-
If you want to make efficient use of your time and have it become fun, leave out the shredding and pedal board stuff. It's not helping you, it's reinforcing old habits (and making you feel like jazz is too hard- it's not!).
Listen to more jazz wherever you can, build up a collection. This will help you get the feel and vocabulary- without that all the theory is just letters and numbers on a page.
-
02-14-2018 05:33 PM
-
Originally Posted by Vladan
-
Playing jazz guitar at a competent level (where you can hang with a group) takes a long time. I've been at it five years--I'm a lot better than when I started, but I wouldn't say I can really hang too well. I practice a fair amount for a hobbyist, say 10 hours a week. (I came from a rock bass background.)
When I started, I underestimated how much work is involved. Now it's too late to stop!
-
What you're already doing sounds like an absolutely perfect practice regimen.
Really, the only negative seems to be that it isn't working for you -- at all.
Well, there's always a minor sticking point. <g>
I'd suggest some serious simplification.
1. Pick one simple tune you like. Feel free to look at the chart as much as you need to.
2. Play the chords as if you were comping for a soloist (I'm assuming that's something you can do, but if not, I can post about it upon request).
3. Scat sing a solo over the first 4 or 8 bars. Do this repeatedly until you have sung a line you like.
4. Figure out how to play it on guitar.
5. Work through the rest of the tune the same way.
That's it. That's jazz.
The next thing to work on is being able to do the entire process fast enough to play in a group.
Once you can do that, you're done -- at least until you get bored with what you can scat sing. At that point, you may want to build your musical imagination. The traditional way is to copy stuff from recordings. A lot of terrific musicians do this as a kind of project-based activity. That is, writing down, in standard notation, entire solos, and learning to play them with the exact articulation of the original.
But, some musicians will admit that they never do this. They just listen to music they like and absorb whatever sinks in. Others will figure out the occasional interesting fragment.
And, whichever way you do it, there's a great player who did it your way, and other great players who did something different.
At the risk of belaboring the point, I think there are two basic skills.
One is to be able to imagine a good line. People build this ability with listening and/or transcribing.
The other is to be able to play, instantly, whatever you imagine. This, I think, comes mainly by spending a lot of time with the guitar in your hands playing all kinds of stuff.
The underpinning of all of it is a well trained ear. Formal ear training can help.
-
Originally Posted by JGinNJ
-
Originally Posted by pkirk
And yeah, in a lot of ways I do see Jazz as “improv boot camp”. So in that respect, I may always be on the outside looking in. That stings a bit as it could be my motivation is not “pure”. I guess there are worse things to try commit to though?
-
Originally Posted by pkirk
I also recently discovered Marc Ribot. Not sure how I missed him. I’m not sure if he’s straight Jazz or not, but I love his playing.
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
In the meantime we learned more details, like you have degree in music, are listening to quite a few modern players, you are not stranger to jazz lingo ... I won't further comment on those, but I already see you will have fine company on this forum.
Once more, good luck.
Of course, by all means, search my links from below signature, you might get some ideas about what to do and what not to do.
Also, by all means, search pkirk's links, where you find them, he is great player.
-
Is your internet connection good enough to get on Facebook and watch video?
Find and join the Matt Warnock 'Play Jazz Guitar' group - it would be perfect for you. Great community, pitched at complete beginners to intermediate jazz players.
Matt tackles a different standard each month. Takes the whole thing apart, learning the melody, the form of the piece, understanding of how the harmony is constructed, comping, a little chord melody and then soloing. He does a live workshop on each part which you can watch back later. Everyone posts up their own attempts at each task and provides feedback and advice.
Sounds like exactly what you need.
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
It's just music, only with icing on it. Instead of C, change a note, learn the shape, and play CM7. Instant jazz.
What the others have said is right, you're trying to do too much at once and get there (wherever that is) too quickly.
Take a simple tune like Satin Doll. In C, medium swing, a few chords. Slow it down, play something. Get the feel of it. Won't take long.
But a good teacher is a good idea. You need someone to discuss with, show you stuff, simplify things. Yes, it will take time but if you're interested in what you're doing you don't think in those terms, you're just doing it and learning new things.
That's it really. Seriously. You only get into the brain damage stuff much later on
-
Originally Posted by ragman1
It boggles my mind. Lol
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
Jazz is about making interesting melody and keeping good time. And, of those two, time is more important.
