• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Website of Steve Neff

  • BLOG
  • SHOP
  • MY ACCOUNT
  • RAVES
  • CONTACT

Search Neffmusic

You are here: Home / Transcriptions / Michael Brecker Act Natural Tenor Sax Solo Transcription

Michael Brecker Act Natural Tenor Sax Solo Transcription

January 26, 2021 by Steve 12 Comments

Here’s another great Michael Brecker tenor sax solo transcription I am excited to share with everyone. This transcription has been available out there on the internet for many years now, so I have never posted my transcription here on my site, but I kind of wanted to now for sentimental reasons.

This transcription includes the chords which go with the solo which I haven’t seen out there on another transcription and there are some slight differences between mine and the one already available on the internet.  The chords are from the Don Grolnick Collection which I purchased a few years ago when I was working on a transcription of “Four Chords” by Steps Ahead.

This is one of the first tenor sax solos I tried to transcribe my second year of college (I say “tried” because it was a weak and feeble attempt with so many wrong notes and messed up rhythms…..).  I was going to Ithaca College at the time and this was one of the first Michael Brecker albums that I purchased. It is Don Grolnick’s “Hearts and Numbers” album and this solo is from the song “Act Natural”.

Don Grolnick Hearts and Numbers

I remember cranking this tune on my record player in my dorm room at Ithaca College and playing along with the record trying to sound as confident and “BA” as Michael Brecker did on the tenor saxophone. I had no idea what the chords were but I knew it was in E minor in that first section of the solo and I really played the tar out of that first 16 bars of the solo over and over again.

To be honest, I think I played bits of this solo on almost every E minor solo I took for the next 10 years! It still comes to mind almost every time I am playing in E minor because it is so ingrained in my brain (especially measures 9-11).

Don Grolnick-Act Natural-Michael Brecker Solo (Starts at 1:37)

This solo was a huge awakening for me because, although the tune sounded like it was in E minor (I am talking in the key for Bb tenor sax here, this would be D minor for concert instruments), Michael Brecker was playing lines from the B altered scale all over the place.  The first 16 bars of this solo are really a great lesson in how you can play in an E minor tonality and use lines based off the E minor pentatonic (EGABDE), the E blues scale (EGABbBDE), the E dorian scale (EF#GABC#DE) and the B altered scale (BCDEbFGAB) to take things more “outside” the tonality (“outside” is a term that means playing lines that sound very dissonant against the harmony).

As I practiced to this song everyday, I really learned how you could use these four elements and mix them together to form a really interesting solo over a minor tonality.  This was like my own personal lesson from Michael Brecker!

 Michael Brecker and Don Grolnick in the 80’s

One of the most important lessons to be learned from Michael Brecker during these daily personal sessions with his recordings, was to play with an 80% sound. To fill the room with tone and to play with confidence!  Michael Brecker played with such an authority and confidence, even if he played wrong notes, you would never know, because he played them so confidently!

I remember seeing him in person a year later in Buffalo NY with Steps Ahead, and he seemed so quiet and humble to me as he walked out and I watched him talking to the audience and interacting with the band.  I thought “Is this the same guy I was listening to on the recordings?”

 Michael Brecker and Don Grolnick in the 80’s

Then the music started and there was no question, Michael started playing his tenor saxophone and it was like he owned every corner of the room.  When he took a sax solo, it was so commanding and powerful that you couldn’t turn away.  I remember sitting in my seat and having so much excitement and energy that I felt like I couldn’t contain it!  I didn’t know what it would take or even if I could ever do it but that was how I wanted to play!

Thanks again to Michael Brecker. The anniversary of his death passed a couple of weeks ago on January 13th. It’s hard to believe you have been gone for 14 years already. Your contributions to music and as a person are still having a lasting impact on those you interacted with and influenced as well as all those who have yet to hear your great recordings in the future.  We miss you!

