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The Real Book can refer to any of a number of popular jazz fake books, but is generally used to refer to Volume 1 of a semi-underground series transcribed and collated by students at Berklee College of Music during the 1970s. Jazz is a musical art form that originated in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States around the start of the 20th century. ...
A fake book is a collection of musical lead sheets intended to help a performer quickly learn new songs. ...
Berklee College of Music, founded in 1945, is an independent music college in Boston, Massachusetts with many prominent faculty, staff, alumni, and visiting artists. ...
The 1970s decade refers to the years from 1970 to 1979. ...
Wikibooks Real Book Errata has a page on the topic of Real Book Errata Whether the book used is the older "illegal" edition or the newer, Hal Leonard "legal" edition, at least one copy of The Real Book has become an indispensable resource for all aspiring and current jazz musicians. Musicians find it convenient to work from "the book", because it is available in different editions to suit Bb, Eb, and C (concert-pitch) instruments, as well as a bass clef edition. A band leader can literally call out page numbers, since each edition is also paginated identically. Image File history File links Wikibooks-logo-en. ...
Wikibooks logo Wikibooks, previously called Wikimedia Free Textbook Project and Wikimedia-Textbooks, is a wiki for the creation of books. ...
A clef (French for key) is a symbol used in musical notation that assigns notes to lines and spaces on the musical staff. ...
A Bandleader is the director of a band of musicians. ...
History of the 'original' Real Book
Bassist Steve Swallow and pianist Paul Bley are rumored to have been responsible for producing lead sheets for the book.However, this is an urban myth. Compositions by Swallow, Bley, and their friends (e.g., Chick Corea) are heavily represented in The Real Book alongside jazz standards and classic jazz compositions because when the book was created those were the songs that were being played most by jazz musicians in the early 1970's. There is also speculation that composer Stu Balcomb was heavily involved in putting the book together, given his credit in Swallow's album "Real Book" for "cover graphics", and given the presence of several of his tunes in the book. The handwriting in the Real Book matches that in the liner notes for the album as well, suggesting that the whole book was written out by Swallow. Again, this is not accurate - but Swallow knew who to call to get the picture for his album. Only the first volume is the original. The two following volumes of The Real Book were produced — volume 2 is printed in characteristically 'rough' handwriting and transcription, while the third volume is typeset on a computer. Steve Swallow (b. ...
Paul Bley is a free jazz pianist born in Montreal, Canada in 1932 and long-time resident in the USA. His music characteristically features strong senses both of melodic voicing and space. ...
A lead sheet is form of music notation the describes the melody, lyrics and harmony of a popular song. ...
Armando Anthony Chick Corea (born June 12, 1941) is a multiple Grammy Award winning American jazz pianist/keyboardist and composer. ...
Jazz standard refers to a tune that is widely known, performed, and recorded among jazz musicians. ...
The transcriptions in The Real Book are unlicensed, meaning that no royalties are paid to the artists whose songs appear in the book. Consequently, the book violates copyright and is therefore illegal. In the past, it was usually sold surreptitiously in local music stores, often hidden behind the counter for customers who asked. PDF editions of the book are now often available on P2P networks. This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
PDF is an abbreviation with several meanings: Portable Document Format Post-doctoral fellowship Probability density function There also is an electronic design automation company named PDF Solutions. ...
A peer-to-peer (or P2P) computer network is a network that relies on the computing power and bandwidth of the participants in the network rather than concentrating it in a relatively few servers. ...
The name could have been influenced by the Boston alternative weekly newspaper, The Real Paper, launched by writers of Boston's The Phoenix after a labor dispute, but is most likely a play on words from the common name for these types of song folios: "fake book" The Real Paper was a Boston alternative weekly newspaper that ran from August 2, 1972, to June 18, 1981, often devoting space to counterculture issues of the early 1970s. ...
The Phoenix is an alternative weekly newspaper company based in Boston, Massachusetts that emphasizes arts and entertainment coverage, as well as alternative political viewpoints. ...
A fake book is a collection of musical lead sheets intended to help a performer quickly learn new songs. ...
A variety of dates have been attributed to the book. The April 1990 issue of Esquire magazine featured The Real Book in the "Man At His Best" column by Mark Roman, in an article called "Clef Notes." He states, "I don't know a jazzman who hasn't owned, borrowed, or Xeroxed pages from a Real Book at least once in his career," and he quotes John Voigt, Berklee's music librarian, "The Real Book came out around 1971. The only material available in print then was crap." Another feature surfaced in April 10, 1994, in The New York Times article, "Flying Below the Radar of Copyrights." Manhattan guitarist Bill Wurtzel is quoted as saying, "Everyone has one, but no one knows where they come from. I got mine in 1987 from a bassist who lives in Queens and who attended the Berklee School of Music in Boston; many in jazz circles suspect that students there reproduced the first copies of it in the mid-70's." Esquire is a magazine for men owned by the Hearst Corporation. ...
The New York Times is a daily newspaper published in New York City by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. ...
The Texas musician Blake Milton has created the Electronic Real Book that contains all four transpositions (C, Bb, Eb, bass). This for-profit version allows musicians to sort or find charts by song title, artist, genre/style, key, or tempo and can be embedded with the original recordings for quick reference. Music sequencing software Steinberg Cubase has "Real Book" as a choice in Page Mode Setting, meaning that the key signature would be displayed only once at the top of the page in the notated sheet music, as is the style in the fake book. Cubase is a series of MIDI, music sequencer and digital audio editing computer applications (commonly known as a DAW - Digital Audio Workstation), originally created by the German firm Steinberg in 1989. ...
History of the 'new' Real Book In 2005, the world's largest print music publisher, Hal Leonard, obtained the rights to most of the tunes contained in the original Real Book and published the first legal edition, calling it the Real Book Sixth Edition in tacit acknowledgment of the five previous illegal versions. The cover and binding are identical to the 'old' Real Book, and the books even employ a font which is remarkably similar to the handwritten style of the originals. The other main improvements are that most of the editing mistakes have been corrected; and, of course, every tune has been licensed and the composers are being paid for the use of their music. The books were initially priced cheaper than the illegal ones were usually sold for — with the stated intention[citation needed] of driving the underground distributors out of business or boosting their own sales of the book. As of July 2006 the price has been increased. // History In the late 1930s in Winona, Minnesota, Harold Hal Edstrom, his brother Everett Leonard Edstrom and their friend Roger Busdicker had formed a very popular dance band. ...
Hal Leonard subsequently released The Real Book, Volume II, Second Edition in answer to the Real Book, Volume II. In July 2006 they released The Real Book, Volume III, Second Edition. The Real Vocal Book, Volume I, Second Edition also appeared recently, clearly a (more legible) response to the old book of similar title. These books contain much, but not all, of the same material as their counterparts; and in most cases, but not all, charts from the new Hal Leonard books are compatible with the Real Book charts. Some of these differences are noted in the Real Book Errata article on Wikibooks.
Other Real Books The New Real Book, also in 3 volumes, published by Sher Music, is another legal and readily available modern alternative. The collection of tunes in it differs from the original Real Book, but this edition offers some of the same songs, in new transcriptions and a different notation. Music notation is a system of writing for music. ...
Some other music publishers also apply the term Real Book to their own publications - for example, the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music publishes The AB Real Book. Warner Bros. Music has three real books. The Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music or ABRSM is an educational body that provides examinations in music. ...
External links - Song Index (covers dozens of fake books and real books, legal and illegal)
- Pop Song Piracy, Fake Books, and a Pre-history of Sampling - Article by Barry Kernfeld
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