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'''Bemsha Swing''' (also known as '''Bimsha Swing''') is a jazz standard co-written by [[Thelonious Monk]] and [[Denzil Best]]. The name "Bimsha" comes from a phonetic spelling of "Bimshire," meaning "Little Bimshire," a nickname for Barbados, which is where Best was born.<ref>''Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original,'' by Robin D. G. Kelley. New York: Free Press, 2009, p. 161.</ref>
'''Bemsha Swing''' (also known as '''Bimsha Swing''') is a jazz standard co-written by [[Thelonious Monk]] and [[Denzil Best]]. The name "Bimsha" comes from a phonetic spelling of "Bimshire," meaning "Little Bimshire," a nickname for Barbados, which is where Best was born.<ref>''Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original,'' by Robin D. G. Kelley. New York: Free Press, 2009, p. 161.</ref>


The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.<ref>''The Thelonious Monk Fake Book,'' Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.</ref> The melody consists of a motif around a descending C Spanish [[Phrygian_mode|Phrygian]] scale (the A section) and a chromatic [[Sequence_(music)|sequencing]] of the same motif a fourth higher on an F Spanish Phrygian scale (the B section). The chordal movement by contrast suggests a C Major tonality rather than C Spanish Phrygian, its relative minor f (melodic or harmonic), or its relative Major, A♭ Major. However, the song ends on a D♭maj7(#11) rather than a C chord, a displacement which is characteristic of Monk compositions.
The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.<ref>''The Thelonious Monk Fake Book,'' Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.</ref> The melody consists of a motif around a descending C [[Spanish phrygian scale]] (the A section) and a chromatic [[Sequence_(music)|sequencing]] of the same motif a fourth higher on an F Spanish phrygian scale (the B section). The chordal movement by contrast suggests a C Major tonality rather than C Spanish phrygian, its relative minor f (melodic or harmonic), or its relative Major, A♭ Major. However, the song ends on a D♭maj7(#11) rather than a C chord, a displacement which is characteristic of Monk compositions.


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 19:53, 12 February 2010

Bemsha Swing (also known as Bimsha Swing) is a jazz standard co-written by Thelonious Monk and Denzil Best. The name "Bimsha" comes from a phonetic spelling of "Bimshire," meaning "Little Bimshire," a nickname for Barbados, which is where Best was born.[1]

The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.[2] The melody consists of a motif around a descending C Spanish phrygian scale (the A section) and a chromatic sequencing of the same motif a fourth higher on an F Spanish phrygian scale (the B section). The chordal movement by contrast suggests a C Major tonality rather than C Spanish phrygian, its relative minor f (melodic or harmonic), or its relative Major, A♭ Major. However, the song ends on a D♭maj7(#11) rather than a C chord, a displacement which is characteristic of Monk compositions.

References

  1. ^ Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original, by Robin D. G. Kelley. New York: Free Press, 2009, p. 161.
  2. ^ The Thelonious Monk Fake Book, Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.