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Binek Dissertation 2017 PDF
Binek Dissertation 2017 PDF
May 2017
APPROVED:
Critical Analysis of Her Decca Recordings, 1943-1952. Doctor of Musical Arts (Performance),
May 2017, 136 pp., 17 tables, 9 figures, 25 musical examples, discography, bibliography, 23
titles.
This study examines the evolution of Ella Fitzgerald’s scat syllable vocabulary
during a key developmental period in her career when she was recording for Decca
Records. Between 1943 and 1952, Fitzgerald established the syllabic vocabulary that
would serve as a defining characteristic of her improvisational style for the rest of her
career. Fitzgerald is commonly praised as the greatest vocal improviser in jazz history, but
while much has been written about Fitzgerald’s melodic and harmonic approach to jazz
improvisation, little has been written about her syllabic approach. Timbre and articulation
are considered to be vital elements of any jazz musician’s style; the study examines the
thirteen scat solos recorded during this time period, using scat syllable choices to discuss
timbre and articulation. This analysis provides a model for further research of its kind, as
well as informing historically accurate performance practice by both teachers and students
of jazz singing.
Copyright 2017
by
Justin G. Binek
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
asked if I would write the section on improvisation for her groundbreaking 2008 book Jazz
Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity. That project served as my first opportunity to
pursue this kind of analytical research in jazz singing, an opportunity for which I remain
to acknowledge Fran Morris Rosman at the Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation for her
I would like to thank the members of my DMA committee: Jennifer Barnes, Dr.
Richard Sparks, and Dr. John Murphy. The three of you are remarkable people and
educators, and I am grateful for your generosity, your wisdom, and your friendship. Special
acknowledgement also needs to be given to Rosana Eckert for her service as a committee
member on my three previous recitals, her infectious enthusiasm for teaching, and her
extensive knowledge of vocal pedagogy for non-classical singers. I am grateful for the other
faculty with whom I have had the pleasure of studying during my time at the University of
North Texas, as well as my fellow doctoral students in jazz studies and the vocal jazz and
choral conducting teaching fellows whom I am privileged to call my colleagues and friends.
My parents, William and Georgia Binek, instilled a love of learning in me at an early age,
and have continued to exuberantly support my musical passions throughout every stage of
my career. Last, but certainly not least, I need to thank Claire Binek for agreeing to uproot
our lives and move halfway across the country so I could pursue this degree. Her patience,
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................................................... iii
LIST OF TABLES..................................................................................................................................................... v
CHAPTER 3. “HOW HIGH THE MOON,” “OH, LADY BE GOOD,” AND THE SHIFT IN
FITZGERALD’S SOLO APPROACH ................................................................................................................ 25
DISCOGRAPHY................................................................................................................................................... 136
iv
LIST OF TABLES
Page
Table 1. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Cow Cow Boogie” ............................................... 13
Table 4. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Dream A Little Dream of Me” ........................ 17
Table 9. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “How High the Moon” ........................................ 31
Table 10. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in 1947 Recordings .............................................. 33
Table 11. Double-Time Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Smooth Sailing” .................... 39
Table 13. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Airmail Special” ............................................... 45
Table 17. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in “Common Practice” Syllabic Set ................. 58
v
LIST OF FIGURES
Page
Figure 5. The shift in Ella Fitzgerald’s syllabic vocabulary between 1945 and 1947. ............ 54
vi
LIST OF TRANSCRIPTION EXAMPLES
Page
Ex. 12. “Jump Did-Le Ba,” Dizzy Gillespie scat solo excerpt. .............................................................. 26
Ex. 17. “Flying Home“ (1945), altered syllabic content on repetitive song quote. ................... 36
Ex. 18. “Oh, Lady Be Good” (1947), Repetitive syllabic content on freely improvised solo
material. ................................................................................................................................................................. 37
Ex. 20. “Smooth Sailing,” double-time material, presented in context of the surrounding
choruses (0:57-1:45). ....................................................................................................................................... 40
vii
Ex. 23. “Rough Ridin,” improvisation on the bridge (2:29-2:46). .................................................... 48
viii
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Ella Fitzgerald is commonly praised as the greatest vocal improviser in jazz music’s
history; she, in fact, declared herself to be exactly that. 1 Improvisational methods praise
her ideas as “excellent models for students of vocal jazz” 2 and “musically and verbally
inventive, filled with the joy of her creativity… represent[ing] the essence and pinnacle of
scat singing”; 3 critical commentaries praise her “perfect balance between a steam
Fitzgerald as an exemplar of scat singing in definitions of the term, 5 using phrases like
“[scat singing] is most closely associated by the general public with Ella Fitzgerald and her
many imitators.” 6 Though much has been written about Fitzgerald’s melodic and harmonic
improvisational approach, very little has been written about her syllabic approach to scat
singing, which may be her most significant contribution to this particular art form. This is
particularly curious given that one of the most common complaints voiced to vocal jazz
instructors by novice jazz singers is “I don’t know what syllables I should use.” Most
1Will Friedwald, Jazz Singing: America’s Great Voices from Bessie Smith to Bebop and Beyond (Cambridge: Da
Capo Press, 1990), 282.
2 Patrice Madura, Getting Started with Vocal Improvisation (Reston, VA: MENC, 1999), 29.
3 Bob Stoloff, Scat! Vocal Improvisation Techniques, (Brooklyn: Gerard & Sarzin, 1996), 8.
4Holden, “Ella Fitzgerald’s Playfulness Ripens with Time’s Passage.” This citation refers to the reprint in
Leslie Gourse, The Ella Fitzgerald Companion: Seven Decades of Commentary (New York: Schirmer Books,
1998), 162.
5The New College Encyclopedia of Music defines scat singing as a “jazz term for the use of nonsense syllables
and other wordless effects in the course of a vocal number. The technique has been employed in a rapid and
virtuoso way by Ella Fitzgerald amongst others.” The New Harvard Dictionary of Music defines scat singing as
“A jazz solo of vocal nonsense syllables… Scat came to be represented by virtuosic interpretations (by, e.g.
Ella Fitzgerald) of rapid bebop instrumental improvisation.”
6 Carr, Fairweather, and Priestly, Jazz: The Rough Guide, 887.
1
teachers, and most method books, recommend that students listen to recordings of great
jazz singers to acquire a sense of authentic style, articulation, and syllabic choice. And
though Fitzgerald is usually suggested as a starting point for guided listening, little has
influence on other singers. In Chip Deffaa’s profile of Fitzgerald in Jazz Veterans: A Portrait
Gallery, 7 written shortly before her death in 1996, he wrote “No living singer is more
respected by other singers,” quoting Annie Ross, Jon Hendricks, Anita O’Day, Ruth Brown,
In light of both the esteem with which both Fitzgerald’s peers and the next
generation of jazz singers held her, and the lack of analysis dedicated to the syllabic content
of her scat solos, it seems worth examining the development of Fitzgerald’s style as a scat
singer, as documented through the numerous recordings she made on Decca Records
between 1939 and 1954. These recordings are not always held in critical esteem, 8 but a
closer examination reveals that it was during this period that Fitzgerald established much
of the melodic, harmonic, and particularly syllabic vocabulary that would mark her
improvisational style through the course of her career. 9 This syllabic vocabulary was a
7Originally published in 1996; subsequent citations of this article will refer to the reprint in Gourse, Ella
Fitzgerald, Seven Decades of Commentary, 162-166.
8Scott Yanow, on page 78 of The Jazz Singers refers to much of her output on Decca as “juvenile novelties,”
and Stuart Nicholson references the “critical opinion that would have us believe Ella’s Decca output was an
artistic no-go area” on page 131 of Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography of the First Lady of Jazz.
9Geoffrey Mark Fidelman made this argument as well in First Lady of Song: Ella Fitzgerald for the Record. On
page 17, he stated, in reference to an early Decca recording of “(If You Can’t Sing It) You’ll Have to Swing It”,
“Here, then was the first real hint of the style that was to become the backbone of the career of Ella
Fitzgerald.” On pages 45-46, he addressed her recording of “It’s Only a Paper Moon” with the Delta Rhythm
Boys, noting “…Ella’s scat singing was featured, this talent obviously having progressed.”
2
huge part of her sense of style and rhythm, as noted in 1954 by Louis Bellson, who stated:
“The greatest drum solo I ever heard was done by Ella at this time doing her scat
improvisational style, and is important to the style of any scat singer. My research seeks to
be an example of a kind of research in timbre and articulation – research that has only been
done on a limited basis for jazz vocalists and instrumentalists. For years, jazz musicians
have analyzed notes, but not sounds; this document seeks to join a discussion of timbre and
Very little has been written about anyone’s syllabic approach to scat singing, much
Jeebies” and “Hotter Than That” solos, along with Betty Carter’s “Babe’s Blues” solo; 13
Bauer did mention Fitzgerald in reference to Ella’s “mimic[ing] the tonguing, phrasing, and
10Geoffrey Mark Fidelman, First Lady of Song: Ella Fitzgerald For the Record (New York: Birch Lane Press,
1994), 79.
11 This limited discussion includes works like William Bauer’s “Scat Singing: A Timbral and Phonemic
Analysis” and Diana Spradling’s Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity, both of which explore the
issue of scat timbre and articulation from an academic perspective. Improvisation method books like Scott
Fredrickson’s Scat Singing Method, Bob Stoloff’s Scat!, and Michele Weir’s Vocal Improvisation, present
syllables for students to incorporate, but not in a categorized manner.
12 Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines a vocable as “a word composed of various sounds or
303-323.
14 Ibid.
3
with… vocal licks out of Fitzgerald’s vocabulary such as the rapid alteration of syllables that
Cerulli discussed syllabic choice at two points in “Ella… The Jazz Horn”, featured in
the liner notes to the compilation album The Best of Decca. 16 First, he wrote, “It seems, too,
in the syllables she uses for improvising, she chooses the ones most easily adaptable to the
flow of a tenor sax.” 17 Later, he continued with, “She adopts many of the phrasing devices of
the tenor. There are many times when she will take a word like in and sing it ‘i-hin’; or and
will emerge ‘a-ha-hand’; and she will have improvised within the word or a vowel, in the
her conception is purely instrumental, just like a trumpet or a saxophone ‘blowing’ through
the blues changes.” 19 Nicholson also commented, “Her ‘set riffs’ would remain common to
every performance of the song she gave for almost fifty years; they represented the
building blocks around which she would construct her improvisation. This was a factor
15 Ibid.
16 Reprinted in Gourse, Ella Fitzgerald: Seven Decades of Commentary, 41-42.
17 Gourse, Ella Fitzgerald: Seven Decades of Commentary, 42.
18 Ibid.
19 Stuart Nicholson, Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography of the First Lady of Jazz (New York: Da Capo Press, 1995),
139-140.
