-
Lester wouldn’t bother with IV
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
-
06-29-2024 07:25 PM
-
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
(or any, actually)
-
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
-
Some No Mo for ya.
-
Originally Posted by charlieparker
I -- IV -- I -- V
I -- IV -- I -- V
So that's one measure of each, run through twice over the eight measure A section.
-
All this is well over my head. Undaunted, here's my take on rhythm changes from some time ago. I was really huffing and puffing just to keep up. Even so it was fun to give it a shot.
-
Originally Posted by buduranus2
-
Originally Posted by buduranus2
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
-
Busy summer so it's going a bit slower than anticipated ...
This one for my pass through with the following:
I - - - -
I7 - iv - I - V7
-
I heard a little oleo a hair before 50 seconds. Nice!
-
I took Christian and Jeff's advice to just play Bb over the A section.
Rhythm Changes
-
Originally Posted by charlieparker
I made a playlist of 5 that I think are easy, or lay well on the guitar. I hope it helps.
Jazz Blues: Where to Start - YouTube
-
Originally Posted by charlieparkerOriginally Posted by AllanAllen
I've played a lot of blues iny time so I am not sure how that will help, but I'll check out your playlist.
-
Well, blues means a lot of things. For me, playing jazz with a blues feel is all Lester Young. The irony that he's not on the playlist I sent doesn't escape me.
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
Yeah in my head that was an extended quote and listening back it was barely there. But apparently it showed up!
-
Originally Posted by charlieparker
-
A few keys into phase 3:
I V7 I V7
I7 #ivo I V7
-
So I figured I might try and show some of the stuff that I'm working on with this.
So here, I'm in the key of D, and I'm working on m5-8. So that's D7 - G#o7 - D6 - A7. I'll pick a place on the guitar, usually not more than an octave. Here I'm playing from the F# on the fourth string to the G# on the second string because I wanted a note on that string for my diminished chord. Then I pick what I want to try and use over each chord. Lately I've been working on some of the quadrads a la Jordan Klemons. Though I don't really use them correctly I don't guess. Here I'm using:
D with an added 2, so D E F# A
G#o with an added b2, so G# A B D
and A with an added b2, so A Bb C# E
A lot of the time I'll try working in even smaller chunks than that single octave. In this video, I'm only really using two strings.
I play over drum genius a lot. Here it's set for about 250.
I started just getting used to the shapes themselves where I'm playing them. From there I started with the plain triads, started adding some approach notes, added in the fourth notes, then got more chromatic with the approaches.
This sort of practice isn't really supposed to give me beautiful melodies. I think of it the way a batter on deck will put the weights on the end of his bat while he's loosening up. That would be silly to take to the plate, but when he kicks them off, the bat feels much much lighter. That's a bit how this feels a lot of the time. And this isn't how I'd practice a lot of stuff, but I've been trying to work on being more rhythmic and less eighth-notey, so it works pretty well.
-
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
-
Originally Posted by CliffR
Sometimes I work things up from slow and other times it works a little better to just floor it
-
Been preparing materials for a forthcoming Rhythm Changes Deep Lore vid. Here are some basslines for you.
According to Ethan Iverson, chord symbols predate many of these tunes so players were used to coming up with chords from the bassline. No idea what that reminds me of. In any case, bass lines weren't as improvised Bach then, but usually much more set. However as Ethan points out the great veteran bass players like Ron Carter still play these classic sorts of lines, esp for 2 feels. The (early) Bill Evans example shows this logic applied to modern jazz.
Here's the head for the Bill Evans A section. It's a sort of spin and old school Benny Goodman style swing riff, in 5:4. I also have a collection of rhythm changes riffs if anyones' interested
George Barnes plays Bach/1966
Today, 06:29 PM in The Players