 Michael Brecker and Don Grolnick listening intently……

I also want to acknowledge the great Don Grolnick whose album this was.  Mr. Grolnick died in 1996 at the age of 48 from cancer. As I am now 53, 48 seems like such a young age to die. All I know of Don Grolnick is his incredible music, but I am so thankful for his creative brilliance and contributions to jazz. This album,  “Hearts and Numbers” is one of the jazz classics for me and had a monumental impact on my musical life! Thank you Don Grolnick!
If you have any thoughts on Michael Brecker, Don Grolnick, the transcription or life in general,  I would love to hear from you in the comments below.   Steve

Act Natural-Michael Brecker Solo-Bb PDF

Act Natural-Michael Brecker Solo-C PDF

Act Natural-Michael Brecker Solo-Eb PDF

*If you would like to support me here at neffmusic.com, you can do so on the support page of my store by debit or credit card.   Any support is appreciated and will go towards keeping this site running, saxophone reeds, mouthpiece patches, coffee, and towards justifying the many hours I spend on providing free transcriptions to the saxophone community!  Thanks,   Steve

If you like these type of outside modern sounding lines like I do, be sure to check out my Devastating Lines for Jazz and Funk Soloing for Minor and Dominant Grooves. These two books are filled with great modern 16th note lines in all 12 keys that you can learn and use while soloing. Check out all the 5 star reviews! Steve

DevastatingFrontCoverAdDevastating Minor Lines for Jazz and Funk Soloing

DevastatingDominantAdDevastating Dominant Lines for Jazz & Funk

Filed Under: Transcriptions Tagged With: Act Natural, Don Grolnick, Hearts and Numbers, jazz sax, Michael Brecker, tenor saxophone, transcription

Steve

About Steve

Steve Neff has been playing and teaching saxophone and jazz improvisation around the New England area for over 30 years. He is the author of many best selling jazz improvisation methods as well as founding the popular jazz video lesson site Neffmusic.com.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. AvatarAlex says

    January 28, 2021 at 8:35 pm

    Hey Steve, what exactly do you mean by ‘an 80% sound’? Thanks!!!

    Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      January 28, 2021 at 11:20 pm

      Just meaning when you play at 100% volume it is maxed out. That’s like full tilt all out. Sax players should practice playing at 80%. Big, full sound that fills every corner of the room. I was teaching for a few years and I noticed my students always seemed like they felt uncomfortable taking a solo and playing at full wailing volume. I asked them what volume they would say they practiced at and the majority of them said 30-50% volume. It hit me that when I practice, I practice at 80% because I want to be used to and prepared to play at that level when I take a solo. Ever since then I started teaching my students to practice at 80%. Practice like there is an auditorium full of a thousand people in front of you and you have no mic. That’s what it means to play at 80%…….

      Reply
      • AvatarAlexandre says

        February 9, 2021 at 5:06 pm

        Right on, thanks for that! That made me realize that I actually play at 100% volume way too much of the time, that reduced the dynamic and emotional effect of what I’m trying to convey. I’m definitely striving for that golden 80%.

        Yet another instance of the 80/20 distribution creeping up where we don’t expect it. Cheers!

        Reply
  2. AvatarPILLOIX Bruno says

    January 29, 2021 at 4:59 pm

    Hi Steve , I really enjoyed your comments on this Don Grolnick album ! It’s for me (same as you) one of the beautiful album during this decade and still one of my best I could hear! There is a song that I specially love called “Four Sleepers” For me, Michael Brecker’s solo on this tune is one of his best, so creative, so inspiring, so sensitive …! We miss him for sure! Thanks for what you’re doing !!

    Reply
  3. AvatarWarren Anderson says

    January 31, 2021 at 9:22 am

    Hi Steve, awesome, thanks!
    As a learner, may I ask a question about the notation…
    Measure 22 (under D13b9b5), 2nd beat, you notate a tied triplet for downbeat, then two 1/16ths.
    Since in swung rhythm the 1/8th note downbeat is already considered to have the duration of the first two beats of a triplet, why not notate this more simply as 1/8th, then two 1/16s?
    I don’t read a lot of double and quadruple time 1/16 and 1/32 lines, so maybe they are played straight and you wanted to emphasize this one measure is swung?
    Thanks.

    Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      January 31, 2021 at 9:59 am

      Warren, When I listened to that rhythm in measure 22 it sounded a to me like that triplet pulse from beat one continued through beat two to my ears. Triplets do not always imply a swung rhythm as this solo is a straight 16th note feel. On beat two I continues singing the triplets from beat one during that beat two held note and they seemed to line up with where the 16th notes come in to me. Hope that helps, Steve

      Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      January 31, 2021 at 11:06 am

      Actually now that I listen back to it, if you listen to measure 21 in comparison to measure 22, I think it is more clear to hear. Measure 21 beats 2-3 I can clearly hear that 8th to 16th note rhythm. In measure 22 the F# and D# seem a little delayed and faster in speed than the 16th notes in measure 21. At least that is how I hear it.