20 Ibid.
4
In a previous study, I transcribed a live recording of “Oh, Lady Be Good” 21 from
Verve Records’ compilation album The Essential Ella Fitzgerald: The Great Songs, 22
reviewing the 525 scat syllables used by Fitzgerald during the course of the solo,
identifying 69 unique syllables and grouping them into four categories, along with
identifying combinations used on triplet figures. 23 This remains one of the few published
Like Gunther Schuller in his article “Sonny Rollins and the Challenge of Thematic
Improvisation,” 25 I drew large conclusions based on analysis of one particular solo. 26 While
improvisational style, it is hardly the exemplar. In writing “The Art and Craft of Scat Singing
and Melodic Alteration,“ I then wrote similar analyses of “representative solos” from Mel
21 Diana Spradling, Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity (Edmonds, WA: Sound Music
5
Tormé, 27 Sarah Vaughan, 28 Betty Carter, 29 Mark Murphy, 30 and Bobby McFerrin, 31 then
drew a series of ten general conclusions about scat singing from these solos 32 and stated in
regard to scat syllables: “An analysis of these solos shows that the most common scat
syllables are: Ah, Ba, Bi, Bop, Bu, Da, Dat, Di, Dl, Dn, Do, Dow, Du, Ee, Oo, Wa, and Ya; they
are used in interchangeable combinations with each other. Although these are not the only
I later wrote a paper exploring Ella’s mid-1940s output for Decca Records in which I
examined the following Ella Fitzgerald recordings in detail: “Into Each Life, Some Rain Must
Fall” (1944), “It’s Only a Paper Moon” (1945), “Flying Home” (1945), and “Oh, Lady Be
Good” (1947). 34 In writing about her syllabic vocabulary, I chose not to use International
Phonetic Alphabet in favor of labels that were based on more colloquial spellings to
account for the more pliable behaviors of vowels in scat singing, compared with the
Europeanized vowel behaviors for which IPA analysis is commonly used. 35 For each solo, I
broke down both the complete syllabic set utilized, with the number of times each syllable
was used in the solo, and identifications of notable and/or unusual behaviors. For “Flying
27Spradling, Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity, 91-102. “Route 66” (Live at the Maisonette,
Atlantic, 1975)
28 Ibid., 103-107. “Shulie a Bop” (Sarah Vaughan, Verve, 1954).
29 Ibid., 109-114. “Frenesi” (Meet Betty Carter and Ray Bryant, Columbia, 1955).
30 Ibid., 115-120. “Effendi” (Beauty and the Beast, Muse, 1985).
31 Ibid., 121-128. “Moondance” (Bobby McFerrin, Elektra, 1982),
32 Ibid., 129-131.
33 Ibid., 130.
34 Justin Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between
6
Home” and “Oh, Lady Be Good,” I analyzed each solo chorus in the recording individually,
summarized the complete recording, and well as identified broader groups based on
variants of “base” scat syllables. I also analyzed Fitzgerald’s onset attacks, or articulations,
dividing them into six different groups for purposes of comparison and contrast. 36
as a continuation of the research I began in “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing
36 Ibid., 36-37.
37Ella Fitzgerald and the Ink Spots, recorded November 3, 1943, master number 71482-A, first issued on
Decca 18587.
38 Recorded December 20, 1947, master number 74324, first issued Decca 24387.
39Ella Fitzgerald accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra, recorded September 20, 1949, master number
75282, first issued Decca 24868.
40 Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra, recorded August 25, 1950,
7
“Rough Ridin’” (complete recording)
1. Codify individual scat syllables used and the number of times they are
accounting for greater than two percent of the content of a particular solo.
assumption that if a certain syllable (or variants thereof) are used ten or
also allows for more informative analysis; while it is interesting to note the
number of times Fitzgerald sang doo, dooee, doom, doon, doop, or doot in a
syllables to fall under the broader “doo” syllabic group for purposes of
scat syllables.
43“Mr. Paganini” and “Preview” both are from Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra,
recorded June 26, 1952. “Mr. Paganini” was originally recorded and issued in two parts, with master
numbers 83010 and 83011, both first issued Decca 28774. “Preview” has master number 83014, first issued
Decca 28321.
8
4. Explore comparisons between syllabic behaviors in the various solos, both in
terms of exact number of times used and on a percentage basis for purposes
and onsets.
After transcribing and analyzing these solos, I codified a system of scat syllables
utilized by Ella Fitzgerald during this foundational period. In doing so, I needed to make
educated judgments about how to describe the syllables she utilized. As I wrote
previously, 44 “An issue involved with describing vowel behaviors and shapes is that most
studies of singers’ vowel behaviors involve the use of the International Phonetic Alphabet
(IPA). While this is effective for analyzing more Europeanized vowel behaviors, as Diana
Spradling wrote, “Our everyday, American vernacular speech is full of schwa substitutions.
With the advent of scat singing, many of our [a] vowels have become schwa vowels and for
a very practical reason. There isn’t enough time to adjust the jaw down and then back up
into a more shallow position in faster tempos; and when the jaw is more open, it tends to
slow down the tempo and the groove of a tune. There’s a huge articulatory difference
pronunciation from becoming too articulated, too formal and/or sounding too ‘trained.’” 45
With that in mind, I chose to represent Fitzgerald’s vowel behaviors through the following
vernacular descriptors:
• ah (as in “caught”)
• ee (as in “free)
44Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between 1944
and 1947,” 8-9.
45 Spradling, Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity, 31.
9
• eh (as in “bed”)
• ey (as in “gray”)
• ih (as in “hit”)
• oh (as in “boat”)
• oo (as in “boot”)
• ooh (as in “book”)
• ow (as in “shout”)
• oy (a diphthong combining the aforementioned oh and ee vowels)
• uh (the unstressed, open schwa “uh”
Additionally, most glottal onsets will imply a slight scoop, or pitch bend, in terms of
articulation and pitch. This is an inherent aspect of Fitzgerald’s stylistic approach, and it is
10
CHAPTER 2
In my prior research, 46 I examined two early examples of scat solo fills Ella recorded
for Decca: 1944’s “Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall,” 47 and 1945’s “It’s Only A Paper
Moon.” 48 To this analysis, I have added an even earlier example of Ella providing
background fills with The Ink Spots, 1943’s “Cow Cow Boogie.” 49 Like the recording of “Into
Each Life Some Rain Must Fall,” Fitzgerald provides background fills behind Hoppy Jones’
by the Ink Spots in the 1930s and early 1940s: lead singer Bill Kenny (1914-1978) would
sing the complete melody, then bass Orville ‘Hoppy’ Jones (1902-1944) would recite either
the first half or the bridge of the song. ‘Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall’ represents a
slight departure from the template, as Kenny sings the melody, then Fitzgerald sings more
stylized version of the melody, followed by the half-chorus monologue with scat fills.”
46Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between 1944
and 1947,” 9-11.
47 Ella Fitzgerald and the Ink Spots, recorded August 30, 1944. Master number 72370, first released on Decca
23356.
48Ella Fitzgerald and the Delta Rhythm Boys, recorded March 27, 1945. Master number 72798, first released
on Decca 23425.
49 Ella Fitzgerald and the Ink Spots, recorded November 3, 1943, master number 71482-A, first issued on
Decca 18587.
50 Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between 1944
and 1947,” 9.
11
Ex. 1. “Cow Cow Boogie” (0:34-0:55).
12
Table 1. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Cow Cow Boogie”
The four most common syllable groups (Doo, Dih, Dee, and Oo) account for exactly
half (50.0%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups identified above
emerges when we combine the syllabic data from “Cow Cow Boogie” with her similar
recorded background fills of this period on “Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall” and “It’s
13
Table 2. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in Background Fills, 1943-1945
Bah 1 Doh 1
Bahp 1 Doht 1
Bee 9 Doo 16
Beh 1 Duht 2
Bih 6 Dwee 1
Boh 8 Ee 9
Boo 11 Eh 1
Booh 1 Hey 1
Boy 2 Ih 3
Bree (flip /r/) 2 M 1
Buh 8 Oo 9
Bwee 1 /Ool 2
Dee 8 Tree (flip /r/) 3
Deel 1 Uh 3
Dih 7 Uhm 1
Dl 5 Uhp 1
Dm 7 Yuh 1
Doo 16 (11.8%)
Boo/Booh 12 (8.9%)
Oo 11 (8.1%)
Bee 9 (6.7%)
Dee 9 (6.7%)
Ee 9 (6.7%)
Boh 8 (5.9%)
Buh 8 (5.9%)
Dih 7 (5.2%)
Dm 7 (5.2%)
Bih 6 (4.4%)
Dl 5 (3.7%)
Uh 5 (3.7%)
Ih 3 (2.2%)
Tree (flip /r/) 3 (2.2%)
Six syllables (Doo, Boo/Booh, Oo, Bee, Dee, and Ee) account for slightly less than half
(48.9%) of syllabic content in these fills. Adding two more syllables (Boh and Buh) results
14
in over sixty percent (60.7%) of syllabic content being covered. The fifteen syllable groups
clear picture of Ella Fitzgerald’s syllabic approach to scat singing prior to 1946. During this
time, her syllabic content was primarily driven by the following ten syllable groups, with
the six most common (Boo/Booh, Dl, Dee, Oo, Doo, and Bee) accounting for nearly half
(49.1%) of all syllables utilized, with the ten groups accounting for 60.5% of total syllables
used.
In 1946, Fitzgerald toured with the Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra, and both her
51Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between 1944
and 1947,” 12-21
52Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied. by Vic Schoen and His Orchestra, recorded October 4, 1945. Master number
73066, first released on Decca 23956.
15
harmonic and syllabic approaches to improvisation changed dramatically. Before exploring
this topic in greater detail through study of her extended improvisations, though, it is
worth examining three recordings featuring fills (background or otherwise) that Fitzgerald
made in the postwar era. In her 1949 recording of “Basin Street Blues,” 53 Fitzgerald sang
one chorus of the song in the style of her primary influence, Louis Armstrong, interspersing
While this excerpt is amusing, its brevity does little to inform listeners and research
about Fitzgerald’s evolution as a scat singer without being placed in context with other
solos from the same post-Gillespie timeframe. A more instructive standalone example
comes from a 1950 recording of “Dream A Little Dream of Me.” This particular recording is
actually a duet with Armstrong, and Fitzgerald provides a series of scat fills in the
background after Armstrong takes the melody at the beginning of the second verse.
