Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Jazz and pop musicians learn repertoire from records or from printed music. Jazz musicians sometimes
specialise in a particular area but there are some tunes that everyone should know, if only to avoid
embarrassment at a jam session when someone calls Summertime. It is important to know the harmony as
well as the melody. Most standards are available as sheet music, but jazz musicians often use fake books
(real books) or buskers books which contain only the melody and chord symbols (and sometimes a rough
rhythm guide). The Hartley library has The New Real Book vols 1, 2 and 3 in Bb, Eb and C. Much of the
important repertoire is also available in the various playalong books with CDs.
Below is a list of some of the most famous jazz tunes that I have found useful. This is by no means a
comprehensive list, it is based mostly on jazz of the 30s - 50s and useful repertoire can vary from region to
region in the world. There is a very comprehensive repertoire list in The Jazz Theory Book by Mark Levine.
More modern jazz has become so diverse stylistically that it becomes almost impossible to list modern
standards.