      Reply
      • AvatarWarren Anderson says

        January 31, 2021 at 4:10 pm

        Thanks, Steve, for your two detailed replies.

        My take-home is the priority of listening, singing and playing along when reproducing an artist’s solo rather than slavishly forcing the performance into a system on paper—although you are an awesome notation transcriber and the notation clearly serves as a guide to learn the piece and memory aid when playing it.

        Love all your materials and reviews.

        Thanks, Warren

        Reply
        • SteveSteve says

          February 1, 2021 at 9:47 am

          The reality is that the rhythm you asked about would be fine written either way. The difference between the two is miniscule. The bottom line for me is if I can read through the transcription and stay with the soloist note for note until the end. It might not be 100% perfect but if it is darn close and I can stay with the soloist I am transcribing that is the goal.

          Reply
  4. Avatarmichael maisonpierre says

    February 6, 2021 at 8:21 pm

    Thanks Steve for your writings about MB and transcriptions. I miss him too. Some of my jazz friends say “too many notes” but to me it’s pure passion, inspiring and infectious. I love Don Grolnick too and his song The Cost of Living is the saddest song ever. I heard Michael play it in concert here in Boulder, mentioning Don and his early death. Little did we know.

    Thanks again

    Reply
  5. AvatarTim Rosenberg says

    February 24, 2021 at 9:36 am

    That part about playing 80% all the time is spot on. I too went to Ithaca College. I couldn’t crack the top Jazz Band so I asked Steve Brown why. He said, “I couldn’t hear ya, man!” Next round of auditions, I blew my guts out and I got in!

    Now that I am a teacher, I feel like I spend the first year with my students saying “louder”, “more”, “bigger” over and over.

    Reply
    • SteveSteve says

      February 24, 2021 at 9:53 am

      Haha! I can imagine Steve saying that with that accent of his. Yeah, 80% is what I tell students. Even as they are playing something. I’ll just yell out “80%” and immediately they start playing louder…. I also tell them to “fill the room with their sound” or sometimes to “aim their sound at the far corner ceiling of the room”.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Alexandre Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Steve Neff

Cart


NEFFMUSIC PRINTED BOOKS

Testimonials

Just to say thanks for your advice and lessons.  I’ve just read your amazing story.  I really appreciate what you do in regards to teaching.  I have bought a couple of your lessons and frankly they’re undersold.   I’ve learned much more with these two lessons than with 2 years of sax teachers.   Thanks so much………..
Mike

Hello Steve, I’m getting so much out of your lessons and books, amazing how much one may think one knows, there is always a new frontier or new way to view something you think you had somewhat down. You have taken it all to a new level and am so grateful. Your lessons are so down to earth and understandable and clear!  Thanks so much Steve! Cheers, Eddie

Eddie Parente
Your lessons on playing the blues is so clear . I have been through many books on blues playing and not one of them explains as clear as your lessons . Most of them say “Play the same blues scale over all three chords of a 12 bar blues ” Its very misleading .     Thanks
Martin
Thank you for all the educational information you provide.  I am a classically trained musician.  Professionally, I am a 4th and 5th grade band teacher.  I have played piano and sax for many years, but now I am starting to gig out more. I have always improvised by ear in the past. I have gotten by with my strong sense of pitch, rhythm and melodic contour. However, I want to go deeper. I want to play with a greater variety of melodic and rhythmic ideas to pull from.  I have studied to gain a … Read more
Ray
Absolutely the best learning experience in my 40 years of playing.These books are awesome!!
Alfred LaBella
I want to say something about Steve Neff’s series of lessons, Beginner Jazz Improvisation. For a couple of years I tried many beginner lessons and my problem was that there was a gap between lessons that were fairly simple and ones that I was not quite ready for and my progress stalled out. That problem was solved with the series Beginner Jazz Improvisation. He guides you step by step along the way and builds a foundation for learning jazz and blues. He leaves no question about what to practice … Read more
Pete

Never really had lessons before just kinda worked things out on my own. Was in a rut but your lessons are really helpful in opening melodic possibilities. Ur an awesome resource to the saxophone community. Thanks for sharing. 

