My group is a non-traditional gypsyish group, piano, guitar, bass, drums in rhythm section. We are polystylistic, but when I try to get them to do a gypsy tune, I can't communicate the feel right no matter how hard I try. When I'm soloing I have this incredible urge to constantly speed up, and I feel like there is no solid beat. I practice with a tempo training metronome for about 4 hours a day (a metronome that drops bars and then comes back in) and my tempo is rock solid with that and when I play with GJ play-a-longs like on Stephan Wrembels site.
Do any of you guys have the same problem when playing with people who are more bebop players? What is going on exactly that makes me want to speed up so much. Anyone else play with a piano player, and if so how do you instruct them to provide proper support? It's driving me crazy because I fall apart when I play with them, and I can't replicate the same phenomena in my practice sessions so I don't know how to correct it.
Comments
Thanks for the tip on the other play-a-longs, that might be helpful to understand what they are used to hearing.
http://www.campusfive.com/swingguitarbl ... -feel.html
Must jump in here.
Mssr. Chatelain is essentially correct, but all of the old school bop cats feel 1 & 3. In playing with them, and talking with them they always (yes, always!) say tap your foot on 1 & 3. , two and four are in your heart, one and three in the ground. the accents are the same really for swing, bop, and gypsy jazz . . . just a little lighter or heavier depending.
In dealing with playing with other players, can you lock into the drummer when he is playing ride? if so, the piano should be no issue- just have him float over the top with chords as he would do in any other jazz setting. Check out ritary's live cd, for good examples of piano playing in gypsy jazz. I play with piano and drums somewhat often, and love doing it- and basically I play the same. if everyone has big ears and lets the groove happen it should work pretty well.
cheers,
b
I still think something is missing. There is even a difference in feel between classic American Swing and classic European swing, and my group plays well together in the American swing (straighten up and fly right), it is only on the GJ tunes that we diverge.
I wish I could articulate myself better, and I hope I'm not being to particular, so I hope I'm not frusturating anyone. It is like GJ is a smiling, metal spring, always slightly under tension, while Be Bop is someone walking down the street leaning back with his hands in his pocket, and American Hot Swing (sydney bichet) is like being hunched over dancing - I hope my analogies don't sound too stupid
John
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."