Hey I'm just getting into gypsy and me and a few friends wanna get to together and jam, There is a guitarist, pianist (also sings) and me on electric bass (also sings). I have 2 questions, since I don't play upright, what should I do to get the best bass sound for gypsy jazz, I know a few strategies for getting a tone similar to upright (
https://goo.gl/SwM75s) (
https://goo.gl/KM1UJD) I could also have the pianist do left hand bass with me which leads me to my next question. What should I pianist do? Would left hand bass and right hand melody might work. Since me and pianist both sing what should the right hand do when one of us is singing? Wouldn't standard comping get in the way of guitarist? Thanks in advance!
Comments
I would think that an experienced keyboardist knows how to stay out of the way of the bass and knows how to comp behind a vocalist. I would also think that in a band with multiple potential singers, the sensible approach is for whoever's not singing to take over the comping role--though a singing bass player really can't abandon the bass, unless the keyboardist has a really solid left hand. (I've played with two singing bass players, and it's a non-trivial accomplishment.)
In a trio environment these roles can evolve naturally or be worked out explicitly without too much drama. (Otherwise, why be playing together?)
If you can't find a second guitar to play rhythm for the first, then stride would be the closest straightforward approximation to la pompe, though the feel is rather different. There are more varied and subtle ways of piano backing for swing. To my ears Teddy Wilson was an unsurpassed master of finding imaginative ways to fit the piano into all kinds of swing bands.
Alternatively, the piano could play a modern-style accompaniment, like Peter Beets is playing in that clip before the rhythm guitar comes in, although it doesn't really have "that swing" without something percussive to mark beats 2 and 4 (the bass in this case). If there's a guitar playing rhythm, then I think the piano should definitely lay off the stride and do modern comping like Beets does later.
Maybe, but make that your basic starting point guide line only. Why get bound by formula? One of my favorite albums in this genre features a piano in a Cuban/Latin style. It's genius, a masterpiece, I never get tired listening to this album:
To my ear, the center of swing remains dance. If you can imagine dancers, you've got the pulse. I can feel it here:
But full disclosure: Russell had me at "Fats Waller and his Rhythm"... what a great outfit that was!
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Eli, if this piano-bass-guitar format works out for you, you are a lucky guy, because that's the combination I've long yearned for... but our bass-guitar-clarinet/sax trio could never seem to find the right pianist.
Good ones who like to play in this archaic style seem to be as scarce as rocking horse shit!
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."