53 Ella Fitzgerald accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra, recorded September 20, 1949, master number
16
Ex. 3. “Dream A Little Dream of Me” (1:57-2:23).
Table 4. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Dream A Little Dream of Me”
Syllable Groups
Comprising >2%
17
Nine syllable groups (Dih, Buh, Doo/Dooh, Bah, Bee, Boh, Boo, Dn, and Doh) account
for 75.4% of the solo’s syllabic content, and the thirteen syllable groups identified account
for 93.0% of the syllables used. The final solo to examine in looking at scat fills of this
period is Fitzgerald’s 1952 recording of “Mr. Paganini,” 54 featuring solo fills in the breaks
between stanzas. This series of eight fills is notable for its repetition of ideas and use of
quotes, not only her signature “Tisket, A-Tasket,” but also a pair of nods to Charlie Parker’s
54 Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra, recorded June 26, 1952. “Mr. Paganini” was
originally recorded and issued in two parts, with master numbers 83010 and 83011, both first issued Decca
28774.
55 Infamously, a number of historians suggest that this song is named after Parker’s heroin dealer, Emry
“Moose the Mooche” Byrd. Source: Woideck, Charlie Parker: His Music and Life, 124-125.
18
Ex. 6. “Mr. Paganini,” solo fill 3 (2:07-2:16).
19
Ex. 11. “Mr. Paganini,” solo fill 8 (4:28-4:36).
Analysis of Fitzgerald’s syllabic choices in this solo reveals her increased reliance on
the D onset consonant, along with more use of vowel and glottal syllabic onsets.
20
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bee 22 (12,5%)
Ee 15 (8.5%)
Doo 14 (8.0%)
Boo 13 (7.4%)
Dih 12 (6.8%)
Dl 11 (6.3%)
Dn 9 (5.1%)
Ih 8 (4.5%)
Bah 7 (4.0%)
Bih 7 (4.0%)
Dah 7 (4.0%)
Eh 5 (2.8%)
Oh 5 (2.8%)
Doh 4 (2.2%)
Oo/Ooh 4 (2.2%)
Seven syllable groups (Bee, Ee, Doo, Boo, Dih, Dl, and Dn) account for nearly half
(46.6%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The fifteen syllable groups identified above account
With the data compiled, a clearer picture of Fitzgerald’s solo fills in the postwar
period emerges.
21
Table 6. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in Background Fills, 1949-1952
Individual Syllables: 262
Unique Syllables: 62
/Ah 2 Duh 2
Ah 4 /Ee 4
Bah 15 Ee 7
Bahp 3 Eel 1
Bee 4 Eeoo 2
Beh 3 Eep 1
Bih 8 Eh 5
Bihl 1 Hee 2
Boh 7 Ih 9
Boo 13 Lah 4
Booh 2 Leht 1
Booih 1 M 3
Boop 1 Mah 1
Boy 1 Muh 1
Buh 8 N 1
Dah 7 Noh 1
Dee 5 Nuh 1
Deh 1 Oh 5
Dlee 1 Oo 2
Dih 18 Ooh 1
Diht 1 Oon 1
Dl 12 Ow 1
Dm 2 Spoh 1
Dn 14 Uh 3
Doh 7 Yah 2
Dohp 1 Yih 1
Doo 20 Yoo 3
Dooh 1 Yooh 1
Dool 1 Yuh 4
Doop 1 Zeh 1
Dow 1 Zihp 2
22
The thirteen syllable groups identified above account for 72.1% of the total syllables
used.
The following three graphs provide a visualization of the shift in Ella’s scat fill
syllabic content.
23
The following graph provides a direct visual comparison between the two syllabic
sets.
1943-1945 1949-1952
it is important to look beyond fills and to examine longer recordings with more improvised
scat solo material. My previous paper explored her 1947 recording of “Oh, Lady Be Good”; 56
for this work, I chose to explore that same year’s “How High The Moon.”
56 Binek, “Ella Fitzgerald: syllabic choice in scat singing and her timbral syllabic development between 1944
24
CHAPTER 3
“HOW HIGH THE MOON,” “OH, LADY BE GOOD,” AND THE SHIFT IN
In Chapter 2, I wrote about the harmonic and syllabic shifts in Ella Fitzgerald’s
improvisational approach following her tour with Dizzy Gillespie in 1946. I would argue
that the reasons for the syllabic shift are twofold. First, the faster tempos associated with
the Bebop style of jazz required a different approach to articulations and vowels. It is
physically necessary to sing with a narrower syllabic range, and with articulation driven by
the tongue and not the jaw. As Diana Spradling wrote in Jazz Singing, “Jazz solo singing
lower jaw, 2) a busier, more active tongue, and 3) increased resonance in the upper jaw
region.” 57 Second, the change in Fitzgerald’s syllabic choices was also inspired by the
articulations Dizzy Gillespie and his sidemen used as soloists, both instrumentally and
vocally. Recordings of Gillespie’s orchestra during this period frequently feature Gillespie
and his sidemen (usually John Brown, but occasionally with Kenny Hagood) singing scat
melodies and then trading improvised vocals. 58 Fitzgerald herself quoted Gillespie’s “Oo-
Bop-Sh’-Bam” in the fifth chorus of arguably her most well-known and influential solo,
25
Ex. 12. “Jump Did-Le Ba,” Dizzy Gillespie scat solo excerpt.
This change in articulation created a shift in Fitzgerald’s solo timbre as well. The
onset consonant D naturally creates a shift in a singer’s resonance, focusing tone into a
more forward resonant placement at the front of the hard palate. This consequently results
in a brighter tone quality in general. 59 I previously wrote about the young Fitzgerald’s tone
26
quality being “reedy,” in the style of Artie Shaw; 60 Ella’s immediate post-Gillespie tonal
To examine this change, I will first refer to my prior analyses of Fitzgerald’s 1945
(pre-Gillespie) recording, “Flying Home,” 61 combined with the material from her recorded
consonant, an increase of vowel and glottal onsets, and a decrease in syllables with a B
onset consonant. The three choruses of “How High the Moon” are shown below, followed
27
Ex. 14. “How High the Moon,” chorus 1 (1:27-2:02).
28
Ex. 15. “How High the Moon,” chorus 2 (2:02-2:36).
29
Ex. 16. “How High the Moon,” chorus 3 (2:37-3:02).
The combined data for the complete solo is presented on the following page.
30
Table 9. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “How High the Moon”
Individual Syllables: 440
Unique Syllables: 76
Ah 15 Dloh 2
/Ah 4 Dm 6
Bah 27 Dn 26
Bahb 1 Doh 2
Bahm 3 Doo 26
Bee 33 Dooh 3
Beem 2 Dow 1
Beeoo 1 Down 3
Beeooh 4 Doy 1
Beh 6 Duh 1
Bey 9 Ee 4
Beym 1 /Ee 8
Beyoo 1 Eeoo 1
Bih 21 Ey 1
Bihm 1 Huh 1
Bihp 2 Ih 14
Biht 1 /Ih 2
Blee 1 Lah 4
Bley 1 Leh 1
Blih 2 Lih 1
Boh 4 Loh 1
Boo 8 Loo 1
Booh 9 Looh 1
Boom 2 M 1
Bow 1 Oh 3
Bowm 2 Oo 47
Boy 1 /Ooee 1
Buh 3 Ooh 2
Dah 9 Oom 3
Dee 42 Oom 1
Deem 1 Oot 1
Deeoo 2 Ow 2
Deh 13 Oy 1
Dih 13 Uh 2
Diht 7 Voh 1
Dl 18 Yooh 1
Dlee 1 Yuh 2
Dlih 1
31
The following Syllable Groups comprise greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Oo/Ooh 55 (12.5%)
Dee 45 (10.2%)
Bee 40 (9.1%)
Bah 31 (7.0%)
Doo/Dooh 29 (6.6%)
Dn 26 (5.9%)
Bih 25 (5.7%)
Dl 22 (5.0%)
Dih 20 (4.5%)
Ah 19 (4.3%)
Boo/Booh 19 (4.3%)
Beh/Bey 17 (3.9%)
Ih 16 (3.6%)
Deh 13 (3.0%)
Ee 13 (3.0%)
The six most common syllabic groups (Oo/Ooh, Dee, Bee, Bah, Doo/Dooh, and Dn)
account for over half (52.8%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The fifteen syllable groups
Combining “Flying Home” with the syllabic data gleaned from my prior analysis of
32
Table 10. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in 1947 Recordings
Individual Syllables: 1141
Unique Syllables: 129
Dl 114 (10.0%)
Dee 112 (9.8%)
Oo/Ooh 108 (9.5%)
Doo/Dooh 74 (6.5%)
Bee 65 (5.7%)
Ah 62 (5.4%)
Dih 51 (4.5%)
Bah 47 (4.1%)
Bih 44 (3.9%)
Dn 42 (3.7%)
Boo/Booh 30 (2.7%)
Oh 30 (2.7%)
Beh/Bey 27 (2.4%)
Ih 27 (2.4%)
Ee 25 (2.2%)
The seven most common syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, and
Dih) account for over half (51.4%) of the syllabic content from these two solos. The sixteen
syllable groups identified above account for 77.5% of the total syllables used.
62“Arco Bass” refers to a portion of the third solo chorus of “Oh, Lady Be Good,” in which Fitzgerald imitates
Slam Stewart’s signature “mumble/hum” style of vocalizing simultaneously with his bowed (arco) bass
improvisational solos.
