Pat Metheny. (Across the) Heartland Ensemble: Danny Gottleib. Keywords: Ostinato Pentatonic Diatonic Syncopation Polymetric Motif Motif Variant

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Pat Metheny 5 (Across the) Heartland-1979 Keywords: Ostinato Pentatonic Diatonic Syncopation Polymetric Motif Motif Variant Key Features of Jazz Fusion: Jazz Fusion began in the late 60s when jazz artists began fusing Jazz with other musical styles e.g. Rock, Latin and African. New technologies previously shunned by Jazz artists were embraced. This included using synthesisers, electric guitars and basses and effects. Jazz fusion pieces were often longer and featured a larger proportion of pre-composed music in preference to improvised solo sections. Many artists also experimented with odd time signatures and often took a more fluid approach to structure, rhythm and metre. American Garage reached No.1 in the US Billboard jazz charts as well as No.53 in the pop charts in 1980! American Garage was the Pat Metheny Groups second album. It represented Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays most collaborative effort up until that point. Pianist Lyle Mays would go onto become Metheny s most frequent collaborator. Heartland is the second track on this 5 track album. The album also features Mark Egan on bass and Danny Gottleib on drums. This quartet would form the nucleus of the band from 1977-1985. Ensemble: Pat Metheny Lyle Mays Mark Egan Danny Gottleib 6 and 12 Electric and acoustic Guitar Piano and synthesizers Fretless Electric Bass Drums

Analysis The structure of the piece is essentially Intro + ABA Introduction 0:00-1:18 Section A1 1:18-2:36 4/4 syncopated semiquaver keyboard ostinato x4. Opening melody performed on electric guitar-g major pentatonic-motif X. Polymetres feature from 0:41. 0:41 Second melody based on irregular 7 note Motif Y. It is imposed on the 4/4 ostinato creating a polymetric effect. Ostinato ends, drum beat starts, 4/4 groove established. Inventive jazz chord progressions now accompany guitar melody. Bass alternates between providing harmonic and melodic accompaniment. Section B 2:36-4:55 A1 Coda- 2:18-2:36 Section A2-Guitar Solo Timeline: 0:00-1:14 At 2:02 distinctive 4 bar Diatonic G Bm7 Em7 Bm7 Am7 Bm7 C D (I-III-VI-II-II-III-IV-V) chord pattern heard twice with guitar playing a variation of motif X=X₁ Sense of coda to A section. Chromatic ensemble figures repeated twice to end section. Ostinato returns, chords superimposed on top. A range of tonalities explore: G myxolydian (5 th mode) with chords F C and G as well C minor. Acoustic guitars introduced. Section climaxes (4:42) with Latin piano flavours Cm, Cm(ma7), Cm7 before Eb, F, G crescendo and piano glissando into guitar solo. The distinctive G Bm7 Em7 Bm7 Am7 Bm7 C D (I-III-VI-II-II-III-IV-V) from A1 returns and is used as a basis for the guitar solo. This repeats 9 times. The final 4 times the guitar restates Motif X₁with the guitar restating motif X 1 st st final is used in this section to form harmonic foundation for the guitar solo. A2 Coda-6:29 Chromatic ensemble figures return again twice to close the piece. The piece begins with a 1 bar ostinato on the keyboard repeated 4 times. It is a syncopated 4/4 semi quaver pattern emphasising the last semiquaver of each beat. It only uses the tonic and dominant notes G and D.

This ostinato provides the foundation for the opening 1:14 of the piece and returns in Section B. Introduction Melody 1 The opening melody is performed monophonically on the guitar (0:10) answered by the bass. Unusually this melody is 6 bars long and repeated twice. The melody is pentatonic in G major. Introduction Melody 2 At 0:41-1:13 the guitar and bass perform a 7 note descending motif in octaves. This asymmetric figure is played across the bar line giving a polymetric effect against the 4/4 ostinato. The cymbals crescendo before a sustained Gma9 chord followed by a Cma7 at 1:13-1:18 when the ostinato stops. The drums fill over the sustained chords before commencing a drum beat at section A1. Section A1-1:18-2:36 Trademark Metheny composition at its finest. The section begins with a G pedal in the bass before signature lyrical melodies seamlessly flow over inventive and syncopated jazz chord patterns and rhythms. Note how the drums emphasise the guitar melodies and the bass alternates between providing harmonic support and accompanying the guitar melodies. 1:52 a variation of opening melody, motif X, is heard on the bass twice, this time in a two bar fashion rather than over the original 6 bar format. (Bass 4 octaves below written pitch)

