I've been wondering... I've heard bebop players improvise over gypsy jazz (basically, bebop style soloing over a gypsy rhythm), but haven't heard gypsy jazz style soloing over bebop rhythm.
Any samples? (I have no idea what search terms to use in youtube)
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Birelli went through a thing with bebop if I recall correctly. Might check out some of his stuff.
Rhythm should be a fluid continuum not a prison.
In jazz terms bebop style generally refers to music with a lot of quick harmonic changes in it. Lots of chord changes.
For example Au Privave a bBird 12 bar blues in F concert
Standard blues for that era would be
F7....Bb7....F7...F7.... Bb7....Bb7....F7.....F7....C7....Bb7....F7...maybe up to C7 on the last bar for a turnaround.
Au Privave from the omnibook
F7...Gm/C7...F7...Cm/F7...Bb7....Bb7....F7...Am/C#7...Gm...C7...F7/D7...Gm/C7
Often with somewhat different changes each chorus depending on where Charlie was going. On fast tunes many of the older swing players just couldn't cut it at all.
Delauney reports that when Django first heard bebop his eyes lit up and he said something like .........ahhh....they play so fast...so fast.
One of the great tragedies of last century is that he and Bird didn't get to play together. I think hey really would have hit it off. They both had their own genius level musical vocabulary that was unlike anyone else's.
@Jazzaferri, i'm not really sure as I'm a newbie to GJ and jazz in general so the terms I use might be wrong. I will try to explain what I mean: I've heard of modern (not necessarily bebop) jazz players improvising over GJ rhythm (la pompe), but I haven't really heard a purely GJ style player (that is, arpeggio/chord shape-based soloing) play over modern jazz rhythm (bebop? smooth jazz-style? anything not used in la pompe that sounds 'modern').
Put another way, I've heard of players improvise over la pompe rhythm using 'modern' phrases, or phrases that sound... well, modern. That is, their solos sound modern (as opposed to Stochelo, Bireli, et al., whose phrases don't really sound dated, but still sound gypsy. Modern gypsy, if there's such a thing). What I'm wondering is what the traditional gypsy approach to soloing would sound like in a modern context. Django's 'Blues for Ike' is close (and most of his later recordings of course), but it's from a time when his playing was evolving to 'fit' in a more modern context.
Maybe the reason why I ask will give you an idea what I mean: As I mentioned, I'm new to GJ and jazz in general. So I'm wondering, now that I am studying strictly GJ, if what I learn will work if I jam with non-GJ jazz players. I love GJ, but modern jazz is just so-so for me. Given the lack of GJ players here, I feel I'll be jamming with 'normal' jazz players more. In a nutshell, will GJ be flexible enough to sound good with other styles?
Sorry for the long post, I really don't know how to explain succintly what I mean
The elements of style that would limit the practical application of GJ style in the context of modern Jazz have much to do with harmonic and linear melodic norms .
The GJ vocabulary of rhythm is very limited in comparison to modern jazz and if you are to maintain the style it needs to remain that way or the GJ style police will issue you a summons. People actually will complain at a concert if the soloist does not play mainly straight eighth notes on the beat with strictly diatonic arpeggios. Its a very conservative scene in some ways.
The kind of playing that is the norm in modern world class modern jazz will get you the cold shoulder from the traditionalists in the GJ camp.
Its approached like a folk style by some fans and so its required that a player fit into the frame so to speak to achieve acceptance by the die hard style fans.
This is not un typical in several revivalist music scenes , not at all unusual in these fan bases for "traditional" ethnic or regional music. The fans want to hold the art back so they can classify it and so that the professionals can copy it and serve it up again. Its a stylistic comfort zone thing.
In the jazz world at large its also a viable commercial method. You copy old stuff and repackage for resale. Every scene does this. Its mainly a practical necessity.
So if you plan on playing the music professionally and plan on playing and teaching you have to approach the style as a rule based idiom with limitations as the market doesn't exactly want to fuse with the world music/modern jazz market place. It wants to sell it self as a distinct idiom apart from other styles . Its a marketing necessity. Really.
Art on the other hand will find its own way. Which may not be the way to the bank, which is what people are ultimately afraid of .
%-(
The idea of playing an acoustic steel strung guitar in a Jazz idiom is a great Idea. The Selmer type instrument is unique and very charming and demands dedication on the part of the player. My feeling is that anyone to commits to using this instrument as a means for artistic expression is to be commended and supported by the community .
As a friend who is a world class teacher of folk music once told me," we can not teach style". In folk traditions each player has their own approach to the material and style. In any attempt to "teach" the idiom the rules that are taught will in fact limit the possibility of self expression to such a degree that all we will be left with is hundreds of minor lights that will never illuminate in that way that the true innovators do.
Listen to the music and learn that way. Listen and sing the music you hear and then find it on your instrument and strive to make the sounds you want to hear from that instrument .
I only allow myself 1 cup of coffee a day. So thats it . Thats all I got . :-@
Over time pushing through the limits of chord to chord to chord thinking one looks at the harmonic structure of a set of chord changes and comes up with scalar approaches that work through a series of chord changes.