T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2944.1 | Where's One? | GAVEL::DAGG | | Tue Jun 28 1994 14:26 | 19 |
|
Check out the Bill Evans trio (various incarnations).
They got pretty heavy into accenting different
beats to give the effect of different meters.
Also maybe what Philly Joe Jones (and others)
did on the last 8 of rhythm changes sometimes is
like what you're talking about. He would
accent 4 of the first bar, and then 3 of the second
bar, then 2 of the third bar, and so on, to sound like
he's in 3 for awhile. Very swinging IMHO. To
me this kind of thing is like a rhythmic
disonance, and when the time gets straight again,
its like a resolution.
Also Miles' groups with Tony Williams got
into some deep time superimpositions.
Dave - who thinks he's in the JAZZ notes conference
|
2944.2 | A simple change of accent... | HOTLNE::LUCHT | | Wed Jun 29 1994 10:31 | 32 |
|
Here's an absolutely fried lick I use with the 5 note
accented groupings over a 4/4 pulse:
p.o. sl.
-17-13-12------------11-14-17-14---------(17)-------------
---------13--------13-----------15-----16-----------------
-----------14-11-14---------------14-17-------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
As for tonality, this one is out there. Let's see, you
got an arpeggiated minor triad, diminished triad, and a big
fat major triad all tied together with a few minor intervals.
This is a bizarro riff that me and a percussion buddy of mine
mess around with once in a while. Playing this at a semi-hyper
tempo is somewhat confusing to the ear. By the time your
senses realize the three triads and their assigned tonality,
the notes repeat, placing the strong 1 & 3 accents on different
degrees of the triads (root, 3rd, 5th) within the 5 note groups
over the set 4/4 meter.
In the right setting with some good percussion behind it,
this lick gives the listener a slightly hypnotic feel as well as
a headache if listened to more than a couple times over!
Enjoy,
Kev (who's above lick is for fun, not for the serious minded)
|
2944.3 | 11/16, 9/8, ... | HOTLNE::LUCHT | Triple Bock is here! | Tue Oct 04 1994 07:05 | 8 |
|
Just took a peek at the latest issue of Guitar Player.
They've got a pretty good article on meter variances
that's worth checking out...
Kev --
|
2944.4 | here... | LUDWIG::LUCHT | Is it a passion or just a profession? | Fri Aug 30 1996 20:33 | 18 |
| With all the chat in regards to bent time signatures in an adjacent
conference, check out this riff in 7/8 which is the main theme to
my warped orignal entitled "Plausible Impossible" (rhy=straight 8ths):
--------7--------------------|-----------------------12---------
--------7---------9----------|-----------------------12---------
------------------9----------|----------sl------------\-harm----
|: ---------------------11------|---------11--9-------------------- :|
-----------9--11--------11---|------9---------9--11-------------
----7-------sl---------------|---7-----------(0)----------------
By playing this at a PRESTO tempo, the riff takes on some
characteristics of slap bass...which is what I was shooting for
here. Fire up a high gain tone, and feel free to mute the
arpeggios. Enjoy.
Kev --
|
2944.5 | odd time/drum machines | GAVEL::DAGG | | Tue Sep 03 1996 15:41 | 7 |
| Interesting you should mention odd time signatures. I found
that something I was doing came out to 13 beats per phrase,
and I was also recently considering getting a drum
machine, like a Boss DR660. Would that kind of machine
allow me to create an odd meter drum line?
Dave
|