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Originally Posted by Larry Feldman
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06-10-2015 07:49 PM
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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
From pre-war country blues to swing blues to post-war electric urban blues to bop blues, the blues is the wellspring that flows into virtually every other style of American music.
A good blues solo is not just a bunch of unrelated pentatonic licks string together. A good blues solo has form and logic just as any good music does. The best blues musicians have always known this.
Originally Posted by wolflen
Regards,
Jerome
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It seems as though our culture (The USA) has left the blues behind. It used to be heard more heavily in our popular music. Without that musical backdrop I wonder if it makes the Blues harder to comprehend?
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Some old blues, CC with BG (and IIRC, Count Basie on piano):
"Gone With What Wind"
I love the ensemble riffs at the end. (Mickey Baker would later call these "groove riffs". In either case, they are fun to play and fun to hear.)
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Originally Posted by Larry Feldman
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Jazz Blues, as defined by the masters, is, IMHO, the most difficult form to sound great on, simply because the bar has been set so impossibly high over the years. I'd say the best jazz blues soloing is not only more complex than say a good Giant Steps solo, but infinitely more entertaining, on so many levels, emotionally certainly not the least of them!
Try to play 5 choruses on a slow blues, now that's something that always seems to separate wheat from chaff....
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Originally Posted by nick1994
Endless intellectualisation not really possible here. Basically, you take yer blues and you take yer jazz and you go and make some greasy, happening music.
BTW, Robben Ford opened the jazz rabbit hole for me. What a player!
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I was thinking a slow Jazz Blues, we can start here :
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Originally Posted by princeplanet
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I think the first slow blues I heard that knocked me out was "Stormy Monday" by the Allman Bros. from the "Fillmore East" album (1971). Duane and Dickie had it going on.
Well, I'd heard Jimi play "Red House" before this, but I think this is a better tune, and certainly a jazzier one.
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
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Here's a clip of Willie Thomas playing a Bb blues with a piano player. (I hoped for a video of Willie's own "Blues For Val," a slow blues in one of his books but I couldn't find a video of him playing it.)
This is a lesson in how to vary basic blues vocabulary---rhythm, dynamics, space, plaintive cries, the whole shmear.
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It would be awesome to hear some forum members post their playing, just 1 or 2 choruses and tips from experienced players.
Was hoping to do this myself on weekend but man I am just drowning in the logistics of kids sport.
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Originally Posted by gggomez
Of course, these guys are advanced players so maybe you meant us more "common folk" should post . I really hope to do so once I get together three or four nice bars that are true improvisation and not just memorization. It's slowly coming together. For now, you will have only JazzinNY to draw inspiration from on this thread, seeing he had the guts to post his progress for the world to see.
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Originally Posted by gggomez
On my channel search for Oily Blues (slow), Devil's ears (slow), Billie's bounce (med), and more, since it's all Blues based.
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Originally Posted by gggomez
Not saying this is great blues playing in terms of 'emotion' or anything, it was really just a quick demo of what my Gibson 175 sounds like recorded direct. But it's an example of a jazz-type blues.
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Thanks grahambop yeah I dig that and loved your version of But Beautiful. Real soulful tone you have.
Vladan I could not find your pieces.
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Originally Posted by gggomez
Oily Blues
Devill's Ears/ angel Eyes
Billie's Bounce
And here's one of the playlists: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...DtELx5zxLYVKBf
Also, if you click on the signature link below, top 20 ... you'll find some ...Last edited by Vladan; 06-15-2015 at 08:13 PM.
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Cool Vladan you are quite an artistic and cheeky fella. The attitude of Billie's Bounce suits the video perfectly, put a smile on my dial.
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Mark...
"This is a lesson in how to vary basic blues vocabulary---rhythm, dynamics, space, plaintive cries, the whole shmear."
Cream Cheese Blues..??
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Originally Posted by wolflen
Julian Lage Trio - Sat 27th April - Marciac,...
Today, 03:57 PM in The Players