Hey kids,
We're on this new-fangled You-tube site,
check out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7YyXRZzXtkc
We're playing Manoir De Me Reve at the Mermaid Inn.
The fiddle solo is Mark Campiglia, the guitar solo is me.
Hope ya'll like it.
Also, I've been doing some "Band in the Box"
files for GJ songs. Email me thru this site
or thru
www.hotclubphilly.com and I'll send you some cool stuff.
Barr
Comments
Thanks bro.' As far as it being a long song, sometimes we'll
each play a 1/2 chorus each to keep it interesting.
!
The 1/2 chorus thing works well
on songs like Nuages. We might post a clip of the HC P. playing Nuages with our female vocalist, Phyllis Chapell. She's way good, and is pretty darned cute to boot. [Could be another gig rule Re. cute chick singers]
Cheers,
B.W.
I really enjoyed that clip, there is so much there I I hear too little of these days, namely space...you are using space so well, the sign of a really seasoned and confident player, plus attention to dynamics and line shapes, things I also miss alot with some GJazz players. Well done man!
Post more, its great to hear and watch.
-Chuck
That's wonderful. It's a thoughtful well paced piece with lyrical solos and as Chuck has said - time and space to consider and enjoy the music.
Warren Haynes put it this way: "It's all about sentences - when you're speaking - it's not just "word word word word word word word word ... you have to have pauses for drama."
http://www.gibson.com/Lesson/Lesson/dat ... video1.swf
8)
Thanks for all of the kind words Re. our Youtube debut.
We are really trying to go for something a bit different.
Our singer Phyllis Chapell really adds a lot in that direction,
we're going to post a clip with her ASAP.
BTW, I do think that the phrasing point that some of you
[Duozona, Bob, Halo Stackabones], mentioned is a really good thing to consider. I was thinking that maybe one of the most difficult, and yet important issuses to work on is when to start and end your phrases.
BTW, I think that it's eaisier to play on a song like "Autumn Leaves,"
than a piece like "Manoir De Me Reves ," because it's harder to sound interesting on a song that dosen't have a different chord change every one or two bars.
Quick point;
Guitar players in general aren't always good at just playing
the MELODY. Most of us started out playing rock and roll, where we played rhythm and took solos, but didn't have to lean to play melodies. Horn players, violinst, etc, because of the nature of their instruments are playing melodies from the begining
of their studies. The related issue here is that the phrasing of the melody
is usually a good template for the phrasing of your solo. The phrasing can be a guide, [even at an unconscious level, as you are playing].
I've noticed that my students at times don't really know the melody
to a song that they are working on. It's almost as if the melodic statment of the song is just the part where the guitar player doesn't get to solo Needless to say, it helps to to REALLY know the song that you're soloing on, which means it should be memorized. [Lose the books, ASAP]! If you are showing up week after week to your jams and/or gigs with music books, maybe you should examine your level of commitment. It's a lot easier to memorize a song if you really know the melody. BTW, I recall playing the melody to "Autumn Leaves" at a lesson, and the teacher, [famous G.J. player], said, "if I were sitting in the audience listening to you I'd say to myself", 'this guy doesn't really know the melody of this song.'
He was right, [of course!] and I was so mortified that I learned it right away.
Maybe it takes a lot of work and support and "tough love" to make some progress. Anyhow, thanks again, and I hope that some of y'all find my ravings helpful.
Anyhow, more on this later, I'm handing the conch shell over to you all.
B.W.
A solo should be musical phrases that you hear, not patterns that you play from muscle memory. It is fine to do practice exercises that develop your finger dexterity, but if you don't spend the time to develop your ear, it is all an exercise in futility.
As for books, jazz is ear music, not eye music. Period. Charts are great tools for learning a tune or faking a tune that you don't know, but if you are always using charts, then you are always faking it.
It is a hard endeavor, this jazz guitar thing. If you want to do it well, be prepared to invest a LOT of time!
BTW, Great solo on the Vid Barry. Keep swinging.
Cheers,
Marc
www.hotclubpacific.com
PS: If any of you are in Northern California in early June, be sure to catch our set with the Great jazz guitarist Mimi Fox at Djangofest San Francisco.
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com