Over the past year, I've picked up two guitar students whom I'm teaching the fundamentals of
Gypsy Jazz. One of my students comes from a folk/rock background who can mimic shapes,
but needs to work on some fundamentals of theory, plus some basic block and tackle issues
around chords and scales.
As he is focused on Gypsy Jazz, I am debating whether I should work with him on full seven note
scales then work on the arpeggios for those scales, or whether to skip seven note scales and
work on arpeggios mainly.
At first, it would seem that learning both is the best route, but two factors make me second guess
that:
1) There are only so many minutes in the day for one to practice, and if one had to choose, it
would seem arpeggios are more practical.
2) In my own improvised soloing, I will tend at times to run some scale type patterns, which
sometimes sounds ok, but often is not really a Gypsy flavor. That's likely because I learned
scales (classically) before I focused on arpeggios. Perhaps if you flip it around, learn arpeggios,
then add scale notes later on, the flavor of the improvised soloing would change.
Opinions?
Thanks.
---0---1
<12>~~~~~
---0---1
<12>~~~~~
---0---1--4--5
<12>~~~~~
3--4
<12>~~~~~
4--5--4h5
-3
3---(DR)--
Comments
Others may disagree, but I see this as the best approach. Scales don't seem to matter as much in GJ, until you get to be bop tunes, and even then are secondary to arpeggios.
http://www.jillmartinisoiree.com
And by coincidence, I am using the Wrembel book with my students,
(which we may supplement with one of Michael's chord books)
and our first exploratory tune is "All of Me".
<12>~~~~~
---0---1
<12>~~~~~
---0---1--4--5
<12>~~~~~
3--4
<12>~~~~~
4--5--4h5
-3
3---(DR)--
What is Wrembel's MIB system about?
Jovation,
What's this?
---0---1---------------<12>~~~~~
---0---1---------------<12>~~~~~
---0---1--4--5--------<12>~~~~~
-----------3--4--------<12>~~~~~
-----------4--5--4h5------------
-3--------------------3---(DR)--
Thanks
Stephane calls it "Money in the Bank"! What MIB really stands for I can't say. It just refers to learning arpeggios in every key in three positions on the first four strings picking all ascending, all descending, up/down, and down/up. He also adds note values to that, and then eventually lower and upper approaches and enclosures, and finally the notes on the lowest two strings. He'll have you learn a tune at first, say "All of Me" or "Minor Swing" just playing the arpeggios through the changes, but switching positions every measure. Another thing he had me do at first was solo using only chord tones, so that phrasing became the most important thing. By the time you work through all this, you really have a pretty good grasp of the fingerboard. It makes a great warmup exercise, and it's a great way to map out where you need to be when as you learn a tune. I try to do it for 5-10 minutes when I start practicing, but I do lapse occasionally.
If I've left anything out, perhaps one of Stephane's other students could fill it in.
Michael
Michael
...
Jovation,
What's this?
---0---1---------------<12>~~~~~
---0---1---------------<12>~~~~~
---0---1--4--5--------<12>~~~~~
-----------3--4--------<12>~~~~~
-----------4--5--4h5------------
-3--------------------3---(DR)--
Thanks[/quote]
That is a signature post I had carried over from my days in posting on Yahoo Group Post.
It is tablature for the ending form to at least two Django tunes I know of one is "When Day Is Done" -
and I guess someone in the forum will recall the other.
It seems like an appropriate way to close a message on the forum, just as it would be the end tag on a song.
The “(DR)” is in respect to the man who played it.
[b]Jimmy[/b]
<12>~~~~~
---0---1
<12>~~~~~
---0---1--4--5
<12>~~~~~
3--4
<12>~~~~~
4--5--4h5
-3
3---(DR)--
Thanks for the reply and cool idea.
I play that one like this:
-------------------------<12>~~~~
---5---6---4---5-------<12>~~~~~
---4---5---3---4-------<12>~~~~~
---X---X---X---X---0------------
---5---6---4---5----------------
-3------------------------------
After they have a handle on this at mid tempos, you can move on to scales and "outside" the chord tones. Then all the fancy theory comes in handy!
Cheers,
B.
Ps. Just my two cents!