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I saw an interview with Jonathan Stout where he mentioned that early jazz is '1 and 3' music.
Starts at minute 29:19
For a long time, I assumed that in jazz, you have to set the metronome on 2 and 4 when practicing. However, after trying to practice Rhythm Changes at 250 bpm, I reconsidered this because it feels so difficult and awkward. Practicing swing at higher tempos with the metronome on 1 and 3 feels much easier and more natural. What do you think?
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12-04-2024 06:39 PM
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Originally Posted by rodolfoguitarra
for what it’s worth, I think you should practice both.
but Hal Galper says the same thing in his Forward Motion book. If you want to feel bigger chunks of time you have to use the big beat. So feeling 1 and 3 helps you feel quick tempos at a less frantic pace. 2 and 4 would theoretically be the same, but you body can’t help but feel that 1, so you still feel in four.
I love it but I usually have students do both.Last edited by pamosmusic; 12-04-2024 at 10:53 PM.
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I set my click on the and of 4 the moment, so I don’t have a dog in this fight haha. Foot tapping though, that could get acrimonious.
According to Hal Galper all 4/4 jazz is actually in 2. It’s just modern jazz hides it.
I would also suggest there is value setting the metronome somewhere else once you are used to one way of doing it. Put it where you are not once you are able to synchronise with it.
Barry Harris taught us to pat our foot on 1 and 3. He said the 2 and 4 were about the upper body and the 1 and 3 were about the lower body (“to keep the devil away”). This is also about dancing you shift your weight on 2 and 4. He also said that the worst thing ever to happen to jazz was that it went out of the dance halls because the dancers kept the musicians honest. He and Jonathan would agree about a lot of stuff.
He didn’t practice with a metronome at all, but I would hope that one can tap one’s foot on one and three and have the metronome somewhere else.
In fact I would think it a good thing to practice.
Early Jazz two feel goes BOOM CHICK BOOM CHICK. the chick is the tension.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
If I don’t pull the and onto the 4… tricky!
If I can do that I alternate quarter triplets and displaced quarter triplets. One of them lines up one of them doesn’t.
Then the ultimate challenge - alternating straight four comping with soloing haha
I do and of 3 too, weirdly it feels easier
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"Pat" your foot sounds like bouncing the toes,
but the most Jazzers I see bounce their heels,
especially the seated guitarists; e.g., Joe Pass.
Don't we have a word to distinctly mean that?
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Originally Posted by pauln
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Lots of famous players count on just the 1 on fast tempos.
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Hal Galper is right.
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Originally Posted by Alter
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I think 2 and 4 helps to feel the swing, once you have the feel 1 & 3 to get the tempo up there.
I only just started getting faster so who knows.
I also like setting it at 40 and playing scales/exercises at 160. Click on the one.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I can't play swing of any kind with metronome on 1 and 3. So awkward. I don't think Jonathan Stout meant that
However funk 16th rhythms are perfect. I'm practicing Corey Wong exercises like that.
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It’s worth learning to play jazz with the click on one and three. I had to do that for a session one time.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Like Barry Harris, I remember George Benson said in an interview he never practiced with metronome either, because he never had a timing problems lol. Personally, the metronome set me straight many years ago, it was a breaking point that I could play with metronome and it felt natural. I think I sorted some technique issues to be able to do that.
But I have a feeling once you got it you don't have to learn it again. So it doesn't matter how you set the click, it will not make a dramatic changes in your playing. It's still helping me to monitor my speed threshhold though, when I'm working on technique, but not the time feel.
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Originally Posted by Hep To The Jive
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Dunno, I like it more to put a bass drum on each beat than using just tick on 2,4.
Seems to be working better. For each their own.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
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Originally Posted by Hep To The Jive
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Originally Posted by djg
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Originally Posted by djg
About the years ago I saw Chick and Bobby at the Berlin Philharmoniker.
Wonderful concert and venue.
They started playing some swing tune, and the audience started clapping on 1 and 3.
Deftly, they pulled out the Harry Connick Jr move and added a bar of 5 to get the audience on 2 and 4.
Without missing a beat, the audience moved back to 1 and 3
At this point, Bobby and chick dissolved into giggles and were unable to continue.
That was the end of the gig.
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