Is this just a ridiculous task to set out on for learning gypsy jazz? Am I eventually going to have to sit down and go through all the scales, arpeggios, and theory? Do players who grew up learning this music like Stochelo, Angelo, et al have theory backgrounds or are they just playing?
Comments
I always say the best way to get up to speed on any kind of music is to transcribe, transcribe, transcribe. You'll start to see the patterns and be able to discern them. Knowing arpeggios doesn't mean anything until you hear them in the music.
Oh and 8 hours a day for 6 months is a decent start.
And, about theory, I saw on a site (I can't remember the name) that almost all gypsy jazz players like Django, Stochelo, Bireli don't know a lot of theory, but they know shapes, arpeggios, scales etc...However, I think that Stochelo, Bireli etc learned to improvise by learning Django solos by ear (I saw this about Bireli on a blog, as he was young, learned a lot of solos)
I hope that this post is good.
Stefan.
Visit my YouTube profile: http://www.youtube.com/user/Xiphosss
Vive Django!
here is a very unofficial list :
1. basic triads + stacking patterns (to derive whole arpeggios) !!!!!
2. minor6 + min7b5 + maj9 patterns
3. major6, major 6/9, and minor 6/9 patterns
3. diminished arpeggio patterns (add leading tones to derive the complete scale)
4. dom 7th scales and add dom7b9 to that.
5. whole tone, pentatonic, and augmented (if you want to)
6. tri-tone dom7 subs
...
It gets easier the more you do it. I used to practice 8 to 12hrs a day in the first few years, just replaying the record or tape over until i got what i wanted.
Now my ear is pretty good. I'm not saying i can instantly replicate anything i hear, but it's a helluva lot quicker than if i had to wade through tab. I find tab very laborious. Probably because i've never really used it.
I'm also a believer in trying to do something of your own with the music. Even if it's not awesome technically. So long as it swings & sounds ok, You will get better & better over time if you keep practising, & you'll develop something that's unique to yourself. There's nothing more dull after a while than getting involved in a jam & having to listening to someone churn out Django's solo to Dark Eyes or I'll See You In My Dreams (for example) again. It's great, but we've heard it all before a thousand times. I'd rather hear what the individual player brings to the table, no matter what level or standard they perceive themselves to be at.