Abstract: While jazz improvisation is undeniably a highly technical skill demanding deep musical understanding and competence, recent advances in technology have significantly streamlined the processes of practice and skill acquisition. Students today have easy access to sheet music, transcriptions, improvisational and theoretical resources, and recordings, which make it easier to learn tunes, idiomatic patterns, and stylistic elements for improvisation. However, to attain the deeper artistic and structural essence of jazz—a musical tradition that values both innovation and fidelity to its tradition, it is essential to learn beyond assembling surface-level materials and engage more intentionally with the underlying principles of the music. Therefore, this revisits the foundational approach to jazz improvisation by drawing on core musical principles and insights from historical practices. By emphasizing fundamental yet essential structures and traditional pedagogical strategies through three key concepts of “internalization,” “realization,” and “individualization,” it aims to better understand the principle and essence of jazz improvisation practices beyond the surface-level fluency and thus to cultivate a path toward a more personal, creative, and authentic improvisational voice in the jazz standard repertoire.
Seungyoung Hong (Fri,) studied this question.