
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


“ Falling Grace” and John Scofield (112)
“Falling Grace,” composed by Steve Swallow and first recorded by Gary Burton in 1966, is a structurally modern jazz standard built on lyrical melody and elegant, bass-directed harmony. Its unusual 14-bar A and 10-bar B form is unified by sustained opening tones, recurring triplet figures, and carefully balanced chord tones and extensions. The harmony is defined by half-step bass motion, slash chords placing 3rds and 7ths in the bass, and fluid cycle-of-fourths movement, giving the tune a floating yet logical quality. John Scofield brings a unique authority to the piece. Born in 1951 and educated at Berklee, Scofield emerged in the 1970s and gained international prominence during his tenure with Miles Davis (1982–85), where his blues-inflected tone and rhythmic bite helped shape Miles’s electric comeback era. Over five decades, Scofield has bridged post-bop, funk, fusion, and roots music, influencing generations of guitarists with his gritty sound, elastic phrasing, and harmonic daring. On Swallow Tales (2020), his interpretation honors the tune’s lyricism while highlighting his gift for motivic development and deep harmonic awareness, reaffirming his lasting impact on modern jazz guitar.
Gary Burton
John Scofield
The Jazz RealBook Playlist Vol.2
By Jay Sweet5
77 ratings
“ Falling Grace” and John Scofield (112)
“Falling Grace,” composed by Steve Swallow and first recorded by Gary Burton in 1966, is a structurally modern jazz standard built on lyrical melody and elegant, bass-directed harmony. Its unusual 14-bar A and 10-bar B form is unified by sustained opening tones, recurring triplet figures, and carefully balanced chord tones and extensions. The harmony is defined by half-step bass motion, slash chords placing 3rds and 7ths in the bass, and fluid cycle-of-fourths movement, giving the tune a floating yet logical quality. John Scofield brings a unique authority to the piece. Born in 1951 and educated at Berklee, Scofield emerged in the 1970s and gained international prominence during his tenure with Miles Davis (1982–85), where his blues-inflected tone and rhythmic bite helped shape Miles’s electric comeback era. Over five decades, Scofield has bridged post-bop, funk, fusion, and roots music, influencing generations of guitarists with his gritty sound, elastic phrasing, and harmonic daring. On Swallow Tales (2020), his interpretation honors the tune’s lyricism while highlighting his gift for motivic development and deep harmonic awareness, reaffirming his lasting impact on modern jazz guitar.
Gary Burton
John Scofield
The Jazz RealBook Playlist Vol.2

6,959 Listeners

151 Listeners

26 Listeners

210 Listeners

4,109 Listeners

447 Listeners

35 Listeners

1,993 Listeners

8,590 Listeners

6,589 Listeners

1,966 Listeners

2,324 Listeners

535 Listeners

32 Listeners

2,558 Listeners