Au Privave

"Au Privave" is a bebop jazz standard composed by Charlie Parker in 1951.[1][2] Parker recorded "Au Privave" on January 17, 1951, for the American record label Verve. The origin of the title is unknown ("Privave" is not a French word), though Parker is known to have played with words when naming his compositions.[3] A variant of this title is "Après Vous" (After You), a song recorded by drummer Max Roach.

 \version "2.22.0"  \header { tagline = "" }  global = {   \time 4/4   \key f \major   \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##f   \tempo "" 4=220   \set chordChanges = ##t }  chordNames = \transpose c c, \chordmode {   \global   f1 |   g2:m7 c2:7 |   f2 g2:m7 |   c2:m7 f2:7.5+   bes1:7 |   bes2:m7 es2:7 |   f4 }  melody = \relative c' {   \bar ".|:"   f8 e f c r4 a'8 gis |   a c, r e r g f c |   g' f a bes a f g es |   r8 d'4 r8 r des4 f,8 |   b4.^\lheel f'8 r b, bes4~ |   bes2 as8 f g f |   c'4 }  \score {   <<     \new ChordNames \chordNames     \new Staff {       \global       \melody     }   >>   \layout { } }  \score {   \unfoldRepeats   <<     \new ChordNames \chordNames     \new Staff {       \global       \melody     }   >>   \midi { } }
First eight measures of Au Privave[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Au Privave, Jazzstandards.com, retrieved on December 1, 2010
  2. ^ The Real Book, Volume I, p. 37
  3. ^ "How to say "Au Privave"". Saxontheweb.net. 6 November 2010. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  4. ^ Parker, Charlie (2006). "Au Privave". The Real Book. C Instruments. Vol. 1 (6 ed.). Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-634-06038-0.