The guitar then echoes this melody at 2:00 in an extended format over a new symmetrical 4 bar chord pattern: Following this there is then a sense of coda. Syncopated chromatic ensemble figures repeated twice to end this section. Section C 2:37 The ostinato returns and the drums return to playing atmospherically. Chords are superimposed over the ostinato to imply a range of tonalities and key centres. Chords F, C and G are frequently used over the ostinato giving a Mixolydian flavour whist a C minor tonality is also implied at times. Metheny uses violining on the guitar (playing the string(s) with the volume turned down then turning it up giving a soft crescendo violin bow effect). Metheny introduces acoustic and 12 string guitars. The piano plays chords Cm, Cm(ma7) and Cm7 in a Latin like fashion towards the end of this section (4:43) before a climatic Eb F G progression in whole tones (4:48), with a cymbal crescendo to lead to the guitar solo. Guitar Solo 4:57 The ostinato stops and the drums return to playing a 4/4 beat. The 4 bar chord sequence briefly heard at A1 returns to provide the foundation for the guitar solo. This sequence is repeated 9 times with Metheny recapping the main theme X₁ four times ad.lib. to end (the last an octave up). This is the same melody used in section B which is also based on the opening melody: The same coda at the end of A1 then returns to end the piece.

Musical Elements: Melody The melody is predominantly pentatonic (root, 2, 3, 5, 6) based on 2 motifs X and Y. It features heavy syncopation and metric displacement against the ostinato. This technique is often used in African music. When the ostinato and static harmony give way to jazz chord progressions, the melody becomes more chromatic and adapts to follow the shifting key centres. Metheny restates motif X at the end of the piece, before the chromatic ensemble figures close the piece. Structure Intro+A(coda) B A (coda) Rhythm and Metre Although predominantly in 4/4 with a steady tempo, the syncopations and metric displacements in the melody and ensemble figures often make this pulse hard to detect. A steady 4/4 beat is only really established as late as the guitar solo! Harmony and Tonality The Introduction features static harmony with a G5 chord implied by the ostinato. The B section then uses sophisticated syncopated jazz chord progressions that follow the melody. When the ostinato returns at B, chords are superimposed over the ostinato, notably chords F, C, G and C minor. Chords Eb F G, each a whole tone apart are used as a climax to the B section. The guitar solo then features the distinctive 4 bar chord sequence first heard in A1: Dynamics Many of the dynamics have been compressed during the recording process. All of the instruments, bar the drums and acoustic guitars used in section C, are electric and at the mercy of amplification. The drums however, usually the determining factor in dynamics, are played from a quiet atmospheric dynamic to a medium dynamic. This is consistient with the jazz fusion idiom that seldom uses heavy dynamics. Instrumentation and timbre Metheny, ever the advocate of new sounds and technology, uses clear chorus inflected guitar sounds for the melodies (an effect that makes notes slightly 'wobble' and sound larger than they are). He also uses more traditional folk-like 6 and 12 string acoustic guitar sounds both strummed and picked in the B section.

Methney uses violining, an electric guitar technique whereby the guitarist plays a note or chord with the volume down and slowly fades it up giving a bow like soft crescendo. Plenty of synthesiser and keyboard sounds are used throughout. A fretless bass is also used throughout allowing the player to perform with more vibrato and lyricism, similar to a cello. Exam Style Questions: 1. What does pentatonic mean and how is it use in this piece? 2. What is an ostinato and how is it used in this piece.? 3. Discuss the various styles of music that have been fused in this piece. (12 marks)

4. How has technology been embraced in this piece? 5. What is metrical shifting and how is it used in this piece? 6. Discuss some of the contributions and advancements in jazz found in this piece? (12 marks)

7. Discuss ways Metheny can be described as a pioneer of jazz. (12 marks)