33
45.00%
40.00%
35.00%
30.00%
25.00%
20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
Vowel/Glottal…
Beh/Bey
Ee
Oh
B Onsets
Bah
Boo/Booh
Arco Bass
Bih
Ih
D Onsets
Bee
Dl
Dn
Boy
Dih
Doo/Dooh
Nah
Ah
Dee
Oo/Ooh
Pre-1947 Lady/How High
To summarize: prior to 1946, six syllabic groups (Dl, Boo, Dee, Oo, Doo, Bah, and Ee)
account for nearly half (49.1%) of the syllabic content in Fitzgerald’s solos. The most
common syllabic groups, in order of frequency are Dl, Boo, Dee, Oo, Doo, Bah, Ee, Bee, Dih,
Nah, Boy, Bwee, Lah, Ah, Dah, Duh, and Oo. The percentage breakdown of syllabic onsets is
In “Oh, Lady Be Good” and “How High the Moon,” seven syllabic groups (Dl, Dee,
Oo/Ooh, Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, and Dih) account for over half (51.4%) of the syllabic content
in these two solos. Three syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, and Oo/Ooh) occur much more
frequently than any other group (114, 112, and 108 times, respectively; the next largest
group, Doo/Dooh, occurs 74 times). The most common syllabic groups, in order of
frequency, are Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, Dih, Bah, Bih, Dn, Boo/Booh, Oh,
Beh/Bey, Ih, raspy arco bass syllables, and Ee. The percentage breakdown of syllabic onsets
Ella Fitzgerald’s improvisational style continued to evolve in the late 1940s and
early 1950s. Her “vocalized instrumentals” of 1951 and 1952 in particular refined the
34
template for her Bebop vocabulary and eventually provided the “common practice”
approach that defined her scat solos for the rest of her career.
35
CHAPTER 4
IMPROVSATIONAL STYLE
instrumental selections for Decca. These recordings reveal stylistic and syllabic
refinements that characterized Fitzgerald’s scat singing from this point forward.
Fitzgerald’s frequent inclusion of song quotes raises the question of whether it is necessary
to distinguish between syllables used on song quotes and those used in non-song-quote
lines. It could be argued that if a song quote includes the repetition of a set of syllables, then
This argument is based on the assumption that Ella Fitzgerald repeated herself
exactly when singing repetitive song quotes, and that she did not use repetitive syllabic
syllabic content when singing repetitive quotes, however, and she likewise regularly
repeated syllabic material when improvising freely. The following two examples illustrate
36
Ex. 18. “Oh, Lady Be Good” (1947),
Repetitive syllabic content on freely improvised solo material.
“Smooth Sailing” 63 provides a fascinating case study for two key reasons. First, it is a blues,
a style and form not commonly associated with Fitzgerald. 64 Secondly, there is a ten-
• Chorus 1: statement of the melody, punctuated with B-3 organ hits provided by
Hank Jones.
• Chorus 2: alteration of the melody, punctuated with organ hits and background
pads from the Ray Charles Singers.
63 Recorded June 26, 1951, master number 81215, first issued Decca 27693.
64 Milt Gabler, liner notes for Ella Fitzgerald 75th Anniversary Celebration, 23.
37
• Chorus 7: statement of the original melody, with a cadential modification over
the last four measures.
Analyzing the double-time material at the end of Chorus 4 shows the refinements
that Fitzgerald was making to her Bebop vocabulary at the beginning of the new decade.
38
Table 11. Double-Time Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Smooth Sailing”
Individual Syllables: 79
Unique Syllables: 24
Bah 7 Doh 3
Bee 2 Doo 9
Bih 8 Dooh 4
Bihl 1 Dool 1
Booh 5 /Ee 1
Boy 1 Heep 1
Broo (flip /r/) 3 Hih 1
Dah 4 Ih 1
Dee 3 Oo 1
Deh 2 Yah 1
Dey 2 Yoo 1
Dih 7
Dn 5 Growls 2
The following Syllable Groups comprise greater than 2% of the syllabic content in
Doo/Dooh 14 (17.7%)
Bih 9 (11.4%)
Bah 7 (8.9%)
Dih 7 (8.9%)
Boo/Booh 5 (6.3%)
Dn 5 (6.3%)
Dah 4 (5.1%)
Deh/Dey 4 (5.1%)
Broo (flip /r/) 3 (3.8%)
Dee 3 (3.8%)
Doh 3 (3.8%)
Bee 2 (2.5%)
Six syllable groups (Doo/Dooh, Bih, Bah, Dih, Boo/Booh, and Dn) account for 59.5%
of the solo’s double-time syllabic content. The twelve syllable groups identified above
39
Ex. 20. “Smooth Sailing,” double-time material,
presented in context of the surrounding choruses (0:57-1:45).
40
A comparison of the double-time vocabulary with the solo at large and specifically
The six most common Six syllable groups The four most common
syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Bih, Bah, Dih, syllabic groups
(Boo/Booh, Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, and Dn) (Boo/Booh, Doo/Dooh,
Bih, Bah, and Oo) account account for 59.5% of the Bih, and Oo/Ooh)
for over half (54.5%) of solo’s double-time account for over half
the solo’s syllabic syllabic content. The (53.2%) of the solo’s
content. The thirteen twelve syllable groups non-double-time syllabic
syllable groups identified identified above account content. The ten syllable
above account for 76.1% for 83.5% of the syllables groups identified above
of the total syllables used. used. account for 74.5% of the
total syllables used.
B Dental Onsets:
151 (45.8%) B Dental Onsets: B Dental Onsets:
D Dental Onsets: 27 (34.1%) 127 (48.2%)
107 (32.4%) D Dental Onsets: D Dental Onsets:
Vowel/Glottal Onsets: 41 (51.8%) 76 (28.9%)
30 (9.1%) Vowel/Glottal Onsets: Vowel/Glottal Onsets:
3 (3.8%) 27 (10.2%)
41
If the double-time material in Fitzgerald’s recording of “Smooth Sailing” helps to
enhance understanding of her double-time/bebop scat singing style, then the entirety of
her 1952 recording of “Airmail Special” 65 is an example of her stylistic transformation, and
in many ways serves as a precursor for the classic solos that she recorded with both Verve
Records and Pablo Records, including “Blue Skies,” 66 “Lemon Drop,” 67 “Oh, Lady Be Good”
This 1941 jazz standard, written by Benny Goodman, Jimmy Mundy, and Charlie
Christian, provides an ideal showcase for Fitzgerald’s refined harmonic and syllabic
improvisational approach. After she sings the melody in combination with guitar, she
follows with two choruses of improvisation, a shout chorus performed with the Ray Charles
Singers, and a truncated head out, combining one phrase of the melody, the bridge from the
form, and one phrase from the shout chorus. The following present the two improvisational
65 Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by the Ray Brown Orchestra, master number 82075, first issued Decca 28126.
66 Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Songbook, Verve Records, 1958.
67 Ella in London, Pablo Records, 1974.
68 Ella Fitzgerald at the Opera House, Verve Records, 1974. As I discussed in the introduction, I wrote an
analysis of this solo, which is published in Diana Spradling’s Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and Authenticity
(Edmonds, WA: Sound Music Publications, 2007), 83-89.
69 Ella and Basie, Verve Records, 1963.
42
Ex. 21. “Airmail Special” scat choruses 1 and 2 (0:40-1:54)
43
44
Table 13. Syllabic Tallies and Syllable Groups in “Airmail Special”
Total Individual Syllables: 689
Total Unique Syllables: 75
Ah 4 Dooh 1
/Ah 1 Dooih 10
Bah 25 Dool 3
Bahp 4 Doot 16
Bee 30 Dow 7
Beel 1 Duh 2
Beep 1 Ee 4
Bih 14 /Ee 9
Bihm 1 /Eel 2
Blee 4 Eh 2
Bloo 3 Ehrl 2
Boh 1 Gree (flip /r/) 1
Boo 19 Hoy 1
Booee 1 Ih 9
Booh 2 /Ih 3
Boop 1 Ihl 1
Bow 1 L 1
Boy 1 Lee 2
Bree (flip /r/) 27 Leh 1
Buh 6 N 2
Bwahp 1 Nah 1
Bwee 3 Oh 6
Dah 15 Oo 33
Dahee 1 /Oo 1
Dee 30 /Ooee 1
Deel 9 Ow 7
Deh 4 /Ow 4
Dehr 1 Uh 1
Dih 70 Vah 2
Diht 3 Vow 1
Dl 7 Wah 1
Dn 84 Wow 1
Dnah 1 Wuh 1
Doh 12 Yah 8
Dohn 1 Yuh 2
Doht 1 Yoo 6
Doo 141 Yooh 2
Dooee 1
45
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
The three most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Dn, and Dih) account for nearly
half (47.9%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The fourteen syllable groups identified above
Recorded on the same session as “Air Mail Special,” “Rough Ridin’” 70 presents a
different sort of solo altogether. Like “Air Mail Special,” “Rough Ridin’” is a 32-measure
AABA song form; however, while Fitzgerald followed the form exactly in her improvised
solo on “Air Mail Special,” her first improvised solo on “Rough Ridin’” takes place over a
truncated form. After singing the melody of the tune in duo with guitar (and once again
backed by the Ray Charles Singers), Fitzgerald improvised over half of an A section, then
70 Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by the Ray Brown Orchestra, master number 82076, first issued Decca 27948.
46
Ex. 22. “Rough Ridin,’” improvised scat material (1:14-1:57).
Fitzgerald then joins the Ray Charles Singers for two A sections of shout chorus,
before she improvises on the bridge for the first time. After this brief improvisation,
Fitzgerald sings one A section of melody before joining the singers on a four-measure coda.
47
Ex. 23. “Rough Ridin,” improvisation on the bridge (2:29-2:46).
What makes “Rough Ridin’” unique from the standpoint of Fitzgerald’s evolution as
a scat singer is that this is a medium-slow swing tune, but her syllabic vocabulary
throughout the recording is more in line with what would have been associated previously
with her double-time and bebop vocabulary. The 366 individual syllables (62 unique) of
this solo illuminate the stylistic traits, such as an increased use of Y as an onset consonant,
that characterized her scat singing for the next two decades.
Doo/Dooh 96 (26.3%)
Oo/Ooh 37 (10.1%)
Yoo/Yooh 37 (10.1%)
Boo/Booh 30 (8.2%)
Dee 25 (9.6%)
Bee 24 (6.6%)
Dih 23 (6.3%)
Bih 12 (3.3%)
Bah 11 (3.0%)
Dah 10 (2.7%)
Ow 8 (2.2%)
The four most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Oo/Ooh, Yoo/Yooh, and
Boo/Booh) account for over half (54.6%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable
groups identified above account for 85.4% of the total syllables used.
48
B Dental Onsets: 88 (24.0%)
D Dental Onsets: 171 (46.7%)
Vowel/Glottal Onsets: 52 (14.2%)
Y Onsets: 50 (13.7%)
Recorded on the same 1952 session as “Mr. Paganini,” “Preview” 71 serves as the
final example in this analysis, and the culmination of Fitzgerald’s evolving syllabic
approach to both improvisational and melodic scat singing. This is also one of the more
melody, accompanied by tenor saxophone. She then takes one chorus of improvisational
scat singing, followed by one instrumental chorus. At this point, she returns to the bridge
(with slight embellishment), before closing with two A sections of melody (the second
71 Ella Fitzgerald, accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra, recorded June 26, 1952, master number 83014,
49
Ex. 24. “Preview,” improvisational chorus (0:54-1:41).
