) and stick with that for the exam. I won't have learnt it off by heart, it will just be 'there' because I've gone through that creative process. That doesn't mean that every time I play that piece in future, I will use exactly the same solo...! In the quick study, I WILL improvise completely off the cuff, because that's what that section of the exam requires. I hope all the prep work I'm doing on the three pieces will stand me in good stead for that.
All that sounds fine, except for when you say you're going to settle on the ideas you like best and stick to it -sounds suspicioualy like a prepared solo to me.
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

To come back to the point about being taught jazz by a non jazzer, I'll just repeat a point I've made several times, which is basically about supply and demand. Are there enough jazzers who (a) can and (b) would wish to teach the syllabus? (my feeling is that lots are quite sceptical about them).
No, you're right there - there probably aren't enough. But does that mean non-jazzers should be teaching jazz, even at the early stages? Would you want non-dancers to teach dance? Jazz musicians with no real understanding of classical music to teach classical music?
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

I did grades 1 and 2 jazz just to get me back into playing again after a long break and discovered (quite unexpectedly) a love of that style of music. I worked out for myself that going up the ABRSM grades wasn't going to get me where I wanted to be...so I got myself a specialist teacher. Had I not tried out those grades, I doubt I'd ever developed that enthusiasm for jazz and I think that's what's important. How many parents would just 'know' their child had an interest/flair for jazz and get them a specialist teacher? Not many I imagine. If doing a few grades with a non jazzer sparks that initial interest, I'm all for it.
You may have a point, but what if someone stays with a non-jazzer right up to Grade 5, preparing solos in advance, unable to improvise off the cuff and create something truly original in real time?
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

Why not have a look at the syllabus/some examples of the scales/quick studies etc and see what you think?
I will, but nobody's told me yet what percentage of the marks they take up! For instance, can you fail the quick study, or get very low marks in it, yet get a high mark for the overall exam?
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

Sounds like you are unhappy with the structure/format of the exams as set out by ABRSM. If that's the case, why not raise your concerns with the people who set the exams? To my mind, criticising the students who take them and suggesting the results they get are worthless is not most productive way forward.
The only student I'm criticising is the one who said they pre-prepared their solo virtually down to the last note. I think this is totally wrong. I'm also very unhappy about the poster who said it's fine to set out to fool the examiners that a solo is improvised when it isn't.
QUOTE(jinxi @ Jan 17 2009, 11:58 PM)

The other point to bear in mind is that most of the solos (at least in the early grades) are just 8-12 bars long. I anticipate that by the time I'd 'entered the zone', my solo woud be finished giving the examiner very little to go on!
If most of the solos in the early grades are only 8-12 bars long, then I find it utterly incomprehensible that anyone would feel ready to sit a jazz exam yet still be feeling the need to prepare just one solo as short as that to any serious extent. Work on a number of ideas beforehand, yes - but surely on the day of the exam be prepared to let your ideas flow freely? Otherwise I'm sorry but it just isn't jazz at all! And look, the poster who said the examiners wouldn't notice whether a solo was prepared or not gave the game away - surely you're
supposed to be improvising on the day - otherwise the poster wouldn't have mentioned fooling anyone!