Not an easy song to improvise over. How do you guys play over this one?
There is a lot of chords in this song and I thought about simplifying it. For the first two bars I’m thinking Eb over the changes, after that I’m pretty much lost.
Any tips would be highly appreciated.
Best regards.
Comments
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIOp4TLTPYg
As for how to play over it I don't have a lot of information - I think that you are right to break it down, because typically I don't think people outline every chord in rhythm changes like this. I will need to work on this too, but my best advice would be to listen to some solos over Ain't Misbehavin' that you like and copy those first to get some ideas about what you could do. Good luck!
-M
Best regards
Sometimes you see the bVII7 (Db7 in this case) which is closely related. But the IVm6 is more typical swing era changes. You can play both and make it a II- V... Or you can treat the Ab6 as Fm7b5 (enharmonic spelling) and then go to Bb7, like a minor II-V resolving to major (think night and day, What is this thing called love, etc...) I personally would only play the IVm6, sounds great!
Off the top of my head in Eb you can play this for the first A:
Eb-Eo-Fm-F#o-
Eb(/G)- Eb7(/G)- Ab6-Abm6
Eb-Cm-Fm-Bb7
Gm-C7-Fm-Bb7
There are lots of ways to play this kind of progression though... I like those chromatic diminished chords, but more often than not a diminished is a disguised dominant Eo=C7.
As for soloing you could either follow each chord or make harmonic generalizations. Depends on style and speed. As previously suggested I also recommend transcribing your favorite musicians ideas and going from there. Good luck!
"If you have to think about what you're going to play, your playing becomes stilted" - Joe Pass said this in the video I posted. I am thoroughly convinced after going to music school, learning to read music, and then learning all the theory that describes such music, that none of it is relevant to improvising. The only thing we can do is develop our ears to be able to play EVERYTHING our ears fish out of our musical subconsciousnesses; which should contain all the musical ideas you currently know. If you don't know or have any musical ideas: transcribe EVERYTHING you hear (and I do mean every little melody you come across in addition to your formal transcriptions). It's the best, and how everyone we admire as an improviser has learned to improvise. All the "modern masters" transcribed Django, and we all should too.
So as to what you "should" play over Ain't Misbehavin', just transcribe a bunch of ideas from Django and others (Angelo, Bireli, Stochelo, etc.) and then practice those ideas over the song until they become a part of your musical subconsciousness.
I learn whole solos at a time and then learn the most melodic parts in different keys and positions on the guitar. I do this with my eyes closed to build up "kinetic awareness" as to where the "sounds" of these phrases "are" on the neck. After a while of doing this, you should see a HUGE improvement in your ability to improvise. Also, the great thing about learning Django's solos first, as opposed to the modern players, is that in EVERY one of Django's solos there is a phrase that completely demonstrates his melodic inventiveness and genius. Sometimes his whole solos are masterpieces as in Dark Eyes, Ou est Tu Mon Amour, and I'll See You In My Dreams (to name a few).
Keep on Djamming!
Marcelo Damon
Sure, all of these players are no doubt geniuses, but none of them told me "I studied theory and learned to read notes". Bottom line, all that theory does is stifle your playing. I don't believe knowing theory makes learning to improvise easier, I actually believe it to be a detriment, as it takes your ear of the equation and makes ideas visible on paper, when they should be entirely audible. Leave the theory to the theorists, and the musical notation to the classical musicians.
I don't believe any of the players who we most admire in this style and beyond think "Well, here is a G7 chord, I should play a B diminished arpeggio and/or scale". If you think like this, then you are not actually creating a melody, rather just being a flashcard improviser; which none of the masters are.
I think the word "genius" is thrown around too often anyway. These people learned to become great at what they did because they were wholly dedicated to learning to play. I think when you say someone is gifted, you debase the obvious dedication and devotion that this artist has committed to becoming what they have become. Gypsies traditionally play better than us gadjos because Django Reinhardt IS the partriarch of their cultural heritage. Thus they are brought up on the orthodoxy of his playing style. This is why there are so many young "prodigies" in the roma communities.
I do believe anyone can achieve a very high level of capability by being diligent in your transcribing, and learning to "hear" everything. You just have to believe in yourself and that you are capable of learning anything. Additionally, always play from your heart!
Keep on Djamming!
the truth is simple: the path to success is actualyl the longest and hardest one... i think it's the fear of going through that road that make people try to take shortcuts.... the problem is that you can spend 20 yrs trying to takeshortcuts and never getting to yoru destination, or you can spend 20 yrs struggling but reach actual the destination.... most people would rather take the shortcut... sad but true
however, i should add that for peopel who don't have high/professional aspirations, shortcuts are fine, the important thing is to have fun, after all
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
Lets just remember how we all learned our native languages, we essentially copied the people around us, by ear, then came the grammar but it's really almost as if we never needed it.