Other projects
Arrangements for small ensembles
Here are a selection of small ensemble arrangements for Duncan’s songs. The lead can be vocals or soloist. They will be displayed as PDF files unless you install the Scorch plugin which will allow you to hear and transpose the parts. This plug in is only available for Apple iPad or iPhone users from the App store. These scores are only available from scoreexchange.com.
Street fighter’s guide to improvisation
The book started as scales and exercises and wound up also covering arranging, composition, how to be an instant film composer, musician’s survival tips, ear training and how to play the piano in half an hour! I was thinking of including a snake bite remedy but thought twice about it!!
Basically the book is about freeing yourself and having options.
Musicians are quite often intrigued by my rather cavalier attitude to harmony! I find, especially in America, they ask questions such as What do you think about when you’re playing? – Do you have a system? – Did you study with George Russell?
My usual tongue – in – cheek answer was “If in doubt, go up a semitone” Then one day I sat down and analysed my sense of harmony and devised a set of scales and arpeggios which would let anyone find their own voice. This prompted me to write a book called The Street Fighter’s Guide to Improvisation.
The young person’s guide to the jazz orchestra
“Some years ago I played in a big band comprising of studio players We used to play at a pub called The Lord Nelson so the band was named Nelson’s Column. There were avid fans there, but because there was no leader, there were no announcements. I felt sorry for these poor people and it occurred to me that there should be something written to explain how a big band works. I thought of Benjamin Britten and work he had composed, in which he had taken a composition by a seventeenth century composer named Henry Purcell, and did precisely that. He featured each section of the orchestra and wrote a variation with narration which showed how a symphony orchestra works. I used the same Purcell theme as my model and wrote accordingly. We broadcast the suite with three hours rehearsal and then played it to a live audience, which says a great deal for British musicians. This is the music you will hear.”
(D. Lamont)
The personnel is as follows: Derek Watkins, Ronnie Hughes, Eddie Blair, Henry Lowther & Alan Downey (trumpets), Andy Macintosh, Stan Sulzmann, Jimmy Hastings, Phil Todd & Ronnie Ross (saxes), Bobby Lamb, Chris Pyne, Malcolm Griffiths, Pete Beachill & Jack Thirwell (trombones), Gordon Beck & John Taylor (piano), Frank Ricotti (piano), Neil Cameron (bass), Phil Lee (guitar), Art Morgan (drums).