So, I would suggest, when you're actually trying to make music, to follow Charlie Parker and forget all the rules and just blow. Meaning, think of a melody and try to play it.
-
Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
I can honestly say that I have never, in my 32 year musical life, ever “thought of a melody”. I’ve learned and harmonized many of them. I may have composed a few. But I have never 1) Thought of a melody 2) Attempted to play it in real time.
When it comes to soloing, in my background, you just pick the notes you know will sound good over the key and you play those until it sounds good. And once recorded, that is what you play every time. But there is no conscious thought of melody. Plus there is usually only one or two chords to think about.
I mean there are, of course, times when when I was called on to play “melodically”, but that just means to slow down and hit some bluesy bends or something.
This is is the crux of why Jazz seems so alien to me. Lol
-
Listen to a lot of jazz. A lot. So much of it is feel.
I too was a shredder sort at one time, I've migrated to blues with jazz flavors, but in order to get the jazz side of the sound, I had to internalize the swing. Speaking only for myself, coming from a rock background, the hardest thing for me to learn was the groove in jazz.
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
Who says you've got to do all that? That's an exercise, it's not playing music. They've got you jumping through hoops and you don't see it.
If it feels funny to you, don't do it. Play music, feel something. Simple.
See all those posts you've written in English? Now rewrite them not using any word longer than 8 letters, placing emphasis on the consonants d, s, f and l. End each phrase with a word ending in e and don't use more than 3 adjectives in any one paragraph.
Feel dumb? Exactly.
sorry, it is a bit more complicated than that!
-
The problem posed in the OP was the struggle with jazz soloing/improvising. Well, here are some things which are important but DO NOT teach a guitarist how to effectively improvise jazz solos:
- Songs
- Comping
- Chord melody arrangements
- Scales
- Chords
- Arpeggios
And here are some things which should be done - but by themselves - also DO NOT teach one how to effectively improvise jazz solos:
- Study with a teacher
- Play guitar method books
- Listen to lots of jazz
- Study jazz/modern harmony & theory
- Read jazz improvisation books
Finally, here is yet another thing that will either (1) not work for most, or (2) take an inordinate amount of time:
- knowing your chord scales and arpeggios etc. and endlessly doodling to songs and backing tracks
IMHO of course.
-
Originally Posted by mnorris777
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
With time and work, though, I'm getting better at hearing what I'm playing as I play it. This video is strictly-speaking about bass, but I think it applies here.
-
Originally Posted by JGinNJ
And even after all the helpful advice I’ve received here, I’m still pretty sure Jazz is the most inaccessible music there is. And although this is probably a matter for another post, I’m pretty sure that Jazz and Jazzers kind of like the the fact that it’s somewhat inaccessible. That’s part of the appeal really. “We know things the layman doesn’t. Yay us. We’re smart”.
How is Jazz NOT hard? Not being snarky. Just show me some easy Jazz so I can check it out!
-
Originally Posted by Jazzstdnt
-
A very important part of the answer can be found in post #10.
-
Originally Posted by ragman1
-
Originally Posted by Jamesrohr1
1. Can you scat sing?
2. If you know a tune, say Happy Birthday, can you play the melody starting on any note without mistakes?
-
Originally Posted by Jazzstdnt
-
Jamesrohr1 I think we are on a similar path.
I would turf that Charlie Parker Omnibook, that guy is so advanced. There are so many before steps before that level of playing.
Time and melody has been mentioned a lot above.
I had a lesson recently with a top bass player and we spent a lot of the session focusing on time. Metronome on 2 and 4 or just 4. Make the metronome sound good he said. Don't play the head like it is written in a book a computer can do that, make music play it how you feel it, sing it change it up, use it as a reference but make that metronome sound good. The way he floated around but was always in time was so beautiful and exciting.
The other thing he really pushed me on was to keep the head in my improvisation. These things I have really been working on and it is making a huge difference in improvising and coming up with cool lines. On playing the 3 and the 7 he had me do it in all the gaps in the melody as a bass line to facilitate knowing exactly where you are in the harmony when playing the melody and as a step towards improvising on the melody.
Love the ride.
Blowin in the Wind
Today, 10:27 AM in The Songs