50
Table 15. Syllable Groups in “Preview.”
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Doo/Dooh 81 (18.8%)
Boo/Booh 69 (16.0%)
Bee 46 (10.6%)
Dm 36 (8.3%)
Oo/Ooh 35 (8.1%)
Dn 21 (4.9%)
Dee 19 (4.4%)
Bih 18 (4.2%)
Yoo 17 (3.9%)
Bah 11 (2.5%)
Dah 11 (2.5%)
The four most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, Bee, and Dm)
account for over half (53.7%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups
time when Ella Fitzgerald refined her craft as a scat singer and established the syllabic
framework that became one of her defining characteristics as an artist. Chapter Four will
tie together the data extrapolated from transcribing and analyzing Ella Fitzgerald’s work
51
CHAPTER 5
singer. While these conclusions are useful in terms of researching Fitzgerald’s evolution as
an artist, they also present tools for teachers of vocal jazz improvisation to help their
1) Ella Fitzgerald’s syllabic vocabulary changed perceptibly between 1945 and 1947,
under the influence of Dizzy Gillespie and his orchestra, in terms of dealing with
bebop tempos and instrumental and instrumental and vocal articulation for
improvisation.
Once again, a key example of this can be seen by comparing Fitzgerald’s pre-1945
syllabic content with that of 1947’s “Oh, Lady Be Good” and “How High the Moon.” This
and glottal onsets, and a decrease in syllables with a B onset consonant. These syllabic
approaches can also be heard in Dizzy Gillespie’s recorded vocals of the period, particularly
his trading with John Brown and Kenny Hagood on tunes like “Ool Ya Koo.” Examining
Fitzgerald’s solo on “Flying Home” (1945), plus fills on “Cow Cow Boogie” (1943), “Into
Each Life Some Rain Must Fall” (1944), and “It’s Only a Paper Moon” (1945) reveals the
following:
• Seven syllabic groups (Dl, Boo, Dee, Oo, Doo, Bah, and Ee) account for nearly half
(49.1%) of the syllabic content in these solos.
72 These conclusions formed the basis of a research presentation given at the Jazz Education Conference on
January 5, 2017.
52
• The most common syllabic groups, in order of frequency: Dl, Boo, Dee, Oo, Doo,
Bah, Ee, Bee, Dih, Nah, Boy, Bwee, Lah, Ah, Dah, Duh, and Oo.
Examining Fitzgerald’s solos on “Oh, Lady Be Good” and “How High the Moon”
• Seven syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, and Dih) account for
over half (51.4%) of the syllabic content in these solos.
• Three syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, and Oo/Ooh) occur much more frequently than
any other group (114, 112, and 108 times, respectively; the next largest group,
Doo/Dooh, occurs 74 times).
• The most common syllabic groups, in order of frequency: Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh,
Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, Dih, Bah, Bih, Dn, Boo/Booh, Oh, Beh/Bey, Ih, raspy arco
bass syllables, and Ee.
For teachers of jazz singers, Ella Fitzgerald’s pre-1945 syllabic framework provides
an excellent starting point for students who are beginning to explore scat singing,
particularly if students focus on the six syllabic groups identified above. Instead of being
instructed to “go out and make something up” (as often happens, particularly in ensemble
settings where the director may not have much, if any, vocal jazz experience), students can
focus on six syllabic elements that are consistent with established jazz tradition, yet still
nonrepeating syllabic chains. As students progress to more complex soloing styles at faster
tempos, the stronger emphasis of D as a means of articulation becomes more and more
53
and the imploded D explodes minimal air, enhancing students’ ability to craft
Figure 5. The shift in Ella Fitzgerald’s syllabic vocabulary between 1945 and 1947.
45.00%
40.00%
35.00%
30.00%
25.00%
20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
modification as well. While Ella’s pre-Gillespie syllabic set is more varied in terms of vowel
usage, her post-Gillespie tone quality is brighter, due to a change in tone placement
resulting from increased use of the D dental consonant. Though the range of vowel
behaviors used is narrower in scope, the overall tone quality of the post-Gillespie syllabic
set is brighter and “brassier,” owing to this shift in tonal placement. In examining
Fitzgerald’s approach to syllables, articulation and timbre are inextricably linked to each
other.
2) Analysis of “Oh, Lady Be Good,” “How High the Moon,” measures 39-48 of “Rough
Ridin’,” and “Airmail Special” creates a template for Ella Fitzgerald’s bebop
vocabulary that other singers can emulate.
Even cursory aural analysis of scat solos by artists ranging from Jon Hendricks and
73 For more information regarding the importance of the D syllabic onset in terms of articulation up-tempo
54
Mel Tormé to Kurt Elling and Karrin Allyson illustrates how they have incorporated
section of “Rough Ridin’” and the entirety of “Airmail Special” to the storied 1947
55
Ee 19 Ley 6 /Ow 4
/Ee 17 Leyt 1 Oy 4
/Eel 2 Lih 8 /Oy 1
Eeoo 1 Liht 1 Oyl 1
Eeooh 1 Loh 8 Oym 1
Eet 1 Loo 3 Rih 1
Eh 9 Looh 1 Rihp 1
/Ehm 1 Loot 1 Uh 13
Ehn 1 Luh 3 Vah 2
Ehr 2 M 1 Voh 1
Ehrl 2 N 2 Vow 1
Ey 11 Neh 1 Wah 1
Gree (flip /r/)1 Nih 1 Wow 1
Heep 1 Noh 1 Wuh 1
Hih 1 Nuh 1 Yah 10
Hoy 1 Oh 37 Yee 1
Huh 1 Ohb 1 Yih 1
Ih 35 Ohn 3 Yihn 1
/Ih 5 Oht 2 Yihp 1
Ihl 1 Oo 128 Yoh 1
Iht 1 /Oo 1 Yoo 7
L 1 Ooee 2 Yooh 4
Lah 12 /Ooee 2 Yuh 5
Lahd 1 Ooh 3
Laht 1 /Ooh 3 Arco Bass 26
Lee 5 Oom 1 GROWLS 2
Leh 12 Oon 1 Percussives 1
Lehn 1 Oot 3
Leht 1 Ow 9
The seven most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Dih, Dn, Bee, and
Bah) account for over half (52.3%) of the syllabic content in these solos. The fourteen
syllable groups identified above account for 71.1% of the total syllables used.
56
B Dental Onsets: 429 (22.5%)
D Dental Onsets: 933 (48.9%)
Vowel/Glottal Onsets: 427 (22.4%)
What this means for teachers of jazz singing is that the same template that worked
for Ella Fitzgerald (and for the generations of singers who followed in her footsteps) can
also work for our students. This template will assist our students in developing Bebop
B and vowel onsets, and the use of /dl/ and /dn/ as connective syllables in the creation of
improvisational lines.
14.00%
12.00%
10.00%
8.00%
6.00%
4.00%
2.00%
0.00%
syllables should not in themselves be the main focus of soloing; the purpose of scat
syllables is to effectively serve improvised musical ideas. With that in mind, the acquisition
of syllabic vocabulary is best done in the same way Fitzgerald acquired hers: by listening
57
syllabic choices in a manner that best suits both stylistic considerations in the music and
instrumentals” of 1951 and 1952 in particular that Fitzgerald combined her new Bebop
vocabulary of the mid-1940s with some earlier syllabic textures and use of Y as a syllabic
onset to essentially formalize the syllabic approach to scat singing that she would use for
the remainder of her career. While I will not post the complete list of 1,817 individual
syllables (144 of them unique) found in these four solos, here are the important data points
to be gleaned.
Table 17. Ella Fitzgerald Scat Syllable Choices in “Common Practice” Syllabic Set
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
58
The five most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, Dn, Dih, and Oo/Ooh)
account for over half (52.6%) of the syllabic content in these solos. The thirteen syllable
groups identified above account for 82.4% of the total syllables used.
20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
To complete this analysis, I present a pair of charts, the first dealing with Syllabic
Groups in the four “Ella Fitzgerald Templates” analyzed, the second with syllabic.
59
Figure 8. Syllabic groups by name and frequency.
25.00%
20.00%
15.00%
10.00%
5.00%
0.00%
consonants, with an increasing emphasis on the “Doo/Dooh” syllable group. This graph also
illustrates how certain syllabic emphases result in shifts elsewhere in the syllabic set.
Three examples:
“Common Practice” syllable set, the “Ah,” “Ee,” “Ih,”, and “Oh” vowel/glottal groups
syllable. There is logic to this usage. “Doo-Dn-Doo” is a combination that flows easily
o Lady/How High: Ah, Bey, Bih, Dee, Dl, Ee, Ih, Oh, Oo/Ooh, Arco Bass.
60
o Double-Time/Bebop: Bah, Dih
o Common Practice: Bee, Boo/Booh, Br (flip /r/), Dah, Dm, Dn, Doo/Dooh,
Yoo/Yooh.
50.00%
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
10.00%
0.00%
Pre-1947 Lady/How High Double-Time Common Practice
This final graph illustrates the subtle and not-so-subtle shifts in Fitzgerald’s syllabic
onsets during the time period examined. Her use of D onsets became more and more
prevalent, peaking at nearly 50% in both her Double-Time/Bebop and Common Practice
syllable sets. B was a commonly used onset during her Pre-Gillespie recordings, but
Fitzgerald’s use dropped off for a while before she returned to using the B articulator more
in her Common Practice set. Fitzgerald’s use of vowels and glottals remained fairly
consistent until she established her Common Practice vocabulary, at which point Y onsets
At this time, it seems worth addressing the issue of aesthetics, and the aesthetic
effect of timbral choices interacting with harmonic choices. Comparing the pre-Gillespie,
post-Gillespie, bebop, and “common practice” syllabic sets shows how syllabic choice ties
61
into broader aesthetic choices made by Fitzgerald at different stages during this
developmental period.
• Prior to Fitzgerald’s time with Gillespie, her solos were more playful in character, as
heard in her most common syllable choices (Boo/Booh, Dl, Oo/Ooh, Dee, Doo, Bee,
• Immediately following Fitzgerald’s time with Gillespie, her syllabic profile shifted in
terms of both intensity and intentionality, as seen in her syllabic choices on “Oh,
Lady Be Good” and “How High the Moon” (with the Dl, Dee, and Oo/Ooh syllable
groups accounting for nearly 40% of syllabic material in these scat solos).