Anthony
Your major diatonic patterns book is great. I”m studying the first twenty patterns (first twenty pages) each day with different articulation each day and slowly increasing the tempo each week or so.  There is a noticeable improvement in finger coordination across all keys and its amazing how much more secure I feel on the difficult keys when attempting to play pieces with 5+ flats/sharps. I’m able to sort out the fingerings for these pieces now much more quickly than before, often in one or two … Read more
Geoff
I am a music book junkie and I have to say that your books are the most clear, user friendly, and helpful books I own.  They are my absolute favorites and I only wish I had them years ago.  I wouldn’t change a thing about the experience I had in acquiring my degree at Berklee, but my playing has perhaps grown more in the time I’ve spent buried in your books and lessons.  Keep up the great work!!! Thanks, John
John

I am enjoying your style of teaching, and you’ve done a great job with the videos….good sound quality and well constructed lessons.  Balances the more guitaristic material found on the majority of guitar based programs.  Jazz vocab is what I’m all about at this point in the journey.  I especially dig the fact that you’ve studied with Bergonzi…helps me see his voluminous output in a more bite sized way.

Milton

Hello Steve,

I have not received my alto yet but have already gone through 14 lessons. I love your approach, style, knowledge and competence. I now regret so much to have stayed away from playing the sax for the past 45-50 years…(I am 65).  But It is never too late to get back to your first love. After 23 years in compuer sciences and 22 years in finances…I am now back to music for the rest of my life.

Doing some research on the net, I found this:

http://forum.saxontheweb.net/showthread.php?1… Read more

Claude

Steve,

I have played for many years and have enjoyed going “back to the basics” in some of your lessons!  You have such a gift for explaining concepts.  As I have gotten older, some of the basic things have gotten muddled because I just play, not knowing why.  As I refresh myself with “why”, it increases my confidence and expands my playing.  Thank you so much for using your gift!  You are a blessing!

Julia
I’ve been a member of Steve’s site for about six months now and the difference it has made to my playing is immeasurable. The (many) benefits of this membership are that you can have lessons at time convenient to you, they work out A LOT cheaper than face-to-face lessons with a teacher of the same calibre and you can replay them ad infinitum. I don’t know how many times have I had lessons in the past where I’ve ended up covering the same concepts when really a ‘replay’ of the last lesson would h… Read more
Nick

Steve,  Just want to say thanks for all you are doing for all of us. I’ve learned more from you than anyone else in my 40 years of playing.

If you can give some tips on One Note Samba, Ceora, and Wave… that would be cool.  I really like learning how you apply your concepts to actual songs!

Have a great year,

Kevin Ledbetter

I've learned more from you than anyone else in my 40 years of playing.
I’ve been downloading your lessons for 4 months now (20 lesson) and I have noticed tremendous growth in my playing thus far! I’m so happy that I stumbled upon your site!
Bob
Steve’s monthly lessons are entirely valuable. Without brow beating, he tells you all the stuff you deep down know you really should be working on, instead of just relying on the same old patterns. In spite of the fact that you’re taking a video lesson, Steve’s presentation is comfortable and “real”. In a little more than a year, he’s developed a library of lessons that seem to offer any player a lifetime’s worth of practice material. I’m just glad I stumbled upon it.… Read more
Grant
I am enjoying your style of teaching, and you’ve done a great job with the videos….good sound quality and well constructed lessons.  Balances the more guitaristic material found on the majority of guitar based programs.  Jazz vocab is what I’m all about at this point in the journey.   I especially dig the fact that you’ve studied with Bergonzi…helps me see his voluminous output in a more  bite sized way.
Milton
I would like to say that in the last year my sax playing has progressed loads from your lessons. I have had a sax for about 20 years and dabbled with lessons from a few teachers and have learnt very little from them. As you have said in your lessons many teachers tell you to use the blues scale and leave it there, not even showing you the resolution points!!. I am now believing I can in time become a good improviser.
Thanks again,
Shane
Shane
Hi Steve, I can’t express just how much I appreciate your teaching. My playing has improved so much over the past year since I have been studying and practicing with your lessons. It is possible to teach an old dog new tricks, these lessons are proof! Thanks, Michael Byington
Michael Byington
Hey Steve, I’m a 22-year-old from Australia. I thought it would be worth saying. You’re an absolute legend. I can’t thank you enough. You have helped me rekindle my love for the saxophone and music as a whole. All the best for the future, your work doesn’t go unnoticed. PS. I am loving your devastating minor lines pdf.
Sapph
Hey Steve, My name is Jason Freese and I play keyboards and sax in the band Green Day.  I grew up taking sax lessons from Eric Marienthal when I was a kid and got out of it for a long time. I ran into you on youtube while searching for sax stuff. I bought a whole bunch of your lessons and have been loving it! Thanks! Here is my wikipedia so you can see the albums I’ve played on….Thanks again. It’s sparked my interest in practicing again.   Jason
Jason Freese (sax player for Green Day)
Two years later I began a search for a sax teacher and happened to come across Steve Neff when I was searching YouTube for sax teachers.  I went to neffmusic.com and was very impressed with the lessons Steve Neff was offering.  The concept of selecting lessons was an approach that I thought was unique and purchased a few lessons.  I liked the lessons so much that I signed-up for a 6 month package. I was very happy with all the lessons I selected.  I also purchased Steve’s book Mastering the B… Read more
Michael
I just started looking at my lessons and I have to say, dude you are awesome.  I ABSOLUTELY will learn from you!  I started the tenor about 1 ½ yrs ago and have since picked up an alto, and more recently a soprano.  I spend most of the time on the tenor, followed by soprano, and have only gotten to the alto a few times.  I think I’ll be sticking with tenor.  I’m having a great time and hope one day to play well enough to get regular gigs.  I’ve been playing keys for about 35 years (… Read more
Wil

