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August 3, 2024 3:26 pm  #1


Something mainly for musicians

This is my question:
Bert Kaempfert added additional trombone sounds (tones) to Herb Alpert's recording in his version of the "Mexican Shuffle". Listen to my two audio samples.
https://vocaroo.com/1m8kYhJeC8uM
https://vocaroo.com/1au2LXCPwDtL
In the Czech language we call it something like "musical yes-yes support." Maybe "infills" or "colouration" probably best describes what I mean. 
Is there a special name for these tones in English?

 

 

August 6, 2024 10:43 am  #2


Re: Something mainly for musicians

There are two options, I don't know which is valid.
Either there is no musician here, or the English language has no name for it.
But there is one more possibility - that I have expressed myself incorrectly and you do not understand what I am asking...

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August 6, 2024 10:17 pm  #3


Re: Something mainly for musicians

The way you expressed yourself made perfect sense to me, particularly with regard to the word "infills". I also thought of the word "interpolations", but I'm not a musician and so I'm just mentioning a generic term that can be used to describe insertions. I'll also suggest that to the extent that we might have people here who play a musical instrument, they may not necessarily know a term for something like this if it's not part of what they do ... and I think that this would be more of an advanced technique that wouldn't be that likely to be used by many musicians. Hope that this helps.

 

August 7, 2024 3:21 pm  #4


Re: Something mainly for musicians

Dear Lorne,
thank you for your evaluation, that I expressed myself clearly. It is important for me that others understand what I am asking.

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August 8, 2024 8:00 am  #5


Re: Something mainly for musicians

I'd call them overdubs. For example, Phil Spector overdubbed strings onto The Beatles' "Long & Winding Road" (which songwriter Paul McCartney hated).

 

August 8, 2024 9:05 am  #6


Re: Something mainly for musicians

My understanding of what mroldies is asking about is that the infills/interpolations are something that Kaempfert did added as part of his remake of "Mexican Shuffle" -- but that they were part of Kaempfert's original recording, not dubbed in later.

I've been trying to think of any better-known examples of this kind of thing, because then it might be possible to search for anyone commenting on this which might provide the right terminology for it. The best that I've been able to  so far is Blood, Sweat & Tears' album version of "And When I Die". Wikipedia has the following description of what they added: "The album version features two instrumental portions, one featuring an RMI Electra Piano, and the other featuring horns and temple blocks, like a western cowboy song." Those insertions are very different from what Kaempfert did in that they're totally different from the rest of the song, so much so that I wouldn't be surprised if they did get dubbed in after the rest of the song was recorded. So I'd really like to think of an example that is closer to what was done with "Mexican Shuffle". 

 

August 8, 2024 10:55 am  #7


Re: Something mainly for musicians

I must add that the musical language term that I wanted to find in English does not only refer to the editing of already taken compositions.
That way of playing (musical addition) occurs in many compositions, for example in swing.
In that case, the musician says - I don't play the main melody, I play supplements (?), set-offs (?) auxiliary tones (?)...
In Czech, it is named in the plural "přiznávky".
As if a musician wants to say with his instrument - yes, yes, that's it, now it has the right musical flair.
I also thought that it could be "embellishment tones" or "embellishments".

Last edited by mroldies (August 8, 2024 11:13 am)

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August 9, 2024 8:55 am  #8


Re: Something mainly for musicians

I did a bit of searching in light of the additional comments you provided, and I'm wondering if "fills" might at least partly cover what you're looking for based on the following Wikipedia entry.
https://tinyurl.com/4bk4hyap

 

August 9, 2024 12:06 pm  #9


Re: Something mainly for musicians

Lorne wrote:

I did a bit of searching in light of the additional comments you provided, and I'm wondering if "fills" might at least partly cover what you're looking for based on the following Wikipedia entry.
https://tinyurl.com/4bk4hyap

Lorne, thank you so much, I think that's exactly it!  And the musician says - I don't play the main melody, I play fills.
So - this is "fill" in musical terminology:
https://vocaroo.com/1au2LXCPwDtL
 

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