• As Fitzgerald continued to shape her bebop vocabulary, this idea of intensity and
intentionality was reflected in her syllabic choices (with Doo/Dooh, Dee, Oo/Ooh,
Dih, and Dn accounting for nearly 50% of all material sung). Additionally,
50% D onsets, nearly 25% B onsets, and nearly 25% vowel and glottal onsets.
and 1952, she incorporated an increased variance of both onset approaches and
vowel colors into the “common practice” syllabic set that would shape the
remainder of her career (Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, Dn, Dih, Oo/Ooh, Bee, Dee, Bih,
62
CHAPTER 6
venues for research, building on the analysis of these thirteen solos. In trying to document
Ella Fitzgerald’s influence on other singers, I suggested that transcription and analysis of a
followed her lead, notably Mel Tormé, but also Anita O’Day, Carmen McRae, Jon Hendricks,
Sarah Vaughan, and Betty Carter. 74 Solos to consider for this research could include Mel
Tormé’s full solo on “Lullaby of Birdland” 75 and portions of Kurt Elling’s “The More I Have
You,” 76 Jon Hendricks’ “Listen To Monk,” 77 and Karrin Allyson’s “Everybody’s Boppin'.” 78
Fitzgerald’s scat vocabulary will be an important topic for further research. Transcribing
improviser. Louis Armstrong, widely regarded as the father of modern scat singing, 80 and
74 Bauer’s “Scat Singing: A Timbral and Phonemic Analysis” references Carter’s early solos being “peppered
with… vocal licks out of Fitzgerald’s vocabulary such as the rapid alteration of syllables that start with /n/
and /d/.”
75 From Mel Tormé and the Marty Paich Dek-tette, Bethlehem, 1956.
76 From Man in The Air, Blue Note, 2003.
77 From Freddie Freeloader, Denon, 1990.
78 From Footprints, Concord Jazz, 2005.
79 “Ool Ya Koo” and “Oop-Pop-A-Da” both taken from The Complete RCA Victor Recordings, Bluebird, 1995.
80There are too many sources to mention here, but most standard accounts of both general music history and
jazz history cite Armstrong’s 1926 recording of “Heebie Jeebies” as the advent of modern scat singing.
63
Leo Watson, whose influence on Fitzgerald’s style has been documented in several
sources, 81 are often credited as Fitzgerald’s primary inspirations. I argue that Dizzy
scat solos to clarify their influence on Fitzgerald’s approach. Armstrong’s influence should
unaware of any analysis of this kind that has been published. In listening to recordings of
Leo Watson, however, I have my doubts as to whether he deserves the credit he is often
given as an influence on Fitzgerald; cursory aural analysis doesn’t seem to bear it out, but I
Finally, this document seeks to be an example of a kind of research that has often
been lacking for jazz musicians in general and singers specifically. I chose to focus on Ella
Fitzgerald in large part due to her scope of influence, but equally compelling cases could be
made for similar research on behalf of Sarah Vaughan (who could be considered
Fitzgerald’s primary rival for scope of influence), Mel Tormé (who incorporated many of
Fitzgerald’s techniques, but with modifications based in large part on his background as a
drummer), Bobby McFerrin (for his use of falsetto, vowel shapes, and tonal colors), and
Mark Murphy 82 (who changed the way many singers deal with timbre due to his
81 Notably in Nicholson, Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography of the First Lady of Jazz, 89-92.
82I wrote three particular statements about Murphy in “The Art and Craft of Scat Singing and Melodic
alteration” that speak to the breadth of this experimentation. First, “Murphy’s concept of scat singing is much
more aligned with avant-garde jazz instrumentalists of the 1960s and 1970s than it is with other great scat
singers.” Second, “[T]his solo demonstrates Mark’s dexterity as he moves between registers and exhibits an
extremely wide syllabic palate [sic] (no single syllable is used more than 18 times, with the next closest choice
used on only nine occasions.)” Third, “There is an extremely wide syllabic palate [sic] using a, au, u vowels
and a mixture of dental, explosive, and vocalized consonants while using a less-forward placement in the low
64
experimentation with range and color), and many others (European, Asian, and African jazz
artists could provide fascinating examples for this kind of study). It is my hope that this
register and a very forward placement in falsetto.” 82 Spradling, Jazz Singing: Developing Artistry and
Authenticity, 116.
65
APPENDIX A
TRANSCRIPTIONS
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APPENDIX B
SYLLABIC ANALYSIS
100
“Cow Cow Boogie” (1943): Solo Fills
The four most common syllable groups (Doo, Dih, Dee, and Oo) account for exactly half
(50.0%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups identified above account
for 85.7% of the total syllables used.
101
“Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall” (1944): Fills
The six most common syllabic groups (Doo, Dm, Bee, Bih, Boh, and Boo/Booh) account for
over half (60.7%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups identified above
account for 86.2% of the total syllables used.
102
“It’s Only a Paper Moon” (1945): Fills
Unique Syllables: 28
Individual Syllables: 10
Bah 1
Bee 4
Boh 3
Boo 5
Buh 3
Dm 1
Ee 2
Oo 5
Tree (flip /r/)3
Um 1
Three syllables (Boo, Oo, and Bee) account for exactly half (50%) of the solo’s syllabic
content.
103
Syllables from Solo Fills: Pre-1947
Bah 1 Doh 1
Bahp 1 Doht 1
Bee 9 Doo 16
Beh 1 Duht 2
Bih 6 Dwee 1
Boh 8 Ee 9
Boo 11 Eh 1
Booh 1 Hey 1
Boy 2 Ih 3
Bree (flip /r/)2 M 1
Buh 8 Oo 9
Bwee 1 /Ool 2
Dee 8 Tree (flip /r/)3
Deel 1 Uh 3
Dih 7 Uhm 1
Dl 5 Uhp 1
Dm 7 Yuh 1
Six syllables (Doo, Boo/Booh, Oo, Bee, Dee, and Ee) account for slightly less than half
(48.9%) of syllabic content in these fills. Adding two more syllables (Boh and Buh) results
in over sixty percent (60.7%) of syllabic content being covered. The fifteen syllable groups
identified above account for 89.6% of the total syllables used.
104
“Flying Home” (1945): Complete Solo
Ah 9 Doop 1
Bah 8 Doot 3
Bahb 1 Dow 1
Bahp 6 Doy 2
Bee 12 Duh 9
Beep 1 Ee 15
Beet 1 Ehm 1
Beh 6 Ey 2
Bey 1 Gih 1
Bihp 1 Goo 1
Blee 2 Ih 4
Boh 3 Ihp 2
Boo 16 Iht 1
Booee 19 Lah 5
Booh 1 Lahp 1
Boop 4 Laht 4
Boot 4 Lee 4
Boy 7 Leet 3
Boyt 5 Liht 1
Buh 2 Loh 6
Bwee 10 Loht 1
Dah 7 Loo 1
Daht 2 Luhp 1
Dee 35 Mah 3
Deel 2 Mooh 3
Deeoo 3 Nah 13
Deet 1 Neel 1
Deh 2 Oh 8
Dehl 5 Oht 1
Dih 12 Oo 33
Diht 2 Oot 7
Dl 36 Rihp (flip /r/ 3
Dlee 9 Rihp 3
Dlehn 1 Vaht 1
Dloh 1 Voy 1
Dm 1 Woh 1
Dn 6 Yah 1
Doh 5 Yihp 1
Doo 25 Yoh 6
Dooee 2 Zoyt 1
105
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Ah 9 (2.1%)
Bah 15 (3.5%)
Bee 14 (3.2%)
Boo/Booh 44 (10.1%)
Boy 12 (2.8%)
Bwee 10 (2.3%)
Dah 9 (2.1%)
Dee 41 (9.5%)
Dih 14 (3.2%)
Dl 47 (10.9%)
Doo 27 (6.2%)
Duh 9 (2.1%)
Ee 15 (3.5%)
Lah 10 (2.3%)
Nah 13 (3.0%)
Oh 9 (2.1%)
Oo 40 (9.2%)
The seven most common syllabic groups (Dl, Boo, Dee, Oo, Doo, Bah, and Ee) account for
over half (52.9%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The seventeen syllable groups identified
above account for 78.1% of the total syllables used.
106
All Syllables, Pre-1947
Ah 9 Diht 2 Leet 3
Bah 9 Dl 41 Liht 1
Bahb 1 Dlee 9 Loh 6
Bahp 7 Dlehn 1 Loht 1
Bee 21 Dloh 1 Loo 1
Beep 1 Dm 8 Luhp 1
Beet 1 Dn 6 M 1
Beh 7 Doh 6 Mah 3
Bey 1 Doht 1 Mooh 3
Bih 6 Doo 41 Nah 13
Bihp 1 Dooee 2 Neel 1
Blee 2 Doop 1 Oh 8
Boh 11 Doot 3 Oht 1
Boo 27 Dow 1 Oo 42
Booee 19 Doy 2 /Ool 2
Booh 2 Duh 9 Oot 7
Boop 4 Duht 2 Rihp (flip /r/ 3
Boot 4 Dwee 1 Rihp 3
Boy 9 Ee 24 Tree (flip /r/)3
Boyt 5 Eh 1 Uh 3
Bree (flip /r/)2 Ehm 1 Uhm 1
Buh 10 Ey 2 Uhp 1
Bwee 11 Gih 1 Vaht 1
Dah 7 Goo 1 Voy 1
Daht 2 Hey 1 Woh 1
Dee 43 Ih 7 Yah 1
Deel 3 Ihp 2 Yihp 1
Deeoo 3 Iht 1 Yoh 6
Deet 1 Lah 5 Yuh 1
Deh 2 Lahp 1 Zoyt 1
Dehl 5 Laht 4
Dih 19 Lee 4
107
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 17 (3.0%)
Bee 23 (4.0%)
Boo/Booh 56 (9.9%)
Boy 14 (2.5%)
Dee 50 (8.8%)
Dih 21 (3.7%)
Dl 52 (9.1%)
Doo 47 (8.3%)
Nah 13 (2.2%)
Oo/Ooh 51 (8.9%)
The six most common syllabic groups (Boo/Booh, Dl, Dee, Oo, Doo, and Bee) account for
nearly half (49.1%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The ten syllable groups identified above
account for 60.5% of the total syllables used.
