Improvisation (also
known as improvising) is the act of making something up as you go along -- an
act with which we all have a little experience. Remember playing House or Doctor
as a child, letting the game go wherever your mind would take you? That was
improvisation. No rules, no boundaries, just the limitless potential of your
imagination.
Similarly,
musical improvisation is the act of
"writing" (creating it as you play) a song
while performing it, a technique found most
often in jazz and bluegrass (but can be
traced back to renowned classical
improvisers like Handel and Bach). Of
course, it's a little more complicated than
an imaginative children's game. Though
improvisation is a highly creative and
flexible technique, it requires great skill
on the part of the musician. A musician
involved in an improvisation must have a
detailed knowledge of chord structure and
complicated scales and modes. The musician
must also have an intuitive ability to
structure a song on the fly; great
improvisation thrives on its ability to
sound not improvised but rather wholly
composed. That illusion, the ability of a
song to seem anything but spontaneously made
up, is part of improvisation's allure.
There are two
basic forms of improvisation: structured
improvisation and free improvisation.
Structured improvisation, though a
contradiction in terms, is the most common
of the two. In this form, musicians will use
a pre-determined series of chord changes,
usually held down by the rhythm section, as
the song's base. The lead instrument in the
improvisation (sometimes also
pre-determined) then have the freedom to
create new melodies and harmonies from these
pre-determined chords. The flexibility of
this improvisation form is dependent on the
flexibility of the chord changes, and the
musicians involved must be able to play
exactly what they hear in their heads, as
some complicated changes may not allow for
large deviations.
If we were to
improvise on a song such as "Billy Boy", for
example, we would follow the chord
progressions of the song, but make up a
different melody for it. Some musicians
choose to stay fairly close to the melody by
using neighboring tones and half-step slides
and so on; other musicians feel free to
completely abandon the traditional melody
and make up a new melody entirely.
In addition to
songs, many musicians in the jazz and rhythm
& blues tradition improvise endlessly on the
12-bar blues, which has a chord progression
using only the I, IV and V chords (also
known as the "primary chords" of a given
key) of whatever key the musicians are
playing in. For example, if a jazz group was
playing in the key of Bb, the improvisations
would be based on the I, IV and V chords in
the key of Bb: namely Bb, Eb, and F.
Of course
musicians also add extra notes to chords
such as the 7th -- especially in the blues
-- and sometimes also change the harmony
somewhat from time to time. But the
recurring theme always reverts to the I - IV
- V formula.
Free
improvisation, on the other hand, is far
more like a game of House or Doctor -- it
has no rules. Instead of focusing on harmony
or melody, free improvisation focuses on the
feeling and texture of the music and the way
the instruments complement each other. This
form tends to be far more experimental and
rarely adheres to one style or genre or
music -- it is, quite simply, what it is.