Threads 3551 to 3600 of 10837
Not really replacing it, just a smoother alternative people use more often now.
Dawg - I think what you need is to find some examples of what you're looking for in professional recordings and see what they're doing. If you can't figure it out I'm sure someone here could help...
No, the guitar and piano charts are not the same (except for the treble clef passage in question), and I have seen the same direction on other arrangements. The usual convention is to write guitar...
Hi - welcome to the wild world of jazz guitar! So, what does your teacher recommend right now?
The sound occurred by accident in a rehearsal of the classic George Shearing Quintet. A piano melody line was meant to be doubled in unison by Margie Hyams on vibes and Chuck Wayne on guitar but...
Thats tricky, because to me Shearing style probably means "locked hands" playing...so the piano is playing in two octaves...
I looked it up on Google and It’s not a guitar thing. It’s a piano thing. Locked hands, blocked chords playing the melody in unison with both hands. On the Quintet recordings Chuck Wayne...
Don’t recall, will check the book next rehearsal. But what’s the difference? “Shearing style” is a thing.
What’s the tune? Shearing Quintet usually had them playing in unison. https://youtu.be/KXe_dwE9Pzs?si=V2d1i8vxHzUJFKdU



“Shearing style”
Today, 05:26 PM in Comping, Chords & Chord Progressions