108
“Oh, Lady Be Good” (1947): Complete Solo
Ah 43 Dlee 6 Loh 7
/Ah 3 Dleh 1 Loo 2
Bah 12 Dley 4 Loot 1
Bahp 4 Dloo 1 Luh 3
Bee 24 Dluh 1 Neh 1
Beeooh 1 Dm 2 Nih 1
Beh 2 Dn 16 Noh 1
Behm 2 Doh 9 Nuh 1
Bey 3 Doht 10 Oh 21
Beyb 1 Doo 36 Ohb 1
Beyl 1 Dooh 7 Ohn 3
Beym 1 Doom 1 Oht 2
Bih 11 Doot 1 Oo 47
Bihp 7 Duh 9 Ooee 2
Biht 1 Duhp 1 Ooh 1
Bl 2 Ee 10 /Ooh 3
Blee 3 Eeooh 1 Oon 1
Boh 5 Eet 1 Oot 2
Bohp 1 Eh 7 Oy 3
Boo 10 /Ehm 1 /Oy 1
Booh 1 Ehn 1 Oyl 1
Boy 6 Ehr 2 Oym 1
Boym 3 Ey 10 Rih 1
Bree (flip /r/)2 Ih 11 Rihp 1
Breh (flip /r/)1 Iht 1 Uh 10
Buh 4 Lah 8 Yah 1
Bweem 1 Lahd 1 Yee 1
Dah 9 Laht 1 Yih 1
Daht 1 Lee 3 Yihn 1
Dee 66 Leh 9 Yihp 1
Deel 1 Lehn 1 Yoh 1
Deh 7 Leht 1 Yooh 1
Deyl 1 Ley 6 Yuh 1
Dih 30 Leyt 1
Dihp 1 Lih 7 Arco Bass 26
Dl 79 Liht 1 Percussives 10
109
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Ah 46 (6.5%)
Bah 16 (2.3%)
Bee 25 (3.6%)
Bih 19 (2.7%)
Dee 67 (9.6%)
Dih 31 (4.4%)
Dl 92 (13.1%)
Dn 16 (2.3%)
Doh 19 (2.7%)
Doo/Dooh 45 (6.4%)
Leh/Leh 18 (2.6%)
Oh 27 (2.9%)
Oo/Ooh 56 (8.0%)
Arco Bass 26 (3.7%)
The seven most common syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Ah, Doo/Dooh, Dih, and Oh)
account for over half (52.8%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The thirteen syllable groups
identified above account for 71.7% of the total syllables used.
110
“How High the Moon” (1947): Complete Solo
Ah 15 Dloh 2
/Ah 4 Dm 6
Bah 27 Dn 26
Bahb 1 Doh 2
Bahm 3 Doo 26
Bee 33 Dooh 3
Beem 2 Dow 1
Beeoo 1 Down 3
Beeooh 4 Doy 1
Beh 6 Duh 1
Bey 9 Ee 4
Beym 1 /Ee 8
Beyoo 1 Eeoo 1
Bih 21 Ey 1
Bihm 1 Huh 1
Bihp 2 Ih 14
Biht 1 /Ih 2
Blee 1 Lah 4
Bley 1 Leh 1
Blih 2 Lih 1
Boh 4 Loh 1
Boo 8 Loo 1
Booh 9 Looh 1
Boom 2 M 1
Bow 1 Oh 3
Bowm 2 Oo 47
Boy 1 /Ooee 1
Buh 3 Ooh 2
Dah 9 Oom 3
Dee 42 Oom 1
Deem 1 Oot 1
Deeoo 2 Ow 2
Deh 13 Oy 1
Dih 13 Uh 2
Diht 7 Voh 1
Dl 18 Yooh 1
Dlee 1 Yuh 2
Dlih 1
111
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Ah 19 (4.3%)
Bah 31 (7.0%)
Bee 40 (9.1%)
Beh/Bey 17 (3.9%)
Bih 25 (5.7%)
Boo/Booh 19 (4.3%)
Dee 45 (10.2%)
Deh 13 (3.0%)
Dih 20 (4.5%)
Dl 22 (5.0%)
Dn 26 (5.9%)
Doo/Dooh 29 (6.6%)
Ee 13 (3.0%)
Ih 16 (3.6%)
Oo/Ooh 55 (12.5%)
The six most common syllabic groups (Oo/Ooh, Dee, Bee, Bah, Doo/Dooh, and Dn) account
for over half (52.8%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The fifteen syllable groups identified
above account for 88.6% of the total syllables used.
112
“Oh, Lady Be Good” and “How High the Moon”:
1947 Syllabic Analysis
113
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Ah 62 (5.4%)
Bah 47 (4.1%)
Bee 65 (5.7%)
Beh/Bey 27 (2.4%)
Bih 44 (3.9%)
Boo/Booh 30 (2.7%)
Dee 112 (9.8%)
Dih 51 (4.5%)
Dl 114 (10.0%)
Dn 42 (3.7%)
Doo/Dooh 74 (6.5%)
Ee 25 (2.2%)
Ih 27 (2.4%)
Oh 30 (2.7%)
Oo/Ooh 108 (9.5%)
The seven most common syllabic groups (Dl, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Doo/Dooh, Bee, Ah, and Dih)
account for over half (51.4%) of the syllabic content from these two solos. The sixteen
syllable groups identified above account for 77.5% of the total syllables used.
114
“Basin Street Blues” (1949): Solo Fills
Individual Syllables: 29
Unique Syllables: 16
Ah 2
Bah 7
Deh 1
Dlee 1
Dn 2
Doo 3
Lah 1
M 3
Mah 1
Muh 1
N 1
Ow 1
Spoh 1
Uh 1
Zeh 1
Zihp 2
Bah, Doo, M, Ah, Dn, and Zihp account for over half (65.5%) of the solo’s syllabic content.
115
“Dream A Little Dream of Me” (1950): Solo Fills
Ah 1 Bah 4 (7.0%)
Bah 4 Bee 4 (7.0%)
Bee 4 Bih 2 (3.5%)
Beh 1 Boh 4 (7.0%)
Bih 2 Boo 4 (7.0%)
Boh 4 Buh 6 (10.5%)
Boo 4 Dee 3 (5.3%)
Buh 6 Dih 7 (12.3%)
Dee 3 Dn 4 (7.0%)
Dih 6 Doh 4 (7.0%)
Diht 1 Doo/Dooh 6 (10.5%)
Dl 1 Yoo/Yooh 2 (3.5%)
Dn 4 Yuh 3 (5.3%)
Doh 3
Dohp 1
Doo 4
Dooh 1
Dool 1
Ih 1
Yoo 1
Yooh 1
Yuh 3
Nine syllable groups (Dih, Buh, Doo/Dooh, Bah, Bee, Boh, Boo, Dn, and Doh) account for
75.4% of the solo’s syllabic content. The thirteen syllable groups identified above account
for 93.0% of the total syllables used.
116
“Mr. Paganini” (1952): Solo Fills
/Ah 2 Ooh 1
Ah 1 Oon 1
Bah 4 /Uh 1
Bahp 3 Uh 2
Bee 18 Yah 2
Beel 2 Yih 1
Beh 2 Yoo 2
Bih 6 Yuh 1
Bihl 1
Boh 3 Quotes:
Boo 9
Booh 2 “Tisket, a tasket, I lost my yellow basket!”
Booih 1
Boop 1 “We’re due...”
Boy 1
Buh 2
Dah 7
Dee 2
Dih 12
Dl 11
Dm 2
Dn 9
Doh 4
Doo 13
Doop 1
Dow 1
Duh 2
/Ee 4
Ee 7
Eel 1
Eeoo 2
Eep 1
Eh 5
Hee 2
Ih 8
Lah 3
Leht 1
Noh 1
Nuh 1
Oh 5
Oo 2
117
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 7 (4.0%)
Bee 22 (12,5%)
Bih 7 (4.0%)
Boo 13 (7.4%)
Dah 7 (4.0%)
Dih 12 (6.8%)
Dl 11 (6.3%)
Dn 9 (5.1%)
Doh 4 (2.2%)
Doo 14 (8.0%)
Ee 15 (8.5%)
Eh 5 (2.8%)
Ih 8 (4.5%)
Oh 5 (2.8%)
Oo/Ooh 4 (2.2%)
Seven syllable groups (Bee, Ee, Doo, Boo, Dih, Dl, and Dn) account for nearly half (46.6%) of
the solo’s syllabic content. The fifteen syllable groups identified above account for 81.3% of
the total syllables used.
118
Post-1947 Solo Fills
/Ah 2 Duh 2
Ah 4 /Ee 4
Bah 15 Ee 7
Bahp 3 Eel 1
Bee 4 Eeoo 2
Beh 3 Eep 1
Bih 8 Eh 5
Bihl 1 Hee 2
Boh 7 Ih 9
Boo 13 Lah 4
Booh 2 Leht 1
Booih 1 M 3
Boop 1 Mah 1
Boy 1 Muh 1
Buh 8 N 1
Dah 7 Noh 1
Dee 5 Nuh 1
Deh 1 Oh 5
Dlee 1 Oo 2
Dih 18 Ooh 1
Diht 1 Oon 1
Dl 12 Ow 1
Dm 2 Spoh 1
Dn 14 Uh 3
Doh 7 Yah 2
Dohp 1 Yih 1
Doo 20 Yoo 3
Dooh 1 Yooh 1
Dool 1 Yuh 4
Doop 1 Zeh 1
Dow 1 Zihp 2
119
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Ah 6 (2.3%)
Bah 18 (6.9%)
Bih 9 (3.5%)
Boh 7 (2.7%)
Boo/Booh 17 (6.5%)
Dah 7 (2.7%)
Dih 19 (7.2%)
Dl 12 (4.6%)
Dn 14 (5.3%)
Doh 9 (3.5%)
Doo/Dooh 23 (8.8%)
Ee 15 (5.7%)
Ih 9 (3.5%)
The thirteen syllable groups identified above account for 72.1% of the total syllables used.
