I'm beginning a study of the traditional right-hand technique for Gypsy Jazz guitar - always do a downstroke on a new string. I'm enjoying getting a feel for it, and I can sense why it is done that way. However, there are sometimes musical reasons why I would want to do otherwise.
Here's a passage from Django's classic 1937 solo on Minor Swing, which I'm learning.
Dj1 by
RobMacKillop, on Flickr
Line 1, last bar - it starts with a full-beat rest, then half a beat rest. My instinct is to start with an upstroke so that the down strokes have the accents on the beats. I keep going through this and the next bar alternating down and up.
Line 2, bar 2 - D, U, D - then there is a string change. I
could start the second string with a down stroke, but it kind of upsets the groove I've got going of downstrokes on down beats. I want to play an upstroke on the second string.
I'd like to know what you would do here.
It also brings up the question of inequality of stress between down and up strokes, and strong and weak beats. Should my upstrokes be as strong as my downstrokes? If so, where have the strong and weak beats gone?
Comments
Everything you wrote makes sense to me, keeping the groove and accenting the strong beats.
I think Joscho Stephan said in the workshop on the same subject, i hope I'm not misquoting the guy, sometimes he thinks of it in terms of triplets and makes sure the first beat is always strong regardless of string change.
As long as it sounds right It is right no matter how I get there.
SR. would likely just use 2 downstrokes in a row. At the last bar in the first system
Bar 1 starting last note ....down bar 2 down up down down down up.
Bar 4 down Down up down up
Bar 6 down up down down down up down up
I find it makes quite a difference in the sound of the phrasing rather than alternating.
It's what he grew up with
I think what is most important is to get the phrasing, attack and articulation right however you get there.
@dennis, Dennis Chang did a video called in the Style of Stochelo Rosenberg or some such. Part of a series. Interesting to watch.