Hello Steve,

I just want to say thank you so much for your unbelievable work, it is just mind opening, thanks for sharing it.

Wolfgang from Berlin

Wolfgang from Berlin

Featured Video Lessons

  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$14.99Current price is: $14.99.
  • The Secret to Modern Outside Jazz Lines Lesson-Minor The Secret to Modern Outside Jazz Lines Lesson-Minor $9.99
  • Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson
    Rated 4.91 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Secret to Altissimo (no one has ever told you about before) Lesson The Secret to Altissimo (no one has ever told you about before) Lesson
    Rated 4.75 out of 5
    $9.99

Now over 600 video and audio lessons to choose from!

Free Lessons

  • Free Lesson on The New Ultimate II-V-I Primer-Major Keys
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering Altered Pentatonics
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering the Blues Scale Volume 1 & 2
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering the Dominant Bebop Scale and Language Book 1 & 2
  • Free Video Lesson on Approach Note Velocity Book

Recent reviews

  • Bebop Scale-Altered Scale II-V-I Practice Lesson Bebop Scale-Altered Scale II-V-I Practice Lesson by Noah
  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) by Andy
  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Russ
  • Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Timothy
  • The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Ray Holland

Footer

Recent Comments

  • Leo on Phil-Tone Tenor Mouthpiece
  • Randy Cosby on GetASax GS Supersonic 50s Dukoff 7* Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Brian at GetASax on GetASax GS Supersonic 50s Dukoff 7* Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Brian at GetASax on GetASax GS Supersonic 50s Dukoff 7* Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Steve on GetASax GS Supersonic 50s Dukoff 7* Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review

Top rated products

  • Mastering the Major Bebop Scale & Sound (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Major Bebop Scale & Sound (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $14.99
  • Tune of the Week-Softly as a Morning Sunrise Lesson Tune of the Week-Softly as a Morning Sunrise Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Style of Dexter Gordon-Lady Bird Lesson 1 The Style of Dexter Gordon-Lady Bird Lesson 1
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • Tune of the Week-Days of Wine and Roses Lesson Tune of the Week-Days of Wine and Roses Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • Tune of the Week-Invitation Tune of the Week-Invitation
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99

Product tags

alto sax alto saxophone approach notes audio lesson bebop scale beginner beginner saxophone blues blues licks blues patterns blues scale blues scales diminished scale dominant chords ear training fundamentals II-V-I improvisation jazz improvisation jazz lines jazz patterns jazz sax jazz saxophone jazz standard jazz standards licks Mastering the Blues Scale Michael Brecker modern improv modern improvisation online lesson patterns playing outside practice habits reading music sax basics sax lessons saxophone scales smooth jazz steve neff tenor sax tenor saxophone video lesson video lessons
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • SUPPORT

Neffmusic © 2005–2025