120
“Smooth Sailing” (1951): Complete Solo
Ah 5 Dooh 5
Bah 18 Dool 5
Bahb 1 Doop 1
Bee 6 Dow 4
Beel 1 Doy 1
Bih 26 Droo 1
Bihl 1 Duh 4
Bloo 1 /Ee 1
Blooee 2 Ee 2
Boh 2 /Eel 1
Boo 58 Heep 1
Booh 5 Hih 1
Booih 1 Hyeh 1
Bool 1 Ih 2
Boom 1 Lah 2
Boop 19 Loo 3
Boy 1 Low 1
Brihl (flip /r/)1 /Oo 2
Broo (flip /r/)4 Oo 12
Brool (flip /r/)2 Ooh 1
Buh 3 /Ool 1
Dah 7 /Ow 2
Dee 10 Pih 1
Deel 1 Uh 1
Deer 1 Vey 1
Deh 3 Woo 7
Dey 3 Wow 1
Dih 14 Yah 3
Dihl 1 Yoo 4
Dihoo 1 Yood 1
Dleeih 1 Yooh 5
Dn 14 Yoot 1
Doh 7 Yuh 4
Doheh 1
Doo 22 Growls 2
121
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 19 (5.8%)
Bee 7 (2.1%)
Bih 27 (8.1%)
Boo/Booh 85 (25.8%)
Br (flip /r/) 7 (2.1%)
Dah 7 (2.1%)
Dee 12 (3.6%)
Dih 16 (4.8%)
Doh 8 (2.4%)
Doo/Dooh 31 (9.4%)
Oo/Ooh 18 (5.5$)
Woo 7 (2.1%)
Yoo/Yooh 7 (2.1%)
The six most common syllabic groups (Boo/Booh, Doo/Dooh, Bih, Bah, and Oo) account for
over half (54.5%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The thirteen syllable groups identified
above account for 76.1% of the total syllables used.
122
“Air Mail Special” (1952): Complete Solo
Ah 4 Dooh 1
/Ah 1 Dooih 10
Bah 25 Dool 3
Bahp 4 Doot 16
Bee 30 Dow 7
Beel 1 Duh 2
Beep 1 Ee 4
Bih 14 /Ee 9
Bihm 1 /Eel 2
Blee 4 Eh 2
Bloo 3 Ehrl 2
Boh 1 Gree (flip /r/)1
Boo 19 Hoy 1
Booee 1 Ih 9
Booh 2 /Ih 3
Boop 1 Ihl 1
Bow 1 L 1
Boy 1 Lee 2
Bree (flip /r/)27 Leh 1
Buh 6 N 2
Bwahp 1 Nah 1
Bwee 3 Oh 6
Dah 15 Oo 33
Dahee 1 /Oo 1
Dee 30 /Ooee 1
Deel 9 Ow 7
Deh 4 /Ow 4
Dehr 1 Uh 1
Dih 70 Vah 2
Diht 3 Vow 1
Dl 7 Wah 1
Dn 84 Wow 1
Dnah 1 Wuh 1
Doh 12 Yah 8
Dohn 1 Yuh 2
Doht 1 Yoo 6
Doo 141 Yooh 2
Dooee 1
123
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 29 (4.2%)
Bee 32 (4.6%)
Bih 15 (2.2%)
Boo/Booh 23 (3.3%)
Br (flip /r/) 27 (3.9%)
Dah 16 (2.3%)
Dee 39 (5.7%)
Dih 73 (10.6%)
Dn 85 (12.3%)
Doh 14 (2.0%)
Doo/Dooh 172 (24.9%)
Ee 15 (2.2%)
Ih 14 (2.0%)
Oo 35 (5.1%)
The three most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Dn, and Dih) account for nearly half
(47.9%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The fourteen syllable groups identified above
account for 85.4% of the total syllables used.
124
“Rough Ridin’” (1952): Complete Solo
/Ah 3 Doy 1
Bah 10 /Ee 1
Bahp 1 Ee 2
Bee 23 Hoo 1
Beel 1 /Ih 1
Bih 8 /M 1
Bihl 4 /Oo 22
Boh 2 Oo 8
Boo 18 /Oohl 1
Booh 11 Ooht 1
Boop 1 /Oot 2
Bow 3 Oot 3
Bree (flip /r/)1 /Ow 4
Brey (flip /r/)2 Ow 4
Buh 3 Nahn 1
Dah 7 Spih 1
Dahd 1 Spihl 1
Dahp 1 Spoot 1
Daht 1 Tree (flip /r/)1
Dee 19 Vee 1
Deel 6 Yah 3
Dih 19 Yahd 1
Dihb 1 Yahee 1
Dihl 3 Yaht 2
Dlee 1 Yeep 1
Dm 1 Yih 1
Dn 6 Yoh 1
Doh 2 Yoo 6
Doo 49 Yooh 8
Dooee 1 Yoohp 1
Dooih 1 Yooht 1
Dool 35 Yoot 21
Doot 10 Yuh 2
Dow 5 Yuht 1
Dowb 1
125
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 11 (3.0%)
Bee 24 (6.6%)
Bih 12 (3.3%)
Boo/Booh 30 (8.2%)
Dah 10 (2.7%)
Dee 25 (9.6%)
Dih 23 (6.3%)
Doo/Dooh 96 (26.3%)
Oo/Ooh 37 (10.1%)
Ow 8 (2.2%)
Yoo/Yooh 37 (10.1%)
The four most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Oo/Ooh, Yoo/Yooh, and Boo/Booh)
account for over half (54.6% of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups
identified above account for 85.4% of the total syllables used.
126
“Preview” (1952): Complete Solo
Bah 11 Doht 1
Bee 46 Doo 54
Bih 18 Dooeet 1
Blee 8 Dooih 3
Boh 2 Dooh 2
Bohih 1 Dool 18
Boo 52 Doot 3
Booeeih 1 Dow 2
Booeeuh 1 Dree (flip /r/)1
Booh 10 Duh 3
Boohee 2 /Ee 3
Booih 2 Ee 2
Boop 1 Gah 1
Bow 3 Hoohih 1
Boyl 1 Ih 1
Bree (flip /r/)5 /M 1
Buh 7 Nah 1
Dah 9 Nih 1
Dahd 1 Oh 1
Dahee 1 /Oo 4
Dee 14 Oo 27
Deel 2 Ood 1
Deen 1 /Oohee 2
Deeoo 1 /Ooih 1
Deeooh 1 Uh 1
Dih 11 Yah 1
Dl 1 Yoht 1
Dlee 1 Yoo 15
Dm 36 Yoon 1
Dn 21 Yoot 1
Doh 2 Yuh 4
127
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 11 (2.5%)
Bee 46 (10.6%)
Bih 18 (4.2%)
Boo/Booh 69 (16.0%)
Dah 11 (2.5%)
Dee 19 (4.4%)
Dm 36 (8.3%)
Dn 21 (4.9%)
Doo/Dooh 81 (18.8%)
Oo/Ooh 35 (8.1%)
Yoo 17 (3.95)
The four most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, Bee, and Dm) account for
over half (53.7%) of the solo’s syllabic content. The eleven syllable groups identified above
account for 84.3% of the total syllables used.
128
Vocalized Instrumentals: 1951/1952
129
Syllable Groups comprising greater than 2% of syllabic content:
Bah 70 (3.9%)
Bee 109 (6.0%)
Bih 72 (4.0%)
Boo/Booh 207 (11.4%)
Br (flip /r/) 42 (2.3%)
Dah 44 (2.4%)
Dee 95 (5.2%)
Dih 123 (6.8%)
Dm 37 (2.0%)
Dn 126 (6.9%)
Doo/Dooh 377 (20.7%)
Oo/Ooh 123 (6.8%)
Yoo/Yooh 72 (4.0%)
The five most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Boo/Booh, Dn, Dih, and Oo/Ooh)
account for over half (52.6%) of the syllabic content in these solos. The thirteen syllable
groups identified above account for 82.4% of the total syllables used.
130
Double-Time/Bebop Syllabic Vocabulary Post-1947
“Oh, Lady Be Good” - “How High the Moon”
“Rough Ridin’” (Bars 39-48) - “Airmail Special”
131
Wah 1 Yee 1 Yoh 1 Arco Bass 26
Wow 1 Yih 1 Yoo 7 Growls 2
Wuh 1 Yihn 1 Yooh 4 Percussives 1
Yah 10 Yihp 1 Yuh 5
Ah 67 (3.5%)
Bah 83 (4.3%)
Bee 99 (5.2%)
Bih 68 (3.6%)
Boo/Booh 58 (3.0%)
Dah 39 (2.0%)
Dee 154 (8.1%)
Dih 131 (6.9%)
Dn 127 (6.7%)
Doo/Dooh 260 (13.6%)
Ee 41 (2.1%)
Ih 42 (2.2%)
Oh 43 (2.2%)
Oo/Ooh 145 (7.6%)
The seven most common syllabic groups (Doo/Dooh, Dee, Oo/Ooh, Dih, Dn, Bee, and Bah)
account for over half (52.3%) of the syllabic content in these solos. The fourteen syllable
groups identified above account for 71.1% of the total syllables used.
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Eighth Note Triplet Patterns
133
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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135
DISCOGRAPHY
Fitzgerald, Ella. Ella Fitzgerald 75th Birthday Celebration. MCA/GRP GRD2 619, 1993,
compact disc.
__________; accompanied by Doggett, Bill; Fishkin, Arnold; and the Ray Charles Singers.
“Smooth Sailing.” Decca 27693, Master 81215, June 26, 1951.
__________; accompanied by Graham, Leonard; Lewis, John; Brown, Ray; and Harris, Joe. “How
High the Moon.” Decca 24387, Master 74324, December 20, 1947.
__________; accompanied by the Ray Brown Orchestra. “Airmail Special.” Decca 28126, Master
82075. “Rough Ridin’.” Decca 27948, Master 82076. January 4, 1952.
__________; accompanied by Bob Haggart and His Orchestra. “Oh, Lady Be Good.” Decca
23956, Master 73820, March 18, 1947.
__________; accompanied by Sy Oliver and His Orchestra. “Basin Street Blues.” Decca 24868,
Master 75282, September 20, 1949. “Mr. Paganini.” Part 1 and 2, Decca 28774,
Masters 83010 and 83011. “Preview.” Decca 28321, Master 83014. “Mr. Paganini”
and “Preview” both recorded June 26, 1952.
__________; accompanied by Vic Schoen and His Orchestra. “Flying Home.” Decca 23956,
Master 73066, October 4, 1945.
__________; and the Delta Rhythm Boys. “It’s Only a Paper Moon.” Decca 23425, Master 72798,
March 27, 1945.
__________; and Louis Armstrong, “Dream A Little Dream of Me.” Decca 27209, Master 76750,
August 25, 1950.
__________; and the Ink Spots. “Cow Cow Boogie.” Decca 18587, Master 71482-A, November 3,
1943. “Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall.” Decca 23356, Master 72370, August 30,
1944.
Gillespie, Dizzy. The Complete RCA Victor Recordings. Bluebird 07863 66528-2, 1995,
compact disc.
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