Short Description: The sheet music is a note-for-note transcription
of "When The Saints Go Marching In" (Dr. John) for piano from the YouTube
Video, with intro
Licensed Territory: worldwide
Instrumentation: Piano. The Vocal is not natated, but the lyrics
Interpreter: Dr. John (Mac Rebennack)
Music & Lyrics by: trad.
Level: 5 (of 5)
Pages: 6
Order No. 101-115-8004d
Guarantee: yes
Video: Please click on the video icon above!
Songfacts:
NEW: The jazzinotes transcription contains the intro (the first 49 seconds played rubato)!
Dr. John (legal name Malcolm John Rebennack) was born in 1940 in New Orleans. His phenomenal piano style is inimitable: always varied and inventive, very complex yet catchy and groovy. He won the Blues Music Award in 2011 for Best Pianist, but he didn’t appear only as solo pianist, but also as composer, producer, accompanist (and as music pedagogue, as attested to on his website). He did not restrict himself to the native blues of his home town, but ventured into various other genres such as Rock, R&B, and Creole Soul Music. Through his extravagant performances, he became the icon of psychedelic rock. The list of musicians he collaborated with is a long one. Here are just a few names: Frank Zappa, The Rolling Stones, Phil Spector, Sam Cooke, Aretha Franklin, Canned Heat, Sonny and Cher, and later also Charles Brown and Eric Clapton. His performances in the films The Last Waltz (Martin Scorsese) and Blues Brothers 2000 (John Landis) are also legendary. In 2007, Dr. John was welcomed into the Blues Hall of Fame and in 2011 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Transposition:
We can transpose this score for you. This is how it works:
1. Order it in the original version.
2. Order our article Transposition A.
3. Send an informal email to info@jazzinotes.com (subject: “Transposition”). In the text of the email please indicate the title of the original as well as the key desired.
You’ll receive the transposition within a couple of days as a pdf-file you can open using your password for the original version.