Hellzero Posted November 18, 2018 Posted November 18, 2018 Great lesson, concise and clear, better than ... won't say it. Quote
Dem Jolie-blues Posted November 18, 2018 Posted November 18, 2018 Super !, is it me , or does the pianist in the animation have a 'wind' problem ? Quote
paddy109 Posted November 18, 2018 Posted November 18, 2018 5 hours ago, Happy Jack said: I was fixated on watching your avatar dancing in time with the music! Quote
Dad3353 Posted November 18, 2018 Posted November 18, 2018 13 minutes ago, paddy109 said: I was fixated on watching your avatar dancing in time with the music! But of course, it's Swing, innit..? 1 1 Quote
knirirr Posted November 19, 2018 Posted November 19, 2018 On 18/11/2018 at 14:36, jrixn1 said: Good introduction. A big band will (or should) also have a rhythm guitar, which adds to the driving rhythm; and there should be less emphasis on beats "2" and "4" than in that video -- all four beats should pulse equally. E.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tlc0s2ROPOY Thanks - good music indeed, and pleasing to see such remarks in the comments as: Quote The "chonking" needs to be tight, totally in synch with the bassist...the "motor" of the band, the bass and guitar, are keeping things rock-solid. The reason is that the first jazz band in which I was able to play was a big band, and I had to play rhythm guitar. So, I got a book on it which suggested some chord shapes using only 3 or 4 strings which allowed easy changing of the voicing during each bar. This was fun and I thought it sounded quite good, even with my playing. The bassist complained that I was cramping his style, though. Quote
deepbass5 Posted November 20, 2018 Posted November 20, 2018 Funny that clip didn't explain what swing is at all. Just a big band line up playing a typical swing number. nothing on how you would play two quavers - long and short to give that signature swing In swing style the beat is divided into two, but unevenly, reflecting an underlying triplet feel. Downbeats are 2/3 of a beat in length, while Upbeats are only 1/3 of a beat in length. Quote
paul_c2 Posted November 20, 2018 Posted November 20, 2018 I thought that too but in fairness, "swing" has several meanings. One being the timing as described above; and another being a style (or era) of big band/jazz music. It seemed to explain the style quite well. It was a shame they didn't do section C and on, because I could have done my joke "what do you get when you drop a piano down a mineshaft".